Publications by authors named "Berangere Tissot"

Host gene products required for mediating the action of toxins are potential targets for reversing or controlling their pathogenic impact following exposure. To identify such targets libraries of insertional gene-trap mutations generated with a PiggyBac transposon in Blm-deficient embryonic stem cells were exposed to the plant toxin, ricin. Resistant clones were isolated and genetically characterised and one was found to be a homozygous mutant of the mannosidase 2, alpha 1 (Man2α1) locus with a matching defect in the homologous allele.

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Objective: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a common metabolic disorder of pregnancy. Patients with GDM are at risk for high fetal mortality and gestational complications associated with reduced immune tolerance and abnormal carbohydrate metabolism. Glycodelin-A (GdA) is an abundant decidual glycoprotein with glycosylation-dependent immunomodulatory activities.

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Fucoidan is a potent inhibitor of the human complement system whose activity is mediated through interactions with certain proteins belonging to the classical pathway, particularly the protein C4. Branched fucoidan oligosaccharides displayed a higher anticomplementary activity as compared to linear structures. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) characterization of the branched oligosaccharides and saturation transfer difference-NMR experiment of the interaction with the protein C4 allowed the identification of the glycan residues in close contact with the target protein.

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The Human Proteome Organisation Human Disease Glycomics/Proteome Initiative recently coordinated a multi-institutional study that evaluated methodologies that are widely used for defining the N-glycan content in glycoproteins. The study convincingly endorsed mass spectrometry as the technique of choice for glycomic profiling in the discovery phase of diagnostic research. The present study reports the extension of the Human Disease Glycomics/Proteome Initiative's activities to an assessment of the methodologies currently used for O-glycan analysis.

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A recent analysis of the human sperm N-glycome confirmed the expression of biantennary bisecting type N-glycans and terminal Lewis(x)/Lewis(y) sequences previously implicated in the suppression of the innate and adaptive immune responses, respectively. In this study, glycomic analysis of seminal plasma glycoproteins derived from four fertile men was carried out to determine if the same sequences were expressed on the N- and O-glycome of human seminal plasma glycoproteins. Three major families of N-glycans were detected: (i) high mannose glycans (Man(5-7)GlcNAc(2)); (ii) bi-, tri-, and tetraantennary core-fucosylated complex type N-glycans with antennae terminated with Lewis(x) and/or Lewis(y) sequences; and (iii) bi-, tri-, and tetraantennary core-fucosylated complex type N-glycans with antennae capped with sialic acid.

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Structural elucidation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is one of the major challenges in biochemical analysis. This is mainly because of the diversity of GAG sulfation and N-acetylation patterns and variations in uronate isomers. ESI-MS and recently MALDI-MS methodologies are important strategies for investigating the molecular structure of GAGs.

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This invited paper reviews the study of protein glycosylation, commonly known as glycoproteomics, beginning with the origins of the subject area in the early 1970s shortly after mass spectrometry was first applied to protein sequencing. We go on to describe current analytical approaches to glycoproteomic analyses, with exemplar projects presented in the form of the complex story of human glycodelin and the characterisation of blood group H eptitopes on the O-glycans of gp273 from Unio elongatulus. Finally, we present an update on the latest progress in the field of automated and semi-automated interpretation and annotation of these data in the form of GlycoWorkBench, a powerful informatics tool that provides valuable assistance in unravelling the complexities of glycoproteomic studies.

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Glycodelin is a human glycoprotein with four reported glycoforms, namely glycodelin-A (GdA), glycodelin-F (GdF), glycodelin-C (GdC), and glycodelin-S (GdS). These glycoforms have the same protein core and appear to differ in their N-glycosylation. The glycosylation of GdA is completely different from that of GdS.

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Like many other bacterial cell surfaces, the cell wall of Clostridium difficile is also encapsulated by a proteinaceous paracrystalline layer, the surface (S)-layer. In many bacterial species, the S-layer proteins (SLPs) have been shown to be glycosylated, whereas in other species glycosylation is absent. Unusually, the S-layer of C.

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The Ebola virus nucleoprotein (NP) is an essential component of the nucleocapsid, required for filovirus particle formation and replication. Together with virion protein 35 (VP35) and VP24, this gene product gives rise to the filamentous nucleocapsid within transfected cells. Ebola virus NP migrates aberrantly, with an apparent molecular mass of 115 kDa, although it is predicted to encode an approximately 85-kDa protein.

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LSECtin is a member of the C-type lectin family of glycan-binding receptors that is expressed on sinusoidal endothelial cells of the liver and lymph nodes. To compare the sugar and pathogen binding properties of LSECtin with those of related but more extensively characterized receptors, such as DC-SIGN, a soluble fragment of LSECtin consisting of the C-terminal carbohydrate-recognition domain has been expressed in bacteria. A biotin-tagged version of the protein was also generated and complexed with streptavidin to create tetramers.

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Human sperm lack major histocompatibility class I molecules, making them susceptible to lysis by natural killer (NK) cells. Major histocompatibility class I negative tumor cells block NK cell lysis by expressing sufficient amounts of bisecting type N-glycans on their surfaces. Therefore, sperm could employ the same strategy to evade NK cell lysis.

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We studied chemical level and glycosylation status of haptoglobin in sera of patients with prostate cancer, as compared to benign prostate disease and normal subjects, with the following results. (i) Haptoglobin level was enhanced significantly in sera of prostate cancer. (ii) Sialylated bi-antennary glycans were the dominant structures in haptoglobins from all 3 sources, regardless of different site of N-linked glycan.

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Glycomics is a developing field that provides structural information on complex populations of glycans isolated from tissues, cells and organs. Strategies employing matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) are central to glycomic analysis. Current MALDI-based glycomic strategies are capable of efficiently analyzing glycoprotein and glycosphingolipid glycomes but little attention has been paid to devising glycomic methodologies suited to the analysis of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) polysaccharides which pose special problems for MALDI analysis because of their high level of sulfation and large size.

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The parasitic helminth Schistosoma mansoni is a major public health concern in many developing countries. Glycoconjugates, and in particular the carbohydrate component of these products, represent the main immunogenic challenge to the host and could therefore represent one of the crucial determinants for successful parasite establishment. Here we report a comparative glycomics analysis of the N- and O-glycans derived from glycoproteins present in S.

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The current interest in applying systems biology approaches to studying an organism's form or function promises to reveal further insights into the role of glycosylation in cells and whole organisms. This has prompted the development of a rapid, sensitive method of profiling the glycan component of both glycosphingolipids and glycoproteins from a single sample. Here we report a new mass spectrometric screening strategy for characterizing glycosphingolipid-derived oligosaccharides, which can be integrated into an existing highly sensitive glycoprotein glycomics strategy.

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Algal fucoidan is a complex sulfated polysaccharide whose structural characterization requires powerful spectroscopic methodologies. While most of the structural investigations reported so far have been performed using NMR as the main spectroscopic method, we report herein data obtained by negative electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. MS analysis has been carried out on oligosaccharides obtained by partial hydrolysis of fucoidan from the brown algae Ascophyllum nodosum.

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The regulation of cell function by fibroblast growth factors (FGF) occurs through a dual receptor system consisting of a receptor-tyrosine kinase, FGFR and the glycosaminoglycan heparan sulfate (HS). Mutations of some potential N-glycosylation sites in human fgfr lead to phenotypes characteristic of receptor overactivation. To establish how N-glycosylation may affect FGFR function, soluble- and membrane-bound recombinant receptors corresponding to the extracellular ligand binding domain of FGFR1-IIIc were produced in Chinese Hamster Ovary cells.

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Alpha-L-fucose, the monosaccharide component of fucoidan, is found in the polysaccharide mainly as its sulfated form where sulfate groups are in position 2 and/or 4 and/or 3. The correlation between biological activities and structure of fucoidan requires the determination of the sulfation pattern of the fucose residues. Therefore, it is of importance to discriminate between the isobaric sulfated fucose isomers.

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C1q is a subunit of the C1 complex that triggers activation of the complement classical pathway through recognition and binding of immune complexes. C1q also binds to nonimmune ligands such as the sulfated polysaccharide fucoidan, a potent anticomplementary agent. C1q was submitted for the first time to mass spectrometry analysis, yielding insights into its assembly and its interaction with fucoidan.

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The complex C1 triggers the activation of the Complement classical pathway through the recognition and binding of antigen-antibody complex by its subunit C1q. The globular region of C1q is responsible for C1 binding to the immune complex. C1q can also bind nonimmune molecules such as DNA and sulfated polysaccharides, leading either to the activation or inhibition of Complement.

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Fucoidan inhibits complement by mechanisms that so far remain to be unraveled, and the objective of this work was to delineate the mode of inhibition by this sulfated polysaccharide. For that purpose, low molecular weight fractions of algal (Ascophyllum nodosum) fucoidan containing the disaccharide unit [-->3)-alpha-L-Fuc(2SO3(-))-(1-->4)-alpha-L-Fuc(2,3diSO3(-))-(1-->](n) have been studied. Gel co-affinity electrophoresis and a new affinity capillary electrophoresis (ACE) method have been implemented to characterize fucoidan-complement protein complexes.

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Algal fucoidan is an alpha-L-fucose-based polysaccharide endowed with important biological properties for which the structure has not yet been fully elucidated. In an attempt to implement new enzymatic tools for structural study of this polysaccharide, we have found a fucosidase activity in the digestive glands of the common marine mollusk Pecten maximus, which is active on a fucoidan extracted from the brown algae Ascophyllum nodosum. We now report the purification and characterization of this alpha-L-fucosidase (EC 3.

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