Publications by authors named "Dufourc E"

Article Synopsis
  • Flotillins are scaffolding proteins that play a key role in organizing membranes in various organisms, from archaea to mammals, with a complex structure consisting of multiple functional domains.
  • In the bacterium B. subtilis, the flotillins FloT and FloA localize to specific nanodomains and have various cellular functions, impacting membrane organization.
  • Research using NMR techniques reveals that FloT and FloA can cause disorder in model membranes, affecting their structure and function, with implications for understanding cellular processes.
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Tannins are amphiphilic molecules, often polymeric, which can be generally described as a core containing hydrophobic aromatic rings surrounded by hydroxyl groups. They have been known for millennia and are part of human culture. They are ubiquitous in nature and are best known in the context of wine and tea tasting and food cultures.

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Archaeal membrane lipids have specific structures that allow Archaea to withstand extreme conditions of temperature and pressure. In order to understand the molecular parameters that govern such resistance, the synthesis of 1,2-di--phytanyl--3-phosphoinositol (DoPhPI), an archaeal lipid derived from -inositol, is reported. Benzyl protected -inositol was first prepared and then transformed to phosphodiester derivatives using a phosphoramidite based-coupling reaction with archaeol.

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It has been shown that the use of conformationally pH-switchable lipids can drastically enhance the cytosolic drug delivery of lipid vesicles. Understanding the process by which the pH-switchable lipids disturb the lipid assembly of nanoparticles and trigger the cargo release is crucial to optimize the rational design of pH-switchable lipids. Here, we gather morphological observations (FF-SEM, Cryo-TEM, AFM, confocal microscopy), physicochemical characterization (DLS, ELS), as well as phase behavior studies (DSC, H NMR, Langmuir isotherm, and MAS NMR) to propose a mechanism of pH-triggered membrane destabilization.

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Understanding the membrane dynamics of complex systems is essential to follow their function. As molecules in membranes can be in a rigid or mobile state depending on external (temperature, pressure) or internal (pH, domains, etc.) conditions, we propose an in-depth examination of NMR methods to filter highly mobile molecular parts from others that are in more restricted environments.

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While establishing an invasive infection, the dormant conidia of transit through swollen and germinating stages, to form hyphae. During this morphotype transition, the conidial cell wall undergoes dynamic remodeling, which poses challenges to the host immune system and antifungal drugs. However, such cell wall reorganization during conidial germination has not been studied so far.

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Since the first membrane models in the 1970s, the concept of biological membranes has evolved considerably. The membrane is now seen as a very complex mixture whose dynamic behavior is even more complex. Solid-state NMR is well suited for such studies as it can probe the movements of the membrane from picoseconds to seconds.

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Wine tannins, saliva proteins and membrane lipids.

Biochim Biophys Acta Biomembr

October 2021

Polyphenols have been part of human culture for about 6000 years. However, their mode of action in relation to wine tasting while eating is only beginning to be understood. This review, using analytical techniques and physicochemical concepts, attempts to summarize current knowledge and present an integrated view of the complex relationship between tannins, salivary proteins, lipids in food and in oral membranes.

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Bicelles and nanodiscs for biophysical chemistry.

Biochim Biophys Acta Biomembr

January 2021

Membrane nanoobjects are very important tools to study biomembrane properties. Two types are described herein: Bicelles and Nanodiscs. Bicelles are obtained by thorough water mixing of long chain and short chain lipids and may take the form of membranous discs of 10-50 nm.

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The human nuclear membrane is composed of a double bilayer, the inner membrane being linked to the protein lamina network and the outer nuclear membrane continuous with the endoplasmic reticulum. Nuclear membranes can form large invaginations inside the nucleus; their specific roles still remain unknown. Although much of the protein identification has been determined, their lipid composition remains largely undetermined.

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Human nuclear membrane (hNM) invaginations are thought to be crucial in fusion, fission and remodeling of cells and present in many human diseases. There is however little knowledge, if any, about their lipid composition and dynamics. We therefore isolated nuclear envelope lipids from human kidney cells, analyzed their composition and determined the membrane dynamics after resuspension in buffer.

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T, the relaxation time of dipolar order, is sensitive to slow motional processes. Thus T is a probe for membrane dynamics and organization that could be used to characterize myelin, the lipid-rich membrane of axonal fibers. A mono-component T model associated with a modified ihMT sequence was previously proposed for in vivo evaluation of T with MRI.

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A polymesomorphic thermal phase-transition of a macrocyclic amphiphile consisting of aromatic groups and oligoethylene glycol (OEG) chains is reported. The macrocyclic amphiphile exists in a highly-ordered liquid crystal (LC) phase at room temperature. Upon heating, this macrocycle shows phase-transition from columnar-lamellar to nematic LC phases followed by crystallization before melting.

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SK3 channels are abnormaly expressed in metastatic cells, and Ohmline (OHM), an ether lipid, has been shown to reduce the activity of SK3 channels and the migration capacity of cancer cells. OHM incorporation into the plasma membrane is proposed to dissociate the protein complex formed between SK3 and Orai1, a potassium and a calcium channel, respectively, and would lead to a modification in the lipid environment of both the proteins. Here, we report the synthesis of deuterated OHM that affords the determination, through solid-state NMR, of its entire partitioning into membranes mimicking the SK3 environment.

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Mycolactone is a lipid-like endotoxin synthesized by an environmental human pathogen, Mycobacterium ulcerans, the causal agent of Buruli ulcer disease. Mycolactone has pleiotropic effects on fundamental cellular processes (cell adhesion, cell death and inflammation). Various cellular targets of mycolactone have been identified and a literature survey revealed that most of these targets are membrane receptors residing in ordered plasma membrane nanodomains, within which their functionalities can be modulated.

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Kinetics of photodegradation of novel oral anticoagulants dabigatran, rivaroxaban, and apixaban were studied under simulated solar light irradiation in purified, mineral, and river waters. Dabigatran and rivaroxaban underwent direct photolysis with polychromatic quantum yields of 2.2 × 10 and 4.

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Nanodiscs offer a very promising tool to incorporate membrane proteins into native-like lipid bilayers and an alternative to liposomes to maintain protein functions and protein-lipid interactions in a soluble nanoscale object. The activity of the incorporated membrane protein appears to be correlated to its dynamics in the lipid bilayer and by protein-lipid interactions. These two parameters depend on the lipid internal dynamics surrounded by the lipid-encircling discoidal scaffold protein that might differ from more unrestricted lipid bilayers observed in vesicles or cellular extracts.

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Gaining insight into intermolecular interactions between multiple species is possible at an atomic level by looking at different parameters using different NMR techniques. In the specific case of the astringency sensation, in which at least three molecular species are involved, different NMR techniques combined with dynamic light scattering and molecular modeling contribute to decipher the role of each component in the interaction mode and to assess the thermodynamic parameters governing this complex interaction. The binding process between a saliva peptide, a polyphenol, and polysaccharides was monitored by following H chemical shift variations, changes in NMR peak areas, and size of the formed complex.

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Wine tasting results in interactions of tannin-ethanol solutions with proteins and lipids of the oral cavity. Among the various feelings perceived during tasting, astringency and bitterness most probably result in binding events with saliva proteins, lipids and receptors. In this work, we monitored the conjugated effect of the grape polyphenol catechin and ethanol on lipid membranes mimicking the different degrees of keratinization of oral cavity surfaces by varying the amount of cholesterol present in membranes.

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Encapsulating biological materials in lipid vesicles is of interest for mimicking cells; however, except in some particular cases, such processes do not occur spontaneously. Herein, we developed a simple and robust method for encapsulating proteins in fatty acid vesicles in high yields. Fatty acid based, membrane-free coacervates spontaneously sequester proteins and can reversibly form membranous vesicles upon varying the pH value, the precrowding feature in coacervates allowing for protein encapsulation within vesicles.

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The ramification of cationic amphiphiles on their unsaturated lipid chains is readily achieved by using the thiol-ene click reaction triggering the formation of an inverted hexagonal phase (HII). The new ramified cationic lipids exhibit different bio-activities (transfection, toxicity) including higher transfection efficacies on 16HBE 14o-cell lines.

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The clouding phenomenon in non-ionic surfactant systems is a common feature that remains rare for ionic detergents. Here, we show that fatty acid (negatively charged) systems cloud upon cooling hot dispersions depending on the concentration or when adding excess guanidine hydrochloride. The clouding of these solutions yields the formation of enriched fatty acid droplets in which they exhibit a polymorphism that depends on the temperature: upon cooling, elongated wormlike micelles transit to rigid stacked bilayers inside droplets.

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Stability of wines is of great importance in oenology matters. Quantitative estimation of dark red precipitates formed in Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon wine from Bordeaux region for vintages 2012 and 2013 was performed during the oak barrel ageing process. Precipitates were obtained by placing wine at -4°C or 4°C for 2-6 days and monitored by periodic sampling during a one-year period.

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Saturated long chain fatty acids (sLCFA, e.g., C14:0, C16:0, and C18:0) are potentially the greenest and cheapest surfactants naturally available.

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Oleic acid vesicles represent good models of membrane protocells that could have existed in prebiotic times. Here, we report the formation, growth polymorphism, and dynamics of oleic acid spherical vesicles (1-10 μm), stable elongated vesicles (>50 μm length; 1-3 μm diameter), and chains of vesicles (pearl necklaces, >50 μm length; 1-3 μm diameter) in the presence of aminopropyl triethoxysilane and guanidine hydrochloride. These vesicles exhibit a remarkable behavior with temperature: spherical vesicles only are observed when keeping the sample at 4 °C for 2 h, and self-aggregated spherical vesicles occur upon freezing/unfreezing (-20/20 °C) samples.

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