Publications by authors named "Jean Francois Chich"

Alternaria leaf blight, caused by the fungus , is the most damaging foliar disease of carrot. Some carrot genotypes exhibit partial resistance to this pathogen and resistance Quantitative Trait Loci (rQTL) have been identified. Co-localization of metabolic QTL and rQTL identified camphene, α-pinene, α-bisabolene, β-cubebene, caryophyllene, germacrene D and α-humulene as terpenes potentially involved in carrot resistance against ALB.

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Inducible plant defences against pathogens are stimulated by infections and comprise several classes of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins. Endo-β-1,3-glucanases (EGases) belong to the PR-2 class and their expression is induced by many pathogenic fungi and oomycetes, suggesting that EGases play a role in the hydrolysis of pathogen cell walls. However, reports of a direct effect of EGases on cell walls of plant pathogens are scarce.

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A frequent problem of recombinant protein production is their insolubility. To address this issue, engineered Escherichiacoli strains like Arctic Express that produce an exogenous chaperone facilitating protein folding, have been designed. A drawback is the frequent contamination of the protein by chaperones.

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The plant pathogenic bacterium Dickeya dadantii has recently been shown to be able to kill the aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum. While the factors required to cause plant disease are now well characterized, those required for insect pathogeny remain mostly unknown. To identify these factors, we analyzed the transcriptome of the bacteria isolated from infected aphids.

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The molecular mechanism involved in early stages of prion protein (PrP) conversion has been investigated using the chip based SPR technology, focusing on PrP interactions with membranes, either in its monomeric, oligomeric or Cu(II)-ions bound forms. We observed a strong interaction between PrP and cell membrane models of different lipid compositions. Circular dichroism tests show that membrane-bound, oligomerized or Cu(II)-complexed PrP may adopt a β-sheet-rich conformation.

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The influenza A virus PB1-F2 protein, encoded by an alternative reading frame in the PB1 polymerase gene, displays a high sequence polymorphism and is reported to contribute to viral pathogenesis in a sequence-specific manner. To gain insights into the functions of PB1-F2, the molecular structure of several PB1-F2 variants produced in Escherichia coli was investigated in different environments. Circular dichroism spectroscopy shows that all variants have a random coil secondary structure in aqueous solution.

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Catestatin is a natural peptide of higher organisms including humans, with a wide variety of biological functions involved in catecholamine inhibition, cardiovascular regulation, control of blood pressure, inflammation, and innate immunity. It is derived from the natural processing of chromogranin A, induced in the skin after injury, and produced by chromaffin cells and neutrophils. With neutrophils, the peptide enters the cell by crossing the plasma membrane where it interacts with internal targets to induce calcium influx.

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Antimicrobial peptides are major components of the innate immune defence. They are well conserved along evolution, non-toxic and they ensure potent defences against a large number of pathogens. They act by direct killing of microorganisms and they possess additional roles in the regulation of adaptive immune responses, by recruting or stimulating immune cells.

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Chromogranins/secretogranins are members of the granin family present in secretory vesicles of nervous, endocrine and immune cells. In chromaffin cells, activation of nicotinic cholinergic receptors induces the release, with catecholamines, of bioactive peptides resulting from a natural processing. During the past decade, our laboratory has characterized new antimicrobial chromogranin-derived peptides in the secretions of stimulated bovine chromaffin cells.

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Background: Antimicrobial peptides derived from the natural processing of chromogranin A (CgA) are co-secreted with catecholamines upon stimulation of chromaffin cells. Since PMNs play a central role in innate immunity, we examine responses by PMNs following stimulation by two antimicrobial CgA-derived peptides.

Methodology/principal Findings: PMNs were treated with different concentrations of CgA-derived peptides in presence of several drugs.

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Prion diseases are a group of neurodegenerative diseases that can arise spontaneously, be inherited, or acquired by infection in mammals. The propensity of the prion protein to adopt different structures is a clue to its pathological and perhaps biological role too. While the normal monomeric PrP is well characterized, the misfolded conformations responsible for neurodegeneration remain elusive despite progress in this field.

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Proteomics relies on the separation of complex protein mixtures using bidimensional electrophoresis. This approach is largely used to detect the expression variations of proteins prepared from two or more samples. Recently, attention was drawn on the reliability of the results published in literature.

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Refractile bodies (RB), whose function is still unknown, are specific structures of Eimeriidae parasites. In order to study their proteome, RB were purified from Eimeria tenella sporozoites by a new procedure using a reversible fixation followed by centrifugation. RB proteins were resolved by two-dimensional electrophoresis.

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X-prolyl dipeptidyl aminopeptidases (X-PDAP) are enzymes catalysing the release of dipeptides from the amino termini of polypeptides containing a proline or an alanine at the penultimate position. Involved in various mammalian regulation processes, as well as in chronic human diseases, they have been proposed to play a role in pathogenicity for Streptococci. We compared the structure of X-PDAP from Lactococcus lactis (PepX) with its human counterpart DPP-IV.

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Eimeria tenella is a parasite of great importance as a disease causing agent in the poultry industry. Until recently, biological studies have focused on specific proteins, some of which play an important role in the parasite life cycle. Post-genomic studies will make it possible to understand the complexity of the parasites and their interactions with host cells.

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The X-prolyl dipeptidyl aminopeptidase (X-PDAP) from Lactococcus lactis is a dimeric enzyme catalyzing the removal of Xaa-Pro dipeptides from the N terminus of peptides. The structure of the enzyme was solved at 2.2 A resolution and provides a model for the peptidase family S15.

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The structural and quantitative variability of caprine alpha(s1)-casein induced by the extensive polymorphism recorded at the corresponding locus strongly influences the composition (proteins as well as lipids) and the technological behaviour of milk. Immuno-histo-chemistry studies coupled with electron microscopy analysis have shown that a dysfunction exists in the intracellular transport of caseins when alpha(s1)-casein is lacking. Casein accumulation in the endoplasmic reticulum leads to a dilation of the cisternae that could disturb the whole secretion process (including lipids).

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Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are widely used in the agro-food industry. Some of the LAB also participate in the natural flora in humans and animals. We review here proteomic studies concerning LAB.

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