Publications by authors named "Virginie Vinatier"

In the present work, the photoreactivity of a mixture of iron(III)–pyoverdin (Fe(III)–Pyo) complexes was investigated under simulated cloud conditions. Pyoverdins are expected to complex ferric ions naturally present in cloudwater, thus modifying their availability and photoreactivity. The spectroscopic properties and photoreactivity of Fe(III)-Pyo were investigated, with particular attention to their fate under solar irradiation, also studied through simulations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A total of 450 bacteria and yeast strains isolated from cloud waters sampled at the puy de Dôme station in France (1465 m) were screened for their ability to produce siderophores. To achieve this, a high-throughput method in 96-well plates was adapted from the CAS (chrome azurol S) method. Notably, 42% of the isolates were siderophore producers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Within cloud water, microorganisms are metabolically active and, thus, are expected to contribute to the atmospheric chemistry. This article investigates the interactions between microorganisms and the reactive oxygenated species that are present in cloud water because these chemical compounds drive the oxidant capacity of the cloud system. Real cloud water samples with contrasting features (marine, continental, and urban) were taken from the puy de Dôme mountain (France).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

With the aim of developing a novel superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity assay, a series of polymethinium salts (streptocyanines) were prepared and studied for their ability to be reduced by superoxide radical anion generated either from the pyrogallol autoxidation or by the xanthine oxidase-catalyzed oxidation of xanthine. The nonacarbon chain streptocyanine 9Cl(NEt(2))(2) was found to be relatively stable in neutral buffered aqueous solutions, to be reduced at a significant rate by superoxide, and addition of iron-dependent superoxide dismutase (Fe-SOD) prevented its bleaching, thus constituting a good candidate as a possible superoxide indicator in a spectrophotometric SOD assay. The values found to be optimal for a SOD assay were defined as pH 7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subtype-selective ligands are of great interest to the scientific community, as they provide a tool for investigating the function of one receptor or transporter subtype when functioning in its native environment. Several 4-substituted (S)-glutamate (Glu) analogues were synthesized, and altogether this approach has provided important insight into the structure-activity relationships (SAR) for ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs and mGluRs), as well as the excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs). In this work, three 4,4-disubstituted Glu analogues 1-3, which are hybrid structures of important 4-substituted Glu analogues 4-8, were investigated at iGluRs and EAATs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Peptidoglycan precursors containing D-Cys at position 4 were polymerised to form a synthetic peptidoglycan layer, which could be fluorescently labelled, providing a new method to monitor peptidoglycan transglycosylation and transpeptidation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The preparation of a phosphorylated alpha-dicarbonyl compound designed to specifically react with arginine residues of enzymes accepting phosphorylated compounds as effectors is reported, and shown to inhibit rabbit muscle aldolase in a time-dependent and irreversible manner. This irreversible inhibition occured in a buffer devoid of borate ions, suggesting that the presence of the phosphate moiety contributes in the stabilization of the adduct formed with arginine residues. Under the same conditions, the metalloenzyme iron superoxide dismutase, in which an arginine is known to be critical for the catalytic function, is not significantly inhibited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The preparation and characterization of two vitamin E analogs-sydnonimine conjugates, delta-tocopheryloxycarbonyl-3-morpholinosydnonimine (2) and troloxoxycarbonyl-3-morpholinosydnonimine (3), in which the hydroxyl group of the tocopheryl moieties is linked via an enzymatically cleavable urethane group to the sydnone moiety is described. In the presence of porcine liver esterase, these tocopheryl-sydnonimine conjugates generated the expected antioxidant moieties, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF