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Emmanuelle Leize‐Wagner

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

ORCID: 0000-0002-1151-7940

Publishes on Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research, Protein purification and stability, Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications. 76 papers and 2.6k citations.

76Publications
2.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A method for detection of overoxidation of cysteines: peroxiredoxins are oxidized in vivo at the active-site cysteine during oxidative stress
Elsa Wagner, Sylvie Luche, Lucia Penna et al.|Biochemical Journal|2002
Cited by 177Open Access

Peroxiredoxins are often encountered as double spots when analysed by two-dimensional electrophoresis. The quantitative balance between these two spots depends on the physiological conditions, and is altered in favour of the acidic variant by oxidative stress for all the peroxiredoxins we could analyse. Using HeLa cells as a model system, we have further analysed the two protein isoforms represented by the two spots for each peroxiredoxin. The use of selected enzyme digestion and MS demonstrated that the acidic variant of all the peroxiredoxins analysed is irreversibly oxidized at the active-site cysteine into cysteine sulphinic or sulphonic acid. Thus, this acidic variant represents an inactivation form of the peroxiredoxins, and provides a useful marker of oxidative damage to the cells.

Regeneration of Peroxiredoxins during Recovery after Oxidative Stress
Mireille Chevallet, Elsa Wagner, Sylvie Luche et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2003
Cited by 155Open Access

Peroxiredoxins (prx) are redox enzymes using an activated cysteine as their active site. This activated cysteine can be easily overoxidized to cysteine sulfinic acid or cysteine sulfonic acid, especially under oxidative stress conditions. The regeneration of peroxiredoxins after a short, intense oxidative stress was studied, using a proteomics approach. Important differences in regeneration speed were found, prx2 being the fastest regenerated protein, followed by prx1, whereas prx3 and prx6 were regenerated very slowly. Further study of the mechanism of this regeneration by pulse-chase experiments using stable isotope labeling and cycloheximide demonstrated that the fast-regenerating peroxiredoxins are regenerated at least in part by a retroreduction mechanism. This demonstrates that the overoxidation can be reversible under certain conditions. The pathway of this retroreduction and the reasons explaining the various regeneration speeds of the peroxiredoxins remain to be elucidated.

Proteomic Analysis Identifies Novel Proteins of the Maurer's Clefts, a Secretory Compartment Delivering Plasmodium falciparum Proteins to the Surface of Its Host Cell
Laetitia Vincensini, Sophie Richert, Thierry Blisnick et al.|Molecular & Cellular Proteomics|2005
Cited by 136Open Access

A novel method was validated for the efficient distinction between malaria parasite-derived and host cell proteins in mass spectrometry analyses. This method was applied to a ghost fraction from Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes containing the red blood cell plasma membrane, the erythrocyte submembrane skeleton, and the Maurer's clefts, a Golgi-like apparatus linked to and addressing parasite proteins to the host cell surface. This method allowed the identification of 78 parasite proteins. Among these we identified seven novel proteins of the Maurer's clefts based on immunofluorescence studies and proteinase K digestion assays. The products of six contiguous genes located on chromosome 5 were identified, and the location within the Maurer's clefts was established for two of them. This suggests a clustering of genes encoding Maurer's cleft proteins. Our study sheds new light on the biological function of the Maurer's clefts, which are central to the pathogenesis and to the intraerythrocytic development of P. falciparum.

The Brown Algal Kelp Laminaria digitata Features Distinct Bromoperoxidase and Iodoperoxidase Activities
Carole Colin, Catherine Leblanc, Elsa Wagner et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2003
Cited by 106Open Access

Different haloperoxidases, one specific for the oxidation of iodide and another that can oxidize both iodide and bromide, were separated from the sporophytes of the brown alga Laminaria digitata and purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The iodoperoxidase activity was approximately seven times more efficient than the bromoperoxidase fraction in the oxidation of iodide. The two enzymes were markedly different in their molecular masses, trypsin digestion profiles, and immunological characteristics. Also, in contrast to the iodoperoxidase, bromoperoxidases were present in the form of multimeric aggregates of near-identical proteins. Two full-length haloperoxidase cDNAs were isolated from L. digitata, using haloperoxidase partial cDNAs that had been identified previously in an Expressed Sequence Tag analysis of the life cycle of this species (1). Sequence comparisons, mass spectrometry, and immunological analyses of the purified bromoperoxidase, as well as the activity of the protein expressed in Escherichia coli, all indicate that these almost identical cDNAs encode bromoperoxidases. Haloperoxidases form a large multigenic family in L. digitata, and the potential functions of haloperoxidases in this kelp are discussed.