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Organisation cellulaire et subcellulaire de la voie de biosynthèse des alcaloïdes indoliques monoterpéniques de Catharantus roseus. / Cellular and subcellular organization of the monoterpene indole alkaloids biosynthetic pathway in Catharantus roseusGuirimand, Grégory 27 June 2011 (has links)
Catharanthus roseus est une plante tropicale de la famille des Apocynacées d’intérêt thérapeutique en raison de sa capacité à synthétiser des alcaloïdes indoliques monoterpéniques (AIM) utilisés en chimiothérapie anticancéreuse. La teneur en AIM in planta est très faible notamment en raison d’une haute compartimentalisation cellulaire et subcellulaire de la voie de biosynthèse. Si la compartimentalisation cellulaire était bien caractérisée, très peu de données de localisation subcellulaire in situ étaient disponibles au début de cette thèse. Une connaissance fine de cette compartimentalisation est cependant nécessaire pour identifier les transports inter-compartiment de métabolites intermédiaires, limitant potentiellement le flux métabolique, afin d’améliorer ensuite le rendement de biosynthèse des AIM par ingénierie métabolique. Dans ce contexte nous avons réalisé une étude exhaustive de la localisation subcellulaire des enzymes de cette voie par imagerie GFP dans des cellules de C. roseus transformées par biolistique permettant d’établir un nouveau modèle intégré d’organisation cellulaire et subcellulaire de la biosynthèse des AIM. / Catharanthus roseus is a tropical plant from the Apocynaceae family with a great therapeutic value due to its ability to synthesize monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIA) used in cancer treatment. The yields of these molecules in planta are very low due to a very high level of compartmentation of the biosynthetic pathway at both cellular and subcellular levels. While the cellular compartmentation was widely characterized, very few in situ subcellular localization data were available at the beginning of this PhD. An accurate knowledge of this compartmentation is necessary to identify intermediate metabolites transport events from one compartment to another one, in order to increase the MIA biosynthesis yield by metabolic engineering approaches. In this context we have proceed to the exhaustive study of the subcellular localization of these enzymes by in vivo GFP imaging in C. roseus cells transformed by biolistic. Potential interprotein interactions of these enzymes have also been studied by BiFC. Altogether, our results enabled us to draw an integrated model of the cellular and subcellular organization of MIA biosynthesis in situ.
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Network flux analysis of central metabolism in plantsMasakapalli, Shyam Kumar January 2011 (has links)
The aim of this thesis was to develop stable-isotope steady-state metabolic flux analysis (MFA) based on <sup>13</sup>C labeling to quantify intracellular fluxes of central carbon metabolism in plants. The experiments focus on the analysis of a heterotrophic cell suspension culture of Arabidopsis thaliana (L) Heynh. (ecotype Landsberg erecta). The first objective was to develop a robust methodology based on combining high quality steady-state stable labeling data, metabolic modeling and computational analysis. A comprehensive analysis of the factors that influence the outcome of MFA was undertaken and best practice established. This allowed a critical analysis of the subcellular compartmentation of carbohydrate oxidation in the cell culture. The second objective was to apply the methodology to nutritional perturbations of the cell suspension. A comparison of growth on different nitrogen sources revealed that transfer to an ammonium-free medium: (i) increased flux through the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (oxPPP) by 10% relative to glucose utilisation; (ii) caused a substantial decrease in entry of carbon into the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA); and (iii) increased the carbon conversion efficiency from 55% to 69%. Although growth on nitrate alone might be expected to increase the demand for reductant, the cells responded by decreasing the assimilation of inorganic N. Cells were also grown in media containing different levels of inorganic phosphate (Pi). Comparison of the flux maps showed that decreasing Pi availability: (i) decreased flux through the oxPPP; (ii) increased the proportion of substrate fully oxidised by the TCA cycle; and (iii) decreased carbon conversion efficiency. These changes are consistent with redirection of metabolism away from biosynthesis towards cell maintenance as Pi is depleted. Although published genome-wide transcriptomic and metabolomic studies suggest that Pi starvation leads to the restructuring of carbon and nitrogen metabolism, the current analysis suggests that the impact on metabolic organisation is much less extreme.
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