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Anne Galinier
Researcher at Paul Sabatier University
Publications - 102
Citations - 5590
Anne Galinier is an academic researcher from Paul Sabatier University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catabolite repression & Bacillus subtilis. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 95 publications receiving 5222 citations. Previous affiliations of Anne Galinier include University of Lyon & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
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Liver mitochondria and insulin resistance
Guillaume Vial,Hervé Dubouchaud,Karine Couturier,Cécile Cottet-Rousselle,Nellie Taleux,Anne Athias,Anne Galinier,Louis Casteilla,Xavier Leverve +8 more
TL;DR: How liver mitochondria could be implicated in IR and should therefore be considered as a specific therapeutic target in the future is highlighted.
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Characterization of YvcJ, a conserved P-loop-containing protein, and its implication in competence in Bacillus subtilis.
TL;DR: The results show that even if YvcJ and YhbJ belong to the same family of P-loop-containing proteins, the deletion of corresponding genes has different consequences in B. subtilis and in E. coli.
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Insights into the functioning of Bacillus subtilis HPr kinase/phosphatase: affinity for its protein substrates and role of cations and phosphate.
TL;DR: It was shown here that the presence of magnesium is a prerequisite for the interaction of HprK/P with either HPr or Crh and that phosphate mediates its effect by binding directly to the ATP-binding site of the enzyme.
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Effect of subacute oral doses of nivalenol on immune and metabolic defence systems in mice.
Marie-Estelle Gouze,Joëlle Laffitte,Philippe Pinton,Geneviève Dedieux,Anne Galinier,Jean-Paul Thouvenot,Nicolas Loiseau,Isabelle P. Oswald,Pierre Galtier +8 more
TL;DR: The NOAEL of this toxin in this study was 1.774 mg/kg bw, corresponding to an exposure to 5 ppm contaminated food, which appears to be by far higher than the maximal natural occurrence measured in European cereals, known to range from 0.34 to 1.86 ppm.
Journal Article
Phosphotransfer functions mutated Bacillus subtilis HPr-like protein Crh carrying a histidine in the active site.
TL;DR: The Bacillus subtilis protein Crh exhibits strong similarity to HPr, a phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS), but when Gln-15 of Crh was replaced with a histidine, Crh gained most of the catalytic and regulatory functions exerted by HPr.