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Zhao Xiaohong - - 2012
Expression of huntingtin fragments with 103glutamines (HttQ103) is toxic in yeast containing either the [PIN+] prion, which is the amyloid form of Rnq1, or [PSI+] prion, which is the amyloid form of the Sup35. We find that HttQP103, which has a polyproline region at the C-terminal end of the polyQ ...
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Masuda Hisako - - 2012
All free-living bacteria carry the toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems controlling cell growth and death under stress conditions. YeeU-YeeV(CbtA) is one of the E. coli TA systems, and the toxin, CbtA has been reported to inhibit the polymerization of bacterial cytoskeletal proteins, MreB and FtsZ. Here, we demonstrate that the antitoxin, YeeU, ...
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Nucifora Leslie G - - 2012
Huntington disease is a genetic neurodegenerative disorder that arises from an expanded polyglutamine region in the N terminus of the HD gene product, huntingtin. Protein inclusions comprised of N-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin are a characteristic feature of disease, though are likely to play a protective role rather than a ...
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Yu Xin - - 2012
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7) is one of nine neurodegenerative disorders caused by expanded polyglutamine repeats, and a common toxic gain-of-function mechanism has been proposed. Proteolytic cleavage of several polyglutamine proteins has been identified and suggested to modulate the polyglutamine toxicity. In this study, we show that full-length and cleaved ...
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Echeverria Gloria V - - 2012
Although protein-mediated toxicity in neurological disease has been extensively characterized, RNA-mediated toxicity is an emerging mechanism of pathogenesis. In microsatellite expansion disorders, expansion of repeated sequences in noncoding regions gives rise to RNA that produces a toxic gain of function, while expansions in coding regions can disrupt protein function as ...
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Westhof Eric - - 2012
It is now about 30 years since ribozymes, catalytically active RNA molecules, were discovered. Although the chemical versatility of RNA does not come close to that of proteins, the chemical properties of nucleic acid systems are nevertheless thoroughly exploited in biological systems, leading to diverse ways of accelerating chemical reactions. ...
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Biester Eva-Maria - - 2011
Multifunctional acyltransferases are able to catalyze the esterification of various acyl-acceptors with activated fatty acids. Here we describe the identification of four proteins from Tetrahymena thermophila that share certain properties with mammalian acyltransferases regarding their predicted transmembrane structure, their molecular mass and the typical acyltransferase motif. Expression of the Tetrahymena ...
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Bin-Umer Mohamed Anwar - - 2011
Fusarium head blight (FHB) reduces crop yield and results in contamination of grains with trichothecene mycotoxins. We previously showed that mitochondria play a critical role in the toxicity of a type B trichothecene. Here, we investigated the direct effects of type A and type B trichothecenes on mitochondrial translation and ...
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Jakeman David L - - 2011
Understanding how enzymes mediate catalysis is a key to their re-programming for biotechnological applications. The family three retaining glycosidase postulated to be involved in erythromycin self-resistance was cloned, recombinantly expressed in E. coli, purified and characterized. Bioinformatics analysis enabled the identification of the acid / base and nucleophile residues, and ...
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Wagner Anne M - - 2011
Methods for synthetically manipulating protein structure enable greater flexibility in the study of protein function. Previous characterization of the Escherichia coli aminoacyl tRNA transferase (AaT) has shown that it can modify the N-terminus of a protein with an amino acid from a tRNA or a synthetic oligonucleotide donor. Here, we ...
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Schwarz Flavio - - 2011
N-linked glycosylation is a frequent protein modification that occurs in all three domains of life. This process involves the transfer of a pre-assembled oligosaccharide from a lipid donor to asparagine side chains of polypeptides and is catalyzed by the membrane-bound oligosaccharyltransferase (OST). We characterized an alternative bacterial pathway wherein a ...
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Formation of m2G6 in Methanocaldococcus jannaschii tRNA catalyzed by the novel methyltransferase ...
Menezes Sheena - - 2011
The modified nucleosides N(2)-methylguanosine and N(2)(2)-dimethylguanosine in transfer RNA occur at five positions in the D and anticodon arms, and at positions G6 and G7 in the acceptor stem. Trm1 and Trm11 enzymes are known to be responsible for several of the D/anticodon arm modifications, but methylases catalyzing post-transcriptional m(2)G ...
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Stöhr Jan - - 2011
Abstract The conversion of the cellular isoform of the prion protein (PrP(C)) into the pathologic isoform (PrP(Sc)) is the key event in prion diseases. To study the conversion process, an in vitro system based on varying the concentration of low amounts of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) has been employed. In ...
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Sarasa L - - 2010
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by neuronal loss and the presence of both neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques in the brain. These plaques arise from the deposition of beta-amyloid (Aβ) peptides (38-43 amino acids), which are generated from enzymatic cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) by β- and γ-secretases. ...
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Pavlov Pavel F - - 2011
Intracellular amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Mitochondria were found to be the target both for amyloid precursor protein (APP) that accumulates in the mitochondrial import channels and for Aβ that interacts with several proteins inside mitochondria and leads to mitochondrial dysfunction. Here, ...
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Li Hongmei - - 2010
Proteolytic processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) generates large soluble APP derivatives, β-amyloid (Aβ) peptides, and APP intracellular domain. Expression of the extracellular sequences of APP or its Caenorhabditis elegans counterpart has been shown to be sufficient in partially rescuing the CNS phenotypes of the APP-deficient mice and the ...
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Hirayama K - - 2010
The amyloid of canine amyloid-producing odontogenic tumor (APOT) was evaluated biochemically and immunohistochemically. The N-terminal amino-acid sequence of purified amyloid protein from a canine APOT was strikingly similar to the sequence in both rat ameloblastin and porcine sheathlin. Immunohistochemically, the amyloid in APOT from 9 dogs was strongly reactive with ...
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Dueholm Morten S - - 2010
Summary Amyloids are highly abundant in many microbial biofilms and may play an important role in their architecture. Nevertheless, little is known of the amyloid proteins. We report the discovery of a novel functional amyloid expressed by a Pseudomonas strain of the P. fluorescens group. The amyloid protein was purified ...
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Nerelius Charlotte - - 2010
Amyloid consists of cross-beta-sheet fibrils and is associated with about 25 human diseases, including several neurodegenerative diseases, systemic and localized amyloidoses and type II diabetes mellitus. Amyloid-forming proteins differ in structures and sequences, and it is to a large extent unknown what makes them convert from their native conformations into ...
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Caubet Cécile - - 2010
Heterozygous nonsense mutations in the CDSN gene encoding corneodesmosin (CDSN), an adhesive protein expressed in cornified epithelia and hair follicles, cause hypotrichosis simplex of the scalp (HSS), a nonsyndromic form of alopecia. Truncated mutants of CDSN ((mut)CDSN), which bear the N-terminal adhesive Gly/Ser-rich domain (GS domain) of the protein, abnormally ...
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Daude Nathalie - - 2010
The cellular prion protein PrP(C) refolds into a beta-sheet enriched, infectivity-associated form called PrP(Sc). Shadoo (Sho) is a newly discovered glycoprotein that is also expressed in the adult brain. Wild type (wt) mouse Sho consists of an arginine-rich region, a hydrophobic central domain of five tandem A/LAAG amino acid repeats ...
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Toombs James A - - 2010
Numerous prions (infectious proteins) have been identified in yeast that result from the conversion of soluble proteins into beta-sheet-rich amyloid-like protein aggregates. Yeast prion formation is driven primarily by amino acid composition. However, yeast prion domains are generally lacking in the bulky hydrophobic residues most strongly associated with amyloid formation ...
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Caccamo Antonella - - 2010
Transactive response DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) is the pathological protein found in frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin positive inclusions and in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. In diseased tissue, TDP-43 translocates from its physiological nuclear location into the cytoplasm, where it accumulates. Additionally, C-terminal fragments of TDP-43 accumulate in affected brain regions ...
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Barbagallo Alessia P M - - 2010
The pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease is attributed to misfolding of Amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides. Aβ is generated during amyloidogenic processing of Aβ-precursor protein (APP). Another characteristic of the AD brain is increased phosphorylation of APP amino acid Tyr(682). Tyr(682) is part of the Y(682)ENPTY(687) motif, a docking site for interaction with ...
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Kawai Tomoko - - 2010
The neural adaptor protein FE65 interacts with the amyloid beta-protein precursor (APP). In osmotically stressed cells, the membrane APP-tethered FE65 is released into the cytoplasm and translocates to the nuclear matrix, where it stabilizes p53 via a non-canonical pathway. In this study, we found that the second phosphotyrosine interaction domain ...
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Ramsook Caleen B - - 2010
The occurrence of highly conserved amyloid-forming sequences in Candida albicans Als proteins (H. N. Otoo et al., Eukaryot. Cell 7:776-782, 2008) led us to search for similar sequences in other adhesins from C. albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The beta-aggregation predictor TANGO found highly beta-aggregation-prone sequences in almost all yeast adhesins. ...
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Solomon James P - - 2009
Familial amyloidosis of Finnish type (FAF), or gelsolin amyloidosis, is a systemic amyloid disease caused by a mutation (D187N/Y) in domain 2 of human plasma gelsolin, resulting in domain 2 misfolding within the secretory pathway. When D187N/Y gelsolin passes through the Golgi, furin endoproteolysis within domain 2 occurs as a ...
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Wang Xuan - - 2010
Amyloid fibers are filamentous protein structures commonly associated with neurodegenerative diseases. Unlike disease-associated amyloids, which are the products of protein misfolding, Escherichia coli assemble membrane-anchored functional amyloid fibers called curli. Curli fibers are composed of two proteins, CsgA and CsgB. In vivo, the polymerization of the major curli subunit protein, ...
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Hata Saori - - 2009
Alcadeins (Alcs) constitute a family of neuronal type I membrane proteins, designated Alc(alpha), Alc(beta), and Alc(gamma). The Alcs express in neurons dominantly and largely colocalize with the Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP) in the brain. Alcs and APP show an identical function as a cargo receptor of kinesin-1. Moreover, proteolytic ...
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Wu Tzong-Yuan - - 2009
OBJECTIVE: In this study, we proposed a hypothesis to explain the mechanisms of memantine action in treating Alzheimer disease (AD). Memantine may reduce the expression of amyloid precursor protein and tau protein, as well as acting as an antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors in the brain. RESULTS: Two neuropathologic characteristics of ...
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Suga Kei - - 2009
In this study, we examined the interaction of Syntaxin 5L (Syx5L), a Syx5 isoform that has an N-terminal extension containing a di-arginine ER-retrieval motif, with presenilin (PS) and its effects on the processing of beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP). Similar to Syx5, Syx5L bound to PS1 holoprotein but not to its ...
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Sakuma Megumi - - 2009
X11-like (X11L) is neuronal adaptor protein that interacts with the amyloid beta-protein precursor (APP) and regulates its metabolism. The phosphotyrosine interaction/binding (PI/PTB) domain of X11L interacts with the cytoplasmic region of APP695. We found that X11L-APP interaction is enhanced in osmotically stressed cells and X11L modification is required for the ...
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Murphy Charles L - - 2009
AA amyloidosis invariably has been associated with fibrillar deposits of the acute phase high-density lipoprotein serum amyloid A isotypes SAA1 and SAA2. We now report the first case in a patient with no antecedent history of a chronic inflammatory or neoplastic process whose pathologic renal deposits were comprised of a ...
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Hameed Mahrukh - - 2009
Proteins may form undesirable aggregates during the process of folding. Increasing evidence suggests that amyloid fibrils may arise from partially folded precursor molecules. We have previously demonstrated that hen egg white lysozyme [HEWL] exists as molten globule at pH 12.7. Here, we report that lysozyme at pH 7.0 and 11.0 ...
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Wang Hong-Xing - - 2009
Signaling via the conserved WNT/beta-CATENIN pathway controls diverse developmental processes. To explore its potential role in the ovary, we investigated the expression of WNTs, frizzled (FZD) receptors and other pathway components in human cumulus cells obtained from oocytes collected for in vitro fertilization. Proteins were detected in cultured cells using ...
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Kang Jaskiranjit - - 2009
Peptides and proteins fragment sequence-specifically in the presence of 3-mercaptopropionic acid to afford thioesters which can be used in native chemical ligation reactions.
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Finzi Giovanna - - 2008
BACE2 is a protease homologous to BACE1 protein, an enzyme involved in the amyloid formation of Alzheimer disease (AD). However, despite the high homology between these two proteins, the biological role of BACE2 is still controversial, even though a few studies have suggested a pathogenetic role in sporadic inclusion-body myositis ...
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Lam Wun - - 2008
Formation of SDS-insoluble protein aggregates in affected neurons is a cellular pathological feature of polyglutamine (polyQ) disease. We identified a multi-WD-domain protein, receptor for activated protein kinase C1 (RACK1), as a novel polyQ aggregate component from a Drosophila transgenic polyQ disease model. We showed that WD domains were crucial determinants ...
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Vanaudenaerde B M - - 2008
Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) is the leading cause of death after lung transplantation. Treatment is challenging, as the precise pathophysiology remains unclear. We hypothesize that T(H)17 lineage plays a key role in the pathophysiology of BOS by linking T-cell activation to neutrophil influx and chronic inflammation. In a cross-sectional study, ...
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Jakubowski Hieronim - - 2008
Severely elevated plasma homocysteine (Hcy) levels observed in genetic disorders of Hcy metabolism are associated with pathologies in multiple organs and lead to premature death due to vascular complications. In addition to elevating plasma Hcy, mutations in cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) or methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene lead to markedly elevated levels ...
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Wang Lei - - 2008
Protein aggregation is a process in which identical proteins self-associate into imperfectly ordered macroscopic entities. Such aggregates are generally classified as amorphous, lacking any long-range order, or highly ordered fibrils. Protein fibrils can be composed of native globular molecules, such as the hemoglobin molecules in sickle-cell fibrils, or can be ...
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del Pozo Yauner Luis - - 2008
Light chain-associated amyloidosis is a fatal disease characterized by the aggregation and pathologic deposition of monoclonal light chain-related fragments as amyloid fibrils in organs or tissues throughout the body. Notably, it has been observed that proteins encoded by the lambda variable light chain (V(L)) gene segment 6a are invariably associated ...
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Nishikori Shingo - - 2008
Polyglutamine (polyQ)-expanded proteins are associated with cytotoxicity in some neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington's disease. We have reported that the aggregation of the polyQ-expanded protein is partially suppressed by co-expression of either of two homologs of an AAA chaperone p97, CDC-48.1 or CDC-48.2, in Caenorhabditis elegans, but how p97 regulates ...
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Jonas Mary Cabell - - 2008
We have recently identified a new form of post-translational regulation of BACE1 (beta-site amyloid precursor protein (APP)-cleaving enzyme 1), a membrane protein that acts as the rate-limiting enzyme in the generation of the Alzheimer disease amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta). Specifically, BACE1 is transiently acetylated on seven lysine residues in the lumen ...
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Santos Sofia Duque - - 2008
We report the amyloid-like properties of Escherichia coli transthyretin-like protein (TLP). TLP is 32% homologous to human transthyretin (hTTR), and is also tetrameric. In contrast to hTTR, TLP does not bind thyroxine. TLP orthologues are found in several prokaryotes, lower eukaryotes and vertebrates. TLP carries a signal peptide that targets ...
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Okada Shoko - - 2008
Aposthonia gurneyi, an Australian webspinner species, is a primitive insect that constructs and lives in a silken tunnel which screens it from the attentions of predators. The insect spins silk threads from many tiny spines on its forelegs to weave a filmy sheet. We found that the webspinner silk fibers ...
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Morell Montse - - 2008
The accumulation of aggregated protein in the cell is associated with the pathology of many diseases and constitutes a major concern in protein production. Intracellular aggregates have been traditionally regarded as nonspecific associations of misfolded polypeptides. This view is challenged by studies demonstrating that, in vitro, aggregation often involves specific ...
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Wang Xuan - - 2008
Amyloid fibers are filamentous proteinaceous structures commonly associated with mammalian neurodegenerative diseases. Nucleation is the rate-limiting step of amyloid propagation, and its nature remains poorly understood. Escherichia coli assembles functional amyloid fibers called curli on the cell surface using an evolved biogenesis machine. In vivo, amyloidogenesis of the major curli ...
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Broomell Chris C - - 2008
The fang-like jaws of the marine polychaete Nereis virens possess remarkable mechanical properties considering their high protein content and lack of mineralization. Hardness and stiffness properties in the jaw tip are comparable to human dentin and are achieved by extensive coordination of Zn (2+) by a histidine-rich protein framework. In ...
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Nakaya Tadashi - - 2008
FE65, a neural adaptor protein, interacts with amyloid beta-protein precursor (APP) and is known to regulate amyloid beta generation from APP. FE65 also associates with nuclear proteins; however, its physiological function in the nucleus remains unclear. A fixed population of cytoplasmic FE65 is tethered to membranes by binding APP. This ...
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