Search results for "030303 biophysics"

showing 10 items of 20 documents

Stability of OBPs

2020

Odorant binding proteins (OBPs) are small proteins, some of which bind odorants with high specificity. OBPs are relatively easy to produce and show a pronounced stability toward thermal and chemical denaturation. This high stability renders OBPs attractive candidates for the development of odorant detections systems. Unfortunately, binding of odorants is not easy to quantify due to lack of spectroscopic signals upon binding. Therefore, a possible approach to detect binding is to employ the shift in thermal or chemical stability upon ligand-protein interaction. Being a rather indirect approach, the experimental setup should be done with care. Here, the experimental results on stability of OB…

0303 health sciences03 medical and health sciencesOdorant bindingChemistry030303 biophysicsBiophysicsDenaturation (biochemistry)Chemical stabilityThermal stabilityStability (probability)
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Generation of TCR-engineered reference cell samples to control T-cell assay performance

2020

In vitro cellular assays analyzing antigen-specific T cells are characterized by their high complexity and require controlled conditions to lower experimental variations. Without standard cellular reagents, it is difficult to compare results over time and across institutions. To overcome this problem, a simple and robust technology was developed to generate TCR-engineered reference samples (TERS) containing defined numbers of antigen-specific T cells. Utilization of TERS enables performance control of three main T-cell assays: MHC-peptide multimer staining, IFN-gamma ELISpot and cytokine flow cytometry. TERS continuously deliver stable results and can be stored for longer periods of time. H…

0303 health sciencesChemistryElectroporationELISPOTT cell030303 biophysicsT-cell receptorfood and beveragesReference cellPerformance control03 medical and health sciencesmedicine.anatomical_structureHigh complexitymedicineCytokine flow cytometryBiomedical engineering
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Quantification of propagating and standing surface acoustic waves by stroboscopic X-ray photoemission electron microscopy.

2018

The quantification of surface acoustic waves (SAWs) in LiNbO3 piezoelectric crystals by stroboscopic X-ray photoemission electron microscopy (XPEEM), with a temporal smearing below 80 ps and a spatial resolution below 100 nm, is reported. The contrast mechanism is the varying piezoelectric surface potential associated with the SAW phase. Thus, kinetic energy spectra of photoemitted secondary electrons measure directly the SAW electrical amplitude and allow for the quantification of the associated strain. The stroboscopic imaging combined with a deliberate detuning allows resolving and quantifying the respective standing and propagating components of SAWs from a superposition of waves. Furth…

0303 health sciencesNuclear and High Energy PhysicsRadiationMaterials sciencebusiness.industry030303 biophysicsPhase (waves)02 engineering and technologyAcoustic wave021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPiezoelectricitySecondary electronslaw.invention03 medical and health sciencesPhotoemission electron microscopySuperposition principleOpticslawElectron microscope0210 nano-technologybusinessInstrumentationExcitationJournal of synchrotron radiation
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Vanillin cell sensor

2007

Our project for iGEM 2006 consisted of designing a cellular vanillin biosensor. We used an EnvZ -E. coli strain as a chassis, and constructed two different devices: a sensor and an actuator, assembled using OmpR-P as a standardised mediator. The sensor device contained a computation- ally designed vanillin receptor and a synthetic two-component signal transduction protein (Trz). The receptor protein was based on a ribose-binding protein as scaffold. The Trz was built by fusion of the periplasmic and transmembrane domains of a Trg protein with an EnvZ kinase domain. When the receptor complex binds Trg, an allosteric motion is propagated to the cyto- plasmic EnvZ kinase domain, resulting in a…

0303 health sciencesReceptor complex030303 biophysicsAllosteric regulationAutophosphorylationBioengineeringCell BiologyBiologyCell biology03 medical and health sciencesSynthetic biologyTransmembrane domainProtein kinase domainBiochemistry[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologySignal transductionMolecular BiologyTranscription factor030304 developmental biologyBiotechnologyIET Synthetic Biology
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RNA Nanostructure Molecular Imaging

2020

Atomic force and transmission electron microscopies (AFM/TEM) are powerful tools to analyze RNA-based nanostructures. While cryo-TEM analysis allows the determination of near-atomic resolution structures of large RNA complexes, this chapter intends to present how RNA nanostructures can be analyzed at room temperature on surfaces. Indeed, TEM and AFM analyses permit the conformation of a large population of individual molecular structures to be observed, providing a statistical basis for the variability of these nanostructures within the population. Nevertheless, if double-stranded DNA molecular imaging has been described extensively, only a few investigations of single-stranded DNA and RNA …

0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyNanostructureMaterials scienceAtomic force microscopy030303 biophysicsResolution (electron density)RNA ConformationPopulationRNANanotechnology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMolecular imagingeducationDNA030304 developmental biology
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Electrochemical modifications of proteins: disulfide bonds reduction

2002

International audience; Electrochemical reduction of lysozyme disulfide bonds was achieved at pH between 10 and 11.Below pH 10, no disulfide bond cleavage was observed. At pH higher than 12, the cleavage of disulfide bonds is essentially due to hydrolysis. The addition of denaturant considerably enhanced the performance of the electrochemical device.

030303 biophysicsLysozymeElectrochemistryCleavage (embryo)01 natural sciencesAnalytical Chemistry03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundHydrolysisPolymer chemistry[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringElectrochemistryOrganic chemistryDenaturation (biochemistry)Disulfide bondsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSReductionchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesProtein010401 analytical chemistryDisulfide bondGeneral Medicine[SDV.IDA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineering0104 chemical sciencesEnzymechemistryYield (chemistry)LysozymeFood Science
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1H, 13C, and 15N NMR chemical shift assignment of the complex formed by the first EPEC EspF repeat and N-WASP GTPase binding domain

2021

AbstractLEE-encoded effector EspF (EspF) is an effector protein part of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli’s (EPEC’s) arsenal for intestinal infection. This intrinsically disordered protein contains three highly conserved repeats which together compose over half of the protein’s complete amino acid sequence. EPEC uses EspF to hijack host proteins in order to promote infection. In the attack EspF is translocated, together with other effector proteins, to host cell via type III secretion system. Inside host EspF stimulates actin polymerization by interacting with Neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP), a regulator in actin polymerization machinery. It is presumed that EspF acts by di…

030303 biophysicsRegulatormacromolecular substancesBiochemistryArticleType three secretion system03 medical and health sciencesStructural BiologyEnteropathogenic Escherichia coliNMR-spektroskopiaN-WASPPeptide sequenceActin030304 developmental biologysolution NMRSolution NMR0303 health sciencesEffectorChemistryResonance assignmentsresonance assignmentsNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyintrinsically disordered protein3. Good healthCell biologytype III secretion systemType III secretion systemIntrinsically disordered proteinEPEC EspFproteiinitGTPase bindingBiomolecular Nmr Assignments
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Spectroscopic and electrochemical study of interactions between DNA and different salts of 1,4-dihydropyridine AV-153

2020

1,4-dihydropyridines (1,4-DHP) possess important biochemical and pharmacological properties, including antimutagenic and DNA-binding activity. The latter activity was first described for water-soluble 1,4-DHP with carboxylic group in position 4, the sodium salt of the 1,4-DHP derivative AV-153 among others. Some data show the modification of physicochemical properties and biological activities of organic compounds by metal ions that form the salts. We demonstrated the different affinity to DNA and DNA-protecting capacity of AV-153 salts, depending on the salt-forming ion (Na, K, Li, Rb, Ca, Mg). This study aimed to use different approaches to collate data on the DNA-binding mode of AV-153-N…

Circular dichroismGuanine030303 biophysicsIntercalation (chemistry)Biophysicslcsh:MedicineCircular dichroismG-quadruplexBiochemistryMedicinal chemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNucleobase03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundCircular voltammetryMoleculeDenaturation (biochemistry)DNA bindingMolecular Biology14-dihydropyridines030304 developmental biologyAV-153 salts0303 health sciencesGeneral Neurosciencelcsh:RGeneral MedicineG-quadruplexeschemistryFourier-transformed infrared spectroscopySpectrofluorimetryGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDNAPeerJ
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PyDSC: a simple tool to treat differential scanning calorimetry data

2020

AbstractHerein, we describe an open-source, Python-based, script to treat the output of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) experiments, called pyDSC, available free of charge for download at https://github.com/leonardo-chiappisi/pyDSC under a GNU General Public License v3.0. The main aim of this program is to provide the community with a simple program to analyze raw DSC data. Key features include the correction from spurious signals, and, most importantly, the baseline is computed with a robust, physically consistent approach. We also show that the baseline correction routine implemented in the script is significantly more reproducible than different standard ones proposed by propriet…

Computer science030303 biophysicsDSC03 medical and health sciencesSoftwareDifferential scanning calorimetryprotein conformationPhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySpurious relationshipReliability (statistics)0303 health sciencesReproducibilityInstrument controlSIMPLE (military communications protocol)business.industry030302 biochemistry & molecular biologypolymer stabilityCondensed Matter PhysicsKey featuresbaseline correction540 Chemie und zugeordnete Wissenschaftenphase transitionddc:540businessAlgorithmPython
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From non-excitable single-cell to multicellular bioelectrical states supported by ion channels and gap junction proteins: Electrical potentials as di…

2019

Endogenous bioelectric patterns within tissues are an important driver of morphogenesis and a tractable component of a number of disease states. Developing system-level understanding of the dynamics by which non-neural bioelectric circuits regulate complex downstream cascades is a key step towards both, an evolutionary understanding of ion channel genes, and novel strategies in regenerative medicine. An important capability gap is deriving rational modulation strategies targeting individual cells' bioelectric states to achieve global (tissue- or organ-level) outcomes. Here, we develop an ion channel-based model that describes multicellular states on the basis of spatio-temporal patterns of …

Gap Junction Proteins030303 biophysicsCellBiophysicsCell CommunicationRegenerative medicineModels BiologicalConnexinsIon ChannelsCell membrane03 medical and health sciencesmedicineMorphogenesisAnimalsHumansMolecular BiologyIon channelPhysics0303 health sciencesCell potentialElectrical potentialsGap JunctionsElectrophysiological PhenomenaMulticellular organismmedicine.anatomical_structureSingle-Cell AnalysisNeuroscienceSignal TransductionProgress in biophysics and molecular biology
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