Search results for "Complementary"

showing 10 items of 1156 documents

Evidence of a New MoYpd1p Phosphotransferase Isoform in the Multistep Phosphorelay System of Magnaporthe oryzae

2021

Different external stimuli are perceived by multiple sensor histidine kinases and transmitted by phosphorylation via the phosphotransfer protein Ypd1p in the multistep phosphorelay system of the high osmolarity glycerol signaling pathway of filamentous fungi. How the signal propagation takes place is still not known in detail since multiple sensor histidine kinase genes in most filamentous fungi are coded in the genome, whereas only one gene for Ypd1p exists. That raises the hypothesis that various Ypd1p isoforms are produced from a single gene sequence, perhaps by alternative splicing, facilitating a higher variability in signal transduction. We found that the mRNA of MoYPD1 in the rice bl…

Microbiology (medical)Gene isoformQH301-705.5MutantPlant ScienceBiology<i>Magnaporthe oryzae</i>Phosphotransferasealternative splicingphosphotransferComplementary DNAanatomy_morphologyBiology (General)GeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCommunicationAlternative splicingHistidine kinasephosphorelayhigh osmolarity glycerol (HOG) pathwayMagnaporthe oryzaeCell biologyProteomehistidine kinasesYPD1signalingsignal transductionJournal of Fungi
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Activity against Microorganisms Affecting Cellulosic Objects of the Volatile Constituents of Leonotis nepetaefolia from Nicaragua

2014

The chemical composition of the essential oil from aerial parts of L. nepetaefolia (L.) R. Br. collected in Nicaragua was evaluated by GC and GC-MS. The main components were ( Z)-phytol (22.8%), caryophyllene oxide (18.9%) and hexahydrofarnesylacetone (9.0%). The antibacterial activity against several Gram + and Gram - bacteria, including Bacillus cereus and B. subtilis, both infesting historical cellulosic material, was also determined. B. cereus, B. subtilis and Staphylococcus epidermis were the most affected by the action of the oil.

MicroorganismBacillus cereusNicaraguaMicrobial Sensitivity TestsPlant ScienceGram-Positive Bacterialaw.inventionBacillus cereusPhytollawVolatile componentGram-Negative BacteriaDrug DiscoveryOils VolatileFood scienceEssential oilPolycyclic SesquiterpenesPharmacologyLamiaceaebiologyTerpenesChemistryfungiLeonotis nepetaefoliadisinfestation of museum objects.General MedicineHexahydrofarnesylacetonebiology.organism_classification(Z)-PhytolAnti-Bacterial AgentsComplementary and alternative medicineCereusCaryophyllene oxideLamiaceaeAntibacterial activitySesquiterpenesBacteriaBacillus subtilisLeonotis
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Pursaethosides A-E, triterpene saponins from Entada pursaetha.

2005

Five new triterpenoid saponins, pursaethosides A-E (1-5), were isolated from the n-BuOH extract of the seed kernels of Entada pursaetha along with the known phaseoloidin. The structures of 1-5 were elucidated mainly by spectroscopic data interpretation and chemical degradation. Pursaethosides C-E (3-5) possess as a common structural feature entagenic acid as aglycon, which is rare among triterpene saponins. Compounds 2-4 and phaesolidin were found to be not cytotoxic when tested against HCT 116 and HT-29 human colon cancer cells.

MimosaSaponinPharmaceutical SciencePharmacognosyEntada pursaethaAnalytical ChemistryTriterpenoidTriterpeneDrug DiscoveryTumor Cells CulturedHumansCameroonNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationPlants MedicinalMolecular StructureOrganic ChemistryGlycosideSaponinsAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicTerpenoidTriterpenesHuman colon cancerComplementary and alternative medicinechemistryBiochemistryMolecular MedicineDrug Screening Assays AntitumorJournal of natural products
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Pharmacophore Models Derived from Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Protein-Ligand Complexes: A Case Study

2018

A single, merged pharmacophore hypothesis is derived combining 2000 pharmacophore models obtained during a 20 ns molecular dynamics simulation of a protein-ligand complex with one pharmacophore model derived from the initial PDB structure. This merged pharmacophore model contains all features that are present during the simulation and statistical information about the dynamics of the pharmacophore features. Based on the dynamics of the pharmacophore features we derive two distinctive feature patterns resulting in two different pharmacophore models for the analyzed system – the first model consists of features that are obtained from the PDB structure and the second uses two features that ca…

Models Molecular0301 basic medicineChemistry PharmaceuticalPlant ScienceMolecular Dynamics SimulationLigands01 natural sciencesStructure-Activity Relationship03 medical and health sciencesMolecular dynamicsComputational chemistry0103 physical sciencesDrug DiscoveryData MiningComputer SimulationPharmacology010304 chemical physicsChemistryProteinsHydrogen BondingGeneral Medicine030104 developmental biologyComplementary and alternative medicinePharmacophoreDatabases Nucleic AcidProtein ligandNatural Product Communications
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Nocturnin in the demosponge Suberites domuncula: a potential circadian clock protein controlling glycogenin synthesis in sponges

2012

Sponges are filter feeders that consume a large amount of energy to allow a controlled filtration of water through their aquiferous canal systems. It has been shown that primmorphs, three-dimensional cell aggregates prepared from the demosponge Suberites domuncula and cultured in vitro , change their morphology depending on the light supply. Upon exposure to light, primmorphs show a faster and stronger increase in DNA, protein and glycogen content compared with primmorphs that remain in the dark. The sponge genome contains nocturnin, a light/dark-controlled clock gene, the protein of which shares a high sequence similarity with the related molecule of higher metazoans. The sponge nocturnin …

Models MolecularAryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocatorGlycogeninPeriod (gene)Circadian clockGene ExpressionBiochemistry03 medical and health sciencesCryptochromeComplementary DNAAnimalsRNA Messenger14. Life underwaterMolecular BiologyDNA PrimersGlycoproteins030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesBase SequencebiologyCircadian Rhythm Signaling Peptides and Proteins030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyNuclear ProteinsCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationCircadian RhythmSuberites domunculaCLOCKBiochemistryGlucosyltransferasesSuberitesTranscription FactorsBiochem. J.
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Digitalis purpurea P5 beta R2, encoding steroid 5 beta-reductase, is a novel defense-related gene involved in cardenolide biosynthesis.

2009

The stereospecific 5 beta-reduction of progesterone is a required step for cardiac glycoside biosynthesis in foxglove plants. Recently, we have isolated the gene P5 beta R, and here we investigate the function and regulation of P5 beta R2, a new progesterone 5 beta-reductase gene from Digitalis purpurea. P5 beta R2 cDNA was isolated from a D. purpurea cDNA library and further characterized at the biochemical, structural and physiological levels. Like P5 beta R, P5 beta R2 catalyzes the 5 beta-reduction of the Delta(4) double bond of several steroids and is present in all plant organs. Under stress conditions or on treatment with chemical elicitors, P5 beta R expression does not vary, wherea…

Models MolecularDNA ComplementaryPhysiologyMolecular Sequence DataPlant ScienceBiologyGenes Plantchemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisGene Expression Regulation PlantComplementary DNACardenolidemedicineAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerCloning MolecularBeta (finance)Cardiac glycosideRegulation of gene expressionDigitaliscDNA libraryReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionGene Expression ProfilingDigitalis purpureaSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationCardenolidesKineticschemistryBiochemistryOxidoreductasesMetabolic Networks and Pathwaysmedicine.drugThe New phytologist
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Molecular dissection of human Argonaute proteins by DNA shuffling.

2013

A paramount task in RNA interference research is to decipher the complex biology of cellular effectors, exemplified in humans by four pleiotropic Argonaute proteins (Ago1-Ago4). Here, we exploited DNA family shuffling, a molecular evolution technology, to generate chimeric Ago protein libraries for dissection of intricate phenotypes independently of prior structural knowledge. Through shuffling of human Ago2 and Ago3, we discovered two N-terminal motifs that govern RNA cleavage in concert with the PIWI domain. Structural modeling predicts an impact on protein rigidity and/or RNA-PIWI alignment, suggesting new mechanistic explanations for Ago3's slicing deficiency. Characterization of hybrid…

Models MolecularDNA ComplementaryProtein ConformationRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataDNA RecombinantPiwi-interacting RNASequence alignmentComputational biologyBiologyStructural BiologyMolecular evolutionRNA interferenceConsensus SequenceConsensus sequenceHumansAmino Acid SequenceEukaryotic Initiation FactorsRNA Processing Post-TranscriptionalRNA Small InterferingMolecular BiologyGene LibraryGeneticsSequence Homology Amino AcidRNADNA ShufflingArgonauteDNA shufflingProtein Structure TertiaryMicroRNAsPhenotypeArgonaute ProteinsRNA InterferenceDirected Molecular EvolutionSequence AlignmentNature structuralmolecular biology
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alpha 11beta 1 integrin recognizes the GFOGER sequence in interstitial collagens.

2002

The integrins alpha(1)beta(1), alpha(2)beta(1), alpha(10)beta(1), and alpha(11)beta(1) are referred to as a collagen receptor subgroup of the integrin family. Recently, both alpha(1)beta(1) and alpha(2)beta(1) integrins have been shown to recognize triple-helical GFOGER (where single letter amino acid nomenclature is used, O = hydroxyproline) or GFOGER-like motifs found in collagens, despite their distinct binding specificity for various collagen subtypes. In the present study we have investigated the mechanism whereby the latest member in the integrin family, alpha(11)beta(1), recognizes collagens using C2C12 cells transfected with alpha(11) cDNA and the bacterially expressed recombinant a…

Models MolecularIntegrinsDNA ComplementaryReceptors CollagenPhenylalanineIntegrinAmino Acid MotifsPlasma protein bindingBiochemistrylaw.inventionCollagen receptorMiceProtein structurelawCell AdhesionAnimalsHumansMagnesiumMolecular BiologyBinding selectivityCells Culturedchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyDose-Response Relationship DrugCell BiologyPrecipitin TestsRecombinant ProteinsAmino acidProtein Structure TertiaryKineticschemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinRecombinant DNACalciumCollagenPeptidesType I collagenProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Effects of confinement and external fields on structure and transport in colloidal dispersions in reduced dimensionality

2012

In this work, we focus on low-dimensional colloidal model systems, via simulation studies and also some complementary experiments, in order to elucidate the interplay between phase behavior, geometric structures and transport properties. In particular, we try to investigate the (nonlinear!) response of these very soft colloidal systems to various perturbations: uniform and uniaxial pressure, laser fields, shear due to moving boundaries and randomly quenched disorder.We study ordering phenomena on surfaces or in monolayers by Monte Carlo computer simulations of binary hard-disk mixtures, the influence of a substrate being modeled by an external potential. Weak external fields allow a control…

Models MolecularPhase transitionCondensed matter physicsChemistryMicrofluidicsMonte Carlo methodHard spherespacs:82.70.Dd; 05.40.Jc; 01.20.JaComputer simulation of liquid structureCondensed Matter PhysicsPhase TransitionLattice constantComplementary experimentsddc:540Brownian dynamicsCoulombGeneral Materials Scienceddc:530ColloidsBrownian motionMonte Carlo MethodBrownian motionMechanical Phenomena
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Strombine dehydrogenase in the demosponge Suberites domuncula: Characterization and kinetic properties of the enzyme crucial for anaerobic metabolism

2008

Previously, the cDNA and the respective gene for a presumed tauropine dehydrogenase (TaDH) from Suberites domuncula (GenBank accession nos. AM712888, AM712889) had been annotated. The conclusion that the sequences encode a TaDH had been inferred from the 68% identity with the TaDH protein from the marine demosponge Halichondria japonica. However, subsequent enzymatic assays shown here indicate that the presumed S. domuncula opine dehydrogenase is in fact a strombine dehydrogenase (StDH). The enzyme StDH is highly specific for glycine and is inhibited by an excess of the substrate pyruvate. Besides kinetic data, we report in this study also on the predicted tertiary and quaternary structure …

Models MolecularPhysiologyGlycineDehydrogenaseBiochemistrySubstrate SpecificityComplementary DNAPyruvic AcidAnimalsAnaerobiosisProtein Structure QuaternaryMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationOxidoreductases Acting on CH-NH Group DonorsStrombine dehydrogenasebiologyTauropine dehydrogenaseAnaerobic metabolism; Demospongiae; Opine dehydrogenase; Strombine dehydrogenase; Suberites domunculabiology.organism_classificationProtein Structure TertiarySuberites domunculaKineticsEnzymechemistryBiochemistryGlycineFemaleProtein quaternary structureProtein MultimerizationSuberites
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