Search results for "DOP"

showing 10 items of 4870 documents

The GTP- and Phospholipid-Binding Protein TTD14 Regulates Trafficking of the TRPL Ion Channel in Drosophila Photoreceptor Cells

2015

Recycling of signaling proteins is a common phenomenon in diverse signaling pathways. In photoreceptors of Drosophila, light absorption by rhodopsin triggers a phospholipase Cβ-mediated opening of the ion channels transient receptor potential (TRP) and TRP-like (TRPL) and generates the visual response. The signaling proteins are located in a plasma membrane compartment called rhabdomere. The major rhodopsin (Rh1) and TRP are predominantly localized in the rhabdomere in light and darkness. In contrast, TRPL translocates between the rhabdomeral plasma membrane in the dark and a storage compartment in the cell body in the light, from where it can be recycled to the plasma membrane upon subsequ…

RhodopsinCancer Researchlcsh:QH426-470LightGTP'BiologyEye03 medical and health sciencesTransient receptor potential channelTransient Receptor Potential Channels0302 clinical medicineGTP-binding protein regulatorsGTP-Binding ProteinsGeneticsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIon channel030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesCell MembraneMembrane ProteinsDarknessRhabdomereTransport proteinCell biologylcsh:GeneticsProtein TransportDrosophila melanogasterMembrane proteinRhodopsinMutationbiology.proteinPhotoreceptor Cells Invertebrate030217 neurology & neurosurgerySignal TransductionResearch ArticlePLOS Genetics
researchProduct

Proton Transfer and Protein Conformation Dynamics in Photosensitive Proteins by Time-resolved Step-scan Fourier-transform Infrared Spectroscopy

2014

Monitoring the dynamics of protonation and protein backbone conformation changes during the function of a protein is an essential step towards understanding its mechanism. Protonation and conformational changes affect the vibration pattern of amino acid side chains and of the peptide bond, respectively, both of which can be probed by infrared (IR) difference spectroscopy. For proteins whose function can be repetitively and reproducibly triggered by light, it is possible to obtain infrared difference spectra with (sub)microsecond resolution over a broad spectral range using the step-scan Fourier transform infrared technique. With -10(2)-10(3) repetitions of the photoreaction, the minimum num…

RhodopsinMaterials scienceproton transferProtein ConformationGeneral Chemical EngineeringBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryInfrared spectroscopymembrane proteinsProtonationtime-resolved spectroscopyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologychannelrhodopsinattenuated total reflectionProtein structureSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredFourier transform infrared spectroscopyinfrared spectroscopySpectroscopyIssue 88biologyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybacteriorhodopsinGeneral Neurosciencesingular value decompositionstep-scanProteinsEspectroscòpia infrarojaBacteriorhodopsinPhotochemical ProcessesBacteriorhodopsinsAttenuated total reflectionprotein dynamicsbiology.proteinProtonsTime-resolved spectroscopyProteïnesJournal of Visualized Experiments
researchProduct

Rhodopsin transport in the membrane of the connecting cilium of mammalian photoreceptor cells

2000

The transport of the photopigment rhodopsin from the inner segment to the photosensitive outer segment of vertebrate photoreceptor cells has been one of the main remaining mysteries in photoreceptor cell biology. Because of the lack of any direct evidence for the pathway through the photoreceptor cilium, alternative extracellular pathways have been proposed. Our primary aim in the present study was to resolve rhodopsin trafficking from the inner to the outer segment. We demonstrate, predominantly by high-sensitive immunoelectron microscopy, that rhodopsin is also densely packed in the membrane of the photoreceptor connecting cilium. Present prominent labeling of rhodopsin in the ciliary mem…

RhodopsinOpsingenetic structuresPhotoreceptor Connecting CiliumImmunoblottingMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesMyosinsBiologyPhotoreceptor cellRats Sprague-DawleyMiceRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsStructural BiologymedicineAnimalsHumansPhotopigmentAmino Acid SequenceCiliaMicroscopy ImmunoelectronCiliary membraneCiliumRod OpsinsAntibodies MonoclonalDyneinsBiological TransportCell BiologyMiddle AgedRod Cell Outer SegmentActin cytoskeletonImmunohistochemistryActinseye diseasesRatsCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLmedicine.anatomical_structureRhodopsinMyosin VIIabiology.proteinCattleFemalesense organsRetinitis PigmentosaCell Motility and the Cytoskeleton
researchProduct

Climatic oscillations triggered post-Messinian speciation of Western Palearctic brown frogs (Amphibia, Anura, Ranidae)

2003

Abstract Oscillating glacial cycles over the past 2.4 million years are proposed to have had a major impact on the diversity of contemporary species communities. We used mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data to infer phylogenetic relationships within Western Palearctic brown frogs and to test the influence of Pliocene and Pleistocene climatic changes on their evolution. We sequenced 1976 bp of the mitochondrial genes 16S rRNA and cytochrome b and of the nuclear rhodopsin gene for all current species and subspecies. Based on an established allozyme clock for Western Palearctic water frogs and substitution rate constancy among water frogs and brown frogs, we calibrated a molecular clock…

RhodopsinRanidaeClimateLineage (evolution)Rana italicaRana arvalisDNA MitochondrialPolymerase Chain ReactionEvolution MolecularRNA Ribosomal 16SGeneticsVicarianceAnimalsProtein IsoformsMolecular clockMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBase SequencebiologyEcologyDNACytochrome b Groupbiology.organism_classificationRana dalmatinaRana latasteiRana graeca
researchProduct

Peripherin-2 couples rhodopsin to the CNG channel in outer segments of rod photoreceptors.

2014

Outer segments (OS) of rod photoreceptors are cellular compartments specialized in the conversion of light into electrical signals. This process relies on the light-triggered change in the intracellular levels of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which in turn controls the activity of cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels in the rod OS plasma membrane. The rod CNG channel is a macromolecular complex that in its core harbors the ion-conducting CNGA1 and CNGB1a subunits. To identify additional proteins of the complex that interact with the CNGB1a core subunit we applied affinity purification of mouse retinal proteins followed by mass spectrometry. In combination with in vitro and in viv…

Rhodopsingenetic structuresImmunoelectron microscopyProtein subunitPeripherinsCyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation ChannelsNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyRetinaCell membraneMiceRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsRetinitis pigmentosaGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansPeripherin 2Molecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)General MedicineAnatomyRetinal Photoreceptor Cell Outer Segmentmedicine.diseaseProtein Structure TertiaryTransmembrane domainmedicine.anatomical_structureFörster resonance energy transferRhodopsinbiology.proteinBiophysicssense organsRetinitis PigmentosaProtein Binding
researchProduct

Differential expression and interaction with the visual G-protein transducin of centrin isoforms in mammalian photoreceptor cells.

2004

Photoisomerization of rhodopsin activates a heterotrimeric G-protein cascade leading to closure of cGMP-gated channels and hyperpolarization of photoreceptor cells. Massive translocation of the visual G-protein transducin, Gt, between subcellular compartments contributes to long term adaptation of photoreceptor cells. Ca(2+)-triggered assembly of a centrin-transducin complex in the connecting cilium of photoreceptor cells may regulate these transducin translocations. Here we demonstrate expression of all four known, closely related centrin isoforms in the mammalian retina. Interaction assays revealed binding potential of the four centrin isoforms to Gtbetagamma heterodimers. High affinity b…

Rhodopsingenetic structuresLightBlotting WesternBiologyBiochemistryRetinaRats Sprague-DawleyMiceCalcium-binding proteinHeterotrimeric G proteinmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsScattering RadiationCiliaTransducinMicroscopy ImmunoelectronMolecular BiologyCyclic GMPGlutathione TransferaseCentrosomeRetinaChromatographyDose-Response Relationship DrugReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionCiliumCalcium-Binding ProteinsCell BiologySequence Analysis DNARod Cell Outer SegmentRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyRatsMice Inbred C57BLKineticsProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy FluorescenceRhodopsinCentrosomeCentrinbiology.proteinCalciumCattleElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gelsense organsTransducinProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
researchProduct

Estudio de los mecanismos moleculares de estrés oxidativo, disfunción mitocondrial, estrés de retículo endoplasmático y autofagia en leucocitos de pa…

2015

Introducción: La diabetes mellitus tipo 2 (DM2) se presenta como un cuadro clínico que incluye diversas alteraciones en el metabolismo, incluyendo hiperglicemia, resistencia a insulina, dislipidemia e inflamación crónica de bajo grado. Supone un gran problema a nivel mundial dada su creciente incidencia y las complicaciones deletéreas que conlleva, principalmente en el sistema cardiovascular. El principal factor determinante de DM2 es la obesidad. A medida que aumenta el índice de masa corporal se desarrolla resistencia a la insulina lo que finalmente originará una pérdida del control homeostático de la glucosa. Entre las principales complicaciones vasculares de la diabetes están por una pa…

Riesgo cardiovascularUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAAutofagiaEstrés oxidativoLeucocitosDisfunción mitocondrial:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]Diabetes tipo 2Estrés de retículo endoplasmático
researchProduct

Synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of several ring-contracted amantadine analogs

2008

Graphical abstract Several bisnoradamantylamines and noradamantylamines have been synthesized and their antiviral, trypanocidal, NMDA receptor antagonist, and dopamine reuptake inhibitory activities have been studied.

RimantadineStereochemistryDopamineeducationClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical Sciencemacromolecular substancesPharmacologymedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsReceptors N-Methyl-D-AspartateBiochemistryChemical synthesisArticleInhibitory Concentration 50DogsPolycyclic compoundMemantineTrypanosomiasisDopamineDrug DiscoveryAmantadinemedicineInfluenza A virusAnimalsNMDA receptor antagonistMolecular BiologyCells Culturedchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryOrganic ChemistryAmantadinePolycyclic cage compoundsBiological activityInfluenzanervous systemInfluenza A virusMolecular MedicineNMDA receptormedicine.drugBioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry
researchProduct

A non-stationary one-ring scattering model

2013

This paper introduces a non-stationary one-ring scattering model in which the mobile station (MS) can move along a straight line from the ring's center to the border of the ring. This movement results in a time-variant angle-of-arrival (AOA), which is modeled by a stochastic process. We derive the first-order density of the AOA process in closed form. Subsequently, a closed-form expression is provided for the local power spectral density (PSD) of the channel. We also formulate the local autocorrelation function (ACF) of the complex channel gain in integral form, from which a highly accurate closed-form approximation is derived. Furthermore, the average Doppler shift and the Doppler spread o…

Ring (mathematics)Scatteringbusiness.industryStochastic processMathematical analysisAutocorrelationSpectral densitysymbols.namesakeMobile stationsymbolsTelecommunicationsbusinessDoppler effectCommunication channelMathematics2013 IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC)
researchProduct

Severity of Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis and Risk of Ipsilateral Hemispheric Ischaemic Events: Results from the ACSRS Study

2005

Objectives. This study determines the risk of ipsilateral ischaemic neurological events in relation to the degree of asymptomatic carotid stenosis and other risk factors. Methods. Patients (n = 1115) with asymptomatic internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis greater than 50% in relation to the bulb diameter were followed up for a period of 6-84 (mean 37.1) months. Stenosis was graded using duplex, and clinical and biochemical risk factors were recorded. Results. The relationship between ICA stenosis and event rate is linear when stenosis is expressed by the ECST method, but S-shaped if expressed by the NASCET method. In addition to the ECST grade of stenosis (RR 1.6; 95% CI 1.21-2.15), histor…

Riskmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentCarotid StenosiPredictive Value of TestCarotid endarterectomySeverity of Illness IndexAsymptomaticBrain Ischemiachemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrovascular Accidentmedicine.arteryInternal medicineSeverity of illnessNASCETMED/22 - CHIRURGIA VASCOLAREmedicineCarotidStenosisMedicine(all)Ultrasonography Doppler DuplexCreatininebusiness.industryRisk FactorIncidence (epidemiology)medicine.diseasemajor clinical studyUltrasonography Duplex DopplerAsymptomaticStenosischemistryPredictive value of testsCardiologySurgeryECSTRadiologyInternal carotid arterymedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessHumanEuropean Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery
researchProduct