Search results for "Protein molecules"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

SP0027 Biosimilars: Potential Clinical Differences and European Regulatory Aspects

2014

Although successful drugs, the use of anti-TNFs is limited by their high cost, and in the present climate of economic difficulty, there is pressure to find alternatives that reproduce their effects at a lower price. Due to their large molecular size and structural complexity, anti-TNFs are impossible to duplicate, unlike smaller, chemically-generated compounds, which can be copied. However, unlike generics, biosimilars are similar rather than identical to the original drugs. Determining the level of similarity that guarantees a comparable efficacy and safety represents a new test for the pharmacological market. Biosimilars of smaller biological molecules, such as somatotropin, EPO and GCSF …

Drugmedicine.medical_specialtyProtein moleculesbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectImmunologyBiosimilarPharmacologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyInfliximabClinical trialRheumatologyMolecular sizePharmacovigilancemedicineImmunology and AllergyIntensive care medicinebusinessPaediatric patientsmedicine.drugmedia_commonAnnals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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Protein search for multiple targets on DNA

2016

Protein-DNA interactions are crucial for all biological processes. One of the most important fundamental aspects of these interactions is the process of protein searching and recognizing specific binding sites on DNA. A large number of experimental and theoretical investigations have been devoted to uncovering the molecular description of these phenomena, but many aspects of the mechanisms of protein search for the targets on DNA remain not well understood. One of the most intriguing problems is the role of multiple targets in protein search dynamics. Using a recently developed theoretical framework we analyze this question in detail. Our method is based on a discrete-state stochastic appro…

Models MolecularQuantitative Biology - Subcellular ProcessesComputer scienceProcess (engineering)Monte Carlo methodBiophysicsGeneral Physics and Astronomy03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinePosition (vector)Computer SimulationStatistical physicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySubcellular Processes (q-bio.SC)030304 developmental biologyStochastic Processes0303 health sciencesBinding SitesModels GeneticProtein moleculesProteinsDNAchemistryFOS: Biological sciencesMonte Carlo Method030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDNAProtein BindingThe Journal of Chemical Physics
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Human neuroglobin: crystals and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis

2002

Neuroglobin, a recently discovered member of the haemoglobin superfamily, is primarily expressed in the brain of humans and other vertebrates, where it has been proposed to enhance O(2) supply in response to hypoxia or ischaemia, protecting the neuron from hypoxic injury. Neuroglobin is the first example of a vertebrate haemoglobin in which a hexacoordinate haem geometry has been detected. A triple mutant (replacing three Cys residues) of human neuroglobin (151 amino acids) has been expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and crystallized in two crystal forms, the best of which diffracts to 1.95 A resolution using synchrotron radiation. The crystals belong to space group P2(1), with unit-ce…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCrystallographyProtein moleculesResolution (electron density)HexacoordinateNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsGeneral MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causeRecombinant ProteinsAmino acidGlobinsCrystalCrystallographychemistryX-Ray DiffractionStructural BiologyNeuroglobinX-ray crystallographymedicineHumansEscherichia coli
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Enzymatic and Metabolic Studies on Isolated Nuclei

1957

Publisher Summary In protein synthesis it is important to distinguish between the net synthesis of protein, as measured by an increased amount of protein nitrogen or by the formation of proteins with specific biological properties, such as enzymatically and immunologically active proteins, and exchange reactions, which may be observed in isotope experiments and, which reflect the replacement of an amino acid in a protein molecule with one from its environment. Incorporation of an amino acid into a protein can occur only during net synthesis; both types of reaction occur in similar systems. In true synthesis of protein it is usually difficult to obtain synthesis of a specific entity, especia…

chemistry.chemical_classificationEnzymeProtein moleculeschemistryBiochemistryBiological propertyProtein biosynthesisMoleculeA proteinBiologyProtein nitrogenAmino acid
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