Search results for "Protein subunit"

showing 10 items of 243 documents

Two α subunits and one β subunit of meprin zinc-endopeptidases are differentially expressed in the zebrafish Danio rerio

2007

Abstract Meprins are members of the astacin family of metalloproteases expressed in epithelial tissues, intestinal leukocytes and certain cancer cells. In mammals, there are two homologous subunits, which form complex glycosylated disulfide-bonded homo- and heterooligomers. Both human meprin α and meprin β cleave several basement membrane components, suggesting a role in epithelial differentiation and cell migration. There is also evidence that meprin β is involved in immune defence owing to its capability of activating interleukin-1β and the diminished mobility of intestinal leukocytes in meprin β-knockout mice. Here we show for the first time by reverse transcription PCR, immunoblotting a…

Molecular Sequence DataClinical BiochemistryDanioBiochemistryCatalysisChromosomesConserved sequenceAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceZebrafishConserved SequencePhylogenyZebrafishRegulation of gene expressionMessenger RNAbiologyMetalloendopeptidasesbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyProtein Structure TertiaryCell biologyProtein SubunitsZincGene Expression RegulationMicroscopy FluorescenceStructural Homology Proteinbiology.proteinAstacinSequence AlignmentATP synthase alpha/beta subunitsbchm
researchProduct

Complete Sequence of the 24-mer Hemocyanin of the TarantulaEurypelma californicum

2000

Hemocyanins are large oligomeric respiratory proteins found in many arthropods and molluscs. The hemocyanin of the tarantula Eurypelma californicum is a 24-mer protein complex with molecular mass of 1,726,459 Da that consists of seven different polypeptides (a–g), each occupying a distinct position within the native molecule. Here we report the complete molecular structure of the E. californicumhemocyanin as deduced from the corresponding cDNAs. This represents the first complex arthropod hemocyanin to be completely sequenced. The different subunits display 52–66% amino acid sequence identity. Within the subunits, the central domain, which bears the active center with the copper-binding sit…

Molecular massStereochemistryProtein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentHemocyaninCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyRandom hexamerBiochemistryComplete sequencePhylogeneticsmedicineHomology modelingMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceJournal of Biological Chemistry
researchProduct

9 Å cryo-EM structure and molecular model of a gastropod hemocyanin didecamer (KLH1) reveals the architecture of the asymmetric collar

2008

Hemocyanins are blue copper proteins that transport oxygen in the hemolymph of many arthropods and molluscs. Molluscan hemocyanins are decamers, didecamers or multidecamers of a 350–400 kDa polypeptide subunit that is subdivided into seven or eight different functional units (FUs, each with a single copper active site). The quaternary structure is a semi-hollow cylinder consisting of a wall and a collar. Recently, we published a 9 A cryo-EM structure and molecular model of a cephalopod hemocyanin decamer (NpH, from Nautilus pompilius) that answered many hitherto unsolved questions concerning the quaternary structure of molluscan hemocyanin. Notably, it revealed the twisted pathway of the 10…

Molecular modelbiologyChemistryStereochemistryCopper proteinmedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitActive siteHemocyaninAnatomybiology.organism_classificationCephalopodHemolymphbiology.proteinmedicineProtein quaternary structure
researchProduct

A Novel CCT5 Missense Variant Associated with Early Onset Motor Neuropathy

2020

Diseases associated with acquired or genetic defects in members of the chaperoning system (CS) are increasingly found and have been collectively termed chaperonopathies. Illustrative instances of genetic chaperonopathies involve the genes for chaperonins of Groups I (e.g., Heat shock protein 60, Hsp60) and II (e.g., Chaperonin Containing T-Complex polypeptide 1, CCT). Examples of the former are hypomyelinating leukodystrophy 4 (HLD4 or MitCHAP60) and hereditary spastic paraplegia (SPG13). A distal sensory mutilating neuropathy has been linked to a mutation [p.(His147Arg)] in subunit 5 of the CCT5 gene. Here, we describe a new possibly pathogenic variant [p.(Leu224Val)] of the same subunit b…

Mutation.Hereditary spastic paraplegiaProtein subunitchaperoning systemMutation MissenseBiologyMolecular Dynamics Simulationmedicine.disease_causeCatalysisArticleChaperoninInorganic Chemistrylcsh:ChemistryHeat shock proteinmedicineMissense mutationHumansPhysical and Theoretical Chemistrymotor neuropathyAge of OnsetGenetic variantMolecular BiologyGenelcsh:QH301-705.5SpectroscopyExome sequencingMyelin SheathGenetic chaperonopathieGeneticsMutationgenetic variantsOrganic ChemistryInfant NewbornGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePhenotypeComputer Science ApplicationsCCT5; chaperoning system; chaperonins; genetic chaperonopathies; genetic variants; motor neuropathy; mutationPhenotypelcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999chaperoninsFemaleCCT5mutationHereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathygenetic chaperonopathiesChaperonin Containing TCP-1International Journal of Molecular Sciences
researchProduct

Neuronal Nicotinic Receptors in the Locust Locusta migratoria

1998

We have identified five cDNA clones that encode nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subunits expressed in the nervous system of the locust Locusta migratoria. Four of the subunits are ligand-binding α subunits, and the other is a structural β subunit. The existence of at least one more nAChR gene, probably encoding a β subunit, is indicated. Based on Northern analysis and in situ hybridization, the five subunit genes are expressed. locα1, locα3, andlocβ1 are the most abundant subunits and are expressed in similar areas of the head ganglia and retina of the adult locust. Because Locα3 binds α-bungarotoxin with high affinity, it may form a homomeric nAChR subtype such as the mammalian α7…

Nervous systemGene isoformmedicine.medical_specialtyanimal structuresbiologyProtein subunitCell BiologyIn situ hybridizationbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryCell biologyNicotinic acetylcholine receptormedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologynervous systemInternal medicineMushroom bodiesmedicineHomomericsense organsMolecular BiologyLocustJournal of Biological Chemistry
researchProduct

Conformational changes in acetylcholine binding protein investigated by temperature accelerated molecular dynamics.

2014

Despite the large number of studies available on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, a complete account of the mechanistic aspects of their gating transition in response to ligand binding still remains elusive. As a first step toward dissecting the transition mechanism by accelerated sampling techniques, we study the ligand-induced conformational changes of the acetylcholine binding protein (AChBP), a widely accepted model for the full receptor extracellular domain. Using unbiased Molecular Dynamics (MD) and Temperature Accelerated Molecular Dynamics (TAMD) simulations we investigate the AChBP transition between the apo and the agonist-bound state. In long standard MD simulations, both confo…

Nicotinic Acetylcholine ReceptorsProtein ConformationGatingMolecular DynamicsLigandsBiochemistryBiophysics SimulationsIon ChannelsMolecular dynamicsAcetylcholine bindingComputational ChemistryBiochemical SimulationsNicotinic AgonistsBiomacromolecule-Ligand InteractionsBiochemistry SimulationsMultidisciplinaryHydrogen bondChemistryPhysicsQTemperatureRLigand (biochemistry)nicotinic receptor molecular dynamics tamd acethylcholine binding proteinChemistryNicotinic agonistBiochemistryMedicineBiophysic Al SimulationsResearch ArticleProtein BindingProtein subunitScienceBiophysicsMolecular Dynamics SimulationProtein ChemistryStatistical MechanicsChemical BiologyAnimalsBiologyAcetylcholine receptorBinding SitesProteinsComputational BiologyHydrogen BondingSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Protein SubunitsMolluscaAcetylcholine ReceptorsBiophysicsLobelineCarrier ProteinsPLoS ONE
researchProduct

Intravitreal delivery of AAV-NDI1 provides functional benefit in a murine model of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy.

2012

Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrially inherited form of visual dysfunction caused by mutations in several genes encoding subunits of the mitochondrial respiratory NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex (complex I). Development of gene therapies for LHON has been impeded by genetic heterogeneity and the need to deliver therapies to the mitochondria of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), the cells primarily affected in LHON. The therapy under development entails intraocular injection of a nuclear yeast gene NADH-quinone oxidoreductase (NDI1) that encodes a single subunit complex I equivalent and as such is mutation independent. NDI1 is imported into mitochondria due to an e…

Oxidoreductase complexRetinal Ganglion CellsretinaSaccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinsgenetic structuresGenetic enhancementProtein subunitGenetic VectorsOptic Atrophy Hereditary LeberBiologyMitochondrionmedicine.disease_causeRetinal ganglionArticleMiceLHONGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansGenetics (clinical)GeneticsRetinaMutationElectron Transport Complex IGenetic heterogeneityAAVDependovirusgene therapyeye diseasesmitochondriaDisease Models AnimalOptic AtrophyNDI1medicine.anatomical_structureIntravitreal InjectionsCancer researchsense organsMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsEuropean journal of human genetics : EJHG
researchProduct

Modification of the proteolytic fragmentation pattern upon oxidation of cysteines from ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase.

2003

The proteolytic susceptibility of the native CO 2 -fixing photosynthetic enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39, Rubisco) has been shown to increase in vitro after oxidative treatments that affect cysteine thiols. A limited incubation of oxidized (pretreated with the disulfide cystamine) Rubisco from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with subtilisin or proteinase K generated fragments of molecular mass about 53 kDa (band I in SDS-PAGE) and 47 kDa (band II) derived from the large subunit (55 kDa) of the enzyme. In contrast, proteolysis of the reduced Rubisco (pretreated with the free thiol cysteamine) produced only the 53 kDa band. The same fragmentation pattern was repr…

OxygenaseProtein subunitRibulose-Bisphosphate CarboxylaseMolecular Sequence DataBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundEndopeptidasesAnimalsEuglena gracilisAmino Acid SequenceCysteineConserved SequenceRibulose 15-bisphosphatebiologyRibuloseHydrolysisfungiRuBisCOSubtilisinPeptide FragmentsKineticsProtein SubunitschemistryBiochemistryModels Chemicalbiology.proteinProtein quaternary structureHoloenzymesOxidation-ReductionProtein Processing Post-TranslationalChlamydomonas reinhardtiiCysteineBiochemistry
researchProduct

Topology of the 10 subunits within the decamer of KLH, the hemocyanin of the marine gastropod Megathura crenulata.

2002

Immunoelectron microscopy has been performed using negatively stained immune complexes of keyhole limpet hemocyanin isoform 1 (KLH1) decamers and a functional unit-specific monoclonal antibody anti-KLH1-c1. The antibody links hemocyanin molecules at both the collar and the collarless edge of the decamer, indicating a peripheral localization of functional units c. In isoform 2 (KLH2) the positions of functional units c have been identified with the peanut agglutinin (PNA), which has previously been shown to exclusively bind to KLH2-c. Ferritin linked to PNA was used to visualize labeled molecules electron microscopically. The pattern of labeling also indicates a peripheral localization of th…

Peanut agglutininGene isoformModels MolecularImmunoelectron microscopymedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaHemocyaninBiologyMegathura crenulatabiology.organism_classificationCrystallography X-RayMolecular biologyNegative stainMolecular WeightMicroscopy ElectronProtein SubunitsStructural BiologyMolluscaHemocyaninsmedicinebiology.proteinAnimalsProtein Structure QuaternaryKeyhole limpet hemocyaninJournal of structural biology
researchProduct

Novel Analogs and Stereoisomers of the Marine Toxin Neodysiherbaine with Specificity for Kainate Receptors

2007

Antagonists for kainate receptors (KARs), a family of glutamategated ion channels, are efficacious in a number of animal models of neuropathologies, including epilepsy, migraine pain, and anxiety. To produce molecules with novel selectivities for kainate receptors, we generated three sets of analogs related to the natural marine convulsant neodysiherbaine (neoDH), and we characterized their pharmacological profiles. Radioligand displacement assays with recombinant alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) and KARs demonstrated that functional groups at two positions on the neoDH molecule are critical pharmacological determinants; only binding to the glutamate receptor …

PharmacologyAgonistAlaninemedicine.drug_classChemistryProtein subunitStereoisomerismKainate receptorAMPA receptorBridged Bicyclo Compounds HeterocyclicLigand (biochemistry)ArticleCell LineReceptors Kainic AcidBiochemistryConvulsantmedicineHumansMolecular MedicineMarine ToxinsReceptorMarine toxinJournal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
researchProduct