Search results for "Structural Biology."

showing 10 items of 822 documents

VCD studies on cyclic peptides assembled from L-α-amino acids and a trans-2-aminocyclopentane- or trans-2-aminocyclohexane carboxylic acid.

2010

The increasing interest in peptidomimetics of biological relevance prompted us to synthesize a series of cyclic peptides comprising trans-2-aminocyclohexane carboxylic acid (Achc) or trans-2-aminocyclopentane carboxylic acid (Acpc). NMR experiments in combination with MD calculations were performed to investigate the three-dimensional structure of the cyclic peptides. These data were compared to the conformational information obtained by electronic circular dichroism (ECD) and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectroscopy. Experimental VCD spectra were compared to theoretical VCD spectra computed quantum chemically at B3LYP/6-31G(d) density functional theory (DFT) level. The good agreem…

Circular dichroismCyclohexanecarboxylic AcidsPeptidomimeticStereochemistryCarboxylic acidMolecular ConformationMolecular Dynamics SimulationBiochemistryelectronic circular dichroismPeptides CyclicMolecular dynamicsStructural BiologyDrug DiscoveryCycloleucineMolecular BiologyNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationCyclohexylaminesCircular DichroismOrganic Chemistrycyclic peptidestrans-2-aminocyclopentaneGeneral Medicinevibrational circular dichroismCyclic peptideNMRAmino acidtrans-2-aminocyclohexane carboxylic acidchemistryVibrational circular dichroismMolecular MedicineDensity functional theorycarboxylic acidPeptidomimeticsJournal of peptide science : an official publication of the European Peptide Society
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Roles of a conserved proline in the internal fusion peptide of Ebola glycoprotein

2004

AbstractThe structural determinants underlying the functionality of viral internal fusion peptides (IFPs) are not well understood. We have compared EBOwt (GAAIGLAWIPYFGPAAE), representing the IFP of the Ebola fusion protein GP, and EBOmut (GAAIGLAWIPYFGRAAE) derived from a non-functional mutant with conserved Pro537 substituted by Arg. P537R substitution did not abrogate peptide-membrane association, but interfered with the ability to induce bilayer destabilization. Structural determinations suggest that Pro537 is required to preserve a membrane-perturbing local conformation in apolar environments.

Circular dichroismEbola glycoproteinProtein insertion into membranesProlinePeptide conformationMutantMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsBiochemistrySendai viruschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyGeneticsProlineAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyPeptide sequencePOPCchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryProteïnes de membranaCell BiologyEbolavirusFusion proteinPeptide FragmentsPeptide ConformationViral fusion peptideBiochemistryAvian Sarcoma VirusesLiposomesHIV-1PèptidsGlycoproteinPeptide–lipid interactionViral Fusion ProteinsFEBS Letters
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Novel atrazine-binding biomimetics inspired to the D1 protein from the photosystem II of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

2020

Biomimetic design represents an emerging field for improving knowledge of natural molecules, as well as to project novel artificial tools with specific functions for biosensing. Effective strategies have been exploited to design artificial bioreceptors, taking inspiration from complex supramolecular assemblies. Among them, size-minimization strategy sounds promising to provide bioreceptors with tuned sensitivity, stability, and selectivity, through the ad hoc manipulation of chemical species at the molecular scale. Herein, a novel biomimetic peptide enabling herbicide binding was designed bioinspired to the D1 protein of the Photosystem II of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The D1…

Circular dichroismPhotosystem IIProtein ConformationSupramolecular chemistryPlastoquinoneChlamydomonas reinhardtiiPeptide02 engineering and technologyMolecular Dynamics SimulationBiochemistryFluorescence spectroscopy03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyBiomimeticsAmino Acid SequencePhotosynthesisMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologychemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesbiologyRational designphotosystem IIPhotosystem II Protein ComplexGeneral Medicine021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classificationSpectrometry FluorescencechemistryArtificial peptides Atrazine sensing Rational designBiophysicsThermodynamicsAtrazine0210 nano-technologyPeptidesChlamydomonas reinhardtiiInternational journal of biological macromolecules
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HPLC study on the ‘history’ dependence of gramicidin A conformation in phospholipid model membranes

1989

AbstractA novel HPLC methodology for the study of gramicidin A reconstituted in model membranes has been tested in comparison with circular dichroism data. It is shown that this chromatographic technique not only corroborates most of the recent spectroscopic results but allows one to explain them in terms of mass fractions of different actual conformational species of GA in the phospholipid assemblies. In particular, the dependence of the inserted peptide configuration on the organic solvent and other parameters involved in the ‘history’ of the sample preparation and handling has been analyzed by HPLC in two phospholipid model systems: small unilamellar vesicles and micelles. Moreover, a sl…

Circular dichroismProtein ConformationMolecular ConformationBiophysicsPhospholipidPeptideBiochemistryHigh-performance liquid chromatographyMicellechemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyGramicidin A conformationGeneticsGramicidin ASample preparationMolecular BiologyChromatography High Pressure Liquidchemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyChemistryCircular DichroismGramicidinMembranes ArtificialCell BiologyModels TheoreticalCDMembraneLiposomesPhospholipid vesiclePhosphatidylcholinesHPLCFEBS Letters
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How to untie G-quadruplex knots and why?

2021

International audience; For over two decades, the prime objective of the chemical biology community studying G-quadruplexes (G4s) has been to use chemicals to interact with and stabilize G4s in cells to obtain mechanistic interpretations. This strategy has been undoubtedly successful, as demonstrated by recent advances. However, these insights have also led to a fundamental rethinking of G4-targeting strategies: due to the prevalence of G4s in the human genome, transcriptome, and ncRNAome (collectively referred to as the G4ome), and their involvement in human diseases, should we continue developing G4-stabilizing ligands or should we invest in designing molecular tools to unfold G4s? Here, …

Clinical BiochemistryChemical biologyComputational biology[CHIM.THER]Chemical Sciences/Medicinal ChemistryBiology010402 general chemistryG-quadruplex01 natural sciencesBiochemistry03 medical and health sciencesgenetic diseasesDrug DiscoveryHumansMolecular Biologyunfolding030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health sciencesG-quadruplex[SDV.BBM.BS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Structural Biology [q-bio.BM]Genome Humanhelicasesgenetic instability0104 chemical sciencesG-Quadruplexessmall moleculesMolecular Medicine
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GenClust: A genetic algorithm for clustering gene expression data

2005

Abstract Background Clustering is a key step in the analysis of gene expression data, and in fact, many classical clustering algorithms are used, or more innovative ones have been designed and validated for the task. Despite the widespread use of artificial intelligence techniques in bioinformatics and, more generally, data analysis, there are very few clustering algorithms based on the genetic paradigm, yet that paradigm has great potential in finding good heuristic solutions to a difficult optimization problem such as clustering. Results GenClust is a new genetic algorithm for clustering gene expression data. It has two key features: (a) a novel coding of the search space that is simple, …

Clustering high-dimensional dataDNA ComplementaryComputer scienceRand indexCorrelation clusteringOligonucleotidesEvolutionary algorithmlcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticscomputer.software_genreBiochemistryPattern Recognition AutomatedBiclusteringOpen Reading FramesStructural BiologyCURE data clustering algorithmConsensus clusteringGenetic algorithmCluster AnalysisCluster analysislcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologyGene expression data Clustering Evolutionary algorithmsOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisModels StatisticalBrown clusteringHeuristicGene Expression ProfilingApplied MathematicsComputational BiologyComputer Science Applicationslcsh:Biology (General)Gene Expression RegulationMutationlcsh:R858-859.7Data miningSequence AlignmentcomputerSoftwareAlgorithmsBMC Bioinformatics
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Comparative genomics and protein domain graph analyses link ubiquitination and RNA metabolism.

2006

The human gene parkin, known to cause familial Parkinson disease, as well as several other genes, likely involved in other neurodegenerative diseases or in cancer, encode proteins of the RBR family of ubiquitin ligases. Here, we describe the structural diversity of the RBR family in order to infer their functional roles. Of particular interest is a relationship detected between RBR-mediated ubiquitination and RNA metabolism: a few RBR proteins contain RNA binding domains and DEAH-box RNA helicase domains. Global protein domain graph analyses demonstrate that this connection is not RBR-specific, but instead many other proteins contain both ubiquitination and RNA-related domains. These protei…

Comparative genomicsGeneticsbiologyProtein ConformationUbiquitinUbiquitin-Protein LigasesProtein domainMolecular Sequence DataRNAGenomicsF-box proteinRNA Helicase AParkinUbiquitin ligaseProtein Structure TertiaryStructural Biologybiology.proteinAnimalsCluster AnalysisHumansRNAMolecular BiologyGeneAlgorithmsJournal of molecular biology
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Enzymatic alteration of C1q, the collagen-like subcomponent of the first component of complement, leads to cross-reactivity with type II collagen

1988

AbstractNative serum C1q, the collagenous-like subcomponent of the first component of complement, is not recognized by polyclonal anti-collagen type II antibodies. However, when purified C1q was subjected to limited proteolysis by collagenase it showed antigenic cross-reactivity with collagen type II. The same cross-reactivity was observed with hemolytically active C1q in synovial fluids of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), whereas C1q from synovial fluids of patients with osteoarthritis (OA), villo-nodular synovitis and ankylosing spondylitis was not recognized by this antibody. However, incubation of synovial fluid C1q of OA patients with synovial fluid leucocytes from RA patients …

Complement Activating EnzymesCollagenaseComplementBiophysicsType II collagenEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assaychemical and pharmacologic phenomenaOsteoarthritisBiochemistryAntibodiesArthritis Rheumatoidfluids and secretionsAntigenComplement C1immune system diseasesStructural BiologySynovitisOsteoarthritisSynovial FluidGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansSynovial fluidSpondylitis AnkylosingAntigensRheumatoid arthritisskin and connective tissue diseasesMolecular BiologyC1qAutoantibodiesSheepSynovitisbiologyChemistryComplement C1qAntibodies MonoclonalCell Biologymedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyMicrobial CollagenasePolyclonal antibodiesImmunologyCollagenasebiology.proteinCollagenAntibodyGranulocytesmedicine.drugFEBS Letters
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The reconstitution of human C1, the first complement component Binding of C1r and C1s to C1q influences the C1q conformation

1981

Complement Activating EnzymesMacromolecular SubstancesProtein ConformationBiophysicsPlasma protein bindingBiochemistryProtein structureComplement C1Structural BiologyGeneticsHumansTrypsinMolecular BiologyComplement C1qComplement C1sEnzyme PrecursorsComplement C1sComplement C1rChemistryComponent (thermodynamics)Complement C1qComplement component 7Immunoglobulin Fc FragmentsCell BiologyHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationImmunoglobulin Fc FragmentsComplement (complexity)BiophysicsProtein BindingFEBS Letters
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Pb(II) adsorption by a novel activated carbon - alginate composite material. A kinetic and equilibrium study.

2016

The adsorption capacity of an activated carbon – calcium alginate composite material (ACAA-Ca) has been tested with the aim of developing a new and more efficient adsorbent material to remove Pb(II) ion from aqueous solution. The study was carried out at pH = 5, in NaCl medium and in the ionic strength range 0.1–0.75 mol L−1. Differential Pulse Anodic Stripping Voltammetry (DP-ASV) technique was used to check the amount of Pb(II) ion removed during kinetic and equilibrium experiments. Different kinetic (pseudo first order, pseudo second order and Vermuelen) and equilibrium (Langmuir and Freundlich) models were used to fit experimental data, and were statistically compared. Calcium alginate …

Composite materialThermogravimetric analysisLangmuirCalcium alginateMaterials scienceAlginatesCations DivalentActivated carbonInorganic chemistry02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesBiochemistryWater PurificationStructural Biology.chemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionGlucuronic AcidStructural BiologymedicineHumansFreundlich equationComposite materialMolecular Biology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAqueous solutionDrinking WaterHexuronic AcidsAlginateOsmolar ConcentrationTemperatureGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion Concentration021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPb(II)Anodic stripping voltammetryKineticschemistryLeadCharcoalAdsorption0210 nano-technologyWater Pollutants ChemicalActivated carbonmedicine.drugInternational journal of biological macromolecules
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