Search results for "Structural Biology."

showing 10 items of 822 documents

Conformational investigation of α, β‐dehydropeptides. XI. Molecular and crystal structure of Ac‐(Z )‐ΔPhe‐NMe2 as compared to those of related molecu…

2003

A series of three homologous dimethyldiamides Ac-(Z)-ΔPhe-NMe2, Ac-L-Phe-NMe2 and Ac-DL-Phe-NMe2 have been synthesized and their structures determined from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. To learn more about the conformational preferences of the compounds studied, the fully relaxed ϕ, ψ conformational energy maps on the free molecules of Ac-ΔAla-NMe2 and Ac-(Z)-ΔPhe-NMe2 were obtained with the HF/3-21G method and the calculated minima re-optimized with the DFT/B3LYP/6-31G** method. The crystal state results have been compared with the literature data. The studied dimethyldiamide Ac-ΔXaa-NMe2 combines the double bond in positions α, β and the C-terminal tertiary amide within one molec…

Double bondphenylalanine derivativesStereochemistryαdimethylamidesCrystal structureX‐ray crystallographyBiochemistryβ‐dehydro amino acidschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyAb initio quantum chemistry methodsAmideDrug Discovery(Z )‐dehydrophenylalanine derivativePeptide bondMoleculeMolecular BiologyConformational isomerismPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationab initio calculationsOrganic Chemistryamino acid amidesGeneral MedicineCrystallographydehydropeptideschemistryMolecular MedicineRamachandran plotJournal of Peptide Science
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How is the inner circadian clock controlled by interactive clock proteins?

2015

AbstractMost internationally travelled researchers will have encountered jetlag. If not, working odd hours makes most of us feel somehow dysfunctional. How can all this be linked to circadian rhythms and circadian clocks? In this review, we define circadian clocks, their composition and underlying molecular mechanisms. We describe and discuss recent crystal structures of Drosophila and mammalian core clock components and the enormous impact they had on the understanding of circadian clock mechanisms. Finally, we highlight the importance of circadian clocks for the daily regulation of human/mammalian physiology and show connections to overall fitness, health and disease.

Drosophila and mammalian clock proteinCircadian rhythmCircadian clock mechanismProtein ConformationCircadian clockBiophysicsCLOCK Proteins3D crystal structureCell BiologyBiologyBiochemistryBacterial circadian rhythmsCell biologyStructural BiologyCircadian ClocksGeneticsAnimalsHumansCLOCK ProteinsCircadian rhythmOscillating geneMolecular BiologyNeuroscienceFEBS Letters
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Inferring slowly-changing dynamic gene-regulatory networks

2015

Dynamic gene-regulatory networks are complex since the interaction patterns between their components mean that it is impossible to study parts of the network in separation. This holistic character of gene-regulatory networks poses a real challenge to any type of modelling. Graphical models are a class of models that connect the network with a conditional independence relationships between random variables. By interpreting these random variables as gene activities and the conditional independence relationships as functional non-relatedness, graphical models have been used to describe gene-regulatory networks. Whereas the literature has been focused on static networks, most time-course experi…

Dynamic network analysisL1 penalized inferenceComputer scienceT-LymphocytesGene regulatory networkgene regulatory networkMachine learningcomputer.software_genreBiochemistrygene-regulatory networksStructural Biologygraphical modelscomputer simulationT lymphocyteHumansGene Regulatory NetworkshumanGraphical modelMolecular Biologylymphocyte activationClass (computer programming)Models Statisticalalgorithmbusiness.industryResearchApplied Mathematicsstatistical modelStatistical modelComplex networkQuantitative Biology::GenomicsComputer Science ApplicationsComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONConditional independencemicroarray analysisComputingMethodologies_GENERALArtificial intelligencebusinessmetabolismRandom variablecomputerAlgorithmsBMC Bioinformatics
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Pathway network inference from gene expression data

2014

[EN] Background: The development of high-throughput omics technologies enabled genome-wide measurements of the activity of cellular elements and provides the analytical resources for the progress of the Systems Biology discipline. Analysis and interpretation of gene expression data has evolved from the gene to the pathway and interaction level, i.e. from the detection of differentially expressed genes, to the establishment of gene interaction networks and the identification of enriched functional categories. Still, the understanding of biological systems requires a further level of analysis that addresses the characterization of the interaction between functional modules. Results: We presen…

ESTADISTICA E INVESTIGACION OPERATIVAGene regulatory networkGene ExpressionInferenceSister chromatidsOxidative Phosphorylation//purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https]Structural BiologyEstadística e Investigación OperativaGene Regulatory NetworksTopology (chemistry)Alzheimers-DiseaseGeneticsDIBUJOBiological systemsApplied MathematicsSystems BiologyCell Cycle//purl.org/becyt/ford/1.2 [https]Computer Science ApplicationsMicroarray experimentsModeling and SimulationIdentification (biology)Functional assessmentDNA-replicationFunctional connectionsGlycolysisCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASPathway NetworkDNA ReplicationSaccharomyces-CervisiaeBioinformaticsS-phaseSystems biologyGenomicsComputational biologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyGene interactionAlzheimer DiseaseModelling and SimulationGenomic dataPANAPathwaysMolecular BiologyUbiquitinResearchGene Expression ProfilingR packageGluconeogenesisGene expression profilingComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONPurinesCiencias de la Computación e InformaciónProteolysisGene expression dataCiencias de la Información y BioinformáticaUbiquitin conjugationPathwayBMC Systems Biology
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Siliceous spicules in marine demosponges (example Suberites domuncula)

2005

All metazoan animals comprise a body plan of different complexity. Since-especially based on molecular and cell biological data-it is well established that all metazoan phyla, including the Porifera (sponges), evolved from a common ancestor the search for common, basic principles of pattern formation (body plan) in all phyla began. Common to all metazoan body plans is the formation of at least one axis that runs from the apical to the basal region; examples for this type of organization are the Porifera and the Cnidaria (diploblastic animals). It seems conceivable that the basis for the formation of the Bauplan in sponges is the construction of their skeleton by spicules. In Demospongiae (w…

EXPRESSIONCnidariaSpiculeGENESPROTEINGeneral Physics and AstronomyPaleontologySponge spiculeStructural BiologyevolutionSturtian glaciationAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceDEPOSITIONbiosilicaBody PatterningbiologyPhylumsilicateinsilica formationSPONGESCell BiologySilicon Dioxidebiology.organism_classificationCathepsinsSuberites domunculaspiculesPoriferaSuberites domunculaBody planEvolutionary biologyMORPHOGENESISSuberitesMicron
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Reciprocal regulation of the human sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP)-1a promoter by Sp1 and EGR-1 transcription factors.

2007

AbstractSterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP)-1a is a transcription factor that is highly expressed in actively growing cells, and is involved in the biosynthesis of cholesterol, fatty acids and phospholipids. We have mapped the minimal human SREBP-1a promoter region to 75bp upstream of the translation start site where we discovered a functional role for the 3 GC-boxes containing overlapping sites for the Sp1 and EGR-1 transcription factors. Intact SP1-binding sites are essential for promoter activity, whereas EGR-1 suppresses the transcription of the human SREBP-1a promoter. These results reveal a novel physiologically relevant transcriptional mechanism for the reciprocal regul…

Egr-1Chromatin ImmunoprecipitationSp1 Transcription FactorSREBP-1aResponse elementMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsElectrophoretic Mobility Shift AssayBiologyBiochemistrySp1Cell LineUpstream activating sequenceStructural BiologyTranscription (biology)Sequence Homology Nucleic AcidGene expressionGeneticsHumansPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyTranscription factorGeneral transcription factorBase SequenceReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionPromoterPromoterCell BiologySterol regulatory element-binding proteinBiochemistryEarly Growth Response Transcription Factorslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Gene expressionSterol Regulatory Element Binding Protein 1FEBS letters
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Transmission electron microscopy in molecular structural biology: A historical survey.

2015

In this personal, historic account of macromolecular transmission electron microscopy (TEM), published data from the 1940s through to recent times is surveyed, within the context of the remarkable progress that has been achieved during this time period. The evolution of present day molecular structural biology is described in relation to the associated biological disciplines. The contribution of numerous electron microscope pioneers to the development of the subject is discussed. The principal techniques for TEM specimen preparation, thin sectioning, metal shadowing, negative staining and plunge-freezing (vitrification) of thin aqueous samples are described, with a selection of published im…

Electron crystallographyCryo-electron microscopyBiophysicsNanotechnologyContext (language use)BiologyHistory 20th CenturyBiochemistryNegative stainHistory 21st Centurylaw.inventionStructural biologyElectron diffractionMicroscopy Electron TransmissionTransmission electron microscopylawElectron microscopeMolecular BiologyArchives of biochemistry and biophysics
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Evidence for a biogenic, microorganismal origin of rock varnish from the Gangdese Belt of Tibet

2010

In the present study we examined material from the Ashikule Basin of Tibet. Chemical analyses were performed by use of energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and electron probe microanalysis to clarify whether the varnish layers that had developed on the surface of the rhyolite are indeed composed of varnish bodies and silica glaze. Electron microscopic analyses revealed that the surface of the varnish is covered both by filamentous hyphae bacterial and cocci-shaped forms. Within the varnish mineral layer in those samples two forms of bacteria-like microorganisms exist; cocci as tightly packed bacterial aggregates [within varnish bodies], and bacillus-like microorganisms [within the varnish m…

Electron probe microanalysisMineralBacteriaChemistryDesert varnishGlazeVarnishBiofilmSpectrometry X-Ray EmissionGeneral Physics and AstronomyMineralogyCell BiologyTibetMatrix (geology)Soilstomatognathic diseasesExtracellular polymeric substanceChemical engineeringStructural Biologyvisual_artPaintvisual_art.visual_art_mediumGeneral Materials ScienceOrganic ChemicalsMicron
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Sliding-end-labelling

1986

Abstract A method, termed ‘sliding-end-labelling’, has been devised to avoid a frequent artifact in nucleosome positioning by indirect end labelling, namely the appearing of DNA fragments originated by two nuclease cuts, one of them lying within the region covered by the probe. The method is applied to the nucleosome positioning in the yeast SUC2 gene for invertase.

Electrophoresis Agar GelNucleasebiologyBiophysicsNucleic Acid HybridizationDNA Restriction EnzymesSaccharomyces cerevisiaeCell BiologyBiochemistryNucleosomesChromatin Nucleosome positioning Indirect end labelling SUC2 gene (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)BiochemistryStructural BiologyLabellingGeneticsbiology.proteinMicrococcal NucleaseNucleosomeDNA FungalBiological systemMolecular BiologyFEBS Letters
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Constitutive Promoter Occupancy by the MBF-1 Activator and Chromatin Modification of the Developmental Regulated Sea Urchin α-H2A Histone Gene

2007

The tandemly repeated sea urchin alpha-histone genes are developmentally regulated. These genes are transcribed up to the early blastula stage and permanently silenced as the embryos approach gastrulation. As previously described, expression of the alpha-H2A gene depends on the binding of the MBF-1 activator to the 5' enhancer, while down-regulation relies on the functional interaction between the 3' sns 5 insulator and the GA repeats located upstream of the enhancer. As persistent MBF-1 binding and enhancer activity are detected in gastrula embryos, we have studied the molecular mechanisms that prevent the bound MBF-1 from trans-activating the H2A promoter at this stage of development. Her…

Embryo Nonmammaliananimal structuresRestriction MappingMBF-1Down-RegulationEnhancer RNAschromatin immunoprecipitationBiologyHistone DeacetylasesactivatorHistonesHistone H3Histone H1Structural BiologyHistone H2AHistone methylationAnimalsNucleosomeHistone codenucleosome phasingPromoter Regions GeneticEnhancerBase PairingMolecular Biologyhistone modificationsGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalGastrulaMolecular biologyChromatinNucleosomesRepressor ProteinsMutagenesis InsertionalEnhancer Elements GeneticSea Urchinsembryonic structuresTrans-ActivatorsCalmodulin-Binding ProteinsInsulator Elementssea urchin histone geneProtein Processing Post-TranslationalProtein BindingJournal of Molecular Biology
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