Search results for "Surface protein"
showing 6 items of 6 documents
Development and validation of two PCR tests for the detection of and differentiation between Anaplasma ovis and Anaplasma marginale
2012
Anaplasma ovis and Anaplasma marginale are tick-transmitted bacteria that cause anaplasmosis in domestic and wild animals. Recent results show that some domestic and wild animals and ticks are susceptible to both A. ovis and A. marginale, thus supporting the need to differentiate between these species in hosts and ticks diagnosed with Anaplasma infection. However, although anaplasmosis is one of the most common diseases of grazing animals worldwide, rapid and effective tests are not available for the detection of and discrimination between these 2 Anaplasma species. The objective of this research was to develop an easy and reliable method to identify and discriminate between the closely rel…
Sperm activation and sperm-egg interaction
2006
Different steps of sperm activation such as acrosomal reaction and capacitation are described in details. The molecules involved in sperm-egg interaction are also reported.
Understanding of the physiological and genetic mechanisms involved in the reducing activity of Lactococcus lactis
2015
Lactic acid bacteria, particularly Lactococcus lactis are used in dairy industry. These bacteria are known to have a reducing activity, indicating their ability to lower the redox potential (Eh) of a medium. L. lactis MG1363 genome encodes several proteins with a CXXC motif, potentially linked with a redox activity. To understand the role of proteins rich in cysteine located at the surface of L. lactis, two approaches were used, one bioinformatics and biochemical another. For bioinformatic approach, interest was focused on two proteins of unknown function and CX2CX10CX2C motif: Llmg_0524 and Llmg_0526. Their corresponding genes form an operon temporarily induces in early growth phase. In th…
Solution NMR structure of Borrelia burgdorferi outer surface lipoprotein BBP28, a member of the mlp protein family.
2020
Lyme disease is the most widespread vector‐transmitted disease in North America and Europe, caused by infection with Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato complex spirochetes. We report the solution NMR structure of the B. burgdorferi outer surface lipoprotein BBP28, a member of the multicopy lipoprotein (mlp) family. The structure comprises a tether peptide, five α‐helices and an extended C‐terminal loop. The fold is similar to that of Borrelia tunicate outer surface protein BTA121, which is known to bind lipids. These results contribute to the understanding of Lyme disease pathogenesis by revealing the molecular structure of a protein from the widely found mlp family. This article is protected …
Impact of compatible solutes on the mechanical properties of fibronectin: a single molecule analysis
2003
The influence of ectoine and sarcosine on the mechanical properties of surface bound fibronectin has been investigated by means of force microscopy. Single molecule stretching experiments of fibronectin molecules reveal that ectoine and sarcosine increase the tendency of the polypeptide to coil, thus decreasing its apparent persistence length. This behavior can be explained by means of the preferential exclusion model implying that the osmolytes are expelled from the protein surface due to the increase in chemical potential of the denatured, i.e. stretched, state forcing the protein into a more compact structure. Detailed analysis of the unfolding forces, which are extracted from the succes…
Spatial distribution of two maternal messengers encoding two sea urchin cell surface proteins
1993
We have localized, byin situ hybridization, two messengers, called bepl and bep4 (butanol extracted proteins), coding for cell surface proteins, involved in cell interaction, in sections of eggs of the sea urchinP. lividus. These maternal RNAs are spatially distributed in a gradient with a maximum at one pole of the egg. These results represent the first demonstration of the existence of a gradient of informational molecules in the sea urchin egg,i.e., the biological material for which the gradient theory was first proposed.