Search results for "apparatus"

showing 10 items of 192 documents

Development and characterization of a 293 cell line with regulatable expression of the hepatitis B virus large envelope protein

2004

During the life cycle of hepatitis B virus (HBV) the large L envelope protein plays a pivotal role that is related to its peculiar dual transmembrane topology. To study the complex structure and diverse functions of L under regulated conditions of production, a human 293 cell line stably expressing L under the control of the ecdysone-inducible promoter was generated. Cells demonstrated stringent dose- and time-dependent kinetics of induction with undetectable background expression in the absence of the inducer. Temporal control of L expression allowed to trace (i) its posttranslational reorientation resulting in the mixed topology; (ii) its spatial redistribution from the endoplasmic reticu…

Gene Expression Regulation ViralHepatitis B virusEcdysoneProtein ConformationEndoplasmic reticulumLiver cellCell MembraneCellGolgi ApparatusBiologyEndoplasmic Reticulummedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologymedicine.anatomical_structureViral Envelope ProteinsHepadnaviridaeCell cultureVirologyMembrane topologymedicineHumansSecretionPromoter Regions GeneticCell Line TransformedJournal of Virological Methods
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Simultaneous Aurora-A/STK15 overexpression and centrosome amplification induce chromosomal instability in tumour cells with a MIN phenotype

2007

Abstract Background Genetic instability is a hallmark of tumours and preneoplastic lesions. The predominant form of genome instability in human cancer is chromosome instability (CIN). CIN is characterized by chromosomal aberrations, gains or losses of whole chromosomes (aneuploidy), and it is often associated with centrosome amplification. Centrosomes control cell division by forming a bipolar mitotic spindle and play an essential role in the maintenance of chromosomal stability. However, whether centrosome amplification could directly cause aneuploidy is not fully established. Also, alterations in genes required for mitotic progression could be involved in CIN. A major candidate is represe…

Genome instabilityCancer ResearchCellular differentiationAneuploidyApoptosisCell CommunicationSpindle ApparatusBiologyProtein Serine-Threonine Kinaseslcsh:RC254-282Aurora KinasesChromosome instabilityChromosomal InstabilitymedicineTumor Cells CulturedGeneticsHumansRNA Small InterferingMitosisIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceAurora Kinase ACentrosomePloidiesReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionAurora-A centrosomes amplification aneuploidyCell Differentiationlcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseaseAneuploidyCell biologySpindle apparatusUp-RegulationSettore BIO/18 - GeneticaCell Transformation NeoplasticPhenotypeMicroscopy FluorescenceOncologyCentrosomeColonic NeoplasmsEctopic expressionMicrosatellite InstabilityResearch ArticleBMC Cancer
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Abnormal mitotic spindle assembly and cytokinesis induced by D-Limonene in cultured mammalian cells

2013

D-Limonene is found widely in citrus and many other plant species; it is a major constituent of many essential oils and is used as a solvent for commercial purposes. With the discovery of its chemotherapeutic properties against cancer, it is important to investigate the biological effects of the exposure to D-Limonene and elucidate its, as yet unknown, mechanism of action. We reported here that D-Limonene is toxic in V79 Chinese hamster cells in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, to determine the cellular target of D-Limonene, we performed morphological observations and immunocytochemical analysis and we showed that this drug has a direct effect on dividing cells preventing assembly of mito…

Genome instabilityCell SurvivalHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAurora B kinaseAntineoplastic AgentsSpindle ApparatusBiologyToxicologySeptinMicrotubulesGenomic InstabilityCell LineChromosome segregationInhibitory Concentration 50MicrotubuleChromosome SegregationCricetinaeCyclohexenesGeneticsAnimalsMitosisGenetics (clinical)genomic instability damage-induced mutagenesis mitosis V79 d- LimoneneCytokinesisCell DeathTerpenesAneuploidyTubulin ModulatorsSpindle apparatusCell biologySettore BIO/18 - GeneticaDrug Screening Assays AntitumorLimoneneCytokinesis
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Resisting Bodies: Power Crisis / Meaning Crisis in the Zombie Film from 1932 to Today

2011

Critics have repeatedly focused on the political subtexts of the living dead films of George A. Romero, revealing, notably, how they reflect specific social concerns. In order to determine what makes the zombie movie and the figure of the zombie so productive of political readings, this article examines, first, the classic zombie movies influenced by voodoo lore, then Romero’s initial living dead trilogy (1968-1985), and finally some of the most successful films released in the 2000s. Resorting to a post-structuralist framework including Althusser’s notions of state apparatuses, Foucault’s distinction between subjection and subjectification, and Butler’s analyses of subversive resignificati…

Georges A. Romero[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturezombie moviesDawn of the DeadDay of the DeadresignificationJudith ButlersubversionmeaningNight of the Living Deadcontingency[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureMichel FoucaultLouis Althussersubjection[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteraturepowerresistanceIdeological State ApparatusessubjectificationI Walked with a ZombieVictor HalperinWhite ZombieJacques Tourneurpolitics
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Cohen syndrome is associated with major glycosylation defects

2014

International audience; Cohen syndrome (CS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder with multisytemic clinical features due to mutations in the VPS13B gene, which has recently been described encoding a mandatory membrane protein involved in Golgi integrity. As the Golgi complex is the place where glycosylation of newly synthesized proteins occurs, we hypothesized that VPS13B deficiency, responsible of Golgi apparatus disturbance, could lead to glycosylation defects and/or mysfunction of this organelle, and thus be a cause of the main clinical manifestations of CS. The glycosylation status of CS serum proteins showed a very unusual pattern of glycosylation characterized by a significant accum…

GlycanGlycosylationGlycosylationEndosomeDevelopmental Disabilities[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Vesicular Transport ProteinsGolgi ApparatusFingers03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundsymbols.namesake0302 clinical medicineAntigens CDIntellectual DisabilityMyopiaGeneticsHumansObesityMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiology[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]Retinal DegenerationTransferrinGeneral MedicineFibroblastsBrefeldin AGolgi apparatusIntercellular Adhesion Molecule-1Cell biologyVPS13BchemistryMembrane proteinBiochemistryMicrocephalysymbolsO-linked glycosylationbiology.proteinMuscle HypotoniaElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelRNA InterferenceCell Adhesion Molecules030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Retention mechanisms for ER and Golgi membrane proteins

2014

Unless there are mechanisms to selectively retain membrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) or in the Golgi apparatus, they automatically proceed downstream to the plasma or vacuole membranes. Two types of coat protein complex I (COPI)-interacting motifs in the cytosolic tails of membrane proteins seem to facilitate membrane retention in the early secretory pathway of plants: a dilysine (KKXX) motif (which is typical of p24 proteins) for the ER and a KXE/D motif (which occurs in the Arabidopsis endomembrane protein EMP12) for the Golgi apparatus. The KXE/D motif is highly conserved in all eukaryotic EMPs and is additionally present in hundreds of other proteins of unknown subcellu…

Golgi membraneSecretory PathwayKKXXMolecular Sequence DataGolgi ApparatusMembrane ProteinsGolgi TargetingPlant ScienceCOPIGolgi apparatusBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumCoat Protein Complex ICell biologysymbols.namesakeMembrane proteinPlant CellssymbolsAmino Acid SequenceIntegral membrane proteinSecretory pathwayTrends in Plant Science
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Hepatitis B Virus Large Envelope Protein Interacts with γ2-Adaptin, a Clathrin Adaptor-Related Protein

2001

ABSTRACT For the outcome of a hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, the viral L envelope protein with its pre-S domain performs pivotal functions by mediating attachment of HBV to liver cells, envelopment of viral capsids, release of (sub)viral particles, regulation of supercoiled DNA amplification, and transcriptional transactivation. To assess its multiple functions and host-protein assistance involved, we initiated a two-hybrid screen using the L-specific pre-S1 domain as bait. With this approach, we have identified γ2-adaptin, a putative member of the clathrin adaptor proteins responsible for protein sorting and trafficking, as a specific binding partner of L protein. Evidence for a physic…

Hepatitis B virusVesicle-associated membrane protein 8ImmunoprecipitationImmunologyGolgi ApparatusTransfectionmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyClathrinChromatography AffinityCytosolViral Envelope ProteinsMutant proteinYeastsVirologyProtein targetingmedicineAnimalsBinding siteAdaptor Protein Complex gamma SubunitsBinding SitesbiologyMembrane ProteinsPrecipitin TestsClathrinTransmembrane proteinVirus-Cell InteractionsCell biologyInsect ScienceCOS CellsMutationbiology.proteinClathrin adaptor proteinsProtein BindingJournal of Virology
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Development of the filiform hairs on the cerci of Gryllus bimaculatus Deg. (Saltatoria, Gryllidae)

1978

The filiform hairs, mechanoreceptors of Gryllus, pass through six developmental stages during the last larval stage. The cytoplasm of their sense cells suggests intensive synthesis of protein for cellular metabolism and intercytoplasmic exchange of material via glial evaginations. Ultrahistochemical tests demonstrated acid phosphatase in the lysosomes as well as in components of the Golgi apparatus. There was no significant change in the appearance of the sense cell cytoplasm, indicating a maintained functional state also during molting. The new cuticular apparatus is formed after apolysis by the three enveloping cells. Formation of the replacement hairs is initiated by a cytoplasmic outgro…

HistologyAcid PhosphataseApolysisMorphogenesisGolgi ApparatusApical cellBiologyMicrotubulesPathology and Forensic Medicinesymbols.namesakeMicrotubuleAnimalsintegumentary systemGryllus bimaculatusCell MembraneDendritesCell BiologyAnatomyGolgi apparatusbiology.organism_classificationCell biologyMicroscopy ElectronCytoplasmLarvaMicroscopy Electron ScanningsymbolsUltrastructureOrthopteraLysosomesMechanoreceptorsCell and Tissue Research
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Intraflagellar transport molecules in ciliary and nonciliary cells of the retina.

2010

IFT proteins are differentially localized in photoreceptor cilia, including within the inner segment, and some are shown to function in trafficking in nonciliated retinal neurons.

Immunoelectron microscopyBiologyRetinaArticlesymbols.namesakeMiceIntraflagellar transportmedicineMolecular motorAnimalsCiliaMicroscopy ImmunoelectronResearch ArticlesNeuronsRetinaCiliumIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsCell BiologyDendritesGolgi apparatusEmbryo MammalianTransport proteinCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy FluorescenceCytoplasmsymbolssense organsThe Journal of cell biology
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Protein Kinase C μ Is Regulated by the Multifunctional Chaperon Protein p32

2000

We identified the multifunctional chaperon protein p32 as a protein kinase C (PKC)-binding protein interacting with PKCalpha, PKCzeta, PKCdelta, and PKC mu. We have analyzed the interaction of PKC mu with p32 in detail, and we show here in vivo association of PKC mu, as revealed from yeast two-hybrid analysis, precipitation assays using glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins, and reciprocal coimmunoprecipitation. In SKW 6.4 cells, PKC mu is constitutively associated with p32 at mitochondrial membranes, evident from colocalization with cytochrome c. p32 interacts with PKC mu in a compartment-specific manner, as it can be coimmunoprecipitated mainly from the particulate and not from the so…

ImmunoprecipitationRecombinant Fusion ProteinsGolgi ApparatusSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSpodopteraMitogen-activated protein kinase kinaseBiologyTransfectionBiochemistryCell LineMitochondrial ProteinsAnimalsHumansCloning MolecularKinase activityMolecular BiologyProtein Kinase CProtein kinase CGlutathione TransferaseB-LymphocytesBinding SitesMembrane GlycoproteinsKinaseAutophosphorylationJNK Mitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCell BiologyFusion proteinMitochondriaReceptors ComplementCell biologybody regionsHyaluronan ReceptorsProtein kinase domainBiochemistryMitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCarrier ProteinsMolecular ChaperonesProtein BindingJournal of Biological Chemistry
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