Search results for "assembly"

showing 10 items of 768 documents

Facile approaches to build ordered amphiphilic tris(phthalocyaninato) europium triple-decker complex thin films and their comparative performances in…

2010

Solution processed thin films of an amphiphilic tris(phthalocyaninato) rare earth triple-decker complex, Eu(2)[Pc(15C5)(4)](2)[Pc(OC(10)H(21))(8)], have been prepared from three different methods: self-assembly (SA) annealed in solvent vapor, quasi-Langmuir-Shäfer (QLS) and drop casting methods. In particular, we successfully developed a simple QLS process for fabricating ordered multilayers with a good thickness control. The films prepared from three different methods were characterized by a wide range of methods including electronic absorption spectra, IR, X-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and current-voltage (I-V) measurements. J-type aggregates have been formed with the …

Reaction rate constantchemistryAbsorption spectroscopyX-ray crystallographyStackingAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomychemistry.chemical_elementSelf-assemblyPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThin filmEuropiumMolecular electronic transitionPhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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The Tobacco mosaic virus movement protein associates with but does not integrate into biological membranes

2014

Plant positive-strand RNA viruses require association with plant cell endomembranes for viral translation and replication, as well as for intra- and intercellular movement of the viral progeny. The membrane association and RNA binding of the Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) movement protein (MP) are vital for orchestrating the macromolecular network required for virus movement. A previously proposed topological model suggests that TMV MP is an integral membrane protein with two putative -helical transmembrane (TM) segments. Here we tested this model using an experimental system that measured the efficiency with which natural polypeptide segments were inserted into the ER membrane under conditions…

Recombinant Fusion ProteinsvirusesMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyGene ExpressionMicrobiologiaBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumMicrobiologyCell membraneGenes ReporterPlant CellsVirologymedicineTobacco mosaic virusAmino Acid SequenceMovement proteinIntegral membrane proteinStructure and AssemblyCell MembraneViral translationfungifood and beveragesBiological membraneVirologyTransmembrane proteinTransport proteinCell biologyVirusPlant Viral Movement ProteinsTobacco Mosaic VirusProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structureInsect ScienceHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsProtein Binding
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DICER and ZRF1 contribute to chromatin decondensation during nucleotide excision repair

2016

Abstract Repair of damaged DNA relies on the recruitment of DNA repair factors in a well orchestrated manner. As a prerequisite, the chromatin needs to be decondensed by chromatin remodelers to allow for binding of repair factors and for DNA repair to occur. Recent studies have implicated members of the SWI/SNF and INO80 families as well as PARP1 in nucleotide excision repair (NER). In this study, we report that the endonuclease DICER is implicated in chromatin decondensation during NER. In response to UV irradiation, DICER is recruited to chromatin in a ZRF1-mediated manner. The H2A–ubiquitin binding protein ZRF1 and DICER together impact on the chromatin conformation via PARP1. Moreover, …

Ribonuclease III0301 basic medicineDNA RepairUltraviolet RaysDNA damageDNA repairgenetic processesPoly (ADP-Ribose) Polymerase-1Genome Integrity Repair and ReplicationBiologyChromatin remodelingCell LineDEAD-box RNA HelicasesHistones03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundUbiquitinCell Line TumorGeneticsAnimalsHumansCaenorhabditis elegansOncogene ProteinsOsteoblastsUbiquitinfungiRNA-Binding ProteinsFibroblastsChromatin Assembly and DisassemblyMolecular biologyChromatinChromatinDNA-Binding Proteinsenzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates)HEK293 Cells030104 developmental biologychemistrybiology.proteinDNADNA DamageMolecular ChaperonesNucleotide excision repairDicerNucleic Acids Research
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Aggression and violence among drivers

2001

The invention of assembly line manufacturing, together with the generalised and massive use of the private automobile, has transformed motor vehicles from simply being a mode of transportation to encompass and symbolise a new lifestyle and social order1. Unfortunately, as in many other facets of modern society, the driving environment is not exempt from the expression of violent behaviour2–3. Because the root of driving is found in the lifestyle of a society, this way of life not only dictates the use of motor vehicles but also the way in which they are used4.

Root (linguistics)Traffic congestionExpression (architecture)AggressionmedicineViolent behaviourmedicine.symptomPsychologyAssembly lineSocial psychology
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Subcomponent Self-Assembly A Quick Way to New Metallogels

2013

Subcomponent self-assembly, introduced by the Nitschke group,[1] is a process which allow complex structures to be generated from simple building blocks (generally aldehydes and amines). In this bottom-up approach, the building blocks spontaneously self-assemble around templates (usually metal ions) leading to a simultaneous covalent (C=N) and dative (N– metal) bonds formation. The method has been successfully used to construct well-defined metal-organic macrocycles, helicates, catenanes, rotaxanes, grids,[2] and cages.[3] Our field of interest lies not in building-up of defined structures but in designing gelator molecules for a formation of supramolecular gels as functional nanomaterials.…

SUPRAMOLECULAR GELSMetal ions in aqueous solutionta221GELATORSSupramolecular chemistryNanoparticleNanotechnologymetallogeelimultistimuli responsive010402 general chemistrySmart material01 natural sciencesCatalysisMOLECULESMoleculeta116ta218ta214ta114010405 organic chemistryChemistryIN-SITUOrganic ChemistryGeneral Chemistryself-assemblygelsGELATION0104 chemical sciencesin situ gelationMETALnanoparticlesSelf-assemblymetallogelCHEMISTRY: A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
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SALI ORGANICI: “TECTONI” PER LO STUDIO DI PROCESSI DI SELF-ASSEMBLY IN SOLVENTI ORGANICI

Sali organiciQuenching amplificatoSettore CHIM/06 - Chimica OrganicaSelf assembly
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De Novo Assembly and Functional Annotation of the Olive (Olea europaea) Transcriptome

2013

Olive breeding programmes are focused on selecting for traits as short juvenile period, plant architecture suited for mechanical harvest, or oil characteristics, including fatty acid composition, phenolic, and volatile compounds to suit new markets. Understanding the molecular basis of these characteristics and improving the efficiency of such breeding programmes require the development of genomic information and tools. However, despite its economic relevance, genomic information on olive or closely related species is still scarce. We have applied Sanger and 454 pyrosequencing technologies to generate close to 2 million reads from 12 cDNA libraries obtained from the Picual, Arbequina, and L…

Sanger sequencingSequence assemblyBreedingOleaDatabases GeneticBotanygenomicsGeneticsPlant OilsJuvenileCultivarOlea europaeaOlive OilMolecular BiologyGene LibraryExpressed Sequence TagsExpressed sequence tagbiologycDNA libraryMolecular Sequence AnnotationSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineFull Papersbiology.organism_classificationMolecular Sequence AnnotationOleaFruitSeedsPyrosequencing454 pyrosequencingTranscriptomeGenome PlantDNA Research
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Zasp/Cypher internal ZM-motif containing fragments are sufficient to co-localize with α-actinin—Analysis of patient mutations

2005

Z-band alternatively spliced PDZ-containing protein (ZASP/Cypher) has an important role in maintaining Z-disc stability in striated and cardiac muscle. ZASP/Cypher interacts through its PDZ domain with the major Z-disc actin cross-linker, alpha-actinin. ZASP/Cypher also has a conserved sequence called the ZM-motif, and it is found in two alternatively spliced exons 4 and 6. We have shown earlier that the ZM-motif containing internal regions of two related proteins ALP and CLP36 interact with alpha-actinin rod region, and that the ZM-motif is important in targeting ALP to the alpha-actinin containing structures in cell. Here, we show that the ZASP/Cypher internal fragments containing either …

SarcomeresAmino Acid MotifsPDZ domainCHO Cellsmacromolecular substancesBiologyConserved sequenceStress fiber assemblyMyoblastsMiceExonCricetinaeStress FibersmedicineAnimalsHumansMyocyteActininMuscle SkeletalActinAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingOrganellesGeneticsMyocardiumPoint mutationCardiac muscleExonsIntracellular MembranesCell BiologyLIM Domain Proteinsmusculoskeletal systemPeptide FragmentsCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureMutationCardiomyopathiesProtein BindingExperimental Cell Research
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The Tegument Protein pp65 of Human Cytomegalovirus Acts as an Optional Scaffold Protein That Optimizes Protein Uploading into Viral Particles

2014

ABSTRACT The mechanisms that lead to the tegumentation of herpesviral particles are only poorly defined. The phosphoprotein 65 (pp65) is the most abundant constituent of the virion tegument of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV). It is, however, nonessential for virion formation. This seeming discrepancy has not met with a satisfactory explanation regarding the role of pp65 in HCMV particle morphogenesis. Here, we addressed the question of how the overall tegument composition of the HCMV virion depended on pp65 and how the lack of pp65 influenced the packaging of particular tegument proteins. To investigate this, we analyzed the proteomes of pp65-positive (pp65pos) and pp65-negative (pp65neg) viri…

Scaffold proteinHuman cytomegalovirusProteomevirusesImmunologyMorphogenesisCytomegalovirusBiologyMicrobiologyMass SpectrometryViral Matrix ProteinsVirologymedicineHumansGeneViral matrix proteinVirus AssemblyStructure and AssemblyVirionvirus diseasesViral tegumentbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionPhosphoproteinsmedicine.diseaseVirologyCell biologysurgical procedures operativeInsect SciencePhosphoproteinProteomeGene DeletionJournal of Virology
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Observation of novel oxygen⋯oxygen interaction in supramolecular assembly of cobalt(III) Schiff base complexes: a combined experimental and computati…

2015

Two mononuclear cobalt(III) Schiff base complexes with azide [Co(L)(N3)(L0 )] (1) and [Co(L)(N3)(L00)] (2) {where HL ¼ 1-((2-(diethylamino)ethylimino)methyl)naphthalene-2-ol, HL0 ¼ 2-hydroxy-1-naphthaldehyde and HL00 ¼ acetylacetone} have been synthesized and characterized by elemental analysis, IR and UV-Vis spectroscopy and single crystal X-ray diffraction studies. Both complexes show mononuclear structures with azide as terminal coligand. Structural features have been examined in detail that reveal the formation of interesting supramolecular networks generated through non-covalent forces including hydrogen bonding, C–H/H–C and C–H/p interactions. These interactions have been studied ener…

Schiff basekemianovel oxygenStereochemistryHydrogen bondGeneral Chemical EngineeringAcetylacetoneSupramolecular chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementGeneral ChemistrychemistrycobaltSupramolecular assemblychemistry.chemical_compoundCrystallographychemistryAzidekobolttiCobaltta116Natural bond orbitalRSC Advances: an international journal to further the chemical sciences
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