Search results for "binding"

showing 10 items of 3896 documents

An ex vivo model of the rat trachea to study the effect of inhalable toxic compounds

1996

Different cell culture and organ systems are used to evaluate the physiological responses of the airways to the effects of carcinogenic [e.g., benzo(a)pyrene] and anticarcinogenic (e.g., retinoids) compounds on cellular growth and differentiation. However, in contrast to in vivo conditions dissociated epithelial cells or tracheal ring cultures are covered with medium. Therefore, we developed an ex vivo perfusion model enabling evaluation of morphology and metabolism of different compounds under near-physiological conditions. The trachea was surrounded with culture medium and perfused with air by means of a small animal respirator. To test the viability of the system under various experiment…

Retinyl EstersOligosaccharidesBiologyCell morphologyOrgan cultureXenobioticschemistry.chemical_compoundOrgan Culture TechniquesIn vivoLectinsAnimalsBenzopyrenesRats WistarVitamin ACarcinogenVitamin A DeficiencyGeneral MedicineRatsTracheaMicroscopy ElectronBenzo(a)pyrenechemistryBiochemistryCell culturePyreneDiterpenesEx vivoProtein BindingResearch in Experimental Medicine
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Toward oxygen binding curves of single respiratory proteins

2004

Oxygen binding curves of single molecules promise to discriminate between different models describing cooperativity because load distributions are accessible. Individual tarantula hemocyanins could be detected by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy using intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence as sensor of bound oxygen. However, imaging of immobilized proteins was not possible due to fast photo-bleaching. It is shown that tetra-methyl-carboxy-rhodamine (TAMRA), commonly used as a fluorescence label in single-molecule spectroscopy, can also be applied to monitor bound oxygen. The dye's fluorescence is quenched due to Förster energy transfer to the oxygenated active sites of hemocyanin.

Rhodaminesmedicine.medical_treatmentAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomychemistry.chemical_elementSpidersHemocyaninFluorescence correlation spectroscopyCooperativityCell BiologyFluorescenceOxygenOxygenchemistryStructural BiologyHemocyaninsmedicineBiophysicsAnimalsMoleculeGeneral Materials ScienceSpectroscopyOxygen bindingFluorescent DyesMicron
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The GTP- and Phospholipid-Binding Protein TTD14 Regulates Trafficking of the TRPL Ion Channel in Drosophila Photoreceptor Cells

2015

Recycling of signaling proteins is a common phenomenon in diverse signaling pathways. In photoreceptors of Drosophila, light absorption by rhodopsin triggers a phospholipase Cβ-mediated opening of the ion channels transient receptor potential (TRP) and TRP-like (TRPL) and generates the visual response. The signaling proteins are located in a plasma membrane compartment called rhabdomere. The major rhodopsin (Rh1) and TRP are predominantly localized in the rhabdomere in light and darkness. In contrast, TRPL translocates between the rhabdomeral plasma membrane in the dark and a storage compartment in the cell body in the light, from where it can be recycled to the plasma membrane upon subsequ…

RhodopsinCancer Researchlcsh:QH426-470LightGTP'BiologyEye03 medical and health sciencesTransient receptor potential channelTransient Receptor Potential Channels0302 clinical medicineGTP-binding protein regulatorsGTP-Binding ProteinsGeneticsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIon channel030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesCell MembraneMembrane ProteinsDarknessRhabdomereTransport proteinCell biologylcsh:GeneticsProtein TransportDrosophila melanogasterMembrane proteinRhodopsinMutationbiology.proteinPhotoreceptor Cells Invertebrate030217 neurology & neurosurgerySignal TransductionResearch ArticlePLOS Genetics
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Peripherin-2 couples rhodopsin to the CNG channel in outer segments of rod photoreceptors.

2014

Outer segments (OS) of rod photoreceptors are cellular compartments specialized in the conversion of light into electrical signals. This process relies on the light-triggered change in the intracellular levels of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which in turn controls the activity of cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels in the rod OS plasma membrane. The rod CNG channel is a macromolecular complex that in its core harbors the ion-conducting CNGA1 and CNGB1a subunits. To identify additional proteins of the complex that interact with the CNGB1a core subunit we applied affinity purification of mouse retinal proteins followed by mass spectrometry. In combination with in vitro and in viv…

Rhodopsingenetic structuresImmunoelectron microscopyProtein subunitPeripherinsCyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation ChannelsNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyRetinaCell membraneMiceRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsRetinitis pigmentosaGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansPeripherin 2Molecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)General MedicineAnatomyRetinal Photoreceptor Cell Outer Segmentmedicine.diseaseProtein Structure TertiaryTransmembrane domainmedicine.anatomical_structureFörster resonance energy transferRhodopsinbiology.proteinBiophysicssense organsRetinitis PigmentosaProtein Binding
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Differential expression and interaction with the visual G-protein transducin of centrin isoforms in mammalian photoreceptor cells.

2004

Photoisomerization of rhodopsin activates a heterotrimeric G-protein cascade leading to closure of cGMP-gated channels and hyperpolarization of photoreceptor cells. Massive translocation of the visual G-protein transducin, Gt, between subcellular compartments contributes to long term adaptation of photoreceptor cells. Ca(2+)-triggered assembly of a centrin-transducin complex in the connecting cilium of photoreceptor cells may regulate these transducin translocations. Here we demonstrate expression of all four known, closely related centrin isoforms in the mammalian retina. Interaction assays revealed binding potential of the four centrin isoforms to Gtbetagamma heterodimers. High affinity b…

Rhodopsingenetic structuresLightBlotting WesternBiologyBiochemistryRetinaRats Sprague-DawleyMiceCalcium-binding proteinHeterotrimeric G proteinmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsScattering RadiationCiliaTransducinMicroscopy ImmunoelectronMolecular BiologyCyclic GMPGlutathione TransferaseCentrosomeRetinaChromatographyDose-Response Relationship DrugReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionCiliumCalcium-Binding ProteinsCell BiologySequence Analysis DNARod Cell Outer SegmentRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyRatsMice Inbred C57BLKineticsProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy FluorescenceRhodopsinCentrosomeCentrinbiology.proteinCalciumCattleElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gelsense organsTransducinProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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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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Chromatin-associated RNA interference components contribute to transcriptional regulation in Drosophila

2009

RNA interference (RNAi) pathways have evolved as important modulators of gene expression that operate in the cytoplasm by degrading RNA target molecules through the activity of short (21-30 nucleotide) RNAs1-6. RNAi components have been reported to have a role in the nucleus, as they are involved in epigenetic regulation and heterochromatin formation(7-10). However, although RNAi-mediated post-transcriptional gene silencing is well documented, the mechanisms of RNAi-mediated transcriptional gene silencing and, in particular, the role of RNAi components in chromatin dynamics, especially in animal multicellular organisms, are elusive. Here we show that the key RNAi components Dicer 2 (DCR2) a…

Ribonuclease IIIanimal structuresRNA-induced transcriptional silencingTranscription GeneticRNA-induced silencing complexBiology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRNA interferenceTranscriptional regulationAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsPromoter Regions Genetic030304 developmental biologyRNA Double-StrandedGenetics0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryfungiRNARNA-Binding ProteinsChromatinChromatinRNA silencingMicroRNAsDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationArgonaute ProteinsRNA InterferenceRNA Polymerase II030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDrosophila ProteinHeat-Shock ResponseRNA HelicasesProtein BindingTranscription Factors
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Promoter architecture and transcriptional regulation of Abf1-dependent ribosomal protein genes inSaccharomyces cerevisiae

2016

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ribosomal protein gene (RPG) promoters display binding sites for either Rap1 or Abf1 transcription factors. Unlike Rap1-associated promoters, the small cohort of Abf1-dependent RPGs (Abf1-RPGs) has not been extensively investigated. We show that RPL3, RPL4B, RPP1A, RPS22B and RPS28A/B share a common promoter architecture, with an Abf1 site upstream of a conserved element matching the sequence recognized by Fhl1, a transcription factor which together with Ifh1 orchestrates Rap1-associated RPG regulation. Abf1 and Fhl1 promoter association was confirmed by ChIP and/or gel retardation assays. Mutational analysis revealed a more severe requirement of Abf1 than Fhl1 …

Ribosomal Proteins0301 basic medicineSaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsTranscription GeneticTelomere-Binding ProteinsRibosome biogenesisSaccharomyces cerevisiaeMechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1Biology03 medical and health sciencesRibosomal proteinTranscription (biology)Gene Expression Regulation FungalGeneticsTranscriptional regulationBinding sitePromoter Regions GeneticTranscription factorGeneGeneticsBinding SitesTOR Serine-Threonine KinasesGene regulation Chromatin and EpigeneticsForkhead Transcription FactorsPromoterDNA-Binding Proteins030104 developmental biologyMultiprotein ComplexesTrans-ActivatorsTranscription FactorsNucleic Acids Research
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A Candida albicans 37 kDa polypeptide with homology to the laminin receptor is a component of the translational machinery.

1998

A cDNA encoding a 37 kDa protein was isolated from an expression library using antibodies raised against mycelial cell walls fromCandida albicans.The 37 kDa protein has over 60% sequence identity with the 37 kDa laminin-binding protein (LBP) from humans and over 80% identity with the Yst proteins ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae. TheC. albicansprotein was named CaYst1. It was found in membrane and ribosome fractions but surprisingly, was not found in cell walls. Unlike the human LBP, CaYst1p does not bind laminin. These data indicate that CaYst1p is not a cell-surface receptor for laminin as has been proposed for the human LBP. Instead, like theS. cerevisiaeYst proteins, it appears to be a riboso…

Ribosomal ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsReceptors LamininRibosomal proteinComplementary DNACandida albicansAnimalsHumansCandida albicansAntibodies Fungalchemistry.chemical_classificationFungal proteinbiologyBase SequenceBinding proteinMembrane Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationBlotting NorthernMolecular biologyBlotting SouthernCytoskeletal ProteinsBiochemistrychemistryMembrane proteinProtein BiosynthesisRabbitsGlycoproteinSequence AlignmentMicrobiology (Reading, England)
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Les comportements de protection face au risque naturel : de la résistance à l’engagement

2011

An adequate risk management requires taking into account all the categories of stakeholders, including the exposed populations. Nowadays, one difficulty is to involve these populations and consequently to understand their reactions face to the eventuality of a disaster's occurrence. Several issues must be addressed: how is the representation of risk built up ? How do people develop adaptive strategies towards risk ? And above all, how is it possible to ensure an increase in behaviours suited for prevention and protection ? After drawing up a report on the research in this area, we will discuss the limitations of a persuasive communication, in order to better understand the interest of a bin…

Risk[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyPréventionDisasterReprésentationNatural hazards[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyCatastropheRisques naturelsGeneral PsychologyBinding communicationCommunication engageantePratiques Psychologiques
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