Search results for "folding"

showing 10 items of 330 documents

Chaperonin of Group I: Oligomeric spectrum and biochemical and biological implications

2018

Chaperonins play various physiological roles and can also be pathogenic. Elucidation of their structure, e.g., oligomeric status and post-translational modifications (PTM), is necessary to understand their functions and mechanisms of action in health and disease. Group I chaperonins form tetradecamers with two stacked heptameric rings. The tetradecamer is considered the typical functional complex for folding of client polypeptides. However, other forms such as the monomer and oligomers with smaller number of subunits than the classical tetradecamer, also occur in cells. The properties and functions of the monomer and oligomers, and their roles in chaperonin-associated diseases are still inc…

0301 basic medicineHeptamerReviewOligomerBiochemistryBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)GroELChaperonin03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinePost-translation modificationGroup I ChaperoninsMolecular BiosciencesChaperonopathies; GroEL; Heptamer; Hsp60; Monomer; Non-canonical locales; Post-translation modification; Tetradecamer; Biochemistry; Molecular Biology; Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)lcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologyTetradecamerChaperonopathiesNon-canonical localesHsp60GroELMicrovesicles3. Good healthMonomer030104 developmental biologychemistrylcsh:Biology (General)030220 oncology & carcinogenesisBiophysicsChaperonopathieProtein foldingHSP60Non-canonical localeFunction (biology)
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2016

Protein export is central for the survival and virulence of intracellular P. falciparum blood stage parasites. To reach the host cell, exported proteins cross the parasite plasma membrane (PPM) and the parasite-enclosing parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), a process that requires unfolding, suggestive of protein translocation. Components of a proposed translocon at the PVM termed PTEX are essential in this phase of export but translocation activity has not been shown for the complex and questions have been raised about its proposed membrane pore component EXP2 for which no functional data is available in P. falciparum. It is also unclear how PTEX mediates trafficking of both, soluble as…

0301 basic medicineImmunoprecipitation030106 microbiologyImmunologyChromosomal translocationBiologyTransloconMicrobiologyTransmembrane proteinTransport proteinCell biology03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyMembrane proteinVirologyparasitic diseasesProtein purificationGeneticsParasitologyProtein foldingMolecular BiologyPLOS Pathogens
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Maternal Inheritance of a Recessive RBP4 Defect in Canine Congenital Eye Disease

2018

SUMMARY Maternally skewed transmission of traits has been associated with genomic imprinting and oocyte-derived mRNA. We report canine congenital eye malformations, caused by an amino acid deletion (K12del) near the N terminus of retinol-binding protein (RBP4). The disease is only expressed when both dam and offspring are deletion homozygotes. RBP carries vitamin A (retinol) from hepatic stores to peripheral tissues, including the placenta and developing eye, where it is required to synthesize retinoic acid. Gestational vitamin A deficiency is a known risk factor for ocular birth defects. The K12del mutation disrupts RBP folding in vivo, decreasing its secretion from hepatocytes to serum. T…

0301 basic medicineMaleNon-Mendelian inheritanceProtein Foldingcongenital eye defectEye Diseasesgenetic structuresNATIVE DISULFIDE BONDSMedical PhysiologyRetinoic acidReproductive health and childbirth413 Veterinary scienceMicrophthalmiavitamin Achemistry.chemical_compoundPlasmaA-vitamiini2.1 Biological and endogenous factorsMicrophthalmosPrealbuminCRYSTAL-STRUCTUREAetiologyBase Pairinglcsh:QH301-705.5Sequence DeletionPediatricwhole genome sequencingVITAMIN-A-DEFICIENCYANOPHTHALMIAPenetrancePedigreemedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypeFemalemedicine.medical_specialtyGenotypeENDOPLASMIC-RETICULUMGenes RecessiveMETABOLISMBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesDogscanine geneticsInternal medicinePlacentaRETINOL-BINDING-PROTEINGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansRecessiveMALFORMATIONSBIOCHEMICAL BASISAmino Acid SequenceAlleleEye Disease and Disorders of VisionNutritiongenome-wide association study030102 biochemistry & molecular biologywestern blottingMUTATIONSta1184RBP4maternal inheritancemedicine.diseaseRetinol-Binding ProteinsRetinol binding proteinnuclear magnetic resonance030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologychemistryGeneslcsh:Biology (General)microphthalmiaGenetic LociHela Cells1182 Biochemistry cell and molecular biologyCongenital Structural Anomalies3111 BiomedicineBiochemistry and Cell BiologyDigestive DiseasesGenomic imprintingRetinol-Binding Proteins PlasmaHeLa Cells
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High-Pressure-Driven Reversible Dissociation of α-Synuclein Fibrils Reveals Structural Hierarchy

2017

The analysis of the α-synuclein (aS) aggregation process, which is involved in Parkinson's disease etiopathogenesis, and of the structural feature of the resulting amyloid fibrils may shed light on the relationship between the structure of aS aggregates and their toxicity. This may be considered a paradigm of the ground work needed to tackle the molecular basis of all the protein-aggregation-related diseases. With this aim, we used chemical and physical dissociation methods to explore the structural organization of wild-type aS fibrils. High pressure (in the kbar range) and alkaline pH were used to disassemble fibrils to collect information on the hierarchic pathway by which distinct β-sh…

0301 basic medicineModels MolecularCircular dichroismAmyloidProtein FoldingProtein domainBeta sheetBiophysicsFibrilMicroscopy Atomic ForceSpectrum Analysis RamanDissociation (chemistry)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineProtein structureMicroscopy Electron TransmissionProtein DomainsSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredEscherichia coliPressureChemistryCircular DichroismEnergy landscapeProteinsalpha synuclein amyloid recombinant proteinHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationRecombinant ProteinsCrystallography030104 developmental biologyMutationalpha-SynucleinProtein foldingProtein Conformation beta-StrandProtein Multimerization030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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On the (un)coupling of the chromophore, tongue interactions, and overall conformation in a bacterial phytochrome

2018

Phytochromes are photoreceptors in plants, fungi, and various microorganisms and cycle between metastable red light-absorbing (Pr) and far-red light-absorbing (Pfr) states. Their light responses are thought to follow a conserved structural mechanism that is triggered by isomerization of the chromophore. Downstream structural changes involve refolding of the so-called tongue extension of the phytochrome-specific GAF-related (PHY) domain of the photoreceptor. The tongue is connected to the chromophore by conserved DIP and PRXSF motifs and a conserved tyrosine, but the role of these residues in signal transduction is not clear. Here, we examine the tongue interactions and their interplay with …

0301 basic medicineModels MolecularCrystallography X-RayBiochemistrybakteeritProtein structurephotoconversionchromophore-binding domainTransferasestructural biologyCRYSTAL-STRUCTURETyrosineDEINOCOCCUS-RADIODURANSbiologyPhytochromeChemistryREARRANGEMENTSProtein Structure and FoldingDeinococcusmutagenesisBinding domainSignal TransductionMODULEPLANT PHYTOCHROMEPhenylalaninefotobiologia03 medical and health sciencesBacterial Proteinsprotein conformationcell signalingprotein structureBACTERIOPHYTOCHROMEMolecular BiologyX-ray crystallographysoluviestintäphytochromeAGP1BINDING DOMAINBinding Sitesta114030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyta1182Deinococcus radioduransCell BiologyChromophorebiology.organism_classificationphotoreceptor030104 developmental biologyStructural biologyFTIRBiophysicsTyrosineproteiinit3111 Biomedicineröntgenkristallografia
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Evolving Notch polyQ tracts reveal possible solenoid interference elements.

2016

ABSTRACTPolyglutamine (polyQ) tracts in regulatory proteins are extremely polymorphic. As functional elements under selection for length, triplet repeats are prone to DNA replication slippage and indel mutations. Many polyQ tracts are also embedded within intrinsically disordered domains, which are less constrained, fast evolving, and difficult to characterize. To identify structural principles underlying polyQ tracts in disordered regulatory domains, here I analyze deep evolution of metazoan Notch polyQ tracts, which can generate alleles causing developmental and neurogenic defects. I show that Notch features polyQ tract turnover that is restricted to a discrete number of conserved “polyQ …

0301 basic medicineModels MolecularProtein Structure ComparisonProtein FoldingHuntingtinlcsh:MedicineCarboxamideAnkyrin Repeat DomainBiochemistryProtein Structure SecondaryDatabase and Informatics Methods0302 clinical medicineProtein structureMacromolecular Structure AnalysisDrosophila Proteinslcsh:ScienceGeneticsHuntingtin ProteinMultidisciplinaryReceptors NotchChemistryDrosophila MelanogasterAnimal ModelsCell biologyInsectsExperimental Organism SystemsProtein foldingDrosophilaSequence AnalysisResearch ArticleMultiple Alignment CalculationProtein StructureArthropodamedicine.drug_classBioinformaticsProtein domainSequence alignmentBiologyIntrinsically disordered proteinsResearch and Analysis MethodsTerminal loopEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesModel OrganismsProtein DomainsSequence Motif AnalysisComputational TechniquesmedicineHuntingtin ProteinAnimalsIndelMolecular BiologyRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidModels GeneticSequence Homology Amino Acidlcsh:RDNA replicationOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesProteinsHydrogen BondingInvertebratesSplit-Decomposition MethodIntrinsically Disordered Proteins030104 developmental biologyAnkyrin repeatlcsh:QPeptidesSequence Alignment030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPLoS ONE
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2017

Studying folding and assembly of naturally occurring α-helical transmembrane proteins can inspire the design of membrane proteins with defined functions. Thus far, most studies have focused on the role of membrane-integrated protein regions. However, to fully understand folding pathways and stabilization of α-helical membrane proteins, it is vital to also include the role of soluble loops. We have analyzed the impact of interhelical loops on folding, assembly and stability of the heme-containing four-helix bundle transmembrane protein cytochrome b6 that is involved in charge transfer across biomembranes. Cytochrome b6 consists of two transmembrane helical hairpins that sandwich two heme mol…

0301 basic medicineMultidisciplinaryChemistryTransmembrane proteinFolding (chemistry)03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundTransmembrane domain030104 developmental biologyProtein structureMembrane proteinBiophysicsProtein foldingPeptide sequenceHemePLOS ONE
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An overview of recent molecular dynamics applications as medicinal chemistry tools for the undruggable site challenge

2018

Molecular dynamics (MD) has become increasingly popular due to the development of hardware and software solutions and the improvement in algorithms, which allowed researchers to scale up calculations in order to speed them up. MD simulations are usually used to address protein folding issues or protein-ligand complex stability through energy profile analysis over time. In recent years, the development of new tools able to deeply explore a potential energy surface (PES) has allowed researchers to focus on the dynamic nature of the binding recognition process and binding-induced protein conformational changes. Moreover, modern approaches have been demonstrated to be effective and reliable in …

0301 basic medicinePharmacologyVirtual screeningDrug discoveryComputer scienceOrganic ChemistryRational designPharmaceutical ScienceComputational biologyBiochemistrySmall moleculeSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaChemistry03 medical and health sciencesMolecular dynamics030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineDocking (molecular)030220 oncology & carcinogenesisDrug DiscoveryMolecular MedicineProtein foldingPharmacophoreMolecular Dynamics undruggable target computational studies
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The endoplasmic reticulum unfolded protein response in neurodegenerative disorders and its potential therapeutic significance

2017

In eukaryotic cells, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cell compartment involved in secretory protein translocation and quality control of secretory protein folding. Different conditions can alter ER function, resulting in the accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins within the ER lumen. Such a condition, known as ER stress, elicits an integrated adaptive response known as the unfolded protein response (UPR) that aims to restore proteostasis within the secretory pathway. Conversely, in prolonged cell stress or insufficient adaptive response, UPR signaling causes cell death. ER dysfunctions are involved and contribute to neuronal degeneration in several human diseases, including Al…

0301 basic medicineProgrammed cell deathTherapeutic targetReviewBiologytherapeutic targetsNeurodegenerative diseaselcsh:RC321-571Unfolded protein response03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceProtein misfolding disordermedicineneurodegenerative diseasesprotein misfolding disorderslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryMolecular BiologySecretory pathwayEndoplasmic reticulumNeurodegenerationmedicine.diseaseCell biology030104 developmental biologyProteostasisSecretory proteinUnfolded protein responseER streSignal transductionER stressNeuroscience
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In vivo selection of heterotypically interacting transmembrane helices: Complementary helix surfaces, rather than conserved interaction motifs, drive…

2017

Single pass transmembrane proteins make up almost half of the whole transmembrane proteome. Contacts between such bitopic transmembrane proteins are common, and oligomerization of their single transmembrane helix is involved in triggering and regulation of signal transduction across cell membranes. In several recent analyses the distribution of amino acids at helix-helix contact sides has been analyzed, and e.g. a preference of amino acids with small side chains has been identified. Here we select amino acids, amino acid pairings and amino acid motifs, which mediate strong interactions of single-span transmembrane α-helices. Our analysis illustrates an architecture of TM helix dimers that i…

0301 basic medicineProtein Conformation alpha-HelicalDimerAmino Acid MotifsBiophysicsBiologyBiochemistryBordetella pertussisProtein Structure Secondary03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundAmino Acid SequenceAmino Acidschemistry.chemical_classificationCell MembraneMembrane ProteinsCell BiologyTransmembrane proteinAmino acidCrystallographyTransmembrane domain030104 developmental biologyMembrane proteinchemistryProteomeHelixBiophysicsProtein foldingDimerizationBiochimica et biophysica acta. Biomembranes
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