Search results for "protein engineering"

showing 10 items of 54 documents

Dendritic cells, engineered to secrete a T-cell receptor mimic peptide, induce antigen-specific immunosuppression in vivo

2003

A T-cell receptor mimic peptide (TCRpep) consisting of an 8-amino-acid peptide, homologous to the transmembrane region of the T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha chain, blocks T-cell activation after systemic application. When dendritic cells (DCs) were transduced to secrete the TCRpep and injected into mice, evidence of immunosuppression was observed. In a CD8-driven allergy model, the injection of DCs transduced with the TCRpep reduced inflammation markedly and in a CD4+ T cell-dependent model of multiple sclerosis (experimental autoimmune encephalitis, EAE), injection of TCRpep-secreting DCs abrogated EAE symptoms and prolonged survival. These effects were antigen specific, because transduced DC…

Encephalomyelitis Autoimmune ExperimentalReceptors Peptidemedicine.medical_treatmentReceptors Antigen T-CellBiomedical EngineeringMice TransgenicT-Cell Antigen Receptor SpecificityBioengineeringPeptideBiologyProtein EngineeringApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMiceAntigenBiomimeticsIn vivomedicineAnimalsSecretionAntigensReceptorCells CulturedImmunosuppression Therapychemistry.chemical_classificationT-cell receptorImmunosuppressionDendritic CellsDendritic cellCell biologychemistryImmunologyMolecular MedicineBiotechnologyNature Biotechnology
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Site-Specific Dual Labeling of Proteins on Cysteine Residues with Chlorotetrazines

2018

International audience; Dual-labeled biomolecules constitute a new generation of bioconjugates with promising applications in therapy and diagnosis. Unfortunately, the development of these new families of biologics is hampered by the technical difficulties associated with their construction. In particular, the site specificity of the conjugation is critical as the number and position of payloads can have a dramatic impact on the pharmacokinetics of the bioconjugate. Herein, we introduce dichlorotetrazine as a trivalent platform for the selective double modification of proteins on cysteine residues. This strategy is applied to the dual labeling of albumin with a macrocyclic chelator for nucl…

Fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopyTetrazolesbioconjugation010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysisMicesite-specific labelingAnimalsHumans[CHIM]Chemical SciencesTissue DistributionAmino Acid SequenceAminescysteineSerum AlbuminDual labelingFluorescent Dyeschemistry.chemical_classificationBioconjugation010405 organic chemistryBiomoleculeOptical Imagingprotein engineeringGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryProtein engineeringFluorescence0104 chemical scienceschemistryBiochemistryclick chemistryClick chemistryPeptidesCysteine
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Synthesis and Evaluation of Novel Ring‐Strained Noncanonical Amino Acids for Residue‐Specific Bioorthogonal Reactions in Living Cells

2021

Abstract Bioorthogonal reactions are ideally suited to selectively modify proteins in complex environments, even in vivo. Kinetics and product stability of these reactions are crucial parameters to evaluate their usefulness for specific applications. Strain promoted inverse electron demand Diels–Alder cycloadditions (SPIEDAC) between tetrazines and strained alkenes or alkynes are particularly popular, as they allow ultrafast labeling inside cells. In combination with genetic code expansion (GCE)‐a method that allows to incorporate noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) site‐specifically into proteins in vivo. These reactions enable residue‐specific fluorophore attachment to proteins in living mam…

FluorophoreKinetics010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundIn vivoChemical BiologyAnimalsAmino AcidsFluorescent Dyeschemistry.chemical_classificationCycloaddition ReactionFull Paper010405 organic chemistryChemistryOrganic ChemistryProteinsprotein engineeringGeneral ChemistryProtein engineeringFull PapersGenetic codelive-cell labeling0104 chemical sciencesAmino acidkineticsAlkynesclick chemistryBiophysicsClick chemistryBioorthogonal chemistryunnatural amino acidsChemistry – A European Journal
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Exploration of Evolutionary Relations between Protein Structures

2008

We describe a new method for the exploration of evolutionary relations between protein structures.

GeneticsProtein structureChemistryProtein domainProtein designProtein function predictionProtein engineeringSupersecondary structureComputational biologyProtein structure predictionProtein tertiary structure
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Mosaic hepatitis B virus core particles presenting the complete preS sequence of the viral envelope on their surface

2004

The sequence of the preS domain of the hepatitis B virus (HBV, genotype D) envelope was inserted into the major immunodominant region (MIR) of the C-terminally truncated HBV core (HBc) protein. In Escherichia coli, the HBc–preS fusion protein was partially soluble and did not produce particles. Co-expression of the wild-type HBc as a helper protein along with the fusion protein led to the formation of mosaic HBc particles that exhibited HBc, preS1 and preS2 antigenicity. Two alternative combinations of medium- and high-copy plasmids were used for co-expression of fusion and helper proteins, in an attempt to improve mosaic particle production. However, the preS fusion content of the particle…

Hepatitis B virusAntigenicityvirusesAntibodies ViralProtein Engineeringmedicine.disease_causeVirusMiceViral Envelope ProteinsOrthohepadnavirusViral envelopeVirologyEscherichia colimedicineAnimalsProtein PrecursorsHepatitis B virusHepatitis B Surface AntigensbiologyViral Core Proteinsvirus diseasesProtein engineeringHepatitis Bbiology.organism_classificationVirologyFusion proteindigestive system diseasesHepadnaviridaeFemaleImmunizationReassortant VirusesPlasmidsJournal of General Virology
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Engineering of sugar transporters for improvement of xylose utilization during high-temperature alcoholic fermentation in Ogataea polymorpha yeast

2020

Abstract Background Xylose transport is one of the bottlenecks in the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol. Xylose consumption by the wild-type strains of xylose-utilizing yeasts occurs once glucose is depleted resulting in a long fermentation process and overall slow and incomplete conversion of sugars liberated from lignocellulosic hydrolysates. Therefore, the engineering of endogenous transporters for the facilitation of glucose-xylose co-consumption is an important prerequisite for efficient ethanol production from lignocellulosic hydrolysates. Results In this study, several engineering approaches formerly used for the low-affinity glucose transporters in Saccharomyces cerev…

Hot TemperatureXylose transportersSaccharomyces cerevisiaelcsh:QR1-502Lignocellulosic biomassBioengineeringEthanol fermentationXyloseProtein EngineeringApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyPichialcsh:MicrobiologyFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundHigh-temperature alcoholic fermentationOgataea (Hansenula) polymorphaEthanol fuelXylosebiologyChemistryResearchbiology.organism_classificationYeastBiochemistryAlcoholsFermentationFermentationOgataea polymorphaBiotechnology
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Expression of spearmint limonene synthase in transgenic spike lavender results in an altered monoterpene composition in developing leaves.

2008

We generated transgenic spike lavender (Lavandula latifolia) plants constitutively expressing the limonene synthase (LS) gene from spearmint (Mentha spicata), encoding the LS enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of limonene from geranyl diphosphate. Overexpression of the LS transgene did not consistently affect monoterpene profile in pooled leaves or flowers from transgenic T(0) plants. Analyses from cohorts of leaves sampled at different developmental stages showed that essential oil accumulation in transgenic and control plants was higher in developing than in mature leaves. Furthermore, developing leaves of transgenic plants contained increased limonene contents (more than 450% increase c…

LavenderMonoterpeneTransgeneLavandula latifoliaBioengineeringGenetically modified cropsBiologyProtein EngineeringApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMentha spicatalaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundlawBotanyIntramolecular LyasesGeneEssential oilLimonenefood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationPlants Genetically ModifiedRecombinant ProteinsPlant LeavesGenetic EnhancementLavandulachemistryMonoterpenesBiotechnologyMetabolic engineering
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HIF-1α and Pro-Inflammatory Signaling Improves the Immunomodulatory Activity of MSC-Derived Extracellular Vesicles

2021

Despite the strong evidence for the immunomodulatory activity of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), clinical trials have so far failed to clearly show benefit, likely reflecting methodological shortcomings and lack of standardization. MSC-mediated tissue repair is commonly believed to occur in a paracrine manner, and it has been stated that extracellular vesicles (EVs) secreted by MSCs (EVMSC) are able to recapitulate the immunosuppressive properties of parental cells. As a next step, clinical trials to corroborate preclinical studies should be performed. However, effective dose in large mammals, including humans, is quite high and EVs industrial production is hindered by the proliferative s…

MaleT-Lymphocytesmedicine.medical_treatmentCellimmunomodulationProtein Engineeringlcsh:ChemistryMiceHypersensitivity Delayedlcsh:QH301-705.5TelomeraseCells CulturedSpectroscopyMice Inbred BALB CGeneral MedicineRecombinant ProteinsComputer Science ApplicationsCell biologyCytokinemedicine.anatomical_structurehypoxia-inducible factor 1-alphaCytokinesmesenchymal stromal cellsGenetic VectorsGreen Fluorescent ProteinsBiologyMesenchymal Stem Cell TransplantationArticleCatalysisCell LineViral vectorInorganic ChemistryExtracellular VesiclesYoung AdultParacrine signallingIn vivomedicineAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologyDental PulpCell ProliferationT-cellsLentivirusOrganic ChemistryMesenchymal stem cellMesenchymal Stem CellsHypoxia-Inducible Factor 1 alpha SubunitIn vitrolcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999Cell cultureInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Design and construction of highly stable, protease-resistant chimeric avidins.

2005

The chicken avidin gene family consists of avidin and seven separate avidin-related genes (AVRs) 1-7. Avidin protein is a widely used biochemical tool, whereas the other family members have only recently been produced as recombinant proteins and characterized. In our previous study, AVR4 was found to be the most stable biotin binding protein thus far characterized (T(m) = 106.4 degrees C). In this study, we studied further the biotin-binding properties of AVR4. A decrease in the energy barrier between the biotin-bound and unbound state of AVR4 was observed when compared with that of avidin. The high resolution structure of AVR4 facilitated comparison of the structural details of avidin and …

Models MolecularBiotin bindingInsectaProtein familyProtein subunitRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataBiotinBiosensing TechniquesBiologyProtein EngineeringBiochemistryProtein Structure SecondaryProtein structureAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyThermostabilityCalorimetry Differential ScanningSequence Homology Amino AcidTemperatureCell BiologyProtein engineeringAvidinRecombinant ProteinsProtein Structure TertiaryKineticsBiochemistryMicroscopy FluorescenceMutagenesisBiotinylationMutationbiology.proteinChromatography GelThermodynamicsElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelEndopeptidase KBaculoviridaeChickensAvidinChromatography LiquidPeptide HydrolasesProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Introduction of histidine residues into avidin subunit interfaces allows pH-dependent regulation of quaternary structure and biotin binding

2003

AbstractIn order to turn the subunit association and biotin binding of avidin into pH-sensitive phenomena, we have replaced individually three amino acid residues in avidin (Met96, Val115 and Ile117) with histidines in the 1–3 interface, and in combination with a histidine conversion in the 1–2 interface (Trp110). The single replacements Met96His and Val115His in the 1–3 interface were found to have a clear effect on the quaternary structure of avidin, since subunit associations of these mutants became pH-dependent. The histidine replacement in the 1–2 interface affected the biotin-binding properties of the mutants, in particular reversibility of binding and protein–ligand complex formation…

Models MolecularBiotin bindingInsectaProtein subunitBiophysicsBiotinBiosensing TechniquesBiochemistryCell LineProtein structureStructural BiologyGeneticsAnimalsHistidinepH dependenceProtein Structure QuaternaryMolecular BiologyHistidinebiologyChemistryCell BiologyProtein engineeringHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAvidinRecombinant ProteinsMolecular WeightProtein SubunitsSpectrometry FluorescenceAmino Acid SubstitutionBiochemistryBiotinylationBiophysicsbiology.proteinProtein quaternary structureProtein engineeringBaculoviridaeProtein BindingAvidinFEBS Letters
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