
Histidine and tyrosine phosphorylation in pea mitochondria
... transduction pathways tyrosine phosphoproteins are typically found in the beginning of the signal pathway as membrane receptor kinases. Since the tyrosine phosphoproteins detected in this study were found to be membrane associated, it is possible that they represent mitochondrial receptor tyrosine k ...
... transduction pathways tyrosine phosphoproteins are typically found in the beginning of the signal pathway as membrane receptor kinases. Since the tyrosine phosphoproteins detected in this study were found to be membrane associated, it is possible that they represent mitochondrial receptor tyrosine k ...
No Slide Title
... MRS is mainly used for (but not restricted to) protein/nucleic acid and related databases • DNA and protein sequences • Sequence related information (e.g. alignments, protein, domains, enzymes, metabolic pathways, structural information) • Genomic information • Hereditary information ...
... MRS is mainly used for (but not restricted to) protein/nucleic acid and related databases • DNA and protein sequences • Sequence related information (e.g. alignments, protein, domains, enzymes, metabolic pathways, structural information) • Genomic information • Hereditary information ...
NMR spectroscopy brings invisible protein states into
... experiment is that the probe evolves at different frequencies (the chemical shift) Figure 1 A simple schematic of a CPMG relaxation dispersion experiment. (a) A molecule interconverts when in states A and B, denoted by ωA stochastically between two conformational states, A and B, as a function of ti ...
... experiment is that the probe evolves at different frequencies (the chemical shift) Figure 1 A simple schematic of a CPMG relaxation dispersion experiment. (a) A molecule interconverts when in states A and B, denoted by ωA stochastically between two conformational states, A and B, as a function of ti ...
Macromolecules
... than those rich in AT (or AU) pairs because GC pairs have more hydrogen bonds Now, Specific AT (or AU) and GC base pairing can occur only if the lengths of nucleic acid in the double helix consist of complementary sequences of bases. A must always be opposite T (or U). G must always be opposite C. H ...
... than those rich in AT (or AU) pairs because GC pairs have more hydrogen bonds Now, Specific AT (or AU) and GC base pairing can occur only if the lengths of nucleic acid in the double helix consist of complementary sequences of bases. A must always be opposite T (or U). G must always be opposite C. H ...
SecStAnT: secondary structure analysis tool for data selection
... widely used, internationally referred representation for macromolecular data, including experimental and structural information. These, however, are integrated within the coordinates file, and not of immediate use to the aim of building, e.g. primary or secondary structure-dependent dataset. In this ...
... widely used, internationally referred representation for macromolecular data, including experimental and structural information. These, however, are integrated within the coordinates file, and not of immediate use to the aim of building, e.g. primary or secondary structure-dependent dataset. In this ...
Silk-inspired polymers and proteins
... out the protein (as occurs during the natural spinning process) [28,37,39] or methanol which dehydrates the β-sheet-forming peptides within the polymer/protein [29]. Other stimuli such as stretching (mimicking post-spin draw applied by spiders) [40], storage [41], heat [42] or UV radiation [41] have ...
... out the protein (as occurs during the natural spinning process) [28,37,39] or methanol which dehydrates the β-sheet-forming peptides within the polymer/protein [29]. Other stimuli such as stretching (mimicking post-spin draw applied by spiders) [40], storage [41], heat [42] or UV radiation [41] have ...
8-30-16 Macomolecule Foldable Instructions
... Tab A 1. Give 4 FUNCTIONS OF PROTEINS and EXPLAIN what is meant by that function 2. List 2 EXAMPLES OF PROTEINS and WHERE you would find that protein 3. Describe each level of protein organization. Include what type of bond is used, and what is specifically being bonded to each other (i.e. adjacent ...
... Tab A 1. Give 4 FUNCTIONS OF PROTEINS and EXPLAIN what is meant by that function 2. List 2 EXAMPLES OF PROTEINS and WHERE you would find that protein 3. Describe each level of protein organization. Include what type of bond is used, and what is specifically being bonded to each other (i.e. adjacent ...
Dr. John Perozich's Full CV
... dehydrogenases, including UDP-glucose dehydrogenases and GDP-mannose dehydrogenases, were aligned to elucidate structural, functional and phylogenetic relationships in the enzyme family. Comparative Analysis of Acetylcholinesterases. Poster. Patrick Salibi and John Perozich. Ohio Collaborative Confe ...
... dehydrogenases, including UDP-glucose dehydrogenases and GDP-mannose dehydrogenases, were aligned to elucidate structural, functional and phylogenetic relationships in the enzyme family. Comparative Analysis of Acetylcholinesterases. Poster. Patrick Salibi and John Perozich. Ohio Collaborative Confe ...
Comparative genomics and metabolic reconstruction of
... • Identification of a gap in a pathway (universal, taxon-specific, or in individual genomes) • Search for candidates assigned to the pathway by co-localization and co-regulation (in many genomes) • Prediction of general biochemical function from (distant) similarty and functional patterns • Tentativ ...
... • Identification of a gap in a pathway (universal, taxon-specific, or in individual genomes) • Search for candidates assigned to the pathway by co-localization and co-regulation (in many genomes) • Prediction of general biochemical function from (distant) similarty and functional patterns • Tentativ ...
Protein-only inheritance in yeast: something to get
... fluorescence is distributed diffusely throughout the cell. However, if Sup35p–GFP is expressed in [PSI1] strains, the fluorescence coalesces into foci as soon as it can be visualized, suggesting that pre-existing complexes of Sup35p in [PSI1] cells influence newly synthesized Sup35p to adopt the [PS ...
... fluorescence is distributed diffusely throughout the cell. However, if Sup35p–GFP is expressed in [PSI1] strains, the fluorescence coalesces into foci as soon as it can be visualized, suggesting that pre-existing complexes of Sup35p in [PSI1] cells influence newly synthesized Sup35p to adopt the [PS ...
Synapse Specificity Minireview and Long
... One interpretation of these findings is that late LTP induced in the first pathway generates new proteins that can then be used by the synapses stimulated in the second pathway to generate late LTP. Because the second pathway was only transiently treated with a protein synthesis inhibitor, it is als ...
... One interpretation of these findings is that late LTP induced in the first pathway generates new proteins that can then be used by the synapses stimulated in the second pathway to generate late LTP. Because the second pathway was only transiently treated with a protein synthesis inhibitor, it is als ...
Slide 1
... 3 The Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990 (NLEA) introduced the use of Authorized Health Claims. 4 Due to a litigation that raised First Amendment challenges (i.e., free-speech) to the significant scientific agreement (SSA) standard, which authorized claims are held to, the U.S FDA announce ...
... 3 The Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990 (NLEA) introduced the use of Authorized Health Claims. 4 Due to a litigation that raised First Amendment challenges (i.e., free-speech) to the significant scientific agreement (SSA) standard, which authorized claims are held to, the U.S FDA announce ...
The Diversity of Lysine-Acetylated Proteins in Escherichia coli
... (Ac-AMP) intermediate. Acs activity is posttranslationally regulated by acetylation of lysine-609, which blocks the synthesis of the adenylate intermediate but does not affect the thioester-forming activity of the enzyme [19]. Therefore, a system-wide analysis of lysine-acetylated proteins is requir ...
... (Ac-AMP) intermediate. Acs activity is posttranslationally regulated by acetylation of lysine-609, which blocks the synthesis of the adenylate intermediate but does not affect the thioester-forming activity of the enzyme [19]. Therefore, a system-wide analysis of lysine-acetylated proteins is requir ...
Lab Session 9
... electric field (only), they will all move towards the positive pole at the same rate, with no separation by size. • However, if the proteins are put into an environment that will allow different sized proteins to move at different rates. • The environment is polyacrylamide. • The entire process is c ...
... electric field (only), they will all move towards the positive pole at the same rate, with no separation by size. • However, if the proteins are put into an environment that will allow different sized proteins to move at different rates. • The environment is polyacrylamide. • The entire process is c ...
Prediction of protein function using a deep convolutional
... rapidly increases, experimentally verified functional annotation of whole genomes remains limited. Protein structure, i.e. the 3D configuration of the chain of amino acids, is a very good predictor of protein function, and in fact a more reliable predictor than protein sequence because it is far mor ...
... rapidly increases, experimentally verified functional annotation of whole genomes remains limited. Protein structure, i.e. the 3D configuration of the chain of amino acids, is a very good predictor of protein function, and in fact a more reliable predictor than protein sequence because it is far mor ...
Interactome

In molecular biology, an interactome is the whole set of molecular interactions in a particular cell. The term specifically refers to physical interactions among molecules (such as those among proteins, also known as protein-protein interactions) but can also describe sets of indirect interactions among genes (genetic interactions). Mathematically, interactomes are generally displayed as graphs.The word ""interactome"" was originally coined in 1999 by a group of French scientists headed by Bernard Jacq. Though interactomes may be described as biological networks, they should not be confused with other networks such as neural networks or food webs.