
Chromosomal rearrangements and protein globularity changes in
... system (CNS) Mtb infection is still not clear. Both host susceptibility factors and specific mycobacterial genetic traits have been implicated. The former has been documented extensively by clinical reports on the greater risk of CNS infection in immunocompromised hosts (Keane et al., 2001; Vinnard ...
... system (CNS) Mtb infection is still not clear. Both host susceptibility factors and specific mycobacterial genetic traits have been implicated. The former has been documented extensively by clinical reports on the greater risk of CNS infection in immunocompromised hosts (Keane et al., 2001; Vinnard ...
View Full PDF - Biochemical Society Transactions
... secretory bulk-flow of proteins due to the presence of sorting signals that are recognized by specific membrane spanning receptors to initiate transport to the degradative organelles. These signals are surface structures either directly displayed by the folded polypeptide (often in fungi and plants) ...
... secretory bulk-flow of proteins due to the presence of sorting signals that are recognized by specific membrane spanning receptors to initiate transport to the degradative organelles. These signals are surface structures either directly displayed by the folded polypeptide (often in fungi and plants) ...
Organic Chemistry Notes Student
... A. Carbohydrates - ______________________________________ Monosaccharides are the simplest ______________________. • The carbohydrate monomers are ___________________ • A monosaccharide has a formula that is a multiple of CH2O ______________________ ...
... A. Carbohydrates - ______________________________________ Monosaccharides are the simplest ______________________. • The carbohydrate monomers are ___________________ • A monosaccharide has a formula that is a multiple of CH2O ______________________ ...
Lysosomal and vacuolar sorting: not so different
... secretory bulk-flow of proteins due to the presence of sorting signals that are recognized by specific membrane spanning receptors to initiate transport to the degradative organelles. These signals are surface structures either directly displayed by the folded polypeptide (often in fungi and plants) ...
... secretory bulk-flow of proteins due to the presence of sorting signals that are recognized by specific membrane spanning receptors to initiate transport to the degradative organelles. These signals are surface structures either directly displayed by the folded polypeptide (often in fungi and plants) ...
High Resolution Structure of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae Type IV
... John Tainer and colleagues at the Scripps Research Institute have succeeded in solving the crystal structures of Type IV pilins from several important human pathogens using the macromolecular crystallography beamlines at SSRL (Beamlines 7-1, 9-1, 9-2 and 11-1). This success built directly upon the e ...
... John Tainer and colleagues at the Scripps Research Institute have succeeded in solving the crystal structures of Type IV pilins from several important human pathogens using the macromolecular crystallography beamlines at SSRL (Beamlines 7-1, 9-1, 9-2 and 11-1). This success built directly upon the e ...
Phytochemistry
... Key Word Inde~Amaranthus leucocarpus; Amaranthaceae; lectin; agglutinin; stroma columns; erythrocytes. Abstract--A lectin of M, ca 45,000 per subunit from Amaranthus leucocarpus seeds, has been isolated and purified by affinity chromatography using a stroma column. It is a glycoprotein (10% w/w carb ...
... Key Word Inde~Amaranthus leucocarpus; Amaranthaceae; lectin; agglutinin; stroma columns; erythrocytes. Abstract--A lectin of M, ca 45,000 per subunit from Amaranthus leucocarpus seeds, has been isolated and purified by affinity chromatography using a stroma column. It is a glycoprotein (10% w/w carb ...
4 - EMD Millipore
... Aminoglycosides, such as kanamycin: irreversibly inhibit protein synthesis following their binding to the 30S subunit of the bacterial ribosome. Disruption in protein synthesis by aminoglycosides occurs by three different modes: (a) by interfering with the initiation complex; (b) by inducing a misre ...
... Aminoglycosides, such as kanamycin: irreversibly inhibit protein synthesis following their binding to the 30S subunit of the bacterial ribosome. Disruption in protein synthesis by aminoglycosides occurs by three different modes: (a) by interfering with the initiation complex; (b) by inducing a misre ...
The Amino-terminal Domain of the Golgi Protein Giantin Interacts
... Pfu turbo DNA polymerase to PCR amplify a "1.7-kb fragment from pGCP364/pSG5 using primers GL98, 5#-GACTCAGGATCCAATGAAGCTTCAAGAAGCCTTAATTTCC-3#, which contains a BamHI restriction site and a starting codon, and GL99, 5#-CCTGAGCTTCTACCTGAGAATTCAGATTACGAGTCTCTTC-3#, which contains an EcoRI restriction ...
... Pfu turbo DNA polymerase to PCR amplify a "1.7-kb fragment from pGCP364/pSG5 using primers GL98, 5#-GACTCAGGATCCAATGAAGCTTCAAGAAGCCTTAATTTCC-3#, which contains a BamHI restriction site and a starting codon, and GL99, 5#-CCTGAGCTTCTACCTGAGAATTCAGATTACGAGTCTCTTC-3#, which contains an EcoRI restriction ...
Identification of the Protein Storage Vacuole
... apparatus mediates the traffic of phaseolin to vacuoles (Chrispeels, 1983; Frigerio et al., 1998). To investigate whether phaseolin is transported through the Golgi apparatus in Arabidopsis as well, we examined its N-glycan moiety. The phaseolin construct used in this study has a single glycan at As ...
... apparatus mediates the traffic of phaseolin to vacuoles (Chrispeels, 1983; Frigerio et al., 1998). To investigate whether phaseolin is transported through the Golgi apparatus in Arabidopsis as well, we examined its N-glycan moiety. The phaseolin construct used in this study has a single glycan at As ...
Effect of the addition of CMC on the aggregation behaviour
... Mw shift toward higher values. Also, SPI contains more tyrosine residues than WPC, 3.3% vs. 2.5%, respectively (Stuchell and Krochta, 1994). Moreover, CMC seemed to interact with the protein mixture in ...
... Mw shift toward higher values. Also, SPI contains more tyrosine residues than WPC, 3.3% vs. 2.5%, respectively (Stuchell and Krochta, 1994). Moreover, CMC seemed to interact with the protein mixture in ...
Amino Acid Sequences Evolution
... Similarities in structure and biochemistry provide support for Darwin’s conclusion: living organisms evolved through gradual modification of earlier forms, that is, decent from a common ancestor. One biochemical similarity that can be studied is the similarity in amino acid sequences in homologous p ...
... Similarities in structure and biochemistry provide support for Darwin’s conclusion: living organisms evolved through gradual modification of earlier forms, that is, decent from a common ancestor. One biochemical similarity that can be studied is the similarity in amino acid sequences in homologous p ...
Full-Text PDF
... or multiples of 16 residues up to 96 residues form channels in planar lipid bilayers, and Fritz et al. [41] have described the gradient-driven transport of Ca2+ into liposomes by R-3HB oligomers. 4. cPHB-Proteins It is increasingly apparent that cPHB-proteins are ubiquitous in biological cells, both ...
... or multiples of 16 residues up to 96 residues form channels in planar lipid bilayers, and Fritz et al. [41] have described the gradient-driven transport of Ca2+ into liposomes by R-3HB oligomers. 4. cPHB-Proteins It is increasingly apparent that cPHB-proteins are ubiquitous in biological cells, both ...
Autophagy in the Eukaryotic Cell - CiteSeerX
... and travels along with this protein to the vacuole, where it is finally degraded by vacuolar proteases. The association of prApe1 with Cvt19 promotes the inclusion of both proteins into the forming Cvt vesicles (98), but it is not clear yet if the formation of this complex is the event that triggers ...
... and travels along with this protein to the vacuole, where it is finally degraded by vacuolar proteases. The association of prApe1 with Cvt19 promotes the inclusion of both proteins into the forming Cvt vesicles (98), but it is not clear yet if the formation of this complex is the event that triggers ...
Plant Cell Wall Proteins: A Large Body of Data, but What about
... It is difficult to obtain a high coverage of the complete set of proteins present in cell walls because of the lack of surrounding membrane which can result in the loss of CWPs during the isolation procedure [66]. CWPs can have little or no interactions with cell wall components and thus move freely ...
... It is difficult to obtain a high coverage of the complete set of proteins present in cell walls because of the lack of surrounding membrane which can result in the loss of CWPs during the isolation procedure [66]. CWPs can have little or no interactions with cell wall components and thus move freely ...
Peer-reviewed Article PDF
... contractile units or sarcomeres, which consist of four major components – thin filaments, thick filaments, titin and Zbands. The thin actin/tropomyosin-containing filaments are embedded in the Z-bands and interdigitate with the myosin-containing thick filaments aligned in A-bands. Titin is attached ...
... contractile units or sarcomeres, which consist of four major components – thin filaments, thick filaments, titin and Zbands. The thin actin/tropomyosin-containing filaments are embedded in the Z-bands and interdigitate with the myosin-containing thick filaments aligned in A-bands. Titin is attached ...
Amino Acid Transporters and Release of Hydrophobic Amino Acids
... Cyanobacteria are a group of prokaryotic microorganisms characterized by their ability to fix CO2 at the expense of oxygenic photosynthesis. They represent a coherent phylogenetic group in spite of showing a very diverse morphology and having colonized many different natural habitats. Some cyanobact ...
... Cyanobacteria are a group of prokaryotic microorganisms characterized by their ability to fix CO2 at the expense of oxygenic photosynthesis. They represent a coherent phylogenetic group in spite of showing a very diverse morphology and having colonized many different natural habitats. Some cyanobact ...
Bio-Polymers in Construction - Powell Center for Construction and
... biopolymers, composting is the most frequently cited. This may replace degraded soil and reduce the need for fertilizers (Patel, Bastioli, Marini, & Wurdinger, n.d., p. 10). Although the composting process effectively “downgrades” biopolymers into soil, because they are made from renewable sources t ...
... biopolymers, composting is the most frequently cited. This may replace degraded soil and reduce the need for fertilizers (Patel, Bastioli, Marini, & Wurdinger, n.d., p. 10). Although the composting process effectively “downgrades” biopolymers into soil, because they are made from renewable sources t ...
food derived from insect-protected, glufosinate ammonium
... Food derived from genetically modified (GM) cotton line MXB-13 has been assessed for its safety for human consumption. This cotton line has been genetically modified to be resistant to insect attack and has been developed for cultivation in North America and Australia. A number of criteria have been ...
... Food derived from genetically modified (GM) cotton line MXB-13 has been assessed for its safety for human consumption. This cotton line has been genetically modified to be resistant to insect attack and has been developed for cultivation in North America and Australia. A number of criteria have been ...
Assembly of the Light-Harvesting Chlorophyll Antenna in the Green
... help define the size and number of organelles in the cell by an as-yet-unknown mechanism (Tetali et al., 2007; Mitra and Melis, 2010). The product of the ALB3.1 gene, called ALB3 in higher plants, is a homolog of YidC of Escherichia coli, an inner membrane protein that facilitates incorporation of t ...
... help define the size and number of organelles in the cell by an as-yet-unknown mechanism (Tetali et al., 2007; Mitra and Melis, 2010). The product of the ALB3.1 gene, called ALB3 in higher plants, is a homolog of YidC of Escherichia coli, an inner membrane protein that facilitates incorporation of t ...
Word - Food Standards Australia New Zealand
... Food derived from genetically modified (GM) cotton line MXB-13 has been assessed for its safety for human consumption. This cotton line has been genetically modified to be resistant to insect attack and has been developed for cultivation in North America and Australia. A number of criteria have been ...
... Food derived from genetically modified (GM) cotton line MXB-13 has been assessed for its safety for human consumption. This cotton line has been genetically modified to be resistant to insect attack and has been developed for cultivation in North America and Australia. A number of criteria have been ...
novel nucleotide carrier proteins of Protochlamydia
... Preferred substrates of PamNTT2, PamNTT3 and PamNTT5 To reveal the transport properties of the remaining two transporters (PamNTT3 and PamNTT5) we cloned the corresponding genes, expressed these heterologously in E. coli and measured nucleotide transport mediated by the recombinant carrier proteins. ...
... Preferred substrates of PamNTT2, PamNTT3 and PamNTT5 To reveal the transport properties of the remaining two transporters (PamNTT3 and PamNTT5) we cloned the corresponding genes, expressed these heterologously in E. coli and measured nucleotide transport mediated by the recombinant carrier proteins. ...
`slow-twitch type` mitochondria, but does not
... cellular ATP demand, and Ca2+ fluxes [8]. An increased biogenesis of mitochondria was detected in skeletal muscle of null-mutant mice for proteins involved in ATP metabolism, such as creatine kinase [9] and the ADP ⁄ ATP translocator [10]. Intracellular Ca2+ acts as an important second messenger cont ...
... cellular ATP demand, and Ca2+ fluxes [8]. An increased biogenesis of mitochondria was detected in skeletal muscle of null-mutant mice for proteins involved in ATP metabolism, such as creatine kinase [9] and the ADP ⁄ ATP translocator [10]. Intracellular Ca2+ acts as an important second messenger cont ...
Simulation of Enzyme Reaction - diss.fu
... Several among the 20 amino acids, which are the building blocks of all proteins, have a side chain that can be protonated or not, depending on the pH. These amino acids are referred to as titratable amino acids and usually the acidic groups glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine as well as the ba ...
... Several among the 20 amino acids, which are the building blocks of all proteins, have a side chain that can be protonated or not, depending on the pH. These amino acids are referred to as titratable amino acids and usually the acidic groups glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine as well as the ba ...
A Quaternion-Based Definition of Protein
... [Table 2. Some structures where overall average straightness is high but labels in the PDB file result in the misappropriation of secondary structure. In this way, straightness can check for errors in PDB files.] ...
... [Table 2. Some structures where overall average straightness is high but labels in the PDB file result in the misappropriation of secondary structure. In this way, straightness can check for errors in PDB files.] ...
Amino acid transport systems of lysosomes
... transport system was shown in my laboratory also to be accountable for cystine accumulation, in the same disease, in human skin fibroblasts. My subsequent interest has proceeded principally along the lines of the question whether the lysosomal membrane has an extensive set of such transport systems, ...
... transport system was shown in my laboratory also to be accountable for cystine accumulation, in the same disease, in human skin fibroblasts. My subsequent interest has proceeded principally along the lines of the question whether the lysosomal membrane has an extensive set of such transport systems, ...
Protein

Proteins (/ˈproʊˌtiːnz/ or /ˈproʊti.ɨnz/) are large biomolecules, or macromolecules, consisting of one or more long chains of amino acid residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within living organisms, including catalyzing metabolic reactions, DNA replication, responding to stimuli, and transporting molecules from one location to another. Proteins differ from one another primarily in their sequence of amino acids, which is dictated by the nucleotide sequence of their genes, and which usually results in protein folding into a specific three-dimensional structure that determines its activity.A linear chain of amino acid residues is called a polypeptide. A protein contains at least one long polypeptide. Short polypeptides, containing less than about 20-30 residues, are rarely considered to be proteins and are commonly called peptides, or sometimes oligopeptides. The individual amino acid residues are bonded together by peptide bonds and adjacent amino acid residues. The sequence of amino acid residues in a protein is defined by the sequence of a gene, which is encoded in the genetic code. In general, the genetic code specifies 20 standard amino acids; however, in certain organisms the genetic code can include selenocysteine and—in certain archaea—pyrrolysine. Shortly after or even during synthesis, the residues in a protein are often chemically modified by posttranslational modification, which alters the physical and chemical properties, folding, stability, activity, and ultimately, the function of the proteins. Sometimes proteins have non-peptide groups attached, which can be called prosthetic groups or cofactors. Proteins can also work together to achieve a particular function, and they often associate to form stable protein complexes.Once formed, proteins only exist for a certain period of time and are then degraded and recycled by the cell's machinery through the process of protein turnover. A protein's lifespan is measured in terms of its half-life and covers a wide range. They can exist for minutes or years with an average lifespan of 1–2 days in mammalian cells. Abnormal and or misfolded proteins are degraded more rapidly either due to being targeted for destruction or due to being unstable.Like other biological macromolecules such as polysaccharides and nucleic acids, proteins are essential parts of organisms and participate in virtually every process within cells. Many proteins are enzymes that catalyze biochemical reactions and are vital to metabolism. Proteins also have structural or mechanical functions, such as actin and myosin in muscle and the proteins in the cytoskeleton, which form a system of scaffolding that maintains cell shape. Other proteins are important in cell signaling, immune responses, cell adhesion, and the cell cycle. Proteins are also necessary in animals' diets, since animals cannot synthesize all the amino acids they need and must obtain essential amino acids from food. Through the process of digestion, animals break down ingested protein into free amino acids that are then used in metabolism.Proteins may be purified from other cellular components using a variety of techniques such as ultracentrifugation, precipitation, electrophoresis, and chromatography; the advent of genetic engineering has made possible a number of methods to facilitate purification. Methods commonly used to study protein structure and function include immunohistochemistry, site-directed mutagenesis, X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry.