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Poster
Poster

... Phagocytosis is one of the processes of removing bacteria from the host. The fusion of the lysosome in the macrophage forms a phagolysosome, leading to the destruction of the bacterium. M. tb is able to resist this process and survive in the phagolysosome. The phagolysosome is a difficult place to s ...
Give a brief account of drug protein binding and outline its
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... 1995b(13): Give a brief account of drug protein binding and outline its significance General: Drug protein binding refers to the interaction a drug has with proteins. - Can be intravascular, interstitial, or intracellular proteins o Plasma proteins binding is most significant - Interaction is usuall ...
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... report two additions to this  product  line,  which  are  targeted  to  the  structural  proteomics  field:  Expressway™ Milligram  and  Expressway™ NMR.  The  core  of  these  two  kits  consists  of  an  improved  buffer  system  and  cell  lysate  that  allows  the  synthesis of milligram amounts ...
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... Local protein synthesis is activated by glutamate in synaptoneurosomes (Weiler, Greenough PNAS, 90:7168, 1993). To search for transmitter receptor triggered mechanisms involved in translational control of dendritically localized mRNAs, we focussed on mRNPs that might be affected by second messenger ...
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Michal Sharon received her BSc in Chemistry from the Hebrew
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... 18. What are the systems of the human body? What organs belong to those systems? 19. What levels of organization would the following examples fit in? Kidney? A circulatory system? A urinary bladder? A bone? Skin? Lungs? Brain? Water? Carbon? Oxygen? (Epithelium, Connective, Nervous, & Muscle)? Proka ...
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Classification of Protein

... variety of neurotoxic, proteolytic, and hemolytic effects. ...
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Protein–protein interaction



Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) refer to physical contacts established between two or more proteins as a result of biochemical events and/or electrostatic forces.In fact, proteins are vital macromolecules, at both cellular and systemic levels, but they rarely act alone. Diverse essential molecular processes within a cell are carried out by molecular machines that are built from a large number of protein components organized by their PPIs. Indeed, these interactions are at the core of the entire interactomics system of any living cell and so, unsurprisingly, aberrant PPIs are on the basis of multiple diseases, such as Creutzfeld-Jacob, Alzheimer's disease, and cancer.PPIs have been studied from different perspectives: biochemistry, quantum chemistry, molecular dynamics, signal transduction, among others. All this information enables the creation of large protein interaction networks – similar to metabolic or genetic/epigenetic networks – that empower the current knowledge on biochemical cascades and disease pathogenesis, as well as provide putative new therapeutic targets.
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