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Chapter 15
Chapter 15

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Kidney Disease and Protein
Kidney Disease and Protein

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Leukaemia Section t(10;11)(p12;q23) KMT2A/NEBL Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics in Oncology and Haematology
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... A. Left: Long-distance inverse polymerase chain reaction (LDI-PCR) analysis of both derivatives using genomic DNA. Lane M, size marker; lane 1, LDI-PCR analysis of der(11) showing the wild-type (wt) band and the der(11) band (asterisk); lane 2, LDIPCR analysis of der(10) showing the wt band and the ...
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Full Text
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... The second hypothesis, the absence of transcription factors from the cyst is being tested in more detail. One of the possibilities would be the absence of general transcription factors. We have studied the basic transcription factor TBP (T ATA Binding Protein) since it is involved in the formation o ...
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... Popdc proteins are three-pass transmembrane proteins with a short extracellular amino-terminus, which contains up to two N-glycosylation sites (Andrée et al., 2000; Knight et al., 2003). Glycosylation is quite extensive in these proteins and significantly affecting the electrophoretic mobility in SD ...
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Oxidative stress in bacteria and protein damage by reactive oxygen
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... can restore the redox homeostasis of the cytosol and eliminate harmful oxidant by activation of the transcription factors SoxRS and OxyR. Irreversible oxidation of amino acid residues in a protein can be exerted by two major mechanisms: ionizing radiation and metal ion-catalyzed oxidation reactions. ...
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... offered arises from the relationship between RPS27, MDM2 and p53: RPS27 is a p53 repressible protein (He and Sun, 2007; Li et al., 2007). A 2011 study found that it competes with p53 for a central acidic binding domain on MDM2. Once bound, MDM2 is stimulated to ubiquinate and degrade the RPS27 or p5 ...
(RBPs) have been demonstrated to perform central roles in these
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... and fertility due probably to genome incompatibilities caused by interactions between genes that are functionally diverged in the respective hybridizing species. xBrassicoraphanus, also known as Baemoochae, is a newly synthesized intergeneric allotetraploid between Chinese cabbage (Brassica rapa L.) ...
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... ____________________. We need these monomers because we are making _____________________. Now that we have the place to build the protein and the copied instructions on how to make the protein, the parts (amino acids) need to be brought over to the workbench and placed in the correct order. The job ...
Enzymes - Westgate Mennonite Collegiate
Enzymes - Westgate Mennonite Collegiate

... - high temps may denature (unfold) the enzyme. 2. pH (most like 6 - 8 pH near neutral) 3. Ionic concentration (salt ions) ...
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Protein moonlighting



Protein moonlighting (or gene sharing) is a phenomenon by which a protein can perform more than one function. Ancestral moonlighting proteins originally possessed a single function but through evolution, acquired additional functions. Many proteins that moonlight are enzymes; others are receptors, ion channels or chaperones. The most common primary function of moonlighting proteins is enzymatic catalysis, but these enzymes have acquired secondary non-enzymatic roles. Some examples of functions of moonlighting proteins secondary to catalysis include signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, apoptosis, motility, and structural.Protein moonlighting may occur widely in nature. Protein moonlighting through gene sharing differs from the use of a single gene to generate different proteins by alternative RNA splicing, DNA rearrangement, or post-translational processing. It is also different from multifunctionality of the protein, in which the protein has multiple domains, each serving a different function. Protein moonlighting by gene sharing means that a gene may acquire and maintain a second function without gene duplication and without loss of the primary function. Such genes are under two or more entirely different selective constraints.Various techniques have been used to reveal moonlighting functions in proteins. The detection of a protein in unexpected locations within cells, cell types, or tissues may suggest that a protein has a moonlighting function. Furthermore, sequence or structure homology of a protein may be used to infer both primary function as well as secondary moonlighting functions of a protein.The most well-studied examples of gene sharing are crystallins. These proteins, when expressed at low levels in many tissues function as enzymes, but when expressed at high levels in eye tissue, become densely packed and thus form lenses. While the recognition of gene sharing is relatively recent—the term was coined in 1988, after crystallins in chickens and ducks were found to be identical to separately identified enzymes—recent studies have found many examples throughout the living world. Joram Piatigorsky has suggested that many or all proteins exhibit gene sharing to some extent, and that gene sharing is a key aspect of molecular evolution. The genes encoding crystallins must maintain sequences for catalytic function and transparency maintenance function.Inappropriate moonlighting is a contributing factor in some genetic diseases, and moonlighting provides a possible mechanism by which bacteria may become resistant to antibiotics.
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