نتایج جستجو برای: coat proteins

تعداد نتایج: 571601  

2010
Linda Ferencko Boris Rotman

BACKGROUND Bacterial spores are protected by a coat consisting of about 60 different proteins assembled as a biochemically complex structure with intriguing morphological and mechanical properties. Historically, the coat has been considered a static structure providing rigidity and mainly acting as a sieve to exclude exogenous large toxic molecules, such as lytic enzymes. Over recent years, how...

Journal: :Journal of Biological Chemistry 1974

2009
Marie-Claude Gesnel Fabienne Del Gatto-Konczak Richard Breathnach

Splicing of the FGFR2 K-SAM exon is repressed by hnRNP A1 bound to the exon and activated by TIA-1 bound to the downstream intron. Both proteins are expressed similarly by cells whether they splice the exon or not, so it is important to know which one is dominant. To answer this question, we used bacteriophage PP7 and bacteriophage MS2 coat fusions to tether hnRNP A1 and TIA-1 to distinct sites...

Journal: :Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library 2000
A Schlegel R G Pestell M P Lisanti

Caveolins are a family of proteins that coat the cytoplasmic face of caveolae, vesicular invaginations of the plasma membrane. These proteins are central to the organization of the proteins and lipids that reside in caveolae. Caveolins transport cholesterol to and from caveolae, and they regulate the activity of signaling proteins that reside in caveolae. Through studying the genes encoding the...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2001
K Matsuoka R Schekman L Orci J E Heuser

The spatial arrangement of COPII coat protein subunits was analyzed by crosslinking to an artificial membrane surface and by electron microscopy of coat proteins and coated vesicle surfaces. The efficiency of COPII subunit crosslinking to phospholipids declined in order of protein recruitment to the coat: Sar1p > Sec23/24p >> Sec13/31p. Deep-etch rotary shadowing and electron microscopy were us...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 1979
N K Pandey A I Aronson

About 70% of the protein in isolated Bacillus subtilis spore coats was solubilized by treatment with a combination of reducing and denaturing agents at alkaline pH. The residue, consisting primarily of protein, was insoluble in a variety of reagents. The soluble proteins were resolved into at least seven bands by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. About one-half of the total was four p...

Journal: :Molecular microbiology 2004
Kristin N Parent Matthew J Ranaghan Carolyn M Teschke

Single amino acid substitutions in a protein can cause misfolding and aggregation to occur. Protein misfolding can be rescued by second-site amino acid substitutions called suppressor substitutions (su), commonly through stabilizing the native state of the protein or by increasing the rate of folding. Here we report evidence that su substitutions that rescue bacteriophage P22 temperature-sensit...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 1994
N Watson V McGuire S Alexander

The PsB glycoprotein in Dictyostelium discoideum is one of a diverse group of developmentally regulated, prespore-cell-specific proteins, that contain a common O-linked oligosaccharide. This post-translational modification is dependent on the wild-type modB allele. The PsB protein exists as part of a multiprotein complex of six different proteins, which have different post-translational modific...

Journal: :Cell 1999
Sebastian Springer Anne Spang Randy Schekman

How do vesicular coats form on the donor membrane? Sebastian Springer,* Anne Spang,* and Randy Schekman*†‡ Do cargo proteins influence this process? Recent work *Department of Molecular and Cell Biology and on the exchange of proteins between the endoplasmic †Howard Hughes Medical Institute reticulum (ER) and the Golgi apparatus in SaccharoUniversity of California myces cerevisiae and higher eu...

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