journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29233215/unraveling-amyloid-formation-paths-of-parkinson-s-disease-protein-%C3%AE-synuclein-triggered-by-anionic-vesicles
#81
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juris Kiskis, Istvan Horvath, Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede, Sandra Rocha
Amyloid formation of the synaptic brain protein α-synuclein (αS) is related to degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease patients. αS is thought to function in vesicle transport and fusion and it binds strongly to negatively charged vesicles in vitro. Here we combined circular dichroism, fluorescence and imaging methods in vitro to characterize the interaction of αS with negatively charged vesicles of DOPS (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-L-serine, sodium salt) and DOPG (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-(1'-rac-glycerol), sodium salt) and the consequences of such interactions on αS amyloid formation...
January 2017: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29233214/microdroplet-fusion-mass-spectrometry-accelerated-kinetics-of-acid-induced-chlorophyll-demetallation
#82
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jae Kyoo Lee, Hong Gil Nam, Richard N Zare
Kinetics of acid-induced chlorophyll demetallation was recorded in microdroplets by fusing a stream of microdroplets containing 40 µM chlorophyll a or b dissolved in methanol with a stream of aqueous microdroplets containing 35 mM hydrochloric acid (pH = 1·46). The kinetics of the demetallation of chlorophyll in the fused microdroplets (14 ± 6 µm diameter; 84 ± 18 m s-1 velocity) was recorded by controlling the traveling distance of the fused microdroplets between the fusion region and the inlet of a mass spectrometer...
January 2017: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28093096/structural-biology-of-supramolecular-assemblies-by-magic-angle-spinning-nmr-spectroscopy
#83
REVIEW
Caitlin M Quinn, Tatyana Polenova
In recent years, exciting developments in instrument technology and experimental methodology have advanced the field of magic-angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to new heights. Contemporary MAS NMR yields atomic-level insights into structure and dynamics of an astounding range of biological systems, many of which cannot be studied by other methods. With the advent of fast MAS, proton detection, and novel pulse sequences, large supramolecular assemblies, such as cytoskeletal proteins and intact viruses, are now accessible for detailed analysis...
January 2017: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28100928/mass-spectrometry-a-technique-of-many-faces
#84
REVIEW
Maya A Olshina, Michal Sharon
Protein complexes form the critical foundation for a wide range of biological process, however understanding the intricate details of their activities is often challenging. In this review we describe how mass spectrometry plays a key role in the analysis of protein assemblies and the cellular pathways which they are involved in. Specifically, we discuss how the versatility of mass spectrometric approaches provides unprecedented information on multiple levels. We demonstrate this on the ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathway, a process that is responsible for protein turnover...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27660069/molecular-mechanisms-of-xeroderma-pigmentosum-xp-proteins
#85
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra C Koch, Nina Simon, Charlotte Ebert, Thomas Carell
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is a highly versatile and efficient DNA repair process, which is responsible for the removal of a large number of structurally diverse DNA lesions. Its extreme broad substrate specificity ranges from DNA damages formed upon exposure to ultraviolet radiation to numerous bulky DNA adducts induced by mutagenic environmental chemicals and cytotoxic drugs used in chemotherapy. Defective NER leads to serious diseases, such as xeroderma pigmentosum (XP). Eight XP complementation groups are known of which seven (XPA-XPG) are caused by mutations in genes involved in the NER process...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27659610/photosystem-ii-the-water-splitting-enzyme-of-photosynthesis-and-the-origin-of-oxygen-in-our-atmosphere-corrigendum
#86
James Barber
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27659445/quantum-entanglement-facts-and-fiction-how-wrong-was-einstein-after-all
#87
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bengt Nordén
Einstein was wrong with his 1927 Solvay Conference claim that quantum mechanics is incomplete and incapable of describing diffraction of single particles. However, the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox of entangled pairs of particles remains lurking with its 'spooky action at a distance'. In molecules quantum entanglement can be viewed as basis of both chemical bonding and excitonic states. The latter are important in many biophysical contexts and involve coupling between subsystems in which virtual excitations lead to eigenstates of the total Hamiltonian, but not for the separate subsystems...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27659286/nuclear-magnetic-resonance-nmr-applied-to-membrane-protein-complexes
#88
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohammed Kaplan, Cecilia Pinto, Klaartje Houben, Marc Baldus
Increasing evidence suggests that most proteins occur and function in complexes rather than as isolated entities when embedded in cellular membranes. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) provides increasing possibilities to study structure, dynamics and assembly of such systems. In our review, we discuss recent methodological progress to study membrane-protein complexes (MPCs) by NMR, starting with expression, isotope-labeling and reconstitution protocols. We review approaches to deal with spectral complexity and limited spectral spectroscopic sensitivity that are usually encountered in NMR-based studies of MPCs...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27659174/-photosystem-ii-the-water-splitting-enzyme-of-photosynthesis-and-the-origin-of-oxygen-in-our-atmosphere
#89
James Barber
About 3 billion years ago an enzyme emerged which would dramatically change the chemical composition of our planet and set in motion an unprecedented explosion in biological activity. This enzyme used solar energy to power the thermodynamically and chemically demanding reaction of water splitting. In so doing it provided biology with an unlimited supply of reducing equivalents needed to convert carbon dioxide into the organic molecules of life while at the same time produced oxygen to transform our planetary atmosphere from an anaerobic to an aerobic state...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27659043/the-evidence-for-open-and-closed-exocytosis-as-the-primary-release-mechanism
#90
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lin Ren, Lisa J Mellander, Jacqueline Keighron, Ann-Sofie Cans, Michael E Kurczy, Irina Svir, Alexander Oleinick, Christian Amatore, Andrew G Ewing
Exocytosis is the fundamental process by which cells communicate with each other. The events that lead up to the fusion of a vesicle loaded with chemical messenger with the cell membrane were the subject of a Nobel Prize in 2013. However, the processes occurring after the initial formation of a fusion pore are very much still in debate. The release of chemical messenger has traditionally been thought to occur through full distention of the vesicle membrane, hence assuming exocytosis to be all or none. In contrast to the all or none hypothesis, here we discuss the evidence that during exocytosis the vesicle-membrane pore opens to release only a portion of the transmitter content during exocytosis and then close again...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27658939/bridging-the-gap-between-in-vitro-and-in-vivo-rna-folding
#91
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathleen A Leamy, Sarah M Assmann, David H Mathews, Philip C Bevilacqua
Deciphering the folding pathways and predicting the structures of complex three-dimensional biomolecules is central to elucidating biological function. RNA is single-stranded, which gives it the freedom to fold into complex secondary and tertiary structures. These structures endow RNA with the ability to perform complex chemistries and functions ranging from enzymatic activity to gene regulation. Given that RNA is involved in many essential cellular processes, it is critical to understand how it folds and functions in vivo...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27658821/single-particle-electron-cryomicroscopy-trends-issues-and-future-perspective
#92
Kutti R Vinothkumar, Richard Henderson
There has been enormous progress during the last few years in the determination of three-dimensional biological structures by single particle electron cryomicroscopy (cryoEM), allowing maps to be obtained with higher resolution and from fewer images than required previously. This is due principally to the introduction of a new type of direct electron detector that has 2- to 3-fold higher detective quantum efficiency than available previously, and to the improvement of the computational algorithms for image processing...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27658712/the-molecular-choreography-of-protein-synthesis-translational-control-regulation-and-pathways
#93
Jin Chen, Junhong Choi, Seán E O'Leary, Arjun Prabhakar, Alexey Petrov, Rosslyn Grosely, Elisabetta Viani Puglisi, Joseph D Puglisi
Translation of proteins by the ribosome regulates gene expression, with recent results underscoring the importance of translational control. Misregulation of translation underlies many diseases, including cancer and many genetic diseases. Decades of biochemical and structural studies have delineated many of the mechanistic details in prokaryotic translation, and sketched the outlines of eukaryotic translation. However, translation may not proceed linearly through a single mechanistic pathway, but likely involves multiple pathways and branchpoints...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27658613/thermal-protein-unfolding-by-differential-scanning-calorimetry-and-circular-dichroism-spectroscopy-two-state-model-versus-sequential-unfolding
#94
Joachim Seelig, Hans-Joachim Schönfeld
Thermally-induced protein unfolding is commonly described with the two-state model. This model assumes only two types of protein molecules in solution, the native (N) and the denatured, unfolded (U) protein. In reality, protein unfolding is a multistep process, even if intermediate states are only sparsely populated. As an alternative approach we explore the Zimm-Bragg theory, originally developed for the α-helix-to-random coil transition of synthetic polypeptides. The theory includes intermediate structures with concentrations determined by the cooperativity of the unfolding reaction...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27658373/qrb-discovery-introducing-original-research-to-qrb
#95
Bengt Nordén
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27266715/rna-structure-through-multidimensional-chemical-mapping
#96
REVIEW
Siqi Tian, Rhiju Das
The discoveries of myriad non-coding RNA molecules, each transiting through multiple flexible states in cells or virions, present major challenges for structure determination. Advances in high-throughput chemical mapping give new routes for characterizing entire transcriptomes in vivo, but the resulting one-dimensional data generally remain too information-poor to allow accurate de novo structure determination. Multidimensional chemical mapping (MCM) methods seek to address this challenge. Mutate-and-map (M2), RNA interaction groups by mutational profiling (RING-MaP and MaP-2D analysis) and multiplexed •OH cleavage analysis (MOHCA) measure how the chemical reactivities of every nucleotide in an RNA molecule change in response to modifications at every other nucleotide...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27088887/protein-dynamics-and-function-from-solution-state-nmr-spectroscopy
#97
REVIEW
Michael Kovermann, Per Rogne, Magnus Wolf-Watz
It is well-established that dynamics are central to protein function; their importance is implicitly acknowledged in the principles of the Monod, Wyman and Changeux model of binding cooperativity, which was originally proposed in 1965. Nowadays the concept of protein dynamics is formulated in terms of the energy landscape theory, which can be used to understand protein folding and conformational changes in proteins. Because protein dynamics are so important, a key to understanding protein function at the molecular level is to design experiments that allow their quantitative analysis...
2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26821792/modeling-and-simulation-of-protein-surface-interactions-achievements-and-challenges
#98
REVIEW
Musa Ozboyaci, Daria B Kokh, Stefano Corni, Rebecca C Wade
Understanding protein-inorganic surface interactions is central to the rational design of new tools in biomaterial sciences, nanobiotechnology and nanomedicine. Although a significant amount of experimental research on protein adsorption onto solid substrates has been reported, many aspects of the recognition and interaction mechanisms of biomolecules and inorganic surfaces are still unclear. Theoretical modeling and simulations provide complementary approaches for experimental studies, and they have been applied for exploring protein-surface binding mechanisms, the determinants of binding specificity towards different surfaces, as well as the thermodynamics and kinetics of adsorption...
2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26350150/delayed-emergence-of-subdiffraction-sized-mutant-huntingtin-fibrils-following-inclusion-body-formation
#99
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steffen J Sahl, Lana Lau, Willianne I M Vonk, Lucien E Weiss, Judith Frydman, W E Moerner
Aberrant aggregation of improperly folded proteins is the hallmark of several human neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington's Disease (HD) with autosomal-dominant inheritance. In HD, expansion of the CAG-repeat-encoded polyglutamine (polyQ) stretch beyond ~40 glutamines in huntingtin (Htt) and its N-terminal fragments leads to the formation of large (up to several μm) globular neuronal inclusion bodies (IBs) over time. We report direct observations of aggregating Htt exon 1 in living and fixed cells at enhanced spatial resolution by stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy and single-molecule super-resolution optical imaging...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26347403/structural-basis-underlying-cac-rna-recognition-by-the-rrm-domain-of-dimeric-rna-binding-protein-rbpms
#100
Marianna Teplova, Thalia A Farazi, Thomas Tuschl, Dinshaw J Patel
RNA-binding protein with multiple splicing (designated RBPMS) is a higher vertebrate mRNA-binding protein containing a single RNA recognition motif (RRM). RBPMS has been shown to be involved in mRNA transport, localization and stability, with key roles in axon guidance, smooth muscle plasticity, as well as regulation of cancer cell proliferation and migration. We report on structure-function studies of the RRM domain of RBPMS bound to a CAC-containing single-stranded RNA. These results provide insights into potential topologies of complexes formed by the RBPMS RRM domain and the tandem CAC repeat binding sites as detected by photoactivatable-ribonucleoside-enhanced crosslinking and immunoprecipitation...
January 2016: Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
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