journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22500194/the-context-of-gene-expression-regulation
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Johan H Gibcus, Job Dekker
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have uncovered a world of RNAs that do not code for proteins, known as non-protein coding RNAs, that play important roles in gene regulation. Along with histone modifications and transcription factors, non-coding RNA is part of a layer of transcriptional control on top of the DNA code. This layer of components and their interactions specifically enables (or disables) the modulation of three-dimensional folding of chromatin to create a context for transcriptional regulation that underlies cell-specific transcription...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22500193/the-protein-structure-initiative-achievements-and-visions-for-the-future
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gaetano T Montelione
The Protein Structure Initiative (PSI) was established in 2000 by the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences with the long-term goal of providing 3D (three-dimensional) structural information for most proteins in nature. As advances in genomic sequencing, bioinformatics, homology modelling, and methods for rapid determination of 3D structures of proteins by X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) converged, it was proposed that our understanding of the biology of protein structure and evolution could be greatly enabled by 'genomic-scale' protein structure determination...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22403589/cellular-networks-controlling-th2-polarization-in-allergy-and-immunity
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mirjam Kool, Hamida Hammad, Bart N Lambrecht
In contrast to the development of Th1 (type 1 T helper cells), Th17 and Treg (regulatory T cells), little is known of the mechanisms governing Th2 development, which is important for immunity to helminths and for us to understand the pathogenesis of allergy. A picture is emerging in which mucosal epithelial cells instruct dendritic cells to promote Th2 responses in the absence of IL-12 (interleukin 12) production and provide instruction through thymic stromal lymphopoieitin (TSLP) or granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF)...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22403588/new-antiviral-agents-for-hepatitis-c
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jean-Michel Pawlotsky
Approximately 120-130 million individuals are chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) worldwide, although it is curable by therapy. Until recently, treatment of chronic hepatitis C was based on the combination of pegylated interferon-α and ribavirin. A number of models have been developed to study the HCV lifecycle and screen for potential HCV inhibitors. They led to the development of antiviral agents that specifically target a viral function (direct acting antivirals), and host-targeted agents that inhibit HCV replication...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22312416/lipids-as-conductors-in-the-orchestra-of-life
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher J R Loewen
The lipid phosphatidic acid is an important metabolic intermediate in the biosynthesis of lipids in all eukaryotic cells, but it is even more than that. Phosphatidic acid is emerging as a lipid that is both composer and conductor, where in addition to its role as biosynthetic precursor (composer) it is also a potent signaling molecule (conductor) that integrates membrane biogenesis with nutrient sensing and cell growth. This article discusses recent advances in yeast that give praise for phosphatidic acid as one of life's conductors...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22312415/microrna-induced-transdifferentiation
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Archana Shenoy, Robert Blelloch
Recent months have seen rapid advances in the field of transdifferentiation, specifically in the conversion of fibroblasts to neurons. Most surprising is the observation that the ability to drive these transitions is not limited to transcription factors, but that they can be promoted by microRNAs as well. Indeed, in one case, microRNAs alone induced the transdifferentiation of fibroblasts to neuron-like cells, albeit at a low efficiency. Here, we review this rapidly advancing field, discuss possible mechanisms underlying microRNA-induced transdifferentiation and the potential for microRNAs to drive such transitions to any cell type of interest in vitro and in vivo...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22242042/decoding-key-nodes-in-the-metabolism-of-cancer-cells-sugar-spice-and-all-things-nice
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Reuben J Shaw, Lewis C Cantley
In the past 5 years, a convergence of studies has resulted in a broad appreciation in the cancer research community that reprogramming of cellular metabolism may be more central to cancer than appreciated in the past 30 years. The re-emergence of cancer metabolism stems in part from discoveries that a number of common oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes more directly control cell metabolism than previously thought. In addition, a number of what would previously have been called "card-carrying" metabolic enzymes have been identified as human tumor suppressors or oncogenes, causally mutated in a variety of human cancers...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22238515/lessons-from-the-endothelial-junctional-mechanosensory-complex
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Conway, Martin A Schwartz
Mechanotransduction plays a key role in both normal physiology and in diseases such as cancer, atherosclerosis and hypertension. Nowhere is this more evident than in the vascular system, where fluid shear stress from blood flow plays a critical role in shaping the blood vessels and in determining their function and dysfunction. Responses to flow are mediated in part by a complex of proteins comprised of PECAM-1, VE-cadherin and VEGFR2 at endothelial cell-cell junctions; all proteins that clearly have other, non-mechanical functions...
2012: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21399765/chemical-signaling-in-the-gastrointestinal-tract
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L Caetano M Antunes, Julian E Davies, B Brett Finlay
Chemical signaling via the production of small molecules such as hormones has been studied in detail in higher organisms. These molecules have important functions in maintaining physiological homeostasis as well as allowing organisms to respond to external insults. Virtually every living cell produces hormone-like diffusible small molecules that can be used to convey messages to neighboring cells-a vital step in adaptation, development, and survival within populations. Although most of our knowledge on cellular chemical communication comes from studies of multicellular eukaryotes, it is now understood that bacteria can also communicate using sophisticated signaling systems, in a way analogous to those used by higher organisms...
February 1, 2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22162729/structure-and-recognition-of-polyubiquitin-chains-of-different-lengths-and-linkage
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Fushman, Keith D Wilkinson
The polyubiquitin signal is post-translationally attached to a large number of proteins, often directing formation of macromolecular complexes resulting in the translocation, assembly or degradation of the attached protein. Recent structural and functional studies reveal general mechanisms by which different architectures and length of the signal are distinguished.
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22162728/the-puzzling-origin-of-the-autophagosomal-membrane
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Muriel Mari, Sharon A Tooze, Fulvio Reggiori
Autophagy is one of the newest and fastest emerging research areas in biomedical life sciences. Autophagosomes, large double-membrane vesicles enclosing cytoplasmic components targeted for degradation, are the hallmark of this catabolic pathway. The origin of the lipid bilayers composing these transport carriers has been the central enigma of the field since the discovery of autophagy. A series of recent studies has implicated several cellular organelles as the possible source of the autophagosomal membranes, if anything further clouding our view...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22076126/drugs-for-malaria-something-old-something-new-something-borrowed
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charlotte Hobbs, Patrick Duffy
Malaria was estimated to cause 800,000 deaths and 225 million cases worldwide in 2010. Worryingly, the first-line treatment currently relies on a single drug class called artemisinins, and there are signs that the parasite is becoming resistant to these drugs. The good news is that new technology has given us new approaches to drug discovery. New drugs generated this way are probably 10-15 years away from the clinic. Other antimalarials that may offer hope include those rehabilitated after not being used for some time, those that act as inhibitors of resistance mechanisms, those that limit infection while allowing protective immunity to develop, and those which are drugs borrowed from other disease treatments...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22065982/gout-genetics-and-abc-transporters
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Agnès Basseville, Susan E Bates
Gout is a chronic arthritic disease associated with high levels of urate in blood. Recent advances in research have permitted the identification of several new and common genetic factors underlying the disease. Among them, a polymorphism in the ABC transporter gene ATP-binding cassette transporter isoform G2 has been highlighted. ATP-binding cassette transporter isoform G2 was found to be involved in renal urate elimination, and the presence of the Q141K polymorphism to induce a 2-fold decrease in urate efflux...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22003369/secrets-of-aging-what-does-a-normally-aging-brain-look-like
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carol A Barnes
Over the past half century, remarkable progress has been made in understanding the biological basis of memory and how it changes over the lifespan. An important conceptual advance during this period was the realization that normative cognitive trajectories can exist independently of dementing illness. In fact, mammals as different as rats and monkeys, who do not spontaneously develop Alzheimer's disease, show memory impairments at advanced ages in similar domains as those observed in older humans. Thus, animal models have been particularly helpful in revealing brain mechanisms responsible for the cognitive changes that occur in aging...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22003368/adenosine-receptors-and-fibrosis-a-translational-review
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bruce N Cronstein
Adenosine-a purine nucleoside generated extracellularly from adenine nucleotides released by cells as a result of direct stimulation, hypoxia, trauma, or metabolic stress-is a well-known physiologic and pharmacologic agent. Recent studies demonstrate that adenosine, acting at its receptors, promotes wound healing by stimulating both angiogenesis and matrix production. Subsequently, adenosine and its receptors have also been found to promote fibrosis (excess matrix production) in the skin, lungs, and liver, but to diminish cardiac fibrosis...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21941599/taste-isn-t-just-for-taste-buds-anymore
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas E Finger, Sue C Kinnamon
Taste is a discriminative sense involving specialized receptor cells of the oral cavity (taste buds) and at least two distinct families of G protein-coupled receptor molecules that detect nutritionally important substances or potential toxins. Yet the receptor mechanisms that drive taste also are utilized by numerous systems throughout the body. How and why these so-called taste receptors are used to regulate digestion and respiration is now a matter of intense study. In this article we provide a historical perspective and an overview of these systems, leading to speculations on directions for further research...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21941598/conformational-selection-or-induced-fit-50-years-of-debate-resolved
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jean-Pierre Changeux, Stuart Edelstein
Exactly 50 years ago, biochemists raised the question of the mechanism of the conformational change that mediates "allosteric" interactions between regulatory sites and biologically active sites in regulatory/receptor proteins. Do the different conformations involved already exist spontaneously in the absence of the regulatory ligands (Monod-Wyman-Changeux), such that the complementary protein conformation would be selected to mediate signal transduction, or do particular ligands induce the receptor to adopt the conformation best suited to them (Koshland-Nemethy-Filmer-induced fit)? This is not just a central question for biophysics, it also has enormous importance for drug design...
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21941597/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis-new-genes-new-models-and-new-mechanisms
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine Vande Velde, Patrick A Dion, Guy A Rouleau
Research aimed at understanding amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has seen exceptional growth in the past few years. New genes, new models, and new mechanisms have not only improved our understanding, but also contributed to the increasing complexity of ALS pathogenesis. The focus of this piece is to highlight some of the more notable developments in the field and to encourage a re-appreciation for the superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) mouse models.
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21876728/harnessing-the-immune-system-s-arsenal-producing-human-monoclonal-antibodies-for-therapeutics-and-investigating-immune-responses
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Meghan Sullivan, Kaval Kaur, Noel Pauli, Patrick C Wilson
Monoclonal antibody technology has undergone rapid and innovative reinvention over the last 30 years. Application of these technologies to human samples revealed valuable therapeutic and experimental insights. These technologies, each with their own benefits and flaws, have proven indispensable for immunological research and in our fight to provide new treatments and improved vaccines for infectious disease.
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21876727/plant-soil-interactions-in-a-changing-world
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard D Bardgett
Evidence is mounting to suggest that the transfer of carbon through roots of plants to the soil plays a primary role in regulating ecosystem responses to climate change and its mitigation. Future research is needed to improve understanding of the mechanisms involved in this phenomenon, its consequences for ecosystem carbon cycling, and the potential to exploit plant root traits and soil microbial processes that favor soil carbon sequestration.
2011: F1000 Biology Reports
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