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Allosteric Regulation Of Proteins In The Cyclic GMP Signal Transduction PathwayBiswas, Kabir Hassan 05 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Elucidation of the Signal Transduction Pathways Activated by the Plant Natriuretic Peptide AtPNP-ATurek, Ilona 11 1900 (has links)
Plant natriuretic peptides (PNPs) comprise a novel class of hormones that share some sequence similarity in the active site with their animal analogues that function as regulators of salt and water balance. A PNP present in Arabidopsis thaliana (AtPNP-A) has been assigned a role in abiotic and biotic stress responses, and the recombinant protein has been demonstrated to elicit cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-dependent stomatal guard cell opening, regulate ion movements, and induce osmoticum-dependent water uptake. Although the importance of the hormone in maintaining ion and fluid homeostasis has been established, key components of the AtPNP-A-dependent signal transduction pathway remain unknown.
Since identification of the binding partners of AtPNP-A, including its receptor(s), is fundamental to understanding the mode of its action at the molecular level, comprehensive protein-protein interaction studies, involving yeast two-hybrid screening, affinity-based assays, protein cross-linking and co-immunoprecipitation followed by mass spectrometric (MS) analyses have been performed. Several candidate binding partners of AtPNP-A identified with at least two independent methods were subsequently expressed as recombinant proteins, purified, and the specificity of their interactions with the recombinant AtPNP-A was verified using surface plasmon resonance.
Several specific binary interactants of AtPNP-A were subjected to functional assays aimed at unraveling the consequences of the interactions in planta. These experiments have revealed that reactive oxygen species (ROS) are novel secondary messengers involved in the transduction of AtPNP-A signal in suspension-cultured cells of A. thaliana (Col-0).
Further insight into the AtPNP-A dependent signalling events occurring in suspension-cultured cells in ROS-dependent or ROS-independent manner have been obtained from the large-scale proteomics study employing tandem mass tag (TMT) labelling followed by MS analysis to identify and relatively quantify proteins that are differentially expressed upon the treatment with nano- and picomolar concentrations of the biologically active AtPNP-A peptide at different time-points post-treatment.
Characterization of both the AtPNP-A interactome and AtPNP-A dependent proteome afforded novel insights into the signal transduction pathways altered by PNPs and shed new light on the mechanisms by which these candidate interactants operate. Taken together, indications are that PNP dependent mechanisms can be harnessed for possible biotechnological applications.
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Von Willebrand factor activates endothelial nitric oxide synthase in blood platelets by a GPIb-dependent mechanism.Naseem, Khalid M., Riba, Rocio, Oberprieler, Nikolaus G., Roberts, Wayne January 2006 (has links)
No / Background: The molecular regulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in blood platelets and the signalling events induced by platelet-derived NO are poorly defined. In particular, the ability of von Willebrand factor (VWF) to stimulate cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) formation in platelets has produced conflicting data. Objectives: To determine the mechanisms leading to eNOS activation and clarify the downstream signaling pathways activated by platelet-derived NO in response to VWF. Methods: We used three independent markers of NO signaling, [3H] l-citrulline production, cGMP accrual and immunoblotting of vasodilator¿stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) to examine the NO signaling cascade in response to VWF. Results: VWF increased NO synthesis and bioavailability, as evidenced by increased [3H] l-citrulline production and cGMP accrual, respectively. VWF-induced eNOS activation was GPIb-IX-dependent and independent of integrin ¿IIbß3. cGMP formation in response to VWF required Ca2+ mobilization, Src family kinases, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and phospholipase C, but not protein kinase C. This suggests that a cross-talk between the signaling mechanisms regulates platelet activation and NO synthesis. VWF-induced cGMP accrual was completely blocked by apyrase and indomethacin, demonstrating an essential role for platelet-derived ADP and thromboxane A2 (TxA2). Elevated cGMP levels led to increased VASP phosphorylation at serine239 that was both protein kinase G (PKG)- and protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent. Conclusions: We demonstrate that VWF activates eNOS through a specific Ca2+-dependent GPIb receptor-signaling cascade that relies on the generation of platelet-derived ADP and TxA2. Furthermore, we provide the first evidence to suggest that platelet derived-NO/cGMP activates PKA in addition to PKG.
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Molecular Phenotyping of Mutations in Guanylyi Cyclase C Associated with Congenital DiarrheaRasool, Insha January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Guanylyl cyclase C (GC-C) is a member of particulate guanylyl cyclases, discovered primarily as the target of a family of heat stable enterotoxins (ST), produced by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC). ST is acknowledged as a prime cause of traveller’s diarrhea and the leading cause of child mortality under the age of 5 years in developing nations. The bacterial expression of ST peptides represents molecular mimicry where the pathogen has exploited a gastrointestinal tract-signaling pathway to disperse and propagate. GC-C is primarily expressed on the apical or the brush border membranes of intestinal epithelial cells. GC-C agonists elaborated in the gastrointestinal tract are a family of guanylin peptides, which are responsible for maintaining fluid-ion homeostasis, essential for normal gut physiology. The signal of liigand binding to the extracellular domain of GC-C is transduced to the catalytic guanylyl cyclase domain, which results in production of intracellular cGMP. The elevated levels of cGMP influence multiple downstream targets, which finally regulate ion-flux through the transporters present on the membrane of an enterocyte. The ST peptide, a GC-C superagonist, produces physiologically abnormal levels of cGMP that manifest as secretory diarrhea.
The purview of GC-C misregulation was confined to the notion of its hyperactivation caused by ETEC infection and the ensuing diarrhea. Recently, two seminal studies widened the scope of pathologies associated with GC-C. Studies described point mutations in GUCY2C, which were associated with human disease. One study identified a Norwegian family whose members demonstrated a dominantly inherited syndrome of frequent diarrhea associated with hyperactive GC-C. Following this study, inactivating mutations in GC-C in a small Bedouin population was reported. The current study reports the molecular phenotypes associated with the first germ line mutations in GC-C that result in a severe form of congenital sodium diarrhea.
Our collaborators from Austria (Thomas Muller & Andreas Janecke, Department of Pediatrics Innsbruck Medical University) communicated to us their study of patients who had clinical diagnosis of congenital sodium diarrhea, with proportionally high fecal sodium loss, metabolic acidosis and dehydration. Exome sequencing in a cohort of 6 unrelated patients revealed four heterozygous missense mutations in GC-C (R792S, L775P, K507E, N850D). Novel GC-C mutations were de novo spontaneous mutations with the carrier being the only affected family member in contrast to the previous two reports with familial history. Biochemical characterization revealed that the mutants (GC-CR792S, GC-CL775P) were constitutively active with GC-CR792S, GC-CK507E, and GC-CN850D showing further stimulation upon treatment with ST and guanylin family of peptides. Interestingly, there was no change in the binding affinities of the ligands for the mutant receptors compared to wild type. However, a significant decrease (ranging from 10-100 fold) in ligand EC50 for the mutant GC-C receptors was prominent. The in vitro assays suggested that the mutations occupying different domains of GC-C might have resulted in distinct structural consequences reflected in the repertoire of phenotypes that were observed.
The results presented in this thesis illustrate the molecular basis of the severe form of congenital diarrhea associated with the GC-C gain-of-function mutations. This study has also elaborated our understanding of the regulation of GC-C activity by its various domains.
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Regulation of Ecdysone 20-Monooxygenase Activity in the Tobacco Hornworm, Manduca sexta and the Apparent Occurrence of this Activity in Ascaris suum (Nematoda)Drummond, Christopher Anson 14 March 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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