3 resultados para Organelle biogenesis

em DI-fusion - The institutional repository of Université Libre de Bruxelles


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Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli expressing F4 fimbriae are the major cause of porcine colibacillosis and are responsible for significant death and morbidity in neonatal and postweaned piglets. Via the chaperone-usher pathway, F4 fimbriae are assembled into thin, flexible polymers mainly composed of the single-domain adhesin FaeG. The F4 fimbrial system has been labeled eccentric because the F4 pilins show some features distinct from the features of pilins of other chaperone-usher-assembled structures. In particular, FaeG is much larger than other pilins (27 versus approximately 17 kDa), grafting an additional carbohydrate binding domain on the common immunoglobulin-like core. Structural data of FaeG during different stages of the F4 fimbrial biogenesis process, combined with differential scanning calorimetry measurements, confirm the general principles of the donor strand complementation/exchange mechanisms taking place during pilus biogenesis via the chaperone-usher pathway.

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Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is the most common autosomal recessive hereditary ataxia in Caucasians. Neurological symptoms dominate the clinical picture. The underlying neuropathology affects the dorsal root ganglia, the spinal cord, and the deep cerebellar nuclei. In addition, most cases present a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy that may cause premature death. Other problems include a high risk of diabetes, skeletal abnormalities such as kyphoscoliosis, and pes cavus. Most patients carry a homozygous expansion of GAA trinucleotide repeat within the first intron of the FXN gene, leading to repressed transcription through epigenetic mechanisms. The encoded protein, frataxin, is localized in mitochondria and participates in the biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters. Frataxin deficiency leads to mitochondrial dysfunction, altered iron metabolism, and oxidative damage. Thanks to progress in understanding pathogenesis and to the development of animal and cellular models, therapies targeted to correct frataxin deficiency or its downstream consequences are being developed and tested in clinical trials.

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Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by progressive neurological and cardiac abnormalities. It has a prevalence of around 2×105 in whites, accounting for more than one-third of the cases of recessively inherited ataxia in this ethnic group. FRDA may not exist in nonwhite populations.The first symptoms usually appear in childhood, but age of onset may vary from infancy to adulthood. Atrophy of sensory and cerebellar pathways causes ataxia, dysarthria, fixation instability, deep sensory loss, and loss of tendon reflexes. Corticospinal degeneration leads to muscular weakness and extensor plantar responses. A hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may contribute to disability and cause premature death. Other common problems include kyphoscoliosis, pes cavus, and, in 10% of patients, diabetes mellitus.The FRDA gene (FXN) encodes a small mitochondrial protein, frataxin, which is produced in insufficient amounts in the disease, as a consequence of the epigenetic silencing of the gene triggered by a GAA triplet repeat expansion in the first intron of the gene. Frataxin deficiency results in impaired iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in mitochondria, in turn leading to widespread dysfunction of iron-sulfur center containing enzymes (in particular respiratory complexes I, II and III, and aconitase), impaired iron metabolism, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Therapy aims to restore frataxin levels or to correct the consequences of its deficiency.