3 resultados para Faure, Gabriel, b. 1877.

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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It has been shown with lipid layers and more recently with purple membranes that protons have slow surface-to-bulk transfer. This results in long-range proton lateral conduction along membranes. We report here that such lateral transfer can take place along a pure protein film. It is strongly controlled by the packing. Subtle reorganizations of the protein–protein contact can be biological switches between interfacial and delocalized proton pathways between sources and sinks.

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Although vertebrate cytoplasmic dynein can move to the minus ends of microtubules in vitro, its ability to translocate purified vesicles on microtubules depends on the presence of an accessory complex known as dynactin. We have cloned and characterized a novel gene, NIP100, which encodes the yeast homologue of the vertebrate dynactin complex protein p150glued. Like strains lacking the cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain Dyn1p or the centractin homologue Act5p, nip100Δ strains are viable but undergo a significant number of failed mitoses in which the mitotic spindle does not properly partition into the daughter cell. Analysis of spindle dynamics by time-lapse digital microscopy indicates that the precise role of Nip100p during anaphase is to promote the translocation of the partially elongated mitotic spindle through the bud neck. Consistent with the presence of a true dynactin complex in yeast, Nip100p exists in a stable complex with Act5p as well as Jnm1p, another protein required for proper spindle partitioning during anaphase. Moreover, genetic depletion experiments indicate that the binding of Nip100p to Act5p is dependent on the presence of Jnm1p. Finally, we find that a fusion of Nip100p to the green fluorescent protein localizes to the spindle poles throughout the cell cycle. Taken together, these results suggest that the yeast dynactin complex and cytoplasmic dynein together define a physiological pathway that is responsible for spindle translocation late in anaphase.

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αB-crystallin, a member of the small heat shock protein family, possesses chaperone-like function. Recently, it has been shown that a missense mutation in αB-crystallin, R120G, is genetically linked to a desmin-related myopathy as well as to cataracts [Vicart, P., Caron, A., Guicheney, P., Li, A., Prevost, M.-C., Faure, A., Chateau, D., Chapon, F., Tome, F., Dupret, J.-M., et al. (1998) Nat. Genet. 20, 92–95]. By using α-lactalbumin, alcohol dehydrogenase, and insulin as target proteins, in vitro assays indicated that R120G αB-crystallin had reduced or completely lost chaperone-like function. The addition of R120G αB-crystallin to unfolding α-lactalbumin enhanced the kinetics and extent of its aggregation. R120G αB-crystallin became entangled with unfolding α-lactalbumin and was a major portion of the resulting insoluble pellet. Similarly, incubation of R120G αB-crystallin with alcohol dehydrogenase and insulin also resulted in the presence of R120G αB-crystallin in the insoluble pellets. Far and near UV CD indicate that R120G αB-crystallin has decreased β-sheet secondary structure and an altered aromatic residue environment compared with wild-type αB-crystallin. The apparent molecular mass of R120G αB-crystallin, as determined by gel filtration chromatography, is 1.4 MDa, which is more than twice the molecular mass of wild-type αB-crystallin (650 kDa). Images obtained from cryoelectron microscopy indicate that R120G αB-crystallin possesses an irregular quaternary structure with an absence of a clear central cavity. The results of this study show, through biochemical analysis, that an altered structure and defective chaperone-like function of αB-crystallin are associated with a point mutation that leads to a desmin-related myopathy and cataracts.