4 resultados para Bell-Shaped Tuning
em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center
Resumo:
Human pro-TNF-$\alpha$ is a 26 kd type II transmembrane protein, and it is the precursor of 17 kd mature TNF. Pro-TNF release mature from its extracellular domain by proteolytic cleavage between resideu Ava ($-$1) and Val (+1). Both forms of TNF are biologically active and the native form of mature TNF is a bell-shaped trimer. The structure of pro-TNF was studied both in intact cell system and in an in vitro translation system by chemical crosslinking. We found that human pro-TNF protein exist as a trimer in intact cells (LPS-induced THP-1 cells and TNF cDNA transfected COS-3 cells) and this trimeric structure is assembled intracellularly, possibly in the ER. By analysis several deletion mutants, we observed a correlation between expression of pro-TNF cytotoxicity in a juxtacrine fashion and detection of the trimer, suggesting the trimeric structure is very important for its biologic activity. With a series of deletion mutants in the linking domain, we found that the small deletion did not block the cleavage and large deletion did regardless of the presence or absence of the native cleavage site, suggesting that the length of the residues between the plasma membrane and the base of the trimer determines the rate of the cleavage, possibly by blocking the accessibility of the cleavage enzyme to its action site. Our data also suggest that the native cleavage site is not sufficient for the release of mature TNF and alternative cleavage site(s) exists. ^
Resumo:
The actinomycete Corynebacterium glutamicum grows as rod-shaped cells by zonal peptidoglycan synthesis at the cell poles. In this bacterium, experimental depletion of the polar DivIVA protein (DivIVA(Cg)) resulted in the inhibition of polar growth; consequently, these cells exhibited a coccoid morphology. This result demonstrated that DivIVA is required for cell elongation and the acquisition of a rod shape. DivIVA from Streptomyces or Mycobacterium localized to the cell poles of DivIVA(Cg)-depleted C. glutamicum and restored polar peptidoglycan synthesis, in contrast to DivIVA proteins from Bacillus subtilis or Streptococcus pneumoniae, which localized at the septum of C. glutamicum. This confirmed that DivIVAs from actinomycetes are involved in polarized cell growth. DivIVA(Cg) localized at the septum after cell wall synthesis had started and the nucleoids had already segregated, suggesting that in C. glutamicum DivIVA is not involved in cell division or chromosome segregation.
Resumo:
Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is a bullet-shaped rhabdovirus and a model system of negative-strand RNA viruses. Through direct visualization by means of cryo-electron microscopy, we show that each virion contains two nested, left-handed helices: an outer helix of matrix protein M and an inner helix of nucleoprotein N and RNA. M has a hub domain with four contact sites that link to neighboring M and N subunits, providing rigidity by clamping adjacent turns of the nucleocapsid. Side-by-side interactions between neighboring N subunits are critical for the nucleocapsid to form a bullet shape, and structure-based mutagenesis results support this description. Together, our data suggest a mechanism of VSV assembly in which the nucleocapsid spirals from the tip to become the helical trunk, both subsequently framed and rigidified by the M layer.
Resumo:
This research study offers a critical assessment of NIH's Consensus Development Program (CDP), focusing upon its historical and valuative bases and its institutionalization in response to social and political forces. The analysis encompasses systems-level, as well as interpersonal factors in the adoption of consensus as the mechanism for resolving scientific controversies in clinical practice application. Further, the evolution of the CDP is also considered from an ecological perspective as a reasoned adaptation by NIH to pressures from its supporters and clients for translating biomedical research into medical practice. The assessment examines federal science policy and institutional designs for the inclusion of the public interest and democratic deliberation.^ The study relies on three distinct approaches to social research. Conventional historical methods were utilized in the interpretation of social and political influences across eras on the evolution of the National Institutes of Health and its response to demands for accountability and relevance through its Consensus Development Program. An embedded single-case study was utilized for an empirical examination of the CDP mechanism through five exemplar conferences. Lastly, a sociohistorical approach was taken to the CDP in order to consider its responsiveness to the values of the eras which created and shaped it. An exploration of organizational behavior with considerations for institutional reform as a response to continuing political and social pressure, it is a study of organizational birth, growth, and response to demands from its environment. The study has explanatory import in its attempt to account for the creation, timing, and form of the CDP, relative to political, institutional, and cultural pressures, and predictive import thorough its historical view which provides a basis for informed speculation on the playing out of tensions between extramural and intermural scientists and the current demands for health care reform. ^