544 research outputs found
The archaeo-eukaryotic primase of plasmid pRN1 requires a helix bundle domain for faithful primer synthesis
The plasmid pRN1 encodes for a multifunctional replication protein with primase, DNA polymerase and helicase activity. The minimal region required for primase activity encompasses amino-acid residues 40–370. While the N-terminal part of that minimal region (residues 47–247) folds into the prim/pol domain and bears the active site, the structure and function of the C-terminal part (residues 248–370) is unknown. Here we show that the C-terminal part of the minimal region folds into a compact domain with six helices and is stabilized by a disulfide bond. Three helices superimpose well with the C-terminal domain of the primase of the bacterial broad host range plasmid RSF1010. Structure-based site-directed mutagenesis shows that the C-terminal helix of the helix bundle domain is required for primase activity although it is distant to the active site in the crystallized conformation. Furthermore, we identified mutants of the C-terminal domain, which are defective in template binding, dinucleotide formation and conformation change prior to DNA extension
Influence of grape rot on the contents of sulfur binding compounds in wine after automated optical grape sorting
In the last years, climate change has played an important role in some wine growing regions because of the increasing hazard of different kinds of bunch rot. Botrytis cinerea is the most important kind of rot on grapes. Beside sensory effects, this rot can influence the content of yeast nutrients, e.g. thiamine, in the must and thus affect the alcoholic fermentation. To get insight into the influence of Botrytis cinerea on the content of sulfur binding compounds formed during the fermentation process in wine, tons of grapes from the Mosel valley were sorted by an automated optical grape sorter, an innovative possibility of grape sorting, in 2011. Wine samples before sulfurisation of the four sorting fractions, namely control (unsorted berries), free-run (juice from opened berries), positive (healthy, intact berries) and negative (rotten berries) were analysed for the sulfur-binding compounds acetaldehyde, pyruvic acid, 2-oxoglutaric acid and for bound sulfur dioxide. The results show that acetaldehyde concentrations were not affected by rot, while pyruvic acid and 2-oxoglutaric acid levels were significantly higher in the negative fractions and lower in the positive fractions. Accordingly, bound sulfur levels were significantly higher in wines from the negative fraction. In conclusion, it could be shown that fractionation of the berries can efficiently help to reduce sulfur binding compounds in wine and thus reduce the addition of sulfur dioxide
A Memorial for William V. Sliter
William V. (Bill) Sliter, an internationally known micropaleontologist and research geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey, passed away suddenly, October, 1997, while talking to a colleague in his office. In his honor, B. Huber, T. Bralower, and M. Leckie organized a keynote symposium ‘‘Paleoecological and Geochemical Signatures of Cretaceous Anoxic Events’’ at the 1998 annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Toronto, Canada. This theme issue of the Journal of Foraminiferal Research contains the published papers from the symposium and is dedicated to his memory
A Memorial for William V. Sliter
William V. (Bill) Sliter, an internationally known micropaleontologist and research geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey, passed away suddenly, October, 1997, while talking to a colleague in his office. In his honor, B. Huber, T. Bralower, and M. Leckie organized a keynote symposium ‘‘Paleoecological and Geochemical Signatures of Cretaceous Anoxic Events’’ at the 1998 annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Toronto, Canada. This theme issue of the Journal of Foraminiferal Research contains the published papers from the symposium and is dedicated to his memory
Triple-q octupolar ordering in NpO_2
We report the results of resonant X-ray scattering experiments performed at
the Np M_4,5 edges in NpO_2. Below T_0 = 25 K, the development of long-range
order of Np electric quadrupoles is revealed by the growth of superlattice
Bragg peaks. The electronic transition is not accompanied by any measurable
crystallographic distortion, either internal or external, so the symmetry of
the system remains cubic. The polarization and azimuthal dependence of the
intensity of the resonant peaks is well reproduced assuming Templeton
scattering from a triple-q longitudinal antiferroquadrupolar structure.
Electric quadrupole order in NpO_2 could be driven by the ordering at T_0 of
magnetic octupoles of Gamma_5 symmetry, splitting the Np ground state quartet
and leading to a singlet ground state with zero dipole magnetic moment.Comment: 4 Pages, 3 Figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. v2: resubmitted
after referee report
Ligand selectivity in stabilising tandem parallel folded G-quadruplex motifs in human telomeric DNA sequences
Biophysical studies of ligand interactions with three human telomeric repeat sequences (d(AGGG(TTAGGG)n, n = 3, 7 and 11)) show that an oxazole-based ‘click’ ligand, which induces parallel folded quadruplexes, preferentially stabilises longer telomeric repeats providing evidence for selectivity in binding at the interface between tandem quadruplex motifs
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