994 research outputs found
Protein Array Patterning by Diffusive Gel Stamping
10.1371/journal.pone.0046382PLoS ONE710
Degradation of human kininogens with the release of kinin peptides by extracellular proteinases of Candida spp.
The secretion of proteolytic enzymes by pathogenic microorganisms is one of the most successful strategies used by pathogens to colonize and infect the host organism. The extracellular microbial proteinases can seriously deregulate the homeostatic proteolytic cascades of the host, including the kinin-forming system, repeatedly reported to he activated during bacterial infection. The current study assigns a kinin-releasing activity to secreted proteinases of Candida spp. yeasts, the major fungal pathogens of humans. Of several Candida species studied, C. parapsilosis and C. albicans in their invasive filamentous forms are shown to produce proteinases which most effectively degrade proteinaceous kinin precursors, the kininogens. These enzymes, classified as aspartyl proteinases, have the highest kininogen-degrading activity at low pH (approx. 3.5), but the associated production of bradykinin-related peptides from a small fraction of kininogen molecules is optimal at neutral pH (6.5). The peptides effectively interact with cellular B2-type kinin receptors. Moreover, kinin-related peptides capable of interacting with inflammation-induced B1-type receptors are also formed, but with a reversed pH dependence. The presented variability of the potential extracellular kinin production by secreted aspartyl proteinases of Candida spp. is consistent with the known adaptability of these opportunistic pathogens to different niches in the host organism
Solvable model of a many-filament Brownian ratchet
We construct and exactly solve a model of an extended Brownian ratchet. The
model comprises an arbitrary number of heterogeneous, growing and shrinking
filaments which together move a rigid membrane by a ratchet mechanism. The
model draws parallels with the dynamics of actin filament networks at the
leading edge of the cell. In the model, the filaments grow and contract
stochastically. The model also includes forces which derive from a potential
dependent on the separation between the filaments and the membrane. These
forces serve to attract the filaments to the membrane or generate a surface
tension that prevents the filaments from dispersing. We derive an N
-dimensional diffusion equation for the N filament-membrane separations, which
allows the steady-state probability distribution function to be calculated
exactly under certain conditions. These conditions are fulfilled by the
physically relevant cases of linear and quadratic interaction potentials. The
exact solution of the diffusion equation furnishes expressions for the average
velocity of the membrane and critical system parameters for which the system
stalls and has zero net velocity. In the case of a restoring force, the
membrane velocity grows as the square root of the force constant, whereas it
decreases once a surface tension is introduced
Synthetic biology: Building the language for a new science brick by metaphorical brick
Changes in the biosciences and their relations to society over the last decades provide a unique opportunity to examine whether or not such changes leave traces in the language we use to talk about them. In this article we examine metaphors used in English-speaking press coverage to conceptualize a new type of (interdisciplinary) bioscience: synthetic biology. Findings show that three central metaphors were used between 2008 and May 2010. They exploit social and cultural knowledge about books, computers and engines and are linked to knowledge of three revolutions in science and society (the printing, information and industrial revolutions). These three central metaphors are connected to each other through the concepts of reading/writing, designing and mass production and they focus on science as a revolutionary process rather than on the end results or products of science. Overall, we observed the use of a complex bricolage of mixed metaphors and chains of metaphors that root synthetic biology in historical events and achievements, while at the same time extolling its promises for the future. © 2011 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
The actin-bundling protein fascin is overexpressed in colorectal adenomas and promotes motility in adenoma cells in vitro
Background:
Fascin is overexpressed in many cancers, including colorectal, but its role in the malignant transformation of benign colorectal adenomas is unclear.
Methods:
Immunohistochemical analysis of fascin expression was carried out in resected human colorectal adenoma specimens. The effects of forced overexpression of fascin on adenoma cell motility were also analysed.
Results:
We show fascin overexpression in adenomas increasing with tumour size, histological type, and degree of dysplasia and increased cell motility in adenoma cell lines following fascin transfection.
Conclusion:
These data suggest an important role for fascin in the malignant progression of colorectal tumours
α-Actinin and Filamin Cooperatively Enhance the Stiffness of Actin Filament Networks
BACKGROUND: The close subcellular proximity of different actin filament crosslinking proteins suggests that these proteins may cooperate to organize F-actin structures to drive complex cellular functions during cell adhesion, motility and division. Here we hypothesize that alpha-actinin and filamin, two major F-actin crosslinking proteins that are both present in the lamella of adherent cells, display synergistic mechanical functions. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using quantitative rheology, we find that combining alpha-actinin and filamin is much more effective at producing elastic, solid-like actin filament networks than alpha-actinin and filamin separately. Moreover, F-actin networks assembled in the presence of alpha-actinin and filamin strain-harden more readily than networks in the presence of either alpha-actinin or filamin. SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that cells combine auxiliary proteins with similar ability to crosslink filaments to generate stiff cytoskeletal structures, which are required for the production of internal propulsive forces for cell migration, and that these proteins do not have redundant mechanical functions
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