630 research outputs found

    Conformational Plasticity of HLA-B27 Molecules Correlates Inversely With Efficiency of Negative T Cell Selection

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    The development of autoimmune disorders is incompletely understood. Inefficient thymic T cell selection against self-peptides presented by major histocompatibility antigens (HLA in humans) may contribute to the emergence of auto-reactive effector cells, and molecular mimicry between foreign and self-peptides could promote T cell cross-reactivity. A pair of class I subtypes, HLA-B2705 and HLA-B2709, have previously been intensely studied, because they are distinguished from each other only by a single amino acid exchange at the floor of the peptide-binding groove, yet are differentially associated with the autoinflammatory disorder ankylosing spondylitis. Using X-ray crystallography in combination with ensemble refinement, we find that the non-disease-associated subtype HLA-B2709, when presenting the self-peptide pGR (RRRWHRWRL), exhibits elevated conformational dynamics, and the complex can also be recognized by T cells. Both features are not observed in case of the sequence-related self-peptide pVIPR (RRKWRRWHL) in complex with this subtype, and T cell cross-reactivity between pGR, pVIPR, and the viral peptide pLMP2 (RRRWRRLTV) is only rarely observed. The disease-associated subtype HLA-B2705, however, exhibits extensive conformational flexibility in case of the three complexes, all of which are also recognized by frequently occurring cross-reactive T cells. A comparison of the structural and dynamic properties of the six HLA-B27 complexes, together with their individual ability to interact with T cells, permits us to correlate the flexibility of HLA-B27 complexes with effector cell reactivity. The results suggest the existence of an inverse relationship between conformational plasticity of peptide-HLA-B27 complexes and the efficiency of negative selection of self-reactive cells within the thymus

    Les freins au travail collaboratif

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    Le travail collaboratif se définit comme une forme d'organisation solidaire du travail où chacun est responsable pour le tout, sans que la part individuelle puisse être systématiquement isolée, la coordination se faisant par ajustement mutuel Ce concept a acquis une nouvelle dimension grâce aux technologies de l'information et de la communication Mais si cette nouvelle forme de collaboration médiatisée est d'évidence collective, elle est d'abord le résultat d'une somme d'interventions individuelles et des freins peuvent être identifiés à ces deux niveaux. Leur caractérisation permet d'entrevoir les facteurs clés du succès de ce mode d'organisation du travail."travail";"collaboration";"coopération";"organisation"

    The development of academic procrastination in first-year secondary education students:The link with metacognitive self-regulation, self-efficacy, and effort regulation

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    Academic procrastination has been widely recognized as a problematic but common phenomenon in education. A growing body of literature construes procrastination as a situational, dynamic construct. Yet, little is known about its development in young secondary education students. The current study aims to elucidate this issue while exploring the relation with metacognitive self-regulation, self-efficacy, and effort regulation. Hierarchical growth curve modeling of the development of students' procrastination (566 students, 20 Mathematics/English grade-1 secondary education classes) revealed positive linear trajectories at class level but showed greater variability at student level. All mentioned predictors were negatively associated with procrastination and declined over time, with effort regulation revealing the strongest association. Interaction effects with time revealed a stable procrastination - effort regulation association, whereas the association with metacognitive self-regulation and self-efficacy diminished over time. The findings support the view on academic procrastination as a dynamic construct and highlight the importance of early intervention

    Genome-Wide Identification of H-NS-Controlled, Temperature-Regulated Genes in \u3ci\u3eEscherichiacoli \u3c/i\u3eK-12

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    DNA microarrays demonstrate that H-NS controls 69% of the temperature regulated genes in Escherichia coli K-12. H-NS is shown to be a common regulator of multiple iron and other nutrient acquisition systems preferentially expressed at 37°C and of general stress response, biofilm formation, and cold shock genes highly expressed at 23°C

    Allele-Dependent Similarity between Viral and Self-Peptide Presentation by Hla-B27 Subtypes

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    Molecular mimicry is discussed as a possible mechanism that may contribute to the development of autoimmune diseases. It could also be involved in the differential association of the human major histocompatibility subtypes HLA-B(*)2705 and HLA-B(*)2709 with ankylosing spondylitis. These two subtypes differ only in residue 116 of the heavy chain (Asp in B(*)2705 and His in B(*)2709), but the reason for the differential disease association is not understood. Using x-ray crystallography, we show here that the viral peptide pLMP2 (RRRWRRLTV, derived from latent membrane protein 2 (residues 236-244) of Epstein-Barr virus) is presented by the B(*)2705 and B(*)2709 molecules in two drastically deviating conformations. Extensive structural similarity between pLMP2 and the self-peptide pVIPR (RRKWRRWHL, derived from vasoactive intestinal peptide type 1 receptor (residues 400-408)) is observed only when the peptides are presented by B(*)2705 because of a salt bridge between Arg(5) of both peptides and the subtype-specific heavy chain residue Asp(116). Combined with functional studies using pLMP2/pVIPR-cross-reactive cytotoxic T cell lines and clones, together with target cells presenting these peptides or a modified peptide analogue, our results reveal that a pathogen-derived peptide can exhibit major histocompatibility complex class I subtype-dependent, drastically distinct binding modes. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that molecular mimicry between pLMP2 and pVIPR in the HLA-B27 context is an allele-dependent property

    Different Outcomes of Experimental Hepatitis E Virus Infection in Diverse Mouse Strains, Wistar Rats, and Rabbits

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    Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is the causative agent of acute hepatitis E in humans in developing countries, but autochthonous cases of zoonotic genotype 3 (HEV-3) infection also occur in industrialized countries. In contrast to swine, rats, and rabbits, natural HEV infections in mice have not yet been demonstrated. The pig represents a well-established large animal model for HEV-3 infection, but a suitable small animal model mimicking natural HEV-3 infection is currently missing. Therefore, we experimentally inoculated C57BL/6 mice (wild-type, IFNAR−/−, CD4−/−, CD8−/−) and BALB/c nude (nu/nu) mice, Wistar rats, and European rabbits with a wild boar-derived HEV-3 strain and monitored virus replication and shedding, as well as humoral immune responses. HEV RNA and anti-HEV antibodies were detected in one and two out of eight of the rats and all rabbits inoculated, respectively, but not in any of the mouse strains tested. Remarkably, immunosuppressive dexamethasone treatment of rats did not enhance their susceptibility to HEV infection. In rabbits, immunization with recombinant HEV-3 and ratHEV capsid proteins induced protection against HEV-3 challenge. In conclusion, the rabbit model for HEV-3 infection may serve as a suitable alternative to the non-human primate and swine models, and as an appropriate basis for vaccine evaluation studies

    Mechanistic aspects of sodium-binding sites in LeuT-like fold symporters

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    Secondary active transporters are of paramount biological impact in all living cells, facilitating the movement of many different substrates across the membrane against a concentration gradient. The uphill transport of one substrate is coupled to the downhill transport of another and driven by the electrochemical gradient. In the last decade, an increasing number of atomic structures of secondary transporters have been reported, confirming a very fundamental mechanistic concept known as the alternating-access cycle. The wealth of structures of transporters sharing the so-called LeuT-like fold that is characterized by two five-transmembrane-helix repeats sharing a 2-fold inverted pseudo symmetry has raised big hopes to finally describe alternating access on a molecular level. Although comparing the individual transporter states of different LeuT-like fold transporters revealed striking similarities, the coupling process, which represents the heart of secondary transport, is far from being understood. Here, we review the structural, functional, and biophysical validation of sodium-binding sites in four different LeuT-like fold transporters. The conservation of sodium sites is discussed in light of their role as key elements connecting symmetry-related structural domains, which are involved in substrate translocation. Moreover, we highlight their crucial roles in conformational changes of LeuT-like fold transporters and their implication on a unifying mechanism in secondary transport

    The cone of Betti diagrams over a hypersurface ring of low embedding dimension

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    We give a complete description of the cone of Betti diagrams over a standard graded hypersurface ring of the form k[x,y]/, where q is a homogeneous quadric. We also provide a finite algorithm for decomposing Betti diagrams, including diagrams of infinite projective dimension, into pure diagrams. Boij--Soederberg theory completely describes the cone of Betti diagrams over a standard graded polynomial ring; our result provides the first example of another graded ring for which the cone of Betti diagrams is entirely understood.Comment: Minor edits, references update

    Computational and Experimental Studies of Substrate Binding, Conformational Change and Importance of the Trimeric State in the Glycine Betaine Transporter BetP

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    The glycine betaine/sodium symporter BetP responds to changes in external osmolality by regulation of its transport activity. A recent X-ray structure of BetP confirms that it is a homotrimer and in this structure each protomer adopts an identical conformation, in which the pathway is occluded from both sides. Despite the availability of a wealth of experimental data for BetP, the structures of the alternate states (e.g., open to the outside of the cell), molecular mechanisms of substrate and Na<sup>+</sup> binding and transport, as well as the functional implications of the trimeric state remain poorly understood. To address these questions, we carried out computational studies using a range of techniques to derive hypotheses that were then tested experimentally. First, to identify structural features of the alternate states, we developed a procedure for flexible fitting of the X-ray structure of BetP into a lower-resolution cryo-EM map of BetP in a more native lipid environment, in which the three protomers have different conformations. These results suggest that: (i) the protomers adopt distinct conformational states relevant to the transport cycle; and (ii) there is conformational coupling between the protomers. Second, we performed all-atom molecular dynamics simulations and in silico alanine scanning of BetP trimers in order to identify interface residues crucial for maintaining the trimeric state. Mutations of these residues to alanine were introduced experimentally revealing that the isolated monomers are functional, and that the trimeric state is important for the regulation and higher activity of the protein. Finally, using molecular modeling and biochemical experiments we identified two Na<sup>+</sup> binding sites in BetP that could not be resolved in the 3.35 Ã… resolution X-ray structure
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