45 research outputs found

    PSORTb 3.0: improved protein subcellular localization prediction with refined localization subcategories and predictive capabilities for all prokaryotes

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    Motivation: PSORTb has remained the most precise bacterial protein subcellular localization (SCL) predictor since it was first made available in 2003. However, the recall needs to be improved and no accurate SCL predictors yet make predictions for archaea, nor differentiate important localization subcategories, such as proteins targeted to a host cell or bacterial hyperstructures/organelles. Such improvements should preferably be encompassed in a freely available web-based predictor that can also be used as a standalone program

    Genome Analysis of the Anaerobic Thermohalophilic Bacterium Halothermothrix orenii

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    Halothermothirx orenii is a strictly anaerobic thermohalophilic bacterium isolated from sediment of a Tunisian salt lake. It belongs to the order Halanaerobiales in the phylum Firmicutes. The complete sequence revealed that the genome consists of one circular chromosome of 2578146 bps encoding 2451 predicted genes. This is the first genome sequence of an organism belonging to the Haloanaerobiales. Features of both Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria were identified with the presence of both a sporulating mechanism typical of Firmicutes and a characteristic Gram negative lipopolysaccharide being the most prominent. Protein sequence analyses and metabolic reconstruction reveal a unique combination of strategies for thermophilic and halophilic adaptation. H. orenii can serve as a model organism for the study of the evolution of the Gram negative phenotype as well as the adaptation under thermohalophilic conditions and the development of biotechnological applications under conditions that require high temperatures and high salt concentrations

    Proteins from extremophiles as stable tools for advanced biotechnological applications of high social interest

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    Extremophiles are micro-organisms adapted to survive in ecological niches defined as 'extreme' for humans and characterized by the presence of adverse environmental conditions, such as high or low temperatures, extreme values of pH, high salt concentrations or high pressure. Biomolecules isolated from extremophiles possess extraordinary properties and, in particular, proteins isolated from extremophiles represent unique biomolecules that function under severe conditions, comparable to those prevailing in various industrial processes. In this article, we will review some examples of recent applications of thermophilic proteins for the development of a new class of fluorescence non-consuming substrate biosensors for monitoring the levels of two analytes of high social interest, such as glucose and sodium

    NEW SOLID SUPPORTS LINKING NUCLEOSIDE SCAFFOLDS

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    An easy and efficient strategy to obtain new nucleoside based solid supports in which the nucleoside moieties have been anchored to the solid support through the nucleobase is here proposed. A simple and efficient solid-phase synthesis of 5' and 3'-derivatized uridine analogues has so been developed, following methodologies well established in organic chemistry

    CYCLIC URIDINE DIPHOSPHATE GLUCOSE, A NEW PYRIMIDINE ANALOG OF CYCLIC ADP RIBOSE

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    Novel compound 1, as the first example of cyclic ADP-ribose analogs containing a pyrimidine residue, was synthesized by a chemical strategy employing a Mitsunobu reaction for the condensation of the glucosyl moiety on protected uridine, and a Matsuda procedure for the cyclization step
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