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Stephen H. Leppla

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  334
Citations -  22958

Stephen H. Leppla is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bacillus anthracis & Anthrax toxin. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 325 publications receiving 21826 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen H. Leppla include Government of the United States of America & Laboratory of Molecular Biology.

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Proteolytic Inactivation of MAP-Kinase-Kinase by Anthrax Lethal Factor

TL;DR: It is shown that LF is a protease that cleaves the amino terminus of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases 1 and 2 and that this cleavage inactivates MAPKK1 and inhibits the MAPK signal transduction pathway.
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Anthrax toxin edema factor: a bacterial adenylate cyclase that increases cyclic AMP concentrations of eukaryotic cells.

TL;DR: It is shown here that EF is an adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1] produced by Bacillus anthracis in an inactive form and nearly equals that of the most active known cyclase.
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Crystal structure of the anthrax toxin protective antigen.

TL;DR: A model of pH-dependent membrane insertion involving the formation of a porin-like, membrane-spanning β-barrel is proposed and proposed for use as a general protein delivery system is proposed.
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Anthrax toxin triggers endocytosis of its receptor via a lipid raft–mediated clathrin-dependent process

TL;DR: It is found that although endocytosis of ATR is slow, clustering it into rafts either via PA heptamerization or using an antibody sandwich is necessary and sufficient to trigger efficient internalization and allow delivery of LF to the cytoplasm.
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Anthrax toxin protective antigen is activated by a cell surface protease with the sequence specificity and catalytic properties of furin

TL;DR: Data imply that furin is the cellular protease that activates PA, and that nearly all cell types contain at least a small amount of furin exposed on their cell surface.