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Institution

Fundación Instituto Leloir

FacilityBuenos Aires, Argentina
About: Fundación Instituto Leloir is a facility organization based out in Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Dentate gyrus & Neurogenesis. The organization has 702 authors who have published 1052 publications receiving 39299 citations.
Topics: Dentate gyrus, Neurogenesis, RNA, Arabidopsis, Gene


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Drosophila insulin-degrading enzyme (dIDE) is a negative modulator of the PI3K pathway that restrains tissue growth in an autonomous manner, and loss of function exacerbates these phenotypes.
Abstract: Mammalian insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) cleaves insulin, among other peptidic substrates, but its function in insulin signaling is elusive. We use the Drosophila system to define the function of IDE in the regulation of growth and metabolism. We find that either loss or gain of function of Drosophila IDE (dIDE) can restrict growth in a cell-autonomous manner by affecting both cell size and cell number. dIDE can modulate Drosophila insulin-like peptide 2 levels, thereby restricting activation of the phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate kinase pathway and promoting activation of Drosophila forkhead box, subgroup O transcription factor. Larvae reared in high sucrose exhibit delayed developmental timing due to insulin resistance. We find that dIDE loss of function exacerbates this phenotype and that mutants display increased levels of circulating sugar, along with augmented expression of a lipid biosynthesis marker. We propose that dIDE is a modulator of insulin signaling and that its loss of function favors insulin resistance, a hallmark of diabetes mellitus type II.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that unfolding of P displays a first transition with low cooperativity but substantial loss of α-helix content and accessibility to hydrophobic sites, indicative of loose chain packing and fluctuating tertiary structure, typical of molten globules.
Abstract: Paramyxoviruses share the essential RNA polymerase complex components, namely, the polymerase (L), phosphoprotein (P), and nucleoprotein (N). Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) P is the smallest polypeptide among the family, sharing a coiled coil tetramerization domain, which disruption renders the virus inactive. We show that unfolding of P displays a first transition with low cooperativity but substantial loss of α-helix content and accessibility to hydrophobic sites, indicative of loose chain packing and fluctuating tertiary structure, typical of molten globules. The lack of unfolding baseline indicates a native state in conformational exchange and metastable at 20 °C. The second transition starts from a true intermediate state, with only the tetramerization domain remaining folded. The tetramerization domain undergoes a two-state dissociation/unfolding reaction (37.3 kcal mol(-1)). The M(2-1) transcription antiterminator, unique to RSV and Metapneumovirus, forms a nonglobular P:M(2-1) complex with a 1:1 stoichiometry and a K(D) of 8.1 nM determined by fluorescence anisotropy, far from the strikingly coincident dissociation range of P and M(2-1) tetramers (10(-28) M(3)). The M(2-1) binding region has been previously mapped to the N-terminal module of P, strongly suggesting the latter as the metastable molten globule domain. Folding, oligomerization, and assembly events between proteins and with RNA are coupled in the RNA polymerase complex. Quantitative assessment of the hierarchy of these interactions and their mechanisms contribute to the general understanding of RNA replication and transcription in Paramyxoviruses. In particular, the unique P-M(2-1) interface present in RSV provides a valuable antiviral target for this worldwide spread human pathogen.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Viable Brucella ovis cells bound haemin in solution, and this binding was markedly inhibited by preincubation of cells with antibodies to Omp31 and to an exposed prominent loop of the protein, thus showing that Omp 31 functions as an HBP in brucellae.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent advances in the nature of signaling components that operate as connectors of light and temperature signaling, with emphasis on the emerging hubs are summarized.
Abstract: Due to their nature as sessile organisms, plants must accurately sense their surroundings and then translate this information into efficient acclimation responses to maximize development. Light and temperature are two major stimuli that provide immediate cues regarding energy availability, daylength, proximity of other species and seasonal changes. Both cues are sensed by complex systems and the integration of these signals is of very high value to properly respond to environmental changes without being disguised by random changes. For instance a cold day has a different significance if it occurs during the illuminated phase of the day or during the night, or when days are shortening during the fall instead of a long-day in spring. Here, we summarize recent advances in the nature of signaling components that operate as connectors of light and temperature signaling, with emphasis on the emerging hubs. Despite the nature of the thermosensors is still in its infancy compared to an important body of knowledge about plant sensory photoreceptors, the interaction of both types of signaling will not only bring clues of how plants integrate environmental information, but also will help in leading research in the nature of the thermosensors themselves.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A model where cry1-mediated post-translational modification of GPA1 alters its GTP-binding activity is proposed, suggesting context-dependent signaling convergence between cry1 and GPA1 signaling pathways.
Abstract: While studying blue light-independent effects of cryptochrome 1 (cry1) photoreceptor, we observed premature opening of the hook in cry1 mutants grown in complete darkness, a phenotype that resembles the one described for the heterotrimeric G-protein a subunit (GPA1) null mutant gpa1. Both cry1 and gpa1 also showed reduced accumulation of anthocyanin under blue light. These convergent gpa1 and cry1 phenotypes required the presence of sucrose in the growth media and were not additive in the cry1 gpa1 double mutant, suggesting con- text-dependent signaling convergence between cry1 and GPA1 signaling pathways. Both, gpa1 and cry1 mutants showed reduced GTP-binding activity. The cry1 mutant showed wild-type levels of GPA1 mRNA or GPA1 protein. However, an anti-transducin antibody (AS/7) typically used for plant Ga proteins, recognized a 54 kDa band in the wild type but not in gpa1 and cry1 mutants. We propose a model where cry1-mediated post-translational modification of GPA1 alters its GTP-binding activity.

26 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202210
2021107
202099
201986
201865
201781