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Institution

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

FacilityCambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
About: Laboratory of Molecular Biology is a facility organization based out in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Gene & RNA. The organization has 19395 authors who have published 24236 publications receiving 2101480 citations.
Topics: Gene, RNA, DNA, Population, Transcription (biology)


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There are now several crystal structures of antibody Fab fragments complexed to their protein antigens, with good shape complementarity between the interacting surfaces and reasonable juxtapositions of polar residues so as to permit hydrogen-bond formation.
Abstract: There are now several crystal structures of antibody Fab fragments complexed to their protein antigens. These include Fab complexes with lysozyme, two Fab complexes with influenza virus neuraminidase, and three Fab complexes with their anti-idiotype Fabs. The pattern of binding that emerges is similar to that found with other protein-protein interactions, with good shape complementarity between the interacting surfaces and reasonable juxtapositions of polar residues so as to permit hydrogen-bond formation. Water molecules have been observed in cavities within the interface and on the periphery, where they often form bridging hydrogen bonds between antibody and antigen. For the most part the antigen is bound in the middle of the antibody combining site with most of the six complementarity-determining residues involved in binding. For the most studied antigen, lysozyme, the epitopes for four antibodies occupy approximately 45% of the accessible surface area. Some conformational changes have been observed to accompany binding in both the antibody and the antigen, although most of the information on conformational change in the latter comes from studies of complexes with small antigens.

571 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The plethora of Gquadruplex DNA structures is explored, and their possible biological functions as well as the proteins that interact with them are discussed.
Abstract: To be functional, nucleic acids need to adopt particular three-dimensional structures. For a long time DNA was regarded as a rigid and passive molecule with the sole purpose to store genetic information, but experimental data has now accumulated that indicates the full dynamic repertoire of this macromolecule. During the last decade, four-stranded DNA structures known as G-quadruplexes, or DNA tetraplexes, have emerged as a three-dimensional structure of special interest. Motifs for the formation of G-quadruplex DNA structures are widely dispersed in eukaryotic genomes, and are abundant in regions of biological significance, for example, at telomeres, in the promoters of many important genes, and at recombination hotspots, to name but a few in man. Here I explore the plethora of G-quadruplex DNA structures, and discuss their possible biological functions as well as the proteins that interact with them.

570 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Jun 2005-Science
TL;DR: The identification of the Medicago GRAS-type protein Nodulation signaling pathway 1 (NSP1), which is essential for all known Nod factor–induced changes in gene expression, is reported.
Abstract: Rhizobial Nod factors induce in their legume hosts the expression of many genes and set in motion developmental processes leading to root nodule formation. Here we report the identification of the Medicago GRAS-type protein Nodulation signaling pathway 1 (NSP1), which is essential for all known Nod factor-induced changes in gene expression. NSP1 is constitutively expressed, and so it acts as a primary transcriptional regulator mediating all known Nod factor-induced transcriptional responses, and therefore, we named it a Nod factor response factor.

569 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Sep 1991-Cell
TL;DR: The finding that IL5 and GM-CSF share a receptor subunit provides a molecular basis for the observation that these cytokines can partially interfere with each other's binding and have highly overlapping biological activities on eosinophils.

567 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
13 Nov 1998-Science
TL;DR: Crystal structures of the internalization signal binding domain of mu2 complexed with theinternalization signal peptides of epidermal growth factor receptor and the trans-Golgi network protein TGN38 have been determined at 2.7 angstrom resolution.
Abstract: Many cell surface proteins are marked for endocytosis by a cytoplasmic sequence motif, tyrosine-X-X-(hydrophobic residue), that is recognized by the μ2 subunit of AP2 adaptors. Crystal structures of the internalization signal binding domain of μ2 complexed with the internalization signal peptides of epidermal growth factor receptor and the trans-Golgi network protein TGN38 have been determined at 2.7 angstrom resolution. The signal peptides adopted an extended conformation rather than the expected tight turn. Specificity was conferred by hydrophobic pockets that bind the tyrosine and leucine in the peptide. In the crystal, the protein forms dimers that could increase the strength and specificity of binding to dimeric receptors.

566 citations


Authors

Showing all 19431 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert J. Lefkowitz214860147995
Ronald M. Evans199708166722
Tony Hunter175593124726
Marc G. Caron17367499802
Mark Gerstein168751149578
Timothy A. Springer167669122421
Harvey F. Lodish165782101124
Ira Pastan1601286110069
Bruce N. Ames158506129010
Philip Cohen154555110856
Gerald M. Rubin152382115248
Ashok Kumar1515654164086
Kim Nasmyth14229459231
Kenneth M. Yamada13944672136
Harold E. Varmus13749676320
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20239
202265
20211,222
20201,165
20191,082
2018945