Institution
Unit of Virus Host Cell Interactions
Facility•Grenoble, France•
About: Unit of Virus Host Cell Interactions is a facility organization based out in Grenoble, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: RNA & Binding site. The organization has 199 authors who have published 248 publications receiving 14467 citations.
Topics: RNA, Binding site, Polymerase, Viral replication, ESCRT
Papers
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TL;DR: Several features observed for A-box recognition by τA resemble the recognition of promoters by bacterial RNA polymerase, where σ factor unfolds double-stranded DNA and stabilizes the non-coding DNA strand in an open conformation, suggesting that the observed structural similarity between Sfc1/Sfc7 and TFIIF Rap30/Rap74 might also reflect similar functions.
Abstract: Transcription of tRNA-encoding genes by RNA polymerase (Pol) III requires the six-subunit general transcription factor IIIC that uses subcomplexes τA and τB to recognize two gene-internal promoter elements named A- and B-box. The Schizosaccharomyces pombe τA subcomplex comprises subunits Sfc1, Sfc4 and Sfc7. The crystal structure of the Sfc1/Sfc7 heterodimer reveals similar domains and overall domain architecture to the Pol II-specific general transcription factor TFIIF Rap30/Rap74. The N-terminal Sfc1/Sfc7 dimerization module consists of a triple β-barrel similar to the N-terminal TFIIF Rap30/Rap74 dimerization module, whereas the C-terminal Sfc1 DNA-binding domain contains a winged-helix domain most similar to the TFIIF Rap30 C-terminal winged-helix domain. Sfc1 DNA-binding domain recognizes single and double-stranded DNA by an unknown mechanism. Several features observed for A-box recognition by τA resemble the recognition of promoters by bacterial RNA polymerase, where σ factor unfolds double-stranded DNA and stabilizes the non-coding DNA strand in an open conformation. Such a function has also been proposed for TFIIF, suggesting that the observed structural similarity between Sfc1/Sfc7 and TFIIF Rap30/Rap74 might also reflect similar functions.
18 citations
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TL;DR: Although difficult to perform in clinical practice, sPCR appears to be a reliable technique for detecting and quantifying quasi-species resistant to lamivudine and adefovir and can be useful to gain a better understanding of the natural history of antiviral resistance during the treatment of chronic hepatitis B (CHB).
17 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the crystal structures of two THOV PB2 domains, the putative cap-binding and the so-called "627-domain" were determined based on recent work identifying the capbinding and endonuclease domains in IAV polymerase.
Abstract: Orthomyxovirus Influenza A virus (IAV) heterotrimeric polymerase performs transcription of viral mRNAs by cap-snatching, which involves generation of capped primers by host pre-mRNA binding via the PB2 subunit cap-binding site and cleavage 10–13 nucleotides from the 5′ cap by the PA subunit endonuclease. Thogotoviruses, tick-borne orthomyxoviruses that includes Thogoto (THOV), Dhori (DHOV) and Jos (JOSV) viruses, are thought to perform cap-snatching by cleaving directly after the cap and thus have no heterogeneous, host-derived sequences at the 5′ extremity of their mRNAs. Based on recent work identifying the cap-binding and endonuclease domains in IAV polymerase, we determined the crystal structures of two THOV PB2 domains, the putative cap-binding and the so-called ‘627-domain’, and the structures of the putative endonuclease domains (PA-Nter) of THOV and DHOV. Despite low sequence similarity, corresponding domains have the same fold confirming the overall architectural similarity of orthomyxovirus polymerases. However the putative Thogotovirus cap-snatching domains in PA and PB2 have non-conservative substitutions of key active site residues. Biochemical analysis confirms that, unlike the IAV domains, the THOV and DHOV PA-Nter domains do not bind divalent cations and have no endonuclease activity and the THOV central PB2 domain does not bind cap analogues. On the other hand, sequence analysis suggests that other, non-influenza, orthomyxoviruses, such as salmon anemia virus (isavirus) and Quaranfil virus likely conserve active cap-snatching domains correlating with the reported occurrence of heterogeneous, host-derived sequences at the 5′ end of the mRNAs of these viruses. These results highlight the unusual nature of transcription initiation by Thogotoviruses.
17 citations
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TL;DR: It is reported that subunit b of the eIF3 complex directly binds to HCV IRES domain III via its N‐terminal‐RRM, which was previously shown to be involved in eif3j binding.
17 citations
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TL;DR: A rapid, easy-to-perform translation calibration procedure has been developed for use with the EMBL/ESRF mini-κ goniometer head and for other inverse-kappa goniometers designed for macromolecular crystallography.
Abstract: Precise and convenient crystal reorientation is of experimental importance in macromolecular crystallography (MX). The development of multi-axis goniometers, such as the ESRF/EMBL mini-κ, necessitates the corresponding development of calibration procedures that can be used for the setup, maintenance and troubleshooting of such devices. While traditional multi-axis goniometers require all rotation axes to intersect the unique point of the sample position, recently developed miniaturized instruments for sample reorientation in MX are not as restricted. However, the samples must always be re-centred following a change in orientation. To overcome this inconvenience and allow the use of multi-axis goniometers without the fundamental restriction of having all axes intersecting in the same point, an automatic translation correction protocol has been developed for such instruments. It requires precise information about the direction and location of the rotation axes. To measure and supply this information, a general, easy-to-perform translation calibration (TC) procedure has also been developed. The TC procedure is routinely performed on most MX beamlines at the ESRF and some results are presented for reference.
17 citations
Authors
Showing all 202 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Stephen Cusack | 81 | 290 | 21552 |
Rob W.H. Ruigrok | 70 | 166 | 13831 |
Guy Schoehn | 51 | 180 | 8348 |
Christoph W. Müller | 51 | 137 | 10240 |
Winfried Weissenhorn | 51 | 121 | 10142 |
Imre Berger | 43 | 145 | 6501 |
Annelies S. Zinkernagel | 39 | 142 | 11109 |
Marc Jamin | 37 | 77 | 3878 |
Andrew A. McCarthy | 35 | 75 | 5275 |
Niels H. Gehring | 35 | 65 | 4217 |
Ramesh S. Pillai | 35 | 60 | 10255 |
Christiane Schaffitzel | 34 | 86 | 5055 |
Patrice Morand | 34 | 138 | 4374 |
Adam Round | 34 | 66 | 3659 |
Matthew W. Bowler | 31 | 84 | 2705 |