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Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Sensing in the Unfolded Protein Response

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TLDR
The mechanistic principles of ER stress sensing are the focus of this review, and yeast Ire1 directly binds to unfolded proteins, which induces its oligomerization and activation.
Abstract
Secretory and transmembrane proteins enter the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as unfolded proteins and exit as either folded proteins in transit to their target organelles or as misfolded proteins targeted for degradation. The unfolded protein response (UPR) maintains the protein-folding homeostasis within the ER, ensuring that the protein-folding capacity of the ER meets the load of client proteins. Activation of the UPR depends on three ER stress sensor proteins, Ire1, PERK, and ATF6. Although the consequences of activation are well understood, how these sensors detect ER stress remains unclear. Recent evidence suggests that yeast Ire1 directly binds to unfolded proteins, which induces its oligomerization and activation. BiP dissociation from Ire1 regulates this oligomeric equilibrium, ultimately modulating Ire1’s sensitivity and duration of activation. The mechanistic principles of ER stress sensing are the focus of this review.

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Capsosiphon fulvescens Glycoproteins Enhance Probiotics-Induced Cognitive Improvement in Aged Rats.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cognitive impairment in aged rats was synergistically diminished by co-treatment with Cf-hGP and L. plantarum through BDNF-mediated regulation of Nrf2 and eEF2 signaling pathways in the dorsal hippocampus.
Book ChapterDOI

Mechanical Properties of Chaperone BiP, the Master Regulator of the Endoplasmic Reticulum

TL;DR: To establish a correlation between BiP structure and catalysis and how its conformational and viscoelastic changes are coupled to ligand binding, catalysis, and allosterism, optical tweezers and nano-rheology techniques have been essential in this regard.
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TL;DR: Nogo-A antibody ameliorates neurological function after restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), possibly by suppressing apoptosis induced by endoplasmic reticulum stress.
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Toward a Universal Theoretical Framework to Understand Robustness and Resilience: From Cells to Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, a common framework for describing, assessing, and predicting robustness and resilience within and across living systems is proposed to describe, assess, and predict robustness in a rapidly changing environment.
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Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress: An Emerging Therapeutic Target for Intervertebral Disc Degeneration

TL;DR: The current knowledge regarding the impact of ER stress on the process of IDD is summarized, as well as some potential therapeutic strategies for alleviating disc degeneration by targeting different pathways to inhibit ER stress.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Oligomerization and phosphorylation of the Ire1p kinase during intracellular signaling from the endoplasmic reticulum to the nucleus.

TL;DR: Molecular genetic and biochemical studies described here suggest that, as in the case of growth factor receptors of higher eukaryotic cells, Ire1p oligomerizes in response to the accumulation of unfolded proteins in the ER and is phosphorylated in trans by otherIre1p molecules as a result of oligomerization.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Unfolded Protein Response: From Stress Pathway to Homeostatic Regulation

TL;DR: The vast majority of proteins that a cell secretes or displays on its surface first enter the endoplasmic reticulum, where they fold and assemble, and only properly assembled proteins advance from the ER to the cell surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

XBP1 mRNA Is Induced by ATF6 and Spliced by IRE1 in Response to ER Stress to Produce a Highly Active Transcription Factor

TL;DR: The transcription factor XBP1, a target of ATF6, is identified as a mammalian substrate of such an unconventional mRNA splicing system and it is shown that only the spliced form of X BP1 can activate the UPR efficiently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein translation and folding are coupled by an endoplasmic-reticulum-resident kinase

TL;DR: The cloning of perk is described, a gene encoding a type I transmembrane ER-resident protein that contains a protein-kinase domain most similar to that of the known eIF2α kinases, PKR and HRI that implicate PERK in a signalling pathway that attenuates protein translation in response to ER stress.
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