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Peptide sequence

About: Peptide sequence is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 84156 publications have been published within this topic receiving 4357443 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The complete amino acid sequence of the papain-solubilized heavy chain of a human histocompatibility antigen (HLA-B7) has been elucidated and computer analysis of the sequence suggests the existence of internal homology between the amino-terminal portion and the region of the first disulfide loop regions.
Abstract: The complete amino acid sequence of the papain-solubilized heavy chain of a human histocompatibility antigen (HLA-B7) has been elucidated. It consists of a polypeptide of 271 residues (31 333 daltons). A single glycan moiety is attached to an asparagine residue at position 86 by an N-glycosidic bond. Two intrachain disulfide bonds, arranged linearly, involve half-cystine residues at positions 101 and 164 and at positions 203 and 259. They form two loops of 62 and 55 residues, respectively, separated by 38 residues. Computer analysis of the sequence suggests the existence of internal homology between the amino-terminal portion (residues 1--90) and the region of the first disulfide loop (residues 91--180). There is a significant homology between the second disulfide loop region of the chain (residues 182-271) and immunoglobulin (Ig) constant domains and beta 2-microglobulin [Orr, H. T., Lancet, D., Robb, R. J., Lopez de Castro, J. A., & Strominger, J. L. (1979A) Nature (London) (in press)]. However, no such homology to Ig is apparent in the amino-terminal or in the first disulfide loop regions.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The size of the pabC gene product was revealed to be approximately 30 kDa, in agreement with that predicted by the nucleotide sequence data and approximately half the native molecular mass, suggesting that the native enzyme is dimeric.
Abstract: In Escherichia coli, p-aminobenzoate (PABA) is synthesized from chorismate and glutamine in two steps. Aminodeoxychorismate synthase components I and II, encoded by pabB and pabA, respectively, convert chorismate and glutamine to 4-amino-4-deoxychorismate (ADC) and glutamate, respectively. ADC lyase, encoded by pabC, converts ADC to PABA and pyruvate. We reported that pabC had been cloned and mapped to 25 min on the E. coli chromosome (J. M. Green and B. P. Nichols, J. Biol. Chem. 266:12971-12975, 1991). Here we report the nucleotide sequence of pabC, including a portion of a sequence of a downstream open reading frame that may be cotranscribed with pabC. A disruption of pabC was constructed and transferred to the chromosome, and the pabC mutant strain required PABA for growth. The deduced amino acid sequence of ADC lyase is similar to those of Bacillus subtilis PabC and a number of amino acid transaminases. Aminodeoxychorismate lyase purified from a strain harboring an overproducing plasmid was shown to contain pyridoxal phosphate as a cofactor. This finding explains the similarity to the transaminases, which also contain pyridoxal phosphate. Expression studies revealed the size of the pabC gene product to be approximately 30 kDa, in agreement with that predicted by the nucleotide sequence data and approximately half the native molecular mass, suggesting that the native enzyme is dimeric.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Screening of a bicyclic peptide library against tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) identified a potent antagonist that inhibits the TNFα-TNF α receptor interaction and protects cells from TNF α-induced cell death.
Abstract: Protein–protein interactions represent a new class of exciting but challenging drug targets, because their large, flat binding sites lack well-defined pockets for small molecules to bind We report here a methodology for chemical synthesis and screening of large combinatorial libraries of bicyclic peptides displayed on rigid small-molecule scaffolds With planar trimesic acid as the scaffold, the resulting bicyclic peptides are effective for binding to protein surfaces such as the interfaces of protein–protein interactions Screening of a bicyclic peptide library against tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) identified a potent antagonist that inhibits the TNFα–TNFα receptor interaction and protects cells from TNFα-induced cell death Bicyclic peptides of this type may provide a general solution for inhibition of protein–protein interactions

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In dengue virus (DEN) particles, the core protein is a structural protein of the nucleocapsid that first appeared in the cytoplasm and then in the nuclei and nucleoli of infected cells.
Abstract: In dengue virus (DEN) particles, the core protein is a structural protein of the nucleocapsid. The core protein is known to be present in the nucleus of DEN-infected cells but there have been conflicting reports as to whether it is also present in the nucleolus. To clarify this, the intracellular location of the core protein was examined using a monoclonal antibody, 15B11, which was produced in this study. Immunofluorescence staining with this antibody demonstrated that the core protein first appeared in the cytoplasm and then in the nuclei and nucleoli of infected cells. Nuclear localization of the core protein was determined to be independent of other DEN proteins, since recombinant core proteins still entered the nuclei and nucleoli of cells transfected with only the core protein gene. Three putative nuclear localization signal motifs have been predicted to be present on the core protein. Deletion of the first one (KKAR), located at aa 6-9, and mutation of the second one (KKSK), located at aa 73-76, did not eliminate the nuclear localization property of the core protein. The third motif with a bipartite structure, RKeigrmlnilnRRRR, located at aa 85-100, was determined to be responsible for the nuclear localization of the core protein, since the core protein without this motif was located exclusively in the cytoplasm of DEN-infected cells and that this motif mediated nuclear localization of a normally cytoplasmic protein.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that UV induces ING1 to translocate to the nucleolus and that this translocation may facilitate apoptosis, which is shown to facilitate cell cycle progression and affect apoptosis.
Abstract: The ING1 candidate tumor suppressor is downregulated in a variety of primary tumors and established cancer cell lines. Blocking its expression experimentally promotes unregulated growth in vitro and in vivo, using cell and animal models. Alternative splicing products encode proteins that localize to the nucleus, inhibit cell cycle progression and affect apoptosis in different model systems. Here we show that ING1 proteins translocate to the nucleolus 12-48 h after UV-induced DNA damage. When a small 50 amino acid portion of ING1 was fused to green fluorescent protein, the fusion protein was efficiently targeted to the nucleolus, indicating that ING1 possesses an intrinsic nucleolar targeting sequence (NTS). We mapped this activity to two distinct 4 amino acid regions, which individually direct fused heterologous proteins to the nucleolus. Overexpression of ING1 induced apoptosis of primary fibroblasts in the presence and absence of UV exposure. In contrast, NTS mutants of ING1 that were not targeted to the nucleolus did not efficiently induce apoptosis when overexpressed and instead protected cells from UV-induced apoptosis. Taken together, these results indicate that UV induces ING1 to translocate to the nucleolus and that this translocation may facilitate apoptosis.

111 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202366
2022160
2021498
2020976
20191,101
20181,193