comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Omplete protease inhibitor cocktail - Page 1 : comparemela.com

The CRL5–SPSB3 ubiquitin ligase targets nuclear cGAS for degradation

Cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) senses aberrant DNA during infection, cancer and inflammatory disease, and initiates potent innate immune responses through the synthesis of 2′3′-cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP)1–7. The indiscriminate activity of cGAS towards DNA demands tight regulatory mechanisms that are necessary to maintain cell and tissue homeostasis under normal conditions. Inside the cell nucleus, anchoring to nucleosomes and competition with chromatin architectural proteins jointly prohibit cGAS activation by genomic DNA8–15. However, the fate of nuclear cGAS and its role in cell physiology remains unclear. Here we show that the ubiquitin proteasomal system (UPS) degrades nuclear cGAS in cycling cells. We identify SPSB3 as the cGAS-targeting substrate receptor that associates with the cullin–RING ubiquitin ligase 5 (CRL5) complex to ligate ubiquitin onto nuclear cGAS. A cryo-electron microscopy structure of nucleosome-bound cGAS in a complex

Fiji
Coomassie
Ashanti
Ghana
Cytiva-akt
Lipofectamine-rnai
Jackson-immunoresearch
Microplates-perkin-elmer
Q-exactive-orbitrap
Phenoplate-perkinelmer
Perkinelmer
Proteome-software

A new antibiotic traps lipopolysaccharide in its intermembrane transporter

Gram-negative bacteria are extraordinarily difficult to kill because their cytoplasmic membrane is surrounded by an outer membrane that blocks the entry of most antibiotics. The impenetrable nature of the outer membrane is due to the presence of a large, amphipathic glycolipid called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in its outer leaflet1. Assembly of the outer membrane requires transport of LPS across a protein bridge that spans from the cytoplasmic membrane to the cell surface. Maintaining outer membrane integrity is essential for bacterial cell viability, and its disruption can increase susceptibility to other antibiotics2–6. Thus, inhibitors of the seven lipopolysaccharide transport (Lpt) proteins that form this transenvelope transporter have long been sought. A new class of antibiotics that targets the LPS transport machine in Acinetobacter was recently identified. Here, using structural, biochemical and genetic approaches, we show that these antibiotics trap a substrate-bou

Coomassie
Ashanti
Ghana
Vitrobot-mark
Durapore-millipore
Perkin-elmer
Anatrace-maumee
Gatan-bioquantum
Fisher-scientific
Global-phasing
Enzo-life-sciences
Gibson

Polθ is phosphorylated by PLK1 to repair double-strand breaks in mitosis

DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are deleterious lesions that challenge genome integrity. To mitigate this threat, human cells rely on the activity of multiple DNA repair machineries that are tightly regulated throughout the cell cycle1. In interphase, DSBs are mainly repaired by non-homologous end joining and homologous recombination2. However, these pathways are completely inhibited in mitosis3–5, leaving the fate of mitotic DSBs unknown. Here we show that DNA polymerase theta6 (Polθ) repairs mitotic DSBs and thereby maintains genome integrity. In contrast to other DSB repair factors, Polθ function is activated in mitosis upon phosphorylation by Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1). Phosphorylated Polθ is recruited by a direct interaction with the BRCA1 C-terminal domains of TOPBP1 to mitotic DSBs, where it mediates joining of broken DNA ends. Loss of Polθ leads to defective repair of mitotic DSBs, resulting in a loss of genome integrity. This is further exacerbated in

Fiji
Phoenix
Arizona
United-states
Hela-gibco
Biotinylated-pol
Orbitrap-exploris
Lipofectamine-rnaimax-thermofisher
Jn-mark-glover
Mai-tai-deepsee
Giemsa-karyomax
Institut-curie

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.