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  • 2010-2014  (1)
  • 1995-1999  (2)
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  • 1
    Keywords: Bacterial proteins. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (300 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781118855034
    Series Statement: Wiley Series in Protein and Peptide Science Series
    DDC: 572.69
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Protein Aggregation in Bacteria: Functional and Structural Properties of Inclusion Bodies in Bacterial Cells -- Copyright -- Contents -- Contributors -- Preface -- Introduction to the Wiley Series in Protein and Peptide Science -- 1 Fundamentals of Protein Folding -- 1.1 Folding-misfolding-nonfolding crossroads -- 1.2 Protein folding -- 1.2.1 Protein-Folding Code -- 1.2.2 Protein-Folding Models -- 1.2.3 Polymer Aspects of Protein Folding -- 1.2.4 Different Conformations Seen in Protein Folding -- 1.3 Nonfolding -- 1.3.1 Intrinsically Disordered Proteins and Their Abundance -- 1.3.2 Some Functional Advantages of IDPs -- 1.3.3 Function-Induced Folding of IDPs -- 1.3.4 IDPs and Human Diseases -- 1.3.5 How Does an Amino Acid Sequence Encode Intrinsic Disorder? -- 1.3.6 Polymer Aspects of Nonfolding -- 1.4 Misfolding -- 1.4.1 Molecular Mechanisms of Protein Misfolding -- 1.4.2 Fibrillogenesis of Globular Proteins: Requirement for Partial Unfolding -- 1.4.3 Fibrillogenesis of IDPs: Requirement for Partial Folding -- 1.4.4 Conformational Prerequisites for Amyloidogenesis -- 1.4.5 Multiple Pathways of Protein Misfolding -- 1.4.6 Polymer Aspects of Protein Misfolding -- References -- 2 Recruiting Unfolding Chaperones to Solubilize Misfolded Recombinant Proteins -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Chemical Chaperones -- 2.3 PPIs and PDIs are folding enzymes -- 2.4 Molecular Chaperones -- 2.5 The small Hsps -- 2.6 Hsp90 -- 2.7 Hsp70/Hsp40 -- 2.8 GroEL Chaperonins -- 2.9 Conclusions -- References -- 3 Osmolytes as Chemical Chaperones to Use in Protein Biotechnology -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Protein-destabilizing conditions and counteracting mechanisms: shared or independent routes? -- 3.3 Proposed molecular mechanisms for osmolyte activities -- 3.4 Osmolytes and expression of recombinant proteins. , 3.5 Biotechnological relevance of osmolytes for preserving purified proteins -- 3.6 Conclusions -- References -- 4 Inclusion Bodies in the Study of Amyloid Aggregation -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Structure of IBs -- 4.2.1 Amyloid-like Nature of IBs -- 4.2.2 Detection and Characterization of Amyloid Conformations Inside IBs -- 4.3 Formation of IBs -- 4.3.1 In Vivo Formation Kinetics -- 4.3.2 Molecular Determinants of IB Aggregation -- 4.3.3 Sequence Specificity in IB Formation -- 4.4 IBs as the simplest model for in vivo amyloid toxicity -- 4.4.1 The Fitness Cost of Amyloid Aggregation -- 4.4.2 Citotoxicity of Amyloid IBs -- 4.4.3 Infectious Properties of IBs -- 4.5 Using IBs to screen for amyloid inhibitors -- 4.6 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Protein Aggregation in Unicellular Eukaryotes -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 UPR: Unfolded protein response in the ER -- 5.3 Removing persistent misfolded proteins with the proteasome -- 5.4 Lysosomal/vacuolar proteolysis (overload UPS) -- 5.4.1 Autophagy -- 5.4.2 Selective Types of Autophagy -- 5.5 Refolding of protein aggregates in cytosol and nucleus -- 5.6 JUNQ and IPOD -- 5.7 Segregation of aggregates in yeast -- 5.8 Proteins forming nonpathological amyloid-like fibrils in unicellular eukaryotes -- 5.9 Humanized yeast models -- 5.10 Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 6 Structural Properties of Bacterial Inclusion Bodies -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Intermediate species in inclusion body formation -- 6.3 Structural characterization of inclusion bodies -- 6.3.1 Composition, Overall Structure, Shape, and Morphology -- 6.3.2 Native-like and Amyloid-like Structures -- 6.4 Appendix: experimental methods Used in IB structural characterization -- References -- 7 Residue-Specific Structural Studies of Inclusion Bodies -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Molecular structure of amyloid fibrils. , 7.2.1 Structure of Peptide Amyloid Fibrils as Determined by X-ray Crystallography -- 7.2.2 Structure of HET-s Amyloid Fibrils as Determined by Solid -State NMR Spectroscopy -- 7.2.3 Cross- β -Sheet Core of HET-s Amyloid Fibrils as Determined by Solution-tate NMR and the H /D-xchange Method -- 7.3 Structural study of inclusion bodies with solution-state NMR and the H/D-exchange method -- 7.3.1 Experimental Mechanism of Solution-State NMR and the H/D-Exchange Method -- 7.3.2 Example: Structural Study of BMP2 (13-74) Inclusion Bodies -- 7.4 Structural study of inclusion bodies with solid-state NMR spectroscopy -- 7.4.1 Structural Study of HET-s(218-289) Inclusion Bodies -- 7.4.2 Structural Study of FHA2 Inclusion Bodies -- 7.5 Summary -- References -- 8 Biomedical Applications of Bacterial Inclusion Bodies -- 8.1 Biology of IB proteins -- 8.2 IB protein quality -- 8.3 IB architecture -- 8.4 IBs as biomaterials -- 8.5 Purification of IBs -- 8.6 IBs in tissue engineering -- 8.7 Slow drug release from bacterial IBs used as Nanopills -- 8.8 Conclusions -- References -- 9 Aggregation of Recombinant Proteins: Understanding Basic Issues to Overcome Production Bottlenecks -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 How do cells react to the overproduction of a recombinant protein? -- 9.2.1 Physiological Responses to Protein Overproduction -- 9.2.2 Stress Response to Protein Overproduction -- 9.2.3 Effects of Protein Overproduction on the Cell Membrane -- 9.3 Structure, composition, and mechanism of deposition of inclusion bodies -- 9.4 From knowledge to application -- 9.4.1 Growth Conditions -- 9.4.2 Coexpression with Chaperones and Folding Modulators -- 9.4.3 Expressivity Tags -- 9.4.4 Protein Engineering as a Tool to Improve Protein Solubility -- 9.4.5 What Have We Learned? Lessons from Directed Evolution -- 9.5 Advantages of using inclusion bodies -- References. , 10 Fusion to a Pull-Down Module : Designing Enzymes to Form BioCatalytically Active Insoluble Aggregates -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 A short glance at CLEAs -- 10.3 Pull-down modules and their use in inducing selective protein aggregation -- 10.4 Self-aggregating tags as pull-down modules -- 10.5 Pull-down modules undergoing ordered self-assembly -- 10.6 Auto-encapsulation -- 10.7 Even simpler enzymatically active inclusion bodies derived from recombinant proteins as such -- 10.8 Conclusions -- References -- Index -- Supplemental Images.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Current genetics 28 (1995), S. 454-457 
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Lipase ; Candida ; Multigene family ; Chromosomes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the yeast Candida rugosa the lipase isozymes are encoded by a family of genes, five of which have been cloned and sequenced in our laboratory. In this paper we report on the identification and preliminary characterization of two new related sequences, thus extending this multigene family to seven members. The total DNA content of Candida cells was estimated by laser flow-cytometry at about 20 Mb. Eight chromosomes with sizes ranging between 100 kb and 2.1 Mb, as determined by comparison with S. cerevisiae chromosomal bands, were resolved by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The lipase-encoding genes were localized on chromosome I, therefore suggesting that they have originated through multiple duplication events of an ancestral gene.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-6776
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary The Candida rugosa lipase I gene has been expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The recombinant lipase was efficiently synthesized only following the replacement of the enzyme endogenous leader sequence with the signal peptide of the Kluyveromyces lactis killer toxin. Amount of accumulated lipase was about 10–20 mg/l in batch culture and over 1g/l in a computer-controlled fed-batch fermentation system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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