Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Functional Consequences Of Ama1-Ron2 Interaction During Host Cell Invasion By Toxoplasma., Shruthi Krishnamurthy Jan 2016

Functional Consequences Of Ama1-Ron2 Interaction During Host Cell Invasion By Toxoplasma., Shruthi Krishnamurthy

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

T.gondii is a model organism of the phylum Apicomplexa that infects one third of the human population. While the majority of infections are asymptomatic or manifest with mild flu-like symptoms, toxoplasmosis can be fatal in immunocompromised individuals and in the developing fetus. The lytic cycle of tachyzoite-stage parasites causes damage to the host by repeated rounds of host cell invasion, intracellular replication and lysis of the host cell upon egress.

Invasion is a key step for the parasite to maintain its intracellular lifestyle. Apical Membrane Antigen 1 (AMA1) is an adhesin released from a unique set of secretory organelles called …


Epicardial Cell Engraftment And Signaling Promote Cardiac Repair After Myocardial Infarction, Krithika Rao Jan 2016

Epicardial Cell Engraftment And Signaling Promote Cardiac Repair After Myocardial Infarction, Krithika Rao

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

The epicardium is a single layer of epithelial (mesothelial) cells that covers the entire heart surface, but whose function in adult mammals is poorly understood. Defining the role of epicardial cells during homeostasis, growth and injury has potential to provide new treatment strategies for human diseases that result in heart failure, due to extensive loss of viable cardiac tissue. We hypothesized that epicardial cells contribute to repair as transplantable progenitor cells for cellular regeneration and as a source of secreted growth factors for cell protection after myocardial infarction.

Adult epicardial cells were prospectively isolated as uncommitted epithelial cells using epithelial-specific …


The Role Of Src Kinase Activation In Lung Epithelial Alterations In Response To The A,B-Unsaturated Aldehyde Acrolein, Robert Bauer Jan 2016

The Role Of Src Kinase Activation In Lung Epithelial Alterations In Response To The A,B-Unsaturated Aldehyde Acrolein, Robert Bauer

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Cigarette smoke (CS) exposure is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States contributing to over 480,000 deaths a year with over 300 billion dollars in CS related costs spent per year. While the dangers of CS exposure have been studied and characterized for decades being largely attributed to reactive oxygen species and oxidative stress, increasing evidence suggests that reactive aldehydes in CS, specifically the α,β-unsaturated aldehyde acrolein, are responsible for many of the negative pathologies associated CS exposure. Previous work has shown that acrolein can bind directly to a number of cellular proteins containing redox sensitive cysteine …


Defining Platelet-Derived Components Regulating The Prothrombinase Enzyme Complex, Francis Ayombil Jan 2016

Defining Platelet-Derived Components Regulating The Prothrombinase Enzyme Complex, Francis Ayombil

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

At sites of vascular injury, the critical blood clotting enzyme thrombin is generated from prothrombin via Prothrombinase, a macromolecular, Ca2+-dependent enzymatic complex consisting of the serine protease factor Xa and the non-enzymatic cofactor factor Va, assembled on the membranes of activated platelets. Platelets regulate thrombin formation by providing specific binding sites for the components of Prothrombinase and by releasing a platelet-derived factor V/Va molecule that is more procoagulant than its plasma counterpart and partially resistant to proteolytic inactivation. This dissertation identifies and characterizes the subpopulation of platelet-derived factor V/Va that is responsible for the observed protease resistance, and the mechanism …


Mechanisms And Dynamics Of Oxidative Dna Damage Repair In Nucleosomes, Wendy J. Cannan Jan 2016

Mechanisms And Dynamics Of Oxidative Dna Damage Repair In Nucleosomes, Wendy J. Cannan

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

DNA provides the blueprint for cell function and growth, as well as ensuring continuity from one cell generation to the next. In order to compact, protect, and regulate this vital information, DNA is packaged by histone proteins into nucleosomes, which are the fundamental subunits of chromatin. Reactive oxygen species, generated by both endogenous and exogenous agents, can react with DNA, altering base chemistry and generating DNA strand breaks. Left unrepaired, these oxidation products can result in mutations and/or cell death. The Base Excision Repair (BER) pathway exists to deal with damaged bases and single-stranded DNA breaks. However, the packaging of …


Barcoding The Actin Track: Differential Regulation Of Myosin Motors By Tropomyosin, Joseph Emerson Clayton Jan 2016

Barcoding The Actin Track: Differential Regulation Of Myosin Motors By Tropomyosin, Joseph Emerson Clayton

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Myosins and tropomyosins represent two types of actin filament-associated proteins that often work together in contractile and motile processes in the cell. While the role of thin filament troponin-tropomyosin complexes in regulating striated muscle myosin II is well characterized, the role of tropomyosins in non-muscle myosin regulation is not well understood. Fission yeast has recently proved to be a useful model with which to study regulation of myosin motors by tropomyosin owing to its tractable genetics, well-defined actin cytoskeleton, and established actin biochemistry.

A hallmark of type V myosins is their processivity -- the ability to take multiple steps along …


The Role Of Kinesin-2 In Navigating Microtubule Obstacles: Implications For The Regulation Of Axonal Transport, Gregory Hoeprich Jan 2016

The Role Of Kinesin-2 In Navigating Microtubule Obstacles: Implications For The Regulation Of Axonal Transport, Gregory Hoeprich

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Neurons are specialized cells that transmit information through electrical and chemical signals using structural processes known as dendrites and axons. Dendrites receive information for the cell to interpret while the exceedingly long axon transmits the processed information to its target destination. To ensure the neuron properly carries out its extracellular functions, the orchestration of intracellular cargo (e.g. mitochondria) is critical. This is especially true in the axon, which can be up to a meter in length. There are many challenges involved in the spatial and temporal regulation of cargo over such vast cellular distances. In order to accomplish cargo transport …


Novel Mechanisms Governing Autoregulation Of The Src Family Kinase Fyn And Its Crosstalk With Protein Kinase A, Marion Weir Jan 2016

Novel Mechanisms Governing Autoregulation Of The Src Family Kinase Fyn And Its Crosstalk With Protein Kinase A, Marion Weir

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

ABSTRACT

Phosphorylation is a post-translational modification important for regulating protein activity and protein binding capacity. It is used in many different signaling pathways within the cell. Src Family Kinases and Protein Kinase A (PKA) are two prototyptical non-receptor tyrosine and serine/ threonine kinases, respectively, which are found in canonical signaling pathways. These two kinases are critical for signaling in essentially every cell of a multicellular organism, and are particularly important in development, cell migration and proliferation. Although both proteins have been intensely studied for many decades, an understanding of the molecular mechanisms which govern their regulation and the regulation that …