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Full-Text Articles in Molecular Biology

Understanding The Role Of Rhamm In Tumor Load– Mediated Tumor Invasiveness Of Triple Negative Breast Cancer, Ashwin Sritharan, Britney Messam Aug 2021

Understanding The Role Of Rhamm In Tumor Load– Mediated Tumor Invasiveness Of Triple Negative Breast Cancer, Ashwin Sritharan, Britney Messam

Undergraduate Student Research Internships Conference

1.Compare the levels of proliferation between RHAMM+/+ and RHAMM -/- MDA-MB-231 spheroids as determined by ki67 and Caspase 3 signaling 2.Compare levels of RHAMM, CD44, Has2, and p-ERK activation between RHAMM+/+ and RHAMM -/- MDA-MB-231 spheroids


Creating A Protein Chimera To Study Regulation Of Muscle Diversity, Shannon Scarboro May 2021

Creating A Protein Chimera To Study Regulation Of Muscle Diversity, Shannon Scarboro

Symposium of Student Scholars

Creating a protein chimera to study regulation of muscle diversity.

Body muscles are made of many individual super-cells, called muscle fibers, that have distinct properties and determine every individual’s strength and endurance. Initially all muscle fibers have identical characteristics, but become differentiated into specific types in adults. The mechanism of such transition is not well understood, despite its obvious importance for shaping human physicality.

Remarkable conservation of the muscle tissue enables us to use fruit flies to study the mechanisms of muscle fiber diversity. We hypothesized that the transcription factor Mef2 acts as a molecular switch that activates structural genes …


Identification Of The E3 Ligase That Directs The Degradation Of Proteins That Control Cell Fate Decisions In Yeast, Prasanna Tati, Stephen D Willis, Katrina F. Cooper May 2021

Identification Of The E3 Ligase That Directs The Degradation Of Proteins That Control Cell Fate Decisions In Yeast, Prasanna Tati, Stephen D Willis, Katrina F. Cooper

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

The ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) and autophagy pathways are distinct, highly conserved proteolytic systems that play important roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis in response to environmental cues [1]. The goal of this project is to identify the E3 ligase that mediates the degradation of cyclin C following nitrogen starvation in yeast using quantitative Western blot analysis of cyclin C-myc following nitrogen starvation in mutants of known Ubc4/5 interacting E3 ligases. No potential E3 ligases were identified as stable after 4 hours of nitrogen starvation, suggesting redundancy in function.


Evolutionary Conservation Of The Heterochronic Pathway In C. Elegans And C. Briggsae, Maria Ivanova, Eric G. Moss May 2021

Evolutionary Conservation Of The Heterochronic Pathway In C. Elegans And C. Briggsae, Maria Ivanova, Eric G. Moss

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Heterochronic genes control the sequence and timing of developmental events during four larval stages of Caenorhabitis nematodes. Mutations in these genes may cause skipping or reiteration of developmental events.

C. briggsae is a close relative of C. elegans. These species have similar morphology and share the same ecological niche. C. briggsae undergoes the same developmental pathway consisting of four larval stages before reaching adulthood. It also has the same set of heterochronic genes.

Lin-28 is one of the heterochronic genes that also exists in other animals from flies to humans. It conservatively blocks the maturation of let-7 miRNA, the process …


Substrate-Dependent Modulation Of Sirt2 By A Fluorescent Probe, 1-Aminoanthracene, David Bi, Prashit Parikh, Jie Yang, Brian P Weiser May 2021

Substrate-Dependent Modulation Of Sirt2 By A Fluorescent Probe, 1-Aminoanthracene, David Bi, Prashit Parikh, Jie Yang, Brian P Weiser

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Sirtuin isoform 2 (SIRT2) is an enzyme that catalyzes the removal of acyl groups from lysine residues. SIRT2’s catalytic domain has a hydrophobic tunnel where its substrate acyl groups bind. Here, we report that the fluorescent probe 1-aminoanthracene (AMA) binds within SIRT2’s hydrophobic tunnel in a substrate-dependent manner. AMA’s interaction with SIRT2 was characterized by its enhanced fluorescence upon protein binding (>10-fold). AMA interacted weakly with SIRT2 alone in solution (Kd = 37 μM). However, when SIRT2 was equilibrated with a decanoylated peptide substrate, AMA’s affinity for SIRT2 was enhanced ∼10-fold (Kd = 4μM). The peptide’s decanoyl chain and …


Safety Of Silver Oxide Coated Biomaterials In Mice, Michael Klug, Darien L. Seidman, Rahyan Mahmoud, Destiny Morot, Lei Yu, Jeffrey D Hettinger, Renee M Demarest May 2021

Safety Of Silver Oxide Coated Biomaterials In Mice, Michael Klug, Darien L. Seidman, Rahyan Mahmoud, Destiny Morot, Lei Yu, Jeffrey D Hettinger, Renee M Demarest

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

It has been demonstrated that silver oxide coatings designed by our collaborators are able to prevent E. coli and P. aeruginosa attachment to biomaterials in vivo. These findings demonstrate that such coatings show promise in preventing the development of biofilm on biodevices. However, it is unknown if the use of silver oxide in this fashion is toxic in vivo. The goal of this project was to determine whether our silver oxide coatings are safe to use in vivo. To assess the toxicity of our silver oxide formula, mice were implanted with either silver oxide coated titanium discs or uncoated titanium …


Replication Protein A (Rpa) Targeting Of Uracil Dna Glycosylase (Ung2), Derek Chen, Brian P Weiser May 2021

Replication Protein A (Rpa) Targeting Of Uracil Dna Glycosylase (Ung2), Derek Chen, Brian P Weiser

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Replication Protein A (RPA) is a single stranded DNA binding protein which stabilizes ssDNA for replication and repair. One function of RPA is to bind the DNA repair enzyme uracil DNA glycosylase (UNG2) and direct its activity towards ssDNA dsDNA junctions.

UNG2 removes uracil bases from DNA which can appear through dUMP misincorporation or through cytosine deamination. If uracil is present instead of a cytosine, then the original GC pair becomes a GU pair. The uracil will then base pair to adenine in the replicated daughter strand. This results in a GC → AT mutation that could contribute to cancer …