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Articles 1 - 30 of 113

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

Purification Of Recombinant E. Coli Topoisomerase Iii For Structure-Based Drug Design Using Protein Crystallization, Miguel A. Perez Rodriguez, Yuk-Ching Tse-Dinh May 2024

Purification Of Recombinant E. Coli Topoisomerase Iii For Structure-Based Drug Design Using Protein Crystallization, Miguel A. Perez Rodriguez, Yuk-Ching Tse-Dinh

FIU Undergraduate Research Journal

Type IA Topoisomerases are ubiquitous enzymes found throughout all life forms and species. These topoisomerases relieve the topographical constrains formed by DNA during processes like replication and transcription via a cleavage-religation mechanism performed through a catalytically active tyrosine residue in the primary structure of the enzyme. E. coli Topoisomerase III (EtopIII) is a type of Type IA topoisomerase, and its main function in the cell is as a decatenase, which means that it unlinks circular or intertwined pieces of genetic material and creates two unlinked segments of DNA from a singular linked chain. Structure-based determination of the enzyme’s three-dimensional structure …


The Evolution Of Tumor Suppressing Genes In Multicellular Organisms: Nature’S Prevention Of Oncogenesis, Melanie Perez May 2024

The Evolution Of Tumor Suppressing Genes In Multicellular Organisms: Nature’S Prevention Of Oncogenesis, Melanie Perez

FIU Undergraduate Research Journal

The p53 gene family, a well-known group of genes, is the primary propagator of tumor-suppressing mechanisms in multicellular organisms. Although they are currently critical drug targets in cancer, the p53 family also serves specific functions in the development of multicellular organisms. In this paper, the current function, origin, and evolutionary purpose of the p53 family are reviewed in the evolution of multicellular organisms. The TP53 gene induces cellular responses such as apoptosis as a way to combat detrimental environmental and cellular factors that can damage the integrity of a cell’s DNA. The other two members of the p53 family are …


Assay Replicability In Β-Glucosidase Enzyme Kinetics Across Laboratories, Nicole-Tia Najam, Jaime Mayoral May 2024

Assay Replicability In Β-Glucosidase Enzyme Kinetics Across Laboratories, Nicole-Tia Najam, Jaime Mayoral

FIU Undergraduate Research Journal

Replicability is the foundation of research in any scientific discipline. Despite this fact, few studies address experimental variability within and across multiple institutions that operate under the same protocol. While consistency is usually well documented within the same lab, multi-institutional experiments may introduce new variables and, therefore, variability that may lead to inconsistent results. This study seeks to explore intra- and interinstitutional variability among enzyme catalytic efficiency values (KM and Kcat/KM) for the wild type of β-Glucosidase derived from Paenibacillus polymyxa. A standardized protocol for the assay was provided to all institutions that participated in …


Sequence Selectivity In The Binding Of Melatonin To Phix174rf Dna, Camila Garcia Feb 2023

Sequence Selectivity In The Binding Of Melatonin To Phix174rf Dna, Camila Garcia

FIU Undergraduate Research Journal

Melatonin is an endogenous neurotransmitter that controls the circadian rhythm. When consumed through medication, it has been proven to serve as a treatment for sleep disorders and alleviate sleep quality. Stable levels of melatonin in the human organism are shown to be beneficial as it provides a protective layer to DNA strands ensuring their longevity; however, its excessive consumption may have damaging consequences on the long run. Here we present a study on the sequence selectivity in the binding of melatonin to DNA, intending to show that melatonin targets specific DNA sites. Binding tophiX174RF DNA was assayed using restriction enzyme …


Body Fluid Identification Using Dna Extraction Waste Product, Rachel M. Tolces Jun 2022

Body Fluid Identification Using Dna Extraction Waste Product, Rachel M. Tolces

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

In many situations, the amount of DNA evidence recovered at a crime scene is at trace levels, limiting the amount of testing that can be done on the evidence. Because genetic profiling is generally considered the most imperative assay to be completed on a DNA sample, in situations where yield is low, DNA extracts may not be utilized for any other purpose. Fortunately, an alternate source of DNA may exist by utilizing the waste products resulting from DNA extraction.

The goal of this project was to a protocol for recovery of DNA from robotic extraction waste and utilizing this DNA …


Serpin-Derived Novel Peptide For The Treatment Against Hiv-Induced Inflammation In The Central Nervous System, Yemmy Soler Jun 2022

Serpin-Derived Novel Peptide For The Treatment Against Hiv-Induced Inflammation In The Central Nervous System, Yemmy Soler

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

In the brain, HIV predominantly infects microglia/macrophages and astrocytes to a lesser extent. These cells form virus reservoirs with low levels of infection that are very hard to eradicate. Even though the use of cART increases survival rate in HIV patients, the virus persists as a chronic condition. cART is not able to effectively cross the BBB, control HIV replication, or attenuate inflammation in brain reservoirs. Therefore, the virus still causes neuronal dysfunction, pain-related pathology, and ultimately HAND. In this study, we decided to test the hypothesis that a serpin-derived small peptide, SP16, can serve as an anti-viral, anti-inflammatory, pro-survival, …


Development Of Electrochemical Aptamer-Based Sensors For Sensitive And Specific Detection Of Small-Molecule Targets, Yingzhu Liu Jun 2022

Development Of Electrochemical Aptamer-Based Sensors For Sensitive And Specific Detection Of Small-Molecule Targets, Yingzhu Liu

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Electrochemical aptamer-based (E-AB) sensors have been applied for diverse applications such as forensic science, pharmaceutical diagnostics, food safety, environmental monitoring, and personal medical care due to their rapid, accurate, and specific detection of analytes in complex samples. However, limited sensitivity and a lack of portable devices for point-of-care applications have greatly hindered the maturation of E-AB sensors from proof-of-concept designs to commercial systems. This dissertation describes several novel strategies to improve the sensitivities of E-AB sensors and fabricate portable paper-based devices to remedy these problems. We first detail the development of a novel approach to utilize a defined mixture of …


Exonuclease Digestion Assay For Streamlining Aptamer Characterization, Engineering, And Sensor Development, Juan Canoura Jun 2022

Exonuclease Digestion Assay For Streamlining Aptamer Characterization, Engineering, And Sensor Development, Juan Canoura

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Aptamers are DNA or RNA oligonucleotide-based bioreceptors isolated in vitro through the Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment. Given the ease with which a selection can be customized, aptamers can be evolved to function in nearly any chemical environment, making them tailormade for their final application. However, the post-SELEX characterization of the 100-1000’s aptamer candidates remains a significant bottleneck as there are no suitable techniques for high-throughput characterization of each candidate’s affinity/specificity. Moreover, the final aptamer must be engineered to possess signal reporting functionality; this is often done via trail-and-error truncation to yield a structure-switching aptamer. This dissertation describes …


In Silico Characterization Of Protein-Protein Interactions Mediated By Short Linear Motifs, Heidy Elkhaligy Jun 2022

In Silico Characterization Of Protein-Protein Interactions Mediated By Short Linear Motifs, Heidy Elkhaligy

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Short linear motifs (SLiMs), often found in intrinsically disordered regions (IDPs), can initiate protein-protein interactions in eukaryotes. Although pathogens tend to have less disorder than eukaryotes, their proteins alter host cellular function through molecular mimicry of SLiMs. The first objective was to study sequence-based structure properties of viral SLiMs in the ELM database and the conservation of selected viral motifs involved in the virus life cycle. The second objective was to compare the structural features for SliMs in pathogens and eukaryotes in the ELM database. Our analysis showed that many viral SliMs are not found in IDPs, particularly glycosylation motifs. …


The Role Of Conformational Changes In Viral And Bacterial Protein Functions, Md Lokman Hossen Jun 2022

The Role Of Conformational Changes In Viral And Bacterial Protein Functions, Md Lokman Hossen

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Proteins do versatile work in cells. They require a cascade of structural changes to perform different tasks like binding to the other neighboring biomolecules, transporting small chemicals, activating a chemical reaction, etc. The structural conformations of proteins can be critical in changing their working ability. In this dissertation, I investigated the role of conformational changes of viral protein, e.g., spike and envelope protein of SARS-CoV-2, and bacterial protein, e.g., multidrug transporter and toxic extrusion protein- PfMATE from Pyrococcus furiosus. Also, I performed molecular docking-based drug screening targeting the E protein to suggest a set of drugs that can be repurposed …


Discovery Of First-In-Class Small Molecule Agonists Of The Rxfp2 Receptor As Therapeutic Candidates For Osteoporosis, Maria Esteban Lopez Jun 2022

Discovery Of First-In-Class Small Molecule Agonists Of The Rxfp2 Receptor As Therapeutic Candidates For Osteoporosis, Maria Esteban Lopez

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Osteoporosis is a chronic bone disease characterized by decreased bone mass and increased risk of developing fractures, predominantly observed in the elderly. The pathophysiological cause of the disease is a decrease in the activity of the bone-forming cells (osteoblasts) that alters bone remodeling in favor of bone resorption, leading to a decrease in bone mass. Recent studies identified the relaxin family peptide receptor 2 (RXFP2), the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) for insulin-like 3 peptide (INSL3), as an attractive target expressed in osteoblast cells to increase bone formation. The goal of this dissertation is to discover and characterize small molecule agonists …


An Investigation To Corroborate Volatile And Biological Profiles Of Human Odor For Forensic Subject Identification, Chantrell J.G. Frazier Mar 2022

An Investigation To Corroborate Volatile And Biological Profiles Of Human Odor For Forensic Subject Identification, Chantrell J.G. Frazier

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Hands are an integral part in transferring complex microbial communities to and from our surroundings. As a result, hands are significant in provenance investigations as specific microbiota can be deposited on everyday objects through touch interactions. Skin microbiome, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, are unique to each person, and this ‘uniqueness’ can be exploited and applied to forensic identification. Skin microbiota and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are closely related due to specific bacteria breaking down non-volatile organic compounds to volatile organic compounds that are characteristically present in human scent. However, analyses of microbiota from touch interactions have proven to be …


Aptamer-Based Voltammetric Biosensing For The Detection Of Codeine And Fentanyl In Sweat And Saliva, Rosa Lashantez Cromartie Nov 2021

Aptamer-Based Voltammetric Biosensing For The Detection Of Codeine And Fentanyl In Sweat And Saliva, Rosa Lashantez Cromartie

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Despite the many governmental and medicinal restrictions created to combat the opioid epidemic in the United States, opioid abuse and overdose rates continue to rise. The development of an aptamer-based voltammetric sensor and biosensor is described in this dissertation. The aim was to develop a low-cost, sensitive, and specific aptamer-based sensor for on-site, label-free determination of codeine and fentanyl in biological fluids. To do this, the surfaces of screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCE) were modified with gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), followed by the addition of single-stranded DNA aptamers. These were covalently bound to the electrode surface. Operations of the sensors were collected …


Mechanisms Of Chloroperoxidases-Catalyzed Enantioselective Transformations From Spectroscopic And X-Ray Crystallographic Studies Of Enzyme-Substrate Complexes, Xiaoqing Tang Oct 2021

Mechanisms Of Chloroperoxidases-Catalyzed Enantioselective Transformations From Spectroscopic And X-Ray Crystallographic Studies Of Enzyme-Substrate Complexes, Xiaoqing Tang

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The chloroperoxidase secreted from Caldariomyces fumago catalyzes broad spectrum of reactions. The crystallography combined with X-ray diffraction analysis was conducted to reveal recombinant CPO expressed in a modified Aspergillus niger system. Our results indicated that despite functional similarities with wild type CPO, recombinant CPO is over glycosylated with more mannose. Besides, ten iodide ion binding sites were identified in rCPO and six of them were found to be well superimposed on previously reported structure of the wild type CPO. Therefore, recombinant CPO shares almost the same structure with wild type CPO, and the Aspergillus niger is a potential system for …


A Study Of The Mammalian High Mobility Group Protein At-Hook 2 (Hmga2) And Its Interactions With Dna, Linjia Su Oct 2021

A Study Of The Mammalian High Mobility Group Protein At-Hook 2 (Hmga2) And Its Interactions With Dna, Linjia Su

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The mammalian high-mobility-group protein AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) is a small DNA-binding protein and consists of three positively charged “AT-hooks” and a negatively charged C-terminal motif. It is a multifunctional nuclear protein linked to obesity, human height, stem cell youth, human intelligence, and tumorigenesis. Previous results showed that HMGA2 is a potential therapeutic target of anticancer and anti‐obesity drugs through inhibiting its DNA‐binding activities. Here a miniaturized, automated AlphaScreen ultra‐high‐throughput screening assay is developed to identify inhibitors targeting HMGA2‐DNA interactions. After screening the LOPAC1280 library, several compounds are identified that strongly inhibit HMGA2‐DNA interactions including suramin, a negatively charged antiparasitic drug. …


Oxidative Dna Damage Modulates Genome And Epigenome Integrity Via Base Excision Repair, Pawlos S. Tsegay Oct 2021

Oxidative Dna Damage Modulates Genome And Epigenome Integrity Via Base Excision Repair, Pawlos S. Tsegay

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Oxidative DNA damage is one of the leading causes of genome instability, cell death, and diseases. It is repaired by DNA base excision repair (BER), during which repair and translesion DNA polymerases may incorporate damaged nucleotides and mediate RNA-guided DNA repair induced by DNA replication and gene transcription leading to the modulation of genome stability. On the other hand, oxidative DNA damage may result in cellular epigenetic responses to regulate DNA repair, altering genome stability and integrity. In this dissertation, we revealed the molecular mechanisms underlying the misincorporation of oxidized nucleotides, 5′,8-cyclo-2-cyclodeoxyadenosine (cdA) and RNA-guided base lesion repair mediated by …


High And Low Toxin Producing Strains Of Karenia Brevis Differ Significantly In The Redox Proteome, Lipid Profiles, And Xanthophyll Cycle Pigments, Ricardo Colon Jun 2021

High And Low Toxin Producing Strains Of Karenia Brevis Differ Significantly In The Redox Proteome, Lipid Profiles, And Xanthophyll Cycle Pigments, Ricardo Colon

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The dinoflagellate Karenia brevis, blooms annually in the Gulf of Mexico, producing a suite of neurotoxins known as the brevetoxins. The cellular toxin content of K. brevis, however, is highly variable between or even within strains. I investigated biochemical differences between high (KbHT) and low (KbLT) toxin producing cultures both derived from the Wilson strain, related to energy-dependent quenching (qE) by photosystem II, and the content of reduced thiols of the proteome. By characterizing the xanthophyll content of the two strains I was able to determine that KbLT performs qE inconsistently. To investigate the …


Purine Nucleosides Modified At C8 Or C2 Position With (Β-Halo)Vinylsulfone And Β-Ketosulfone Reactive Groups And Their Incorporation Into Dna: Synthesis Of The Organoarsenical Antibiotic Arsinothricin And Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons, Md Abu Hasan Howlader Jun 2021

Purine Nucleosides Modified At C8 Or C2 Position With (Β-Halo)Vinylsulfone And Β-Ketosulfone Reactive Groups And Their Incorporation Into Dna: Synthesis Of The Organoarsenical Antibiotic Arsinothricin And Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons, Md Abu Hasan Howlader

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Modified nucleosides gained great attention as potential anticancer and antiviral therapeutics. In this dissertation, synthesis and reactivity of (β-iodovinyl)sulfone and β-ketosulfone groups incorporated into purine nucleosides at C8 or C2 positions and DNA incorporation of their 5' triphosphates have been developed. Moreover, synthesis of novel antibiotic arsinothricin (AST) as well as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have been discussed. The 8-(1-iodo-2-tosylvinyl)-2'-deoxyadenosine and 8-(1-Iodo-2-tosylvinyl)adenosine were synthesized employing iodovinylsulfonation of 8-ethynyl precursors with TsNa/I2/NaOAc. The 8-(β-iodovinyl)sulfonyl-2'-deoxyguanosine was prepared via radical mediated iodovinylsulfonation of 8-ethynyl-2'-deoxyguanosine with TsNHNH2/KI/(BzO)2. Conformationally different C2 substituted isomeric adenosine analogues were prepared by iodovinylsulfonation …


Type I Topoisomerases As Potential Targets For Therapeutics, Ahmed Seddek Jun 2021

Type I Topoisomerases As Potential Targets For Therapeutics, Ahmed Seddek

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

DNA topoisomerases are universal enzymes that control the topological features of DNA in all forms of life. This study aims to find potential inhibitors of some of the DNA topoisomerases in bacteria and humans that can be developed into potential therapeutics.

The first aim of this study is to find potential inhibitors of bacterial topoisomerase I that can be developed into antibiotics. There is an urgent need to develop novel antibiotics to overcome the world-wide health crisis of antimicrobial resistance. Virtual screening and biochemical assays were combined to screen thousands of compounds for potential inhibitors of bacterial topoisomerase I. NSC76027 …


Identification Of Human Topoisomerase I Poison And Catalytic Inhibitors, Christian Madeira Mar 2021

Identification Of Human Topoisomerase I Poison And Catalytic Inhibitors, Christian Madeira

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Inhibition of human topoisomerase I have been shown to reduce excessive transcription of PAMP-induced genes based on prior studies, which offers a solution to offset complications of sepsis such as tissue damage and organ failure. The enzyme resolves the topological constraints on DNA that encodes these genes. The aim of this study is to identify human topoisomerase I (HTop1) inhibitors that can a.) prevent the relaxation of negative supercoiled plasmid DNA by HTop1 and b.) reduce HTop1 binding to DNA and formation of covalent cleavage complex (HTop1cc) utilizing a novel yeast screening system. Top hits from in-silico screening conducted by …


Bacterial Mechanisms Of Toxicity And Resistance To Organoarsenicals, Luis D. Garbinski Nov 2020

Bacterial Mechanisms Of Toxicity And Resistance To Organoarsenicals, Luis D. Garbinski

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Arsenic is a toxic element prevalent in the environment since the origin of life on Earth. Bacteria evolved in an arsenic-rich environment, where they developed ways to both overcome arsenic toxicity and harness it to compete with other organisms. These mechanisms include chemical modifications (e.g. oxidation, methylation), degradation, and efflux. The goal of this dissertation is to better characterize these mechanisms, illuminating the arsenic biogeocycle and allowing us to harness organoarsenical toxicity for novel antibiotics. A goal of my research was to elucidate the antibiotic properties of MAs(III), which is synthesized by bacteria to thrive over other bacteria, by identifying …


Development Of A Dna Methylation Multiplex Assay For Body Fluid Identification And Age Determination, Quentin Gauthier Nov 2020

Development Of A Dna Methylation Multiplex Assay For Body Fluid Identification And Age Determination, Quentin Gauthier

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

For forensic laboratories, the determination of body fluid origin of samples collected at a crime scene are typically presumptive and often destructive. However, given that in certain cases the presence of DNA is not in dispute and rather where the DNA came from is of primary concern, new methodologies are needed. Epigenetic modifications, such as DNA methylation, affect gene expression in every cell of every mammal. These DNA methylation patterns typically are observed as the addition of a methyl group on the 5’ carbon of a cytosine followed by guanine (CpG). Methylation patterns have been observed to change in response …


Structure Function Relationship In Hexacoordinate Heme Proteins: Mechanism Of Globin X Interactions With Exogenous Ligands And Ligand Accessiblity In Cytoglobin And Neuroglobin, Ruipeng Lei Jul 2020

Structure Function Relationship In Hexacoordinate Heme Proteins: Mechanism Of Globin X Interactions With Exogenous Ligands And Ligand Accessiblity In Cytoglobin And Neuroglobin, Ruipeng Lei

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Cytoglobin (Cygb), neuroglobin (Ngb), and globin X (GbX) belongs to recently discovered members of the vertebrate globin family, they carry a heme prosthetic group that can reversibly bind exogenous ligands such as CO, NO and O2. Although the physiological functions of Cygb, Ngb and GbX are still under debate, several possible physiological functions for these proteins were proposed. Cytoglobin was reported to participate in lipid-based signaling and to stabilize the tumor suppressor p53 upon DNA damage, which imply its anti-cancer role. Neuroglobin was shown to interact with α-subunit of the heterotrimeric G protein as well as cytochrome c …


Dna Base Excision Repair Modulates Dna Repeat Instability And Non-B Form Dna Structures, Eduardo E. Laverde Mar 2020

Dna Base Excision Repair Modulates Dna Repeat Instability And Non-B Form Dna Structures, Eduardo E. Laverde

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The human genome is constantly attacked by endogenous and exogenous sources of DNA damage that generates DNA base lesions and strand breaks leading to genome instability, cell death, and diseases. To combat these adverse effects, cells have evolved a robust DNA repair mechanism called “the DNA base excision repair (BER),” which efficiently removes DNA lesions maintaining genome stability. However, its underlying molecular mechanisms remain to be elucidated. In my dissertation research, I explored the molecular mechanism by which BER modulates trinucleotide repeats (TNR) by processing non-B form structures such as hairpins and R-loops through the coordination among BER enzymes and …


Dual Role Of Rin1 In Cancer Cell Behavior: Is Cortactin A New Rin1-Interacting Partner?, Wei Zhang Nov 2019

Dual Role Of Rin1 In Cancer Cell Behavior: Is Cortactin A New Rin1-Interacting Partner?, Wei Zhang

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Growth factors play an essential role in abnormalities in both intracellular trafficking and signal transduction pathways responsible in normal and cancer cells. Growth factors, such as epidermal growth factor, represent a main course on the activation of mitogenic signal that contribute to the mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway affecting cell proliferation, which is driven by Ras GTPases. However, it also induces a profound morphological change by reorganization actin and other cytoskeleton proteins, which are driven by other GTPases (i.e., Rho and Rac). Ras interference 1 (Rin1) is a key cytosolic protein, that regulates both membrane trafficking and signaling pathways …


The Role Of Inositol Polyphosphate-4-Phosphatase Type Ii B (Inpp4b) In Obese Models And Endocrine Cancers, Manqi Zhang Nov 2019

The Role Of Inositol Polyphosphate-4-Phosphatase Type Ii B (Inpp4b) In Obese Models And Endocrine Cancers, Manqi Zhang

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

INPP4B is a dual-specificity phosphatase and a tumor suppressor in prostate and breast cancers. Progression of the prostate and breast cancers depends on the androgen receptor (AR) or estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) signaling, respectively. In this work we demonstrated that INPP4B reprograms ERα transcriptional activity in breast cancer. INPP4B maintains expression and protein levels of progesterone receptor (PR), an ERα direct target gene required for mammary gland development. Consistently we demonstrated that Inpp4b knockout severely impairs lateral branching in the mammary gland of maturing virgin females. In advanced prostate cancer, activation and transcriptional reprogramming of AR frequently coincides with the …


Functionalized Aptamers For Detection Of Small-Molecule Targets, Haixiang Yu Jun 2019

Functionalized Aptamers For Detection Of Small-Molecule Targets, Haixiang Yu

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Aptamers have recently gained considerable attention for small-molecule detection in diverse applications such as drug identification, medical diagnostics, and environmental monitoring. However, the performance of aptamer-based sensors has been greatly limited by the low target affinity and responsiveness of small-molecule binding aptamers. This dissertation describes several novel aptamer engineering and isolation strategies to remedy this problem. Specifically, we first develop a generally applicable strategy to engineer split aptamers containing two binding domains termed cooperative-binding split aptamers (CBSAs). CBSAs exhibit higher target binding affinity and are far more responsive in terms of target-induced split aptamer assembly compared to single-domain parent split …


Topoisomerase And Tyrosyl-Dna-Phosphodiesterase Ratio As An Indicator For The Response Of Glioblastoma Cancer To Topoisomerase Targeting Anticancer Drugs, Wenjie Wang Jun 2019

Topoisomerase And Tyrosyl-Dna-Phosphodiesterase Ratio As An Indicator For The Response Of Glioblastoma Cancer To Topoisomerase Targeting Anticancer Drugs, Wenjie Wang

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Glioblastoma (GBM) patients have an estimated survival of ~15 months, with the standard of care (surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy) that has only modestly enhanced patient survival. Identifying biomarkers representing vulnerabilities in GBM biology may allow for the selection of effective and safe chemotherapy options. Irinotecan (IRT), a genotoxic compound currently in clinical trials for GBM, targets topoisomerase I (TOP1) by forming an irreversible ternary DNA-TOP1 cleavage complex (TOP1cc) and leads to apoptosis. Tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (TDP1) is a crucial repair enzyme that rescues TOP1cc and reduces the effectiveness of IRT. In the current study, we evaluate the value of the …


Evolutionary Expansions And Neofunctionalization Of Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors In Cnidaria, Ellen G. Dow Jun 2019

Evolutionary Expansions And Neofunctionalization Of Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors In Cnidaria, Ellen G. Dow

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Reef ecosystems are composed of a variety of organisms, transient species of fish and invertebrates, microscopic bacteria and viruses, and structural organisms that build the living foundation, coral. Sessile cnidarians, corals and anemones, interpret dynamic environments of organisms and abiotic factors through a molecular interface. Recognition of foreign molecules occurs through innate immunity via receptors identifying conserved molecular patterns. Similarly, chemosensory receptors monitor the environment through specific ligands. Chemosensory receptors include ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs), transmembrane ion channels involved in chemical sensing and neural signal transduction. Recently, an iGluR homolog was implicated in cnidarian immunological resistance to recurrent infections of …


Quantifying Anthropogenic Indicators And Changes In Dissolved Organic Matter In Coastal Urban Aquatic Ecosystems Exposed To High Tidal Flooding, Gonzalo E. Eyzaguirre Apr 2019

Quantifying Anthropogenic Indicators And Changes In Dissolved Organic Matter In Coastal Urban Aquatic Ecosystems Exposed To High Tidal Flooding, Gonzalo E. Eyzaguirre

Department of Biological Sciences

Sea-level rise is causing an increase in tidal flooding in coastal urban areas. Extreme high tides, also known as king tides, are peak tide moments in which tidal amplitude is increased and shallow groundwater flows from the underlying water table are introduced. During tidal flooding in urban areas, accumulated anthropogenic indicators of different water sources are released from groundwater to surface waters, but how these tidal events affect the contributions of different water sources to urban flood waters is uncertain. We quantified tracers of anthropogenic origin including fluoride, fecal coliform bacteria, as well as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations and …