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

Biochemistry Commons

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

Articles 1 - 10 of 10

Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry

Deciphering The Ck2-Dependent Phosphoproteome And Its Integration With Regulatory Ptm Networks, Teresa Nunez De Villavicencio Diaz Nov 2020

Deciphering The Ck2-Dependent Phosphoproteome And Its Integration With Regulatory Ptm Networks, Teresa Nunez De Villavicencio Diaz

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Protein functions are regulated by the post-translational addition of covalent modifications on certain amino acids. Depending on their distance within the 3-dimensional structure, addition/removal of individual post translational modifications (PTMs) can be impacted by others. This PTM interplay constitutes an essential regulatory mechanism that interconnects the molecular networks in the cell. Protein CK2, a clinically relevant acidophilic Ser/Thr kinase, may be responsible for 10-20% of the human phosphoproteome. Such estimates agree with the number of known substrates, which continues to expand. Furthermore, the demonstration that CK2 participates in hierarchical phosphorylation and has similar sequence determinants to caspases suggest extensive PTM …


Machine Learning Applications For Drug Repurposing, Hansaim Lim Sep 2020

Machine Learning Applications For Drug Repurposing, Hansaim Lim

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

The cost of bringing a drug to market is astounding and the failure rate is intimidating. Drug discovery has been of limited success under the conventional reductionist model of one-drug-one-gene-one-disease paradigm, where a single disease-associated gene is identified and a molecular binder to the specific target is subsequently designed. Under the simplistic paradigm of drug discovery, a drug molecule is assumed to interact only with the intended on-target. However, small molecular drugs often interact with multiple targets, and those off-target interactions are not considered under the conventional paradigm. As a result, drug-induced side effects and adverse reactions are often neglected …


A Mechanistic And Genomic Analysis Of Molluscum Contagiosum Virus Immune Evasion, Ian Benjamin Harvey Aug 2020

A Mechanistic And Genomic Analysis Of Molluscum Contagiosum Virus Immune Evasion, Ian Benjamin Harvey

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Molluscum contagiosum virus (MCV) is a common human-specific poxvirus with a proclivity for

infecting children and the immune-compromised. A characteristic MCV infection is restricted to

the epidermal layers of the skin and can persist for weeks to years in an otherwise healthy

individual. The high clinical burden of MCV is at odds with our limited knowledge regarding how

it successfully evades the human immune response, which is in part due to the lack of an animal

model or cell line to propagate the virus. Through this dissertation, we have uncovered and

characterized a novel mechanism by which MC80, a protein …


Development Of Ligand Guided Selection (Ligs) To Identify Specific Dna Aptamers Against Cell Surface Proteins, Hasan Ekrem Zumrut Jun 2020

Development Of Ligand Guided Selection (Ligs) To Identify Specific Dna Aptamers Against Cell Surface Proteins, Hasan Ekrem Zumrut

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Oligonucleotide aptamers (nucleic acid-based affinity reagents) are an emerging class of synthetic molecules that display high affinity and specificity towards their targets. Aptamer molecules for a target of interest are obtained using a combinatorial chemistry-based method termed systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX). SELEX is an in vitro selection process in which a random oligonucleotide library is subjected to repeated cycles of target incubation, separation, and amplification until target-specific evolved sequences become prevalent in the library. Typically, SELEX is used against target molecules such as small molecules and proteins, in their purified state. However, aptamers selected against purified …


Computational Molecular Docking Models And Design Of Diarylpentanoids For The Androgen Receptor, Jarett Guillow May 2020

Computational Molecular Docking Models And Design Of Diarylpentanoids For The Androgen Receptor, Jarett Guillow

Computational and Data Sciences (MS) Theses

The androgen receptor (AR) is a member of the nuclear receptor protein family that, upon binding to its natural ligand dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in the cytoplasm, translocates to the nucleus and exerts nuclear transcription factor activity to drive gene expression related to normal prostate development. AR signaling becomes overactive during the development and progression of prostate cancer through different mechanisms, including over-expression and mutation of the AR. Therefore, the AR is a prominent molecular target in the clinical management of prostate cancer. However, all therapeutic modalities targeting the AR, including androgen ablation therapy and AR block suffer from transient efficacy and …


Tpr-Containing Proteins Control Protein Organization And Homeostasis For The Endoplasmic Reticulum, Jill Bradley-Graham Mar 2020

Tpr-Containing Proteins Control Protein Organization And Homeostasis For The Endoplasmic Reticulum, Jill Bradley-Graham

Doctoral Dissertations

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a complex, multifunctional organelle comprised of a continuous membrane and lumen that is organized into several functional regions. It plays various roles including protein translocation, folding, quality control, secretion, calcium signaling, and lipid biogenesis. Cellular protein homeostasis is maintained by a complicated chaperone network, and the largest functional family within this network consists of proteins containing tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs). TPRs are well-studied structural motifs that mediate intermolecular protein-protein interactions, supporting interactions with a wide range of ligands or substrates. Nine TPR-containing proteins have been shown to localize to the ER and control protein organization and …


Investigating The Role Of Centromeric Repeats In Female Meiotic Drive, Jocelyn Crawford Jan 2020

Investigating The Role Of Centromeric Repeats In Female Meiotic Drive, Jocelyn Crawford

CMC Senior Theses

Female meiotic drive is an unequal transmission of alleles that arises through the competition of paired chromosomes for inclusion in the egg, resulting in an increase in frequency of the driven alleles regardless of their effect on fitness of the individual. In Mimulus guttatus (monkeyflower) second filial generations, driven alleles display transmission advantages resulting in the virtual elimination of recessive homozygotes, while the equivalent lines lacking drive elements conform to traditional Mendelian segregation population ratios. Centromeres have been identified as mechanistic drive elements due to their role in chromosomal segregation during female meiosis, with Mimulus providing the best documented case …


Functional Characterization Of Proteins From A Putative Chondroitin Sulfate A Degrading Operon And The Crystal Structure Of An Exo-N-Acetylgalactosamine-4-Sulfatase From Tannerella Forsythia, Peter Nguyen Jan 2020

Functional Characterization Of Proteins From A Putative Chondroitin Sulfate A Degrading Operon And The Crystal Structure Of An Exo-N-Acetylgalactosamine-4-Sulfatase From Tannerella Forsythia, Peter Nguyen

Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)

Advanced periodontitis has been shown to have strong associations with the residence of a bacterial triad of Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, and Treponema denticola also known as the red complex. These bacteria were previously thought to be asaccharolytic, making them better suited to survive in deep in periodontal pockets where access to carbohydrates from food is limited. Information gathered from genomic analysis suggested that upregulation of an operon (BFO2285-BFO2295, BFO3043) could confer the capacity for T. forsythia to degrade chondroitin-4-sulfate, the principle glycosaminoglycan of alveolar bone tissue. Bioinformatics analysis suggested the operon was similar to an operon found in Bacteroidetes …


Structural And Functional Characterization Of Cazyme And Cazyme-Related Proteins From: Bacteroides Thetaiotaomicron And Porphyromonas Gingivalis: Two Abundant Colonizers Of The Human Microbiome, James Stevenson Jan 2020

Structural And Functional Characterization Of Cazyme And Cazyme-Related Proteins From: Bacteroides Thetaiotaomicron And Porphyromonas Gingivalis: Two Abundant Colonizers Of The Human Microbiome, James Stevenson

Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)

The human body consists of approximately 30 trillion cells, while non-human microbes that reside on and within the body outnumber human somatic cells by a factor of 1.3 – 2.3. The interplay between our cells and those of the colonizing microorganisms affect physiology in a multitude of ways, both beneficial and detrimental. Microbes found in the oral cavity, such as the Red Complex member Porphyromonas gingivalis, are associated with pathology, namely periodontal diseases including gum deterioration, tooth decay, and loss of underlying alveolar bone. At the other end of the gastrointestinal tract, microbes such as Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron are found …


Investigations Into Signaling Mechanisms Of The Dcbld Receptor Family, Anna Schmoker Jan 2020

Investigations Into Signaling Mechanisms Of The Dcbld Receptor Family, Anna Schmoker

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Cells communicate to drive all biological processes during organismal development, homeostasis, and disease. Communication, or signaling, is carried out through an orchestration of complex sequential molecular interactions. A signal is typically initiated by an extracellular cue binding to a receptor on the cell membrane, which induces an intracellular response, resulting ultimately in cellular phenotypes such as growth, proliferation, migration, apoptosis or survival. Adaptor proteins are critical to signal transduction, as they facilitate the formation of protein complexes that transduce signals. CT10 regulator of kinase (CRK) and CRK-like (CRKL) form a family of adaptors that facilitate complex formation during developmental signaling, …