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Full-Text Articles in Chemicals and Drugs
Quantum Dots' Toxicity: A Multi-Level Investigation On The Impact Of Quantum Dots On The Actin Cytoskeleton, Nhi Le
MSU Graduate Theses
Quantum dots (QDs) are fluorescence nanomaterials with unique optical and physical properties. As such, they are highly sought after for their potential use in several biomedical and industrial applications. Despite their vast potential, recent studies have suggested that quantum dots are toxic to cells. Yet, the mechanism of quantum dots’ toxicity remains unclear. As such, my thesis aims to comprehensively examine the mechanism of quantum dots’ toxicity, emphasizing how quantum dots disrupt the actin cytoskeleton. In this study, I used RNA sequencing and mass spectrometry to investigate the influence of CdSe/ZnS QDs on the transcriptomic proteomic level of Saccharomyces cerevisiae …
Deciphering The Ck2-Dependent Phosphoproteome And Its Integration With Regulatory Ptm Networks, Teresa Nunez De Villavicencio Diaz
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 …
Chemical Tools To Characterize Membrane-Protein Binding Interactions Using Synthetic Lipid Probes, Meng Meng Rowland
Chemical Tools To Characterize Membrane-Protein Binding Interactions Using Synthetic Lipid Probes, Meng Meng Rowland
Doctoral Dissertations
Signaling lipids such as diacylglycerol (DAG) and the phosphatidylinositol polyphosphates (PIPns) play crucial roles in numerous cellular pathways. However, characterization of their activities is hindered by the complexity of associated signaling pathways and of the membrane environment. To address this issue, we have developed lipid probes that are effective for characterizing biological events using different applications, including activity-based probing (PIPns and DAG) and microarray analysis (PIPns). The activity-based probes have been applied to label receptor targets in multiple cancer cell proteomes through photocrosslinking followed by click reactions. The probes were found to label several …