Publications by authors named "B Bothner"

Dansyl labeling is a widely used approach for enhancing the detection of small molecules by UV spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. It has been successfully applied to identify and quantify a variety of biological and environmental specimens. Despite clear advantages, the dansylation reaction has found very few applications in the study of proteins.

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Background: The Intensive Diet and Exercise for Arthritis (IDEA) trial was a randomized trial conducted to evaluate the effects of diet and exercise on osteoarthritis (OA), the most prevalent form of arthritis. Various risk factors, including obesity and sex, contribute to OA's debilitating nature. While diet and exercise are known to improve OA symptoms, cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying these interventions, as well as effects of participant sex, remain elusive.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Homologous recombination (HR) repairs double-stranded DNA breaks (DSBs) by converting them into single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) coated with Replication Protein A (RPA), but the binding of Rad51, a key protein in this process, is competitively inhibited by RPA.
  • - Mediator proteins like Rad52 and BRCA2 enhance Rad51's binding to RPA-coated ssDNA, with Rad52 having two distinct binding modes for Rad51: one that sorts Rad51 into monomers and another located on Rad52’s N-terminal region.
  • - Through advanced microscopy and optical tweezer techniques, the study shows that while Rad52 facilitates Rad51 loading onto ssDNA, it does
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Background/objectives: Cattle-feeding systems may have health implications for consumers of beef products. Organic grass-fed (GRA) and conventional (CON) cattle-feeding systems may result in beef products with differing metabolite profiles and therefore could impact the postprandial metabolomic response of consumers. This study aims to measure whole beef metabolomics and postprandial metabolomic response of consumers between GRA and CON beef to elucidate potential health implications.

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Molybdoenzymes are essential in global nitrogen, carbon, and sulfur cycling. To date, the only known bioavailable source of molybdenum (Mo) is molybdate. However, in the sulfidic and anoxic (euxinic) habitats that predominate in modern subsurface environments and that were pervasive prior to Earth's widespread oxygenation, Mo occurs as soluble tetrathiomolybdate ion and molybdenite mineral that is not known to be bioavailable.

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