Fenestrae are open transmembrane pores that are a structural hallmark of healthy liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs). Their key role is the transport of solutes and macromolecular complexes between the sinusoidal lumen and the space of Disse. To date, the biochemical nature of the cytoskeleton elements that surround the fenestrae and sieve plates in LSECs remain largely elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed self-assembled DNA mini-circles that contain a G-quadruplex-forming sequence from the c-Myc oncogene promoter and demonstrate by FRET that the G-quadruplex unfolding kinetics are 10-fold slower than for the simpler 24-mer G-quadruplex that is commonly used for FRET experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe formation of quadruple-stranded DNA induced by planar metal complexes has particular interest in the development of novel anticancer drugs. This is especially relevant for the inhibition of telomerase, which plays an essential role in cancer cell immortalization and is overexpressed in ca. 85-90% of cancer cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of substituted salicylaldehyde dibenzyl semicarbazones [RC6H3(OH)CH=N-NHCON(CH2Ph)2] and their copper(II) complexes were synthesized and characterized. The chloridocopper(II) complexes of the 4-OH and 5-OH substituted ligands (complexes 9 and 7) show modest affinity and good selectivity (over duplex DNA) for the quadruplex formed from the human telomeric (HTelo) DNA sequence. Substitution of the chlorido ligands of these two complexes with pyridine yielded derivatives (7-py and 9-py) with increased affinity for HTelo.
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