Publications by authors named "C BERDAN"

Living organisms carry out a wide range of remarkable functions, including the synthesis of thousands of simple and complex chemical structures for cellular growth and maintenance. The manipulation of this reaction network has allowed for the genetic engineering of cells for targeted chemical synthesis, but it remains challenging to alter the program underlying their fundamental chemical behavior. By taking advantage of the unique ability of living systems to use evolution to find solutions to complex problems, we have achieved yields of up to ∼95% for three C commodity chemicals, -butanol, 1,3-butanediol, and 4-hydroxy-2-butanone.

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Oxysterols are oxidized derivatives of cholesterol that play regulatory roles in lipid biosynthesis and homeostasis. How oxysterol signaling coordinates different lipid classes such as sterols and triglycerides remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that 4β-hydroxycholesterol (HC) (4β-HC), a liver and serum abundant oxysterol of poorly defined functions, is a potent and selective inducer of the master lipogenic transcription factor, SREBP1c, but not the related steroidogenic transcription factor SREBP2.

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Article Synopsis
  • Metazoan organisms use conserved stress response pathways to protect against adverse conditions, especially in stem cells involved in tissue formation and repair.
  • The study identifies the E3 ligase CUL2 and its substrate FNIP1 as key components in managing reductive stress, which occurs during prolonged antioxidant signaling or mitochondrial inactivity.
  • The degradation of FNIP1 by CUL2 helps restore mitochondrial function, maintaining redox balance and stem cell integrity, highlighting the link between metabolic control and stress/developmental signaling.
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Gram-negative bacteria in the order have an obligate intracellular growth requirement, and some species cause human diseases such as typhus and spotted fever. The bacteria have evolved a dependence on essential nutrients and metabolites from the host cell as a consequence of extensive genome reduction. However, it remains largely unknown which nutrients they acquire and whether their metabolic dependency can be exploited therapeutically.

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