Publications by authors named "Chuan-Fa Liu"

The amelioration of cadmium (Cd) toxicity in plants by ammonium (NH) has been widely investigated. However, the molecular mechanisms underpinning this amelioration have remained ambiguous. Here, we found that NH significantly reduces Cd accumulation and enhances antioxidant capacity by increasing ABA accumulation, which, in turn, improves Cd tolerance in rice seedlings.

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Disulfides in peptides and proteins are essential for maintaining a properly folded structure. Their oxidative folding is invariably performed in an aqueous-buffered solution. However, this process is often slow and can lead to misfolded products.

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Stress and illness connection is complex and involves multiple physiological systems. Panax ginsengs, reputed for their broad-spectrum "cure-all" effect, are widely prescribed to treat stress and related illnesses. However, the identity of ginseng's "cure-all" medicinal compounds that relieve stress remains unresolved.

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Antibody-drug Conjugates (ADCs) are a powerful therapeutic modality for cancer treatment. ADCs are multi-functional biologics in which a disease-targeting antibody is conjugated to an effector payload molecule via a linker. The success of currently used ADCs has been largely attributed to the development of linker systems, which allow for the targeted release of cytocidal payload drugs inside cancer cells.

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Bacteriophages and bacteria are engaged in a constant arms race, continually evolving new molecular tools to survive one another. To protect their genomic DNA from restriction enzymes, the most common bacterial defence systems, double-stranded DNA phages have evolved complex modifications that affect all four bases. This study focuses on modifications at position 7 of guanines.

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Enzymatic peptide ligation holds great promise in the study of protein functions and development of protein therapeutics. Owing to their high catalytic efficiency and a minimal tripeptide recognition motif, peptidyl asparaginyl ligases (PALs) are particularly useful tools for bioconjugation. However, as an inherent limitation of transpeptidases, PAL-mediated ligation is reversible, requiring a large excess of one of the ligation partners to shift the reaction equilibrium in the forward direction.

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Peptide asparaginyl ligases (PALs) are useful tools for precision modifications of proteins and live-cell surfaces by ligating peptides after Asn/Asp (Asx). They share high sequence and structural similarity to plant legumains that are generally known as asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs), thus making it challenging to identify PALs from AEPs. In this study, we investigate 875 plant species from algae to seed plants with available sequence data in public databases to identify new PALs.

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Peptide asparaginyl ligases (PALs) are precision tools for peptide cyclization, cell-surface labelling, protein semisynthesis and protein conjugation. PALs are expressed as inactive proenzymes requiring low pH activation. During activation, a large portion of the cap domain of the proenzyme that covers the substrate binding site is proteolytically removed, exposing the active site to solvent and releasing a population of heterogenous active enzymes.

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Peptide ligases are versatile enzymes that can be utilized for precise protein conjugation for bioengineering applications. Hyperactive peptide asparaginyl ligases (PALs), such as butelase-1, belong to a small class of enzymes from cyclotide-producing plants that can perform site-specific, rapid ligation reactions after a target peptide asparagine/aspartic acid (Asx) residue binds to the active site of the ligase. How PALs specifically recognize their polypeptide substrates has remained elusive, especially at the prime binding side of the enzyme.

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Wound infections are often polymicrobial in nature, biofilm associated and therefore tolerant to antibiotic therapy, and associated with delayed healing. Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus are among the most frequently cultured pathogens from wound infections. However, little is known about the frequency or consequence of E.

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Peptidyl Asx-specific ligases (PALs) effect peptide ligation by catalyzing transpeptidation reactions at Asn/Asp-peptide bonds. Owing to their high efficiency and mild aqueous reaction conditions, these ligases have emerged as powerful biotechnological tools for protein manipulation in recent years. PALs are enzymes of the asparaginyl endopeptidase (AEP) superfamily but have predominant transpeptidase activity as opposed to typical AEPs which are predominantly hydrolases.

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Butelase-1, an asparaginyl endopeptidase or legumain, is the prototypical and fastest known Asn/Asp-specific peptide ligase. It is highly useful for engineering and macrocyclization of peptides and proteins. However, certain biochemical properties and applications of naturally occurring and recombinant butelase-1 remain unexplored.

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The last two decades have seen an increasing demand for new protein-modification methods from the biotech industry and biomedical research communities. Owing to their mild aqueous reaction conditions, enzymatic methods based on the use of peptide ligases are particularly desirable. In this regard, the recently discovered peptidyl Asx-specific ligases (PALs) have emerged as powerful biotechnological tools in recent years.

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Asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs) are cysteinyl enzymes naturally catalyzing the hydrolysis and transpeptidation reactions at Asx-Xaa bonds. These reactions go by a common acyl-enzyme thioester intermediate, which is either attacked by water (for a protease-AEP) or by a peptidic amine nucleophile (for a ligase-AEP) to form the respective hydrolysis or aminolysis product. Herein, we show that hydrazine and hydroxylamine, two α-effect nucleophiles, are capable of resolving the thioester intermediate to yield peptide and protein products containing a C-terminal hydrazide and hydroxamic acid functionality, respectively.

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Asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs) or legumains are Asn/Asp (Asx)-specific proteases that break peptide bonds, but also function as peptide asparaginyl ligases (PALs) that make peptide bonds. This ligase activity can be used for site-specific protein modifications in biochemical and biotechnological applications. Although AEPs are common, PALs are rare.

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Legumains, also known as asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs), cleave peptide bonds after Asn/Asp (Asx) residues. In plants, certain legumains also have ligase activity that catalyzes biosynthesis of Asx-containing cyclic peptides. An example is the biosynthesis of MCoTI-I/II, a squash family-derived cyclic trypsin inhibitor, which involves splicing to remove the N-terminal prodomain and then N-to-C-terminal cyclization of the mature domain.

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Histone lysine methylations have primarily been linked to selective recruitment of reader or effector proteins that subsequently modify chromatin regions and mediate genome functions. Here, we describe a divergent role for histone H4 lysine 20 mono-methylation (H4K20me1) and demonstrate that it directly facilitates chromatin openness and accessibility by disrupting chromatin folding. Thus, accumulation of H4K20me1 demarcates highly accessible chromatin at genes, and this is maintained throughout the cell cycle.

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Peptidyl asparaginyl ligases (PALs) are powerful tools for peptide macrocyclization. Herein, we report that a derivative of Asn, namely N -hydroxyasparagine or Asn(OH), is an unnatural P1 substrate of PALs. By Asn(OH)-mediated cyclization, we prepared cyclic peptides as new matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2) inhibitors displaying the hydroxamic acid moiety of Asn(OH) as the key pharmacophore.

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Peptide asparaginyl ligases (PALs) catalyze transpeptidation at the Asn residue of a short Asn-Xaa-Xaa tripeptide motif. Due to their high catalytic activity toward the P1-Asn substrates at around neutral pH, PALs have been used extensively for peptide ligation at asparaginyl junctions. PALs also bind to aspartyl substrates, but only when the COOH of P1-Asp remains in its neutral, protonated form, which usually requires an acidic pH.

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Infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria seriously endanger human health and global public health. Therefore, it is urgent to discover and develop novel antimicrobial agents to combat multidrug-resistant bacteria. In this study, we designed and synthesized a series of new membrane-active bakuchiol derivatives by biomimicking the structure and function of cationic antibacterial peptides.

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Protein theranostics integrate both diagnostic and treatment functions on a single disease-targeting protein. However, the preparation of these multimodal agents remains a major challenge. Ideally, conventional recombinant proteins should be used as starting materials for modification with the desired detection and therapeutic functionalities, but simple chemical strategies that allow the introduction of two different modifications into a protein in a site-specific manner are not currently available.

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The contribution and mechanism of cerebrovascular pathology in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis are still unclear. Here, we show that venular and capillary cerebral endothelial cells (ECs) are selectively vulnerable to necroptosis in AD. We identify reduced cerebromicrovascular expression of murine N-acetyltransferase 1 (mNat1) in two AD mouse models and hNat2, the human ortholog of mNat1 and a genetic risk factor for type-2 diabetes and insulin resistance, in human AD.

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Although the basic process of receptor-mediated endocytosis (RME) is well established, certain specific aspects, like the endosomal redox state, remain less characterized. Previous studies used chemically labeled ligands or antibodies with a FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) probe to gauge the redox activity of the endocytic pathway with a limitation being their inability to track the apo receptor. New tools that allow direct labeling of a cell surface receptor with synthetic probes would aid in the study of its endocytic pathway and function.

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The poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, PARP1, plays a key role in maintaining genomic integrity by detecting DNA damage and mediating repair. γH2A.X is the primary histone marker for DNA double-strand breaks and PARP1 localizes to H2A.

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Chemical modification of transcripts with 5' caps occurs in all organisms. Here, we report a systems-level mass spectrometry-based technique, CapQuant, for quantitative analysis of an organism's cap epitranscriptome. The method was piloted with 21 canonical caps-m7GpppN, m7GpppNm, GpppN, GpppNm, and m2,2,7GpppG-and 5 'metabolite' caps-NAD, FAD, UDP-Glc, UDP-GlcNAc, and dpCoA.

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