Publications by authors named "D Falke"

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  • * It provides tools for analyzing omics data, integrates various datasets, and features a user-friendly data mining platform, allowing easy comparisons across organisms and data types.
  • * Recent updates include new data types, enhanced search features, an improved Galaxy workspace, and a redesigned MapVEu interface for analyzing spatially resolved data like vector surveillance.
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The Eukaryotic Pathogen, Vector and Host Informatics Resource (VEuPathDB, https://veupathdb.org) represents the 2019 merger of VectorBase with the EuPathDB projects. As a Bioinformatics Resource Center funded by the National Institutes of Health, with additional support from the Welllcome Trust, VEuPathDB supports >500 organisms comprising invertebrate vectors, eukaryotic pathogens (protists and fungi) and relevant free-living or non-pathogenic species or hosts.

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In order to reduce nitrate in vivo, the spore-specific respiratory nitrate reductase, Nar1, of Streptomyces coelicolor relies on an active cytochrome bcc-aa oxidase supercomplex (bcc-aa supercomplex). This suggests that membrane-associated Nar1, comprising NarG1, NarH1, and NarI1 subunits, might not act as a classical menaquinol oxidase but could either receive electrons from the bcc-aa supercomplex, or require the supercomplex to stabilize the reductase in the membrane to allow it to function. To address the biochemical basis for this dependence on the bcc-aa supercomplex, we purified two different Strep-tagged variants of Nar1 and enriched the native enzyme complex from spore extracts using different chromatographic and electrophoretic procedures.

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Respiratory nitrate reductases (Nar) catalyse the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, coupling this process to energy conservation. The obligate aerobic actinobacterium Streptomyces coelicolor synthesizes three Nar enzymes that contribute to maintenance of a membrane potential when either the mycelium or the spores become hypoxic or anoxic. No growth occurs under such conditions but the bacterium survives the lack of O by remaining metabolically active; reducing nitrate is one means whereby this process is aided.

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The three nitrate reductases (Nar) of the saprophytic aerobic actinobacterium Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) contribute to survival when oxygen becomes limiting. In the current study, we focused on synthesis of the Nar2 enzyme, which is the main Nar enzyme present and active in exponentially growing mycelium. Synthesis of Nar2 can, however, also be induced in spores after extended periods of anoxic incubation.

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