Publications by authors named "D Ghose"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how certain oral bacteria can impact the exchange of calcium (Ca) and phosphorus (P) in tooth enamel, which is important for understanding oral health and mineralization therapies.
  • - Using a specific assay and cultured bacteria, the researchers found that one type of bacteria significantly absorbed phosphorus and stored it as polyphosphates, while another type showed no similar capability.
  • - The findings imply that future research on dental health technologies should focus on bacteria that efficiently uptake phosphorus, as this could enhance preventive treatments for oral health.
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The trace metal ion manganese (Mn) in excess is toxic. Therefore, a small subset of factors tightly maintains its cellular level, among which an efflux protein MntP is the champion. Multiple transcriptional regulators and a manganese-dependent translational riboswitch regulate the MntP expression in Escherichia coli.

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Bacteria harbor diverse mechanisms to defend themselves against their viral predators, bacteriophages. In response, phages can evolve counter-defense systems, most of which are poorly understood. In T4-like phages, the gene tifA prevents bacterial defense by the type III toxin-antitoxin (TA) system toxIN, but the mechanism by which TifA inhibits ToxIN remains unclear.

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The evolution of novel functions in biology relies heavily on gene duplication and divergence, creating large paralogous protein families. Selective pressure to avoid detrimental cross-talk often results in paralogs that exhibit exquisite specificity for their interaction partners. But how robust or sensitive is this specificity to mutation? Here, using deep mutational scanning, we demonstrate that a paralogous family of bacterial signaling proteins exhibits marginal specificity, such that many individual substitutions give rise to substantial cross-talk between normally insulated pathways.

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Article Synopsis
  • Apoptosis is crucial for proper development and maintaining tissue balance, and its disruption can lead to diseases like cancer.
  • BAK, an apoptotic effector, changes shape to disrupt mitochondria and trigger cell death, with activation induced by human peptides like BID, BIM, and PUMA.
  • Researchers identified ten new peptides that also activate BAK, providing insights into the complexity of peptide interactions that could lead to potential therapeutic tools targeting BAK.
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