Publications by authors named "Fabio Henrique Dos Santos Rodrigues"

Emission fluorescence is one of the most versatile and powerful biophysical techniques used in several scientific subjects. It is extensively applied in the studies of proteins, their conformations, and intermolecular contacts, such as in protein-ligand and protein-protein interactions, allowing qualitative, quantitative, and structural data elucidation. This review, aimed to outline some of the most widely used fluorescence techniques in this area, illustrate their applications and display a few examples.

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Trans-splicing of trypanosomatid polycistronic transcripts produces polyadenylated monocistronic mRNAs modified to form the 5' cap4 structure (m7Gpppm36,6,2'Apm2'Apm2'Cpm23,2'U). NMR and X-ray crystallography reveal that Leishmania has a unique type of N-terminally-extended cap-binding protein (eIF4E4) that binds via a PAM2 motif to PABP1. This relies on the interactions of a combination of polar and charged amino acid side-chains together with multiple hydrophobic interactions, and underpins a novel architecture in the Leishmania cap4-binding translation factor complex.

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Many Gram-negative bacteria are able to invade hosts by translocation of effectors directly into target cells in processes usually mediated by two very complex secretion systems (SSs), named type III (T3) and type IV (T4) SSs. These syringe-needle injection devices work with intervention of specialized secretion chaperones that, unlike traditional molecular chaperones, do not assist in protein folding and are not energized by ATP. Controversy still surrounds secretion chaperones primary role, but we can say that these chaperones act as: (i) bodyguards to prevent premature aggregation, or as (ii) pilots to direct substrate secretion through the correct secretion system.

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