Publications by authors named "Fiona Broackes-Carter"

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are useful for understanding signaling cascades, predicting protein function, associating proteins with disease and fathoming drug mechanism of action. Currently, only ∼ 10% of human PPIs may be known, and about one-third of human proteins have no known interactions. We introduce FpClass, a data mining-based method for proteome-wide PPI prediction.

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Article Synopsis
  • IntAct is a free online database that collects information about how molecules interact with each other, using data from research papers and direct submissions.
  • The database has a special tool that helps teams organize and check the data, ensuring it's accurate and well-maintained.
  • Recently, IntAct and another database called MINT merged their efforts to work better together and share their information to make everything more efficient.
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Background: Elucidation of the direct/indirect protein interactions and gene associations is required to fully understand the workings of the cell. This can be achieved through the use of both low- and high-throughput biological experiments and in silico methods. We present GAP (Gene functional Association Predictor), an integrative method for predicting and characterizing gene functional associations.

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Article Synopsis
  • IntAct is a free, open-source database that collects and curates molecular interaction data from scientific literature and direct submissions.
  • As of September 2011, it houses around 275,000 curated binary interaction records derived from over 5,000 publications, with two levels of data curation.
  • The database has improved its website for better search and graphical result displays, and it supports new data formats for integration into the Semantic Web.
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Murine arylamine N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) is expressed in the developing heart and in the neural tube at the time of closure. Classically described as a xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme, there is increasing evidence for a distinct biological role for murine NAT2. We have characterized the expression of arylamine N-acetyltransferase 2 during cardiogenesis, mapping its expression in vivo, using a lacZ insertion deletion, and also in vitro, by measuring NAT2 enzyme activity.

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In cystic fibrosis (CF), transcript analysis and quantification are important for diagnosis, prognosis and also as surrogate markers for some therapies including gene therapy. Classical RNA-based methods require significant expression levels in target samples for appropriate analysis, thus PCR-based methods are evolving towards reliable quantification. Various protocols for the quantitative analysis of CFTR transcripts (including those resulting from splicing variants) are described and discussed here.

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Alternative splicing of the human CFTR gene was studied previously and shown not to generate functional CFTR-like chloride ion channels. However, it is possible that some of the alternatively spliced forms may encode CFTR proteins with different functions. The ovine CFTR gene is very similar to the human gene and has regulatory mechanisms in common.

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The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene shows a complex mechanism of tissue-specific and temporal regulation. Expression of the sheep and human CFTR genes shows a gradual decline during lung development, from the early mid-trimester through to term. Alternative upstream exons of CFTR have been identified in several species but their functional role remains obscure.

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The molecular basis of the skipping of constitutive exons in many messenger RNAs is not fully understood. A well-studied example is exon 9 of the human cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene (CFTR), in which an abbreviated polypyrimidine tract between the branch point A and the 3' splice site is associated with increased exon skipping and disease. However, many exons, both in CFTR and in other genes and have short polypyrimidine tracts in their 3' splice sites, yet they are not skipped.

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The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein is a small conductance chloride ion channel that may interact directly with other channels including the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). CFTR is known to be more abundant in the airway epithelium during the second trimester of human development than after birth. This could be a consequence of the change in function of the respiratory epithelium from chloride secretion to sodium absorption near term.

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