Publications by authors named "Hyun Jong Eun"

Aims: The ability to eliminate bacterial persister cells is still a medical challenge that has yet to be overcome. These cells represent a unique subpopulation within bacterial communities and are characterized by a reduced susceptibility to antibiotics with growth retardation. In this study, we investigated the molecular basis of persister formation in Salmonella Typhimurium 14028 s under aminoglycoside stress.

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  • * Researchers used nanodisc technology and paramagnetic relaxation enhancement to study the structure of a complex involving KRAS and the RAF proteins, discovering that these interactions significantly change how KRAS molecules pair up.
  • * The study reveals that binding RAF alters KRAS dimer arrangements, providing insights into RAF activation and suggesting a potential pathway for targeting these interactions in cancer treatment.
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Type II toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are ubiquitously distributed genetic elements in prokaryotes and are crucial for cell maintenance and survival under environmental stresses. The antitoxin is a modular protein consisting of the disordered C-terminal region that physically contacts and neutralizes the cognate toxin and the well-folded N-terminal DNA binding domain responsible for autorepression of TA transcription. However, how the two functional domains communicate is largely unknown.

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Toxin - Antitoxin systems are crucial for bacterial survival against harsh circumstances such as antibiotic treatment. The VapBC systems are the most abundant Toxin-Antitoxin systems among the Toxin - Antitoxin systems in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The VapBC43 system is one of them, which is related to the response to the vancomycin treatment.

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  • * The D-alanylation pathway involves four essential proteins (DltABCD) and is a promising target for developing new antibiotics against drug-resistant S. aureus, particularly focusing on DltA, the first protein in the pathway.
  • * Recent analysis of DltA's structure from a methicillin-resistant strain shows key details about its function, revealing that its activity can significantly increase in the presence of another protein, DltC, which may lead to advancements in antibiotic
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Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are ubiquitously found in bacteria and are related to cell maintenance and survival under environmental stresses such as heat shock, nutrient starvation, and antibiotic treatment. Here, we report for the first time the crystal structure of the Staphylococcus aureus TA complex YoeB-YefM at a resolution of 1.7 Å.

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For bacteria, cysteine thiol groups in proteins are commonly used as thiol-based switches for redox sensing to activate specific detoxification pathways and restore the redox balance. Among the known thiol-based regulatory systems, the MarR/DUF24 family regulators have been reported to sense and respond to reactive electrophilic species, including diamide, quinones, and aldehydes, with high specificity. Here, we report that the prototypical regulator YodB of the MarR/DUF24 family from Bacillus subtilis uses two distinct pathways to regulate transcription in response to two reactive electrophilic species (diamide or methyl-p-benzoquinone), as revealed by X-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, and biochemical experiments.

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