Publications by authors named "Leon P Jenner"

Article Synopsis
  • Armadillo repeat-containing proteins (ARMCs) are important for various cellular functions like adhesion, signaling, and regulating cellular structures, with ARMC6 being significant in primates but its specific roles were previously unclear.
  • Recent experiments show that ARMC6 binds to DNA promoter sequences of cancer-related genes and to telomeric RNA, suggesting involvement in chromosomal maintenance via recognition of G-quadruplex structures.
  • Overexpression of ARMC6 in human cell lines leads to altered expression of oncogenic and telomerase-related genes, highlighting its potential role in linking gene regulation with telomeric chromatin rearrangement.
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Most eukaryotic organisms employ a telomerase complex for the maintenance of chromosome ends. The core of this complex is composed of telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) and telomerase RNA (TR) subunits. The TERT reverse transcriptase (RT) domain synthesises telomeric DNA using the TR template sequence.

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Telomeres are essential nucleoprotein structures at the very ends of linear eukaryote chromosomes. They shelter the terminal genome territories against degradation and prevent the natural chromosome ends from being recognized by repair mechanisms as double-strand DNA breaks.There are two basic characteristics of telomeric DNA, its sequence and its length.

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Thiosulfate dehydrogenases are bacterial cytochromes that contribute to the oxidation of inorganic sulfur. The active sites of these enzymes contain low-spin -type heme with Cys/His axial ligation. However, the reduction potentials of these hemes are several hundred mV more negative than that of the thiosulfate/tetrathionate couple (, +198 mV), making it difficult to rationalize the thiosulfate oxidizing capability.

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Telomeres are essential structures formed from satellite DNA repeats at the ends of chromosomes in most eukaryotes. Satellite DNA repeat sequences are useful markers for karyotyping, but have a more enigmatic role in the eukaryotic cell. Much work has been done to investigate the structure and arrangement of repetitive DNA elements in classical models with implications for species evolution.

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The nitrogenase MoFe protein contains two different FeS centers, the P-cluster and the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co). The former is a [FeS] center responsible for conveying electrons to the latter, a [MoFeSC-()-homocitrate] species, where N reduction takes place. NifB is arguably the key enzyme in FeMo-co assembly as it catalyzes the fusion of two [FeS] clusters and the insertion of carbide and sulfide ions to build NifB-co, a [FeSC] precursor to FeMo-co.

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A growing number of bacterial species are known to move electrons across their cell envelopes. Naturally this occurs in support of energy conservation and carbon-fixation. For biotechnology it allows electron exchange between bacteria and electrodes in microbial fuel cells and during microbial electrosynthesis.

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Thiosulfate dehydrogenases (TsdAs) are bidirectional bacterial di-heme enzymes that catalyze the interconversion of tetrathionate and thiosulfate at measurable rates in both directions. In contrast to our knowledge of TsdA activities, information on the redox properties in the absence of substrates is rather scant. To address this deficit, we combined magnetic CD (MCD) spectroscopy and protein film electrochemistry (PFE) in a study to resolve heme ligation and redox chemistry in two representative TsdAs.

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Multiheme cytochromes possess closely packed redox-active hemes arranged as chains spanning the tertiary structure. Here we describe five variants of a representative multiheme cytochrome engineered as biohybrid phototransducers for converting light into electricity. Each variant possesses a single Cys sulfhydryl group near a terminus of the heme chain, and this was efficiently labelled with a Ru (2,2'-bipyridine) photosensitiser.

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