Publications by authors named "Marine Le Boulch"

We have previously introduced the first generation of C3P3, an artificial system that allows the autonomous in-vivo production of mRNA with GpppN-cap. While C3P3-G1 synthesized much larger amounts of capped mRNA in human cells than conventional nuclear expression systems, it produced a proportionately much smaller amount of the corresponding proteins, indicating a clear defect of mRNA translatability. A possible mechanism for this poor translatability could be the rudimentary polyadenylation of the mRNA produced by the C3P3-G1 system.

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Most eukaryotic expression systems make use of host-cell nuclear transcriptional and post-transcriptional machineries. Here, we present the first generation of the chimeric cytoplasmic capping-prone phage polymerase (C3P3-G1) expression system developed by biological engineering, which generates capped and polyadenylated transcripts in host-cell cytoplasm by means of two components. First, an artificial single-unit chimeric enzyme made by fusing an mRNA capping enzyme and a DNA-dependent RNA polymerase.

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Melatonin, a neuro-hormone released by the pineal gland, has multiple effects in the central nervous system including the regulation of dopamine (DA) levels, but how melatonin accomplishes this task is not clear. Here, we show that melatonin MT and MT receptors co-immunoprecipitate with the DA transporter (DAT) in mouse striatal synaptosomes. Increased DA re-uptake and decreased amphetamine-induced locomotor activity were observed in the striatum of mice with targeted deletion of MT or MT receptors.

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Accumulation of oxidatively damaged proteins is a hallmark of cellular and organismal ageing, and is also a phenotypic feature shared by both replicative senescence and stress-induced premature senescence of human fibroblasts. Moreover, proteins that are building up as oxidized (i.e.

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