Publications by authors named "Pierre A Miranda Herrera"

Article Synopsis
  • Our bodies create various electrophilic species that can interact with and label certain proteins within cells, leading to ongoing discussions about their signaling functions.
  • Researchers are starting to recognize that these electrophiles might significantly alter cellular signaling pathways at regular levels.
  • This Perspective highlights recent findings from our lab about the context-specific regulation of proteins by electrophiles and explores their potential impact on precision medicine, moving beyond their previously understood harmful effects.
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Enzyme-assisted posttranslational modifications (PTMs) constitute a major means of signaling across different cellular compartments. However, how nonenzymatic PTMs-despite their direct relevance to covalent drug development-impinge on cross-compartment signaling remains inaccessible as current target-identification (target-ID) technologies offer limited spatiotemporal resolution, and proximity mapping tools are also not guided by specific, biologically-relevant, ligand chemotypes. Here we establish a quantitative and direct profiling platform (Localis-rex) that ranks responsivity of compartmentalized subproteomes to nonenzymatic PTMs.

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Advances in genetic code expansion have enabled the production of proteins containing site-specific, authentic post-translational modifications. Here, we use a recoded bacterial strain with an expanded genetic code to encode phosphoserine into a human kinase protein. We directly encode phosphoserine into WNK1 (with-no-lysine [K] 1) or WNK4 kinases at multiple, distinct sites, which produced activated, phosphorylated WNK that phosphorylated and activated SPAK/OSR kinases, thereby synthetically activating this human kinase network in recoded bacteria.

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Humidity has been an important factor, in both negative and positive ways, in the development of perovskite solar cells and will prove critical in the push to commercialize this exciting new photovoltaic technology. The interaction between CH(3)NH(3)PbI(3) and H(2)O vapor is investigated by characterizing the ground-state and excited-state optical absorption properties and probing morphology and crystal structure. These undertakings reveal that H(2)O exposure does not simply cause CH(3)NH(3)PbI(3) to revert to PbI(2).

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