Publications by authors named "Puspa Das"

Article Synopsis
  • - Notch signaling is a crucial communication method between cells that influences how they develop and differentiate, relying on receptor-ligand interactions on cell surfaces.
  • - The study finds that overexpression of a protein called TM2D3, similar to a Drosophila protein, activates Notch1 by binding to it and enhancing its presence on the cell surface.
  • - Without TM2D3, Notch1 and Notch2 levels drop on the cell surface, leading to deficiencies in cell signaling and endocytosis in developing Drosophila embryos.
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Notch signaling plays crucial roles in the control of cell fate and physiology through local cell-cell interactions. The core processes of Notch signal transduction are well established, but the mechanisms that fine-tune the pathway in various developmental and post-developmental contexts are less clear. Drosophila almondex, which encodes an evolutionarily conserved double-pass transmembrane protein, was identified in the 1970s as a maternal-effect gene that regulates Notch signaling in certain contexts, but its mechanistic function remains obscure.

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