Publications by authors named "Sahana Mollah"

Our genome is not made of naked DNA but a fiber (chromatin) composed of DNA and proteins packaged into our chromosomes. The basic building block of chromatin is the nucleosome, which has two copies of each of the proteins called histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) wrapped by 146 base pairs of DNA. Regions of our genetic material are found between the more open (euchromatin) and more compact (heterochromatin) regions of the genome that can be variably accessible to the underlying genes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a key vector for gene therapy due to its safety and low immunogenicity, with its capsid proteins being crucial for efficiency and infectivity.
  • Monitoring the quality of AAV capsid proteins during development is essential for ensuring safe and effective treatments, and microflow liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry offers an advanced method for this analysis.
  • This study utilized microflow LC-MS/MS to achieve nearly complete sequence coverage and identified over 30 post-translational modifications in low-concentration AAV2 capsid protein, highlighting the method's sensitivity and potential for characterizing other biological products.
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Histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) have a fundamental function in chromatin biology, as they model chromatin structure and recruit enzymes involved in gene regulation, DNA repair, and chromosome condensation. High throughput characterization of histone PTMs is mostly performed by using nano-liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. However, limitations in speed and stochastic sampling of data dependent acquisition methods in MS lead to incomplete discrimination of isobaric peptides and loss of low abundant species.

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Previously we determined that S81 is the highest stoichiometric phosphorylation on the androgen receptor (AR) in response to hormone. To explore the role of this phosphorylation on growth, we stably expressed wild-type and S81A mutant AR in LHS and LAPC4 cells. The cells with increased wild-type AR expression grow faster compared with parental cells and S81A mutant-expressing cells, indicating that loss of S81 phosphorylation limits cell growth.

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MIF-1 (Pro-Leu-Gly-NH(2)) has potent therapeutic effects in depression and Parkinson's disease, but its CNS sites of production are not yet clear. In this study, the concentration of MIF-1 in different brain regions was measured by the multiple reaction monitoring technique on a 4000 QTRAP mass spectrometer. The limit of quantification was 300 fg of MIF-1, and limit of detection was 60 fg.

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Post-translational modifications of proteins including phosphorylation, glycosylation, acetylation and ubiquitination facilitate the regulation of many cellular processes and intracellular signaling events. Ubiquitination plays a key role in the functional regulation and degradation of many classes of proteins, and the study of ubiquitination and poly-ubiquitination has emerged as one of the most active areas in proteomic research. A variety of mass spectrometric methods have been described for the identification of ubiquitination sites, the study of poly-ubiquitin topology and the identification of ubiquitin substrates.

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Histone post-translational modifications have been recently intensely studied owing to their role in regulating gene expression. Here, we describe protocols for the characterization of histone modifications in both qualitative and semiquantitative manners using chemical derivatization and tandem mass spectrometry. In these procedures, extracted histones are first derivatized using propionic anhydride to neutralize charge and block lysine residues, and are subsequently digested using trypsin, which, under these conditions, cleaves only the arginine residues.

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Chromatin is regulated at many different levels, from higher-order packing to individual nucleosome placement. Recent studies have shown that individual histone modifications, and combinations thereof, play a key role in modulating chromatin structure and gene activity. Reported here is an analysis of Arabidopsis histone H3 modifications by nanoflow-HPLC coupled to electrospray ionization on a hybrid linear ion trap-Fourier transform mass spectrometer (LTQ/FTMS).

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Histone phosphorylation has long been associated with condensed mitotic chromatin; however, the functional roles of these modifications are not yet understood. Histones H1 and H3 are highly phosphorylated from late G2 through telophase in many organisms, and have been implicated in chromatin condensation and sister chromatid segregation. However, mutational analyses in yeast and biochemical experiments with Xenopus extracts have demonstrated that phosphorylation of H1 and H3 is not essential for such processes.

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Minor histocompatibility (H) antigens crucially affect the outcome of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-identical allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT). To understand the basis of alloimmune responses against minor H antigens, identification of minor H peptides and their antigenicity-determining mechanisms is essential. Here we report the identification of HA-3 and its encoding gene.

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Recent studies of histone methylation have yielded fundamental new insights pertaining to the role of this modification in gene activation as well as in gene silencing. While a number of methylation sites are known to occur on histones, only limited information exists regarding the relevant enzymes that mediate these methylation events. We thus sought to identify native histone methyltransferase (HMT) activities from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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The full kinetic pH profile for the base-promoted decomposition of MTO to CH(4) and ReO(4)(-) was examined with the inclusion of new data at pH 7-10. Spectroscopic and kinetic data gave evidence for mono- and dihydroxo complexes: MTO(OH(-)) and MTO(OH(-))(2). Parallel unimolecular eliminations of methane from these species account for the rate-pH profile; the respective rate constants are MTO(OH(-)), k = 4.

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