Publications by authors named "Stan van der Beelen"

Article Synopsis
  • - Hard ticks use a protein-rich saliva to attach securely to their hosts, forming a solid cement cone, but the process behind this transformation is not yet understood.
  • - This study investigates a glycine-rich protein (GRP) in tick saliva, revealing that it can undergo liquid-liquid phase separation to form sticky biomolecular condensates in salty conditions.
  • - The research identifies key interactions in GRP that drive this phase separation and suggests that understanding these mechanisms could lead to new tick control methods and innovative biomedical applications like tissue sealants.
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Chemical probes of epigenetic 'readers' of histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) have become powerful tools for mechanistic and functional studies of their target proteins in normal physiology and disease pathogenesis. Here we report the development of the first class of chemical probes of YEATS domains, newly identified 'readers' of histone lysine acetylation (Kac) and crotonylation (Kcr). Guided by the structural analysis of a YEATS-Kcr complex, we developed a series of peptide-based inhibitors of YEATS domains by targeting a unique π-π-π stacking interaction at the proteins' Kcr recognition site.

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Antibody detection is of fundamental importance in many diagnostic and bioanalytical assays, yet current detection techniques tend to be laborious and/or expensive. We present a new sensor platform (LUMABS) based on bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) that allows detection of antibodies directly in solution using a smartphone as the sole piece of equipment. LUMABS are single-protein sensors that consist of the blue-light emitting luciferase NanoLuc connected via a semiflexible linker to the green fluorescent acceptor protein mNeonGreen, which are kept close together using helper domains.

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