Publications by authors named "Taichi Takasawa"

FtsZ is highly conserved among bacteria and plays an essential role in bacterial cell division. The tense conformation of FtsZ bound to GTP assembles into a straight filament via head-to-tail associations, and then the upper subunit of FtsZ hydrolyzes GTP bound to the lower FtsZ subunit. The subunit with GDP bound disassembles accompanied by a conformational change in the subunit from the tense to relaxed conformation.

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Structural proteomics techniques are useful for identifying the binding sites of proteins. The surface of a target protein with and without a bound binding partner is artificially labeled using a hydroxy radical, deuterium, or a low-molecular-weight chemical, and the difference in the label strength with and without the bound partner is determined. Label strength maps are then prepared on the Protein Data Bank (PDB) structure to identify the binding surface.

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