In addition to its role as cellular energy currency, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) serves as an extracellular messenger that mediates diverse cell-to-cell communication. Compelling evidence supports that ATP is released from cells through pannexins, a family of membrane proteins that form heptameric large-pore channels. However, the activation mechanisms that trigger ATP release by pannexins remain poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleosides are essential cornerstones of life, and nucleoside derivatives and synthetic analogues have important biomedical applications. Correspondingly, production of non-canonical nucleoside derivatives in animal model systems is of particular interest. Here, we report the discovery of diverse glucose-based nucleosides in and related nematodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe major capsid protein VP1 of JC Polyomavirus assembles into pentamers that serve as a model for studying viral entry of this potentially severe human pathogen. Previously, labeling of viral proteins utilized large fusion proteins or non-specific amine- or cysteine-functionalization with fluorescent dyes. Imaging of these sterically hindered fusion proteins or heterogeneously labeled virions limits reproducibility and could prevent the detection of subtle trafficking phenomena.
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