A survey of KIR2DL4 polymorphism revealed seven common sequences in the Australian population. The seven sequences encode three different amino acid sequences of the immunoglobulin domains. Two of the sequences encoding different amino acid sequences in the immunoglobulin domains also occur on some chromosomes with a single nucleotide deletion at the end of exon 6, which encodes the transmembrane domain (DeltaTM mutation), resulting in exon 6 skipping during mRNA production. Due to alternate splicing, a fraction of the mRNA produced by these alleles includes the transmembrane region but is missing the cytoplasmic region. The remaining two sequences differed only by synonymous substitutions. All of the exonic polymorphisms of KIR2DL4 could be detected by single-stranded conformational polymorphism of individually amplified exons. The DeltaTM mutation is in linkage disequilibrium with the killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) A haplotype, and the wild-type sequence is in linkage disequilibrium with the B haplotype. The frequencies of alleles with the DeltaTM mutation or Ig-domain polymorphisms did not differ between women who experienced pre-eclampsia and normotensive controls. Similarly there was no difference in the KIR gene repertoire in pre-eclampsia and normotensive controls.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1521-4141(200201)32:1<18::AID-IMMU18>3.0.CO;2-7 | DOI Listing |
Biochimie
December 2024
Changchun University of Chinese Medicine, Changchun, 130117, China. Electronic address:
Staphylocoagulase (Coa) plays a critical role in the pathogenicity of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus). The present study was undertaken to investigate the underlying mechanism which helicid (HEL) suppressed the virulence factor Coa, as well as to assess the synergistic inhibitory effects of HEL in conjunction with antibiotics, thereby establishing the potential of HEL as an antibacterial adjuvant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Comput Sci
November 2024
MOE Key Laboratory of Bioinformatics, School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Accurate prediction of protein mutation effects is of great importance in protein engineering and design. Here we propose GeoStab-suite, a suite of three geometric learning-based models-GeoFitness, GeoDDG and GeoDTm-for the prediction of fitness score, ΔΔG and ΔT of a protein upon mutations, respectively. GeoFitness engages a specialized loss function to allow supervised training of a unified model using the large amount of multi-labeled fitness data in the deep mutational scanning database.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Chim Acta
August 2024
Sri Lanka Institute of Biotechnology, Pitipana, Homagama, Sri Lanka.
High-resolution melt (HRM) analysis is a closed-tube technique for detecting single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). However, it has limited use in high-resolution melting devices, even those with high thermal accuracy (HTA). In addition to the cost of switching to these specialized devices, the presence of nearest neighbour neutral changes (class III, IV SNPs and small indels) made HRM-based assays a challenging task due to reduced sensitivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStruct Dyn
July 2023
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7260, USA.
Landscape descriptions provide a framework for identifying functionally significant dynamic linkages in proteins but cannot supply details. Rate measurements of combinatorial mutations can implicate dynamic linkages in catalysis. A major difficulty is filtering dynamic linkages from the vastly more numerous static interactions that stabilize domain folding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biosci Bioeng
September 2023
Key Laboratory of Carbohydrate Chemistry and Biotechnology, Ministry of Education, School of Biotechnology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, China. Electronic address:
In humans, almost all the cell surface and secreted glycoproteins are modified with complex-type N-glycans. Thus, it is essential to obtain complex-type N-glycans to fully understand the biological properties of glycoproteins. Here, human β-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II (hGnT-II), a Golgi-localized enzyme integral to complex-type N-glycan biosynthesis, was cloned as a truncated transmembrane form (GnT-II-ΔTM) and heterologously overexpressed in Escherichia coli.
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