32 results match your criteria: "John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park[Affiliation]"
Nature
January 2025
Cell and Developmental Biology Department, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park, Norwich, UK.
Nutrient acquisition is crucial for sustaining life. Plants develop beneficial intracellular partnerships with arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) and nitrogen-fixing bacteria to surmount the scarcity of soil nutrients and tap into atmospheric dinitrogen, respectively. Initiation of these root endosymbioses requires symbiont-induced oscillations in nuclear calcium (Ca) concentrations in root cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Chem Biol
November 2023
Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7UH UK
Obafluorin is a antibacterial natural product that inhibits threonyl-tRNA synthetase (ThrRS). It acts as a broad-spectrum antibiotic against a range of clinically relevant pathogens and comprises a strained β-lactone ring decorated with catechol and 4-nitro-benzyl moieties. The catechol moiety is widespread in nature and its role in the coordination of ferric iron has been well-characterised in siderophores and Trojan horse antibiotics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
September 2023
Centre for Molecular and Structural Biochemistry, School of Chemistry, University of East Anglia Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7TJ UK +44 (0)1603 592003 +44 (0)1603 592699.
RirA is a global iron regulator in diverse that belongs to the Rrf2 superfamily of transcriptional regulators, which can contain an iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster. Under iron-replete conditions, RirA contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster, enabling high-affinity binding to RirA-regulated operator sequences, thereby causing the repression of cellular iron uptake. Under iron deficiency, one of the cluster irons dissociates, generating an unstable [3Fe-4S] form that subsequently degrades to a [2Fe-2S] form and then to apo RirA, resulting in loss of high-affinity DNA-binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
September 2023
Division of Organic Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Sciences, Mansoura University Mansoura 35516 Egypt
It has been reported that organic extracts derived from soft corals belonging to the genus have exhibited a wide range of therapeutic characteristics. Based on biochemical and histological techniques, we aimed to assess the hepatoprotective role of the organic extract and its principal steroidal contents derived from the Red Sea soft coral on acetaminophen-induced liver fibrosis in rats. Serum liver function parameters (ALT, AST, ALP and total bilirubin) were quantified using a spectrophotometer, and both alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels were determined by using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kits while transformed growth factor beta (TGF-β) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) in liver tissue homogenate were determined using ELISA, and TGF-β and TNF-α gene expression in liver tissue was determined using real-time PCR following extraction and purification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
March 2023
Organic Chemistry Division, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Sciences, Mansoura University Mansoura 35516 Egypt
Microorganisms still remain the main hotspots in the global drug discovery avenue. In particular, fungi are highly prolific producers of vast structurally diverse specialized secondary metabolites, which have displayed a myriad of biomedical potentials. Intriguingly, isocoumarins is one distinctive class of fungal natural products polyketides, which demonstrated numerous remarkable biological and pharmacological activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAssigning individuals to their source populations is crucial for conservation research, especially for endangered species threatened by illegal trade and translocations. Genetic assignment can be achieved with different types of molecular markers, but technical advantages and cost saving are recently promoting the shift from short tandem repeats (STRs) to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Here, we designed, developed, and tested a small panel of SNPs for cost-effective geographic assignment of individuals with unknown origin of the endangered Mediterranean tortoise .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy 2050, it is predicted that antimicrobial resistance will be responsible for 10 million global deaths annually, more deaths than cancer, costing the world economy $100 trillion. Clearly, strategies to address this problem are essential as bacterial evolution is rendering our current antibiotics ineffective. The discovery of an allosteric binding site on the established antibacterial target DNA gyrase offers a new medicinal chemistry strategy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWheat stem rust, caused by the fungus f. sp. (Pgt), occurs in most wheat-growing areas worldwide, and, in western Europe since 2013, has started to re-emerge after many decades of absence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
September 2021
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Mansoura University Mansoura 35516 Egypt
Since its first report in December 2019, the novel coronavirus virus, SARS-CoV-2, has caused an unprecedented global health crisis and economic loss imposing a tremendous burden on the worldwide finance, healthcare system, and even daily life. Even with the introduction of different preventive vaccines, there is still a dire need for effective antiviral therapeutics. Nature has been considered as the historical trove of drug discovery and development, particularly in cases of worldwide crises.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
November 2021
School of Pharmacy, University of East Anglia Norwich Research Park, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, UK.
β-1→4-Glucan polysaccharides like cellulose, derivatives and analogues, are attracting attention due to their unique physicochemical properties, as ideal candidates for many different applications in biotechnology. Access to these polysaccharides with a high level of purity at scale is still challenging, and eco-friendly alternatives by using enzymes in vitro are highly desirable. One prominent candidate enzyme is cellodextrin phosphorylase (CDP) from Ruminiclostridium thermocellum, which is able to yield cellulose oligomers from short cellodextrins and α-d-glucose 1-phosphate (Glc-1-P) as substrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
April 2021
Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7UH UK
Thiostreptamide S4 is a thioamitide, a family of promising antitumour ribosomally synthesised and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs). The thioamitides are one of the most structurally complex RiPP families, yet very few thioamitide biosynthetic steps have been elucidated, even though the biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) of multiple thioamitides have been identified. We hypothesised that engineering the thiostreptamide S4 BGC in a heterologous host could provide insights into its biosynthesis when coupled with untargeted metabolomics and targeted mutations of the precursor peptide.
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July 2020
Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7UH UK
Aberrant splicing of pre-mRNA is implicated in many human genetic disorders. Small molecules that target the spliceosome are important leads as therapeutics and research tools, and one compound of significant interest is the polyketide natural product pladienolide B. Here, we describe the reactivation of quiescent pladienolide B production in the domesticated lab strain AS6200 by overexpression of the pathway-specific activator PldR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cabbage stem flea beetle (CSFB), L. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), is a major pest of oilseed rape, L. (Brassicaceae), within the UK and continental Europe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a method for inoculating rachises of (European or common ash) with which is faster than previous methods and allows associated foliar symptoms to be assessed on replicate leaves. A total of ten ash seedlings were inoculated with five isolates of and lesion development assessed over four weeks. A five-point disease progress scale of symptom development was developed from no lesion (0), lesion on rachis (1), "pre-top dead," with curling of distal leaflets and bending of the rachis (2), top dead, with wilting and death of distal leaflets (3) to leaf abscission (4).
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May 2019
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University Pathumwan Bangkok 10330 Thailand
Nutr Bull
March 2019
Department of Plant Science Rothamsted Research Harpenden UK.
Wheat is the staple food crop in temperate countries and increasingly consumed in developing countries, displacing traditional foods. However, wheat products are typically low in bioavailable iron and zinc, contributing to deficiencies in these micronutrients in countries where wheat is consumed as a staple food. Two factors contribute to the low contents of bioavailable iron and zinc in wheat: the low concentrations of these minerals in white flour, which is most widely consumed, and the presence of phytates in mineral-rich bran fractions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ash dieback fungus, , a destructive, alien pathogen of common ash (), has spread across Europe over the past 25 years and was first observed in the UK in 2012. To investigate the relationship of the pathogen's population structure to its mode of arrival, isolates were obtained from locations in England and Wales, either where established natural populations of ash had been infected by wind-dispersed ascospores or where the fungus had been introduced on imported planting stock. Population structure was determined by tests for vegetative compatibility (VC), mating type and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF, the causal agent of septoria tritici blotch, a serious foliar disease of wheat, is a necrotrophic pathogen that undergoes a long latent period. Emergence of insensitivity to fungicides, and pesticide reduction policies, mean there is a pressing need to understand septoria and control it through greater varietal resistance. and , the most common qualitative resistance genes in modern wheat cultivars, determine specific resistance to avirulent fungal genotypes following a gene-for-gene relationship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
April 2017
Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH, U.K.
The metabolism of carbohydrate polymers drives microbial diversity in the human gut microbiota. It is unclear, however, whether bacterial consortia or single organisms are required to depolymerize highly complex glycans. Here we show that the gut bacterium Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron uses the most structurally complex glycan known: the plant pectic polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan-II, cleaving all but 1 of its 21 distinct glycosidic linkages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys J
February 2017
School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom; Astbury Centre for Structural and Molecular Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
We have explored the interdependence of the binding of a DNA triplex and a repressor protein to distal recognition sites on supercoiled DNA minicircles using MD simulations. We observe that the interaction between the two ligands through their influence on their DNA template is determined by a subtle interplay of DNA mechanics and electrostatics, that the changes in flexibility induced by ligand binding play an important role and that supercoiling can instigate additional ligand-DNA contacts that would not be possible in simple linear DNA sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperiments were conducted on the role of intra- and inter-genotypic competition in ecological processes operating at the population scale in diseased plant populations.Combinations of genotypes showing variation for phenotypic traits relating to competitive ability and pathogen compatibility were infected with the oomycete and in separate experiments. Plant fitness and competitive ability were estimated from phenotypic measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvestigating the origin and dispersal pathways is instrumental to mitigate threats and economic and environmental consequences of invasive crop pathogens. In the case of Puccinia striiformis causing yellow rust on wheat, a number of economically important invasions have been reported, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2014
Department of Biological Chemistry, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
DNA topoisomerases control the topology of DNA. Type II topoisomerases exhibit topology simplification, whereby products of their reactions are simplified beyond that expected based on thermodynamic equilibrium. The molecular basis for this process is unknown, although DNA bending has been implicated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Res Notes
July 2013
Department of Biological Chemistry, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK.
Background: Bacterial DNA gyrase is a validated target for antibacterial chemotherapy. It consists of two subunits, GyrA and GyrB, which form an A₂B₂ complex in the active enzyme. Sequence alignment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis GyrB with other bacterial GyrBs predicts the presence of 40 potential additional amino acids at the GyrB N-terminus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
April 2010
Department of Biological Chemistry, John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich NR47UH, UK.