7 results match your criteria: "Research Institute for Systems Biology and Medicine (RISBM)[Affiliation]"

SARS-CoV-2 viral entry requires membrane fusion, which is facilitated by the fusion peptides within its spike protein. These predominantly hydrophobic peptides insert into target membranes; however, their precise mechanistic role in membrane fusion remains incompletely understood. Here, we investigate how FP1 (SFIEDLLFNKVTLADAGFIK), the N-terminal fusion peptide, modulates membrane stability and barrier function across various model membrane systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * A study in Russia examined 574 hospitalized children under 18 with COVID-19 from January 2022 to March 2023, finding about one-third had coinfections, predominantly adenovirus and bacterial infections.
  • * Results indicated that while viral coinfections led to higher fevers and bronchitis, bacterial coinfections resulted in longer illnesses and increased pneumonia, suggesting that seasonal viruses may have been more harmful to children during the Omicron wave than SARS-CoV-2 alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) and Powassan virus (POWV) are neurotropic tick-borne orthoflaviviruses. They cause mostly asymptomatic infections in hosts, but severe forms with CNS involvement can occur. Studying the early stages of viral infections in humans is challenging, and appropriate animal models are essential for understanding the factors determining the disease severity and for developing emergency prophylaxis and treatment options.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this work was to examine the structure and gene cluster of O-OPS of S. xiamenensis strain DCB-2-1 and survey its conceivability for chelating uranyl, chromate and vanadate ions from solution. O-polysaccharide (OPS, O-antigen) was isolated from the lipopolysaccharide of Shewanella xiamenensis DCB-2-1 and studied by 1D and 2D nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and sugar analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose and demonstrate dendrimer-based coatings for a sensitive biochip surface that enhance the high-performance sorption of small molecules (i.e., biomolecules with low molecular weights) and the sensitivity of a label-free, real-time photonic crystal surface mode (PC SM) biosensor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The dose-dependent effects of single metals (Zn, Ni, and Cu) and their combinations at steady time-actions on the cell viability of the bacteria DCB 2-1, isolated from a radionuclide-contaminated area, have been estimated. The accumulation of metals by DCB 2-1 in single and multi-metal systems was assessed using the inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy. To estimate the response of the bacteria's antioxidant defense system, doses of 20 and 50 mg/L of single studied metals and 20 mg/L of each metal in their combinations (non-toxic doses, determined by the colony-forming viability assay) were used.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The study of individual fungi and their communities is of great interest to modern biology because they might be both producers of useful compounds, such as antibiotics and organic acids, and pathogens of various diseases. And certain features associated with the functional capabilities of fungi are determined by differences in gene content. Information about gene content is most often taken from the results of functional annotation of the whole genome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF