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Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks

Gene-expression strategies are remodeled following exposure to stress. The reactive oxidants and electrophiles generated after stress actually affects the structural and functional properties of different cellular proteins. It is also seen that lysine rich motifs of proteins play crucial role in ele...

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Autores principales: Dey, Sanjay Kumar, Ganguli, Sayak, Basu, Protip, Roy, Paushali, Datta, Abhijit
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2951638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20975891
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author Dey, Sanjay Kumar
Ganguli, Sayak
Basu, Protip
Roy, Paushali
Datta, Abhijit
author_facet Dey, Sanjay Kumar
Ganguli, Sayak
Basu, Protip
Roy, Paushali
Datta, Abhijit
author_sort Dey, Sanjay Kumar
collection PubMed
description Gene-expression strategies are remodeled following exposure to stress. The reactive oxidants and electrophiles generated after stress actually affects the structural and functional properties of different cellular proteins. It is also seen that lysine rich motifs of proteins play crucial role in electrophilic attack and modification. Therefore, this study revealing lysine richness in 5 main human snrups (Small Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins) indicates a possible mechanism of gene regulation under stress. This possibility is highly supported by the findings that surface residues of the molecules were full of lysine rich clusters. Lysine richness is also found to be a highly conserved pattern across the various domains of life indicative of stress adaptation in the prebiotic to biotic world transition. Moreover the modeled structures showed good all atom contacts and minimal outliers.
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spelling pubmed-29516382010-10-25 Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks Dey, Sanjay Kumar Ganguli, Sayak Basu, Protip Roy, Paushali Datta, Abhijit Bioinformation Hypothesis Gene-expression strategies are remodeled following exposure to stress. The reactive oxidants and electrophiles generated after stress actually affects the structural and functional properties of different cellular proteins. It is also seen that lysine rich motifs of proteins play crucial role in electrophilic attack and modification. Therefore, this study revealing lysine richness in 5 main human snrups (Small Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins) indicates a possible mechanism of gene regulation under stress. This possibility is highly supported by the findings that surface residues of the molecules were full of lysine rich clusters. Lysine richness is also found to be a highly conserved pattern across the various domains of life indicative of stress adaptation in the prebiotic to biotic world transition. Moreover the modeled structures showed good all atom contacts and minimal outliers. Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2951638/ /pubmed/20975891 Text en © 2010 Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Dey, Sanjay Kumar
Ganguli, Sayak
Basu, Protip
Roy, Paushali
Datta, Abhijit
Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title_full Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title_fullStr Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title_full_unstemmed Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title_short Lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
title_sort lysine richness in human snurps ­ possible sites for electrophilic attacks
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2951638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20975891
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