Boston University
Publishes on Protein Structure and Dynamics, RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, Enzyme Structure and Function. 10 papers and 1.8k citations.
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Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I)-mediated signaling is thought to be involved in the regulation of multiple cellular functions in different tumors including renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Blocking IGF-I signaling by any of the several strategies abolishes or delays the progression of a variety of tumors in animal models. Herein, we demonstrate that in RCC cell lines, IGF-I-mediated signaling is found to be inhibited in the presence of wild type von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppresser gene. Moreover, molecular modeling and biochemical approaches have revealed that beta-domain of the VHL gene product by interacting directly with protein kinase Cdelta inhibits its association with IGF-IR for downstream signaling. We also demonstrated that RCC has IGF-I-mediated invasive activity where protein kinase Cdelta is an important downstream molecule, and this invasiveness can be blocked by wild type VHL. These experiments thus elucidate a novel tumor suppresser function of VHL with its unique kinase inhibitory domain.
Filamentous bacteriophage Pf1 assembles by a membrane-mediated process during which the viral DNA is secreted through the membrane while being encapsulated by the major coat protein. Neutron diffraction studies showed that in the virus most of the coat protein consists of two alpha-helical segments arranged end-to-end with an intervening mobile surface loop. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the coat protein in the membrane-bound form have shown that the secondary structure is essentially identical to that in the intact virus. A comparison indicates that during membrane-mediated viral assembly, while the secondary structure of the coat protein is largely conserved, its tertiary structure changes substantially.