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Biochem Soc Trans,
2014]
STAR (signal transduction and activation of RNA) proteins are a family of RNA-binding proteins that regulate post-transcriptional gene regulation events at various levels, such as pre-mRNA alternative splicing, RNA export, translation and stability. Most of these proteins are regulated by signalling pathways through post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation and arginine methylation. These proteins share a highly conserved RNA-binding domain, denoted STAR domain. Structural investigations of this STAR domain in complex with RNA have highlighted how a subset of STAR proteins specifically recognizes its RNA targets. The present review focuses on the structural basis of RNA recognition by this family of proteins.
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Nature Structural & Molecular Biology,
2004]
A recent study reports the RNA sequences that bind to the translational repressor protein GLD-1. The data suggest that a network of developmental genes may be regulated by GLD-1 or related STAR proteins through silencing or alternative splicing.
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Adv Exp Med Biol,
2010]
A comprehensive understanding of the C. elegans STAR proteins GLD-1 and ASD-2 is emerging from a combination of studies. Those employing genetic analysis reveal in vivo function, others involving biochemical approaches pursue the identification of mRNA targets through which these proteins act. Lastly, mechanistic studies provide the molecular pathway of target mRNA regulation.
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Seminars in Developmental Biology,
1992]
At the 4-cell stage of the C. elegans embryo, three axes can be defined: anterior-posterior (A-P), dorsal-ventral (D-V), and left-right (L-R). The A-P axis first becomes obvious in the newly fertilized 1-cell embryo. Pronouned cytoplasmic assymmetries arise along the A-P axis during the first cell cycle, after which the zygote undergoes a series of stem cell-like cleavages with an A-P orientation of the mitotic spindle; these cleavages generate several somatic founder cells and a primordial germ cell. The D-V and L-R axes are defined by the direction of spindle rotation as the 2-cell embryo divides into four cells. In contrast to the A-P axis, there do not appear to be cellular asymmetries associated with the D-V and L-R axes, and both axes can easily be reversed by micromanipulation. Thus, with respect to the roles that the embryonic axes serve in cell-fate determination in the early C. elegans embryo, it appears that internally transmitted developmental information is differentially segregated along the A-P axis, but not along the D-V or L-R axes. Instead, D-V and L-R differences in the fates of cells within lineages appear to be dictated by differential
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Cell Microbiol,
2018]
Legionella pneumophila is a ubiquitous environmental bacterium that has evolved to infect and proliferate within amoebae and other protists. It is thought that accidental inhalation of contaminated water particles by humans is what has enabled this pathogen to proliferate within alveolar macrophages and cause pneumonia. However, the highly evolved macrophages are equipped more sophisticated innate defense mechanisms than protists, such as the evolution of phagotrophic feeding into phagocytosis with more evolved innate defense processes. Not surprisingly, the majority of proteins involved in phagosome biogenesis (~80%) have origins in the phagotrophy stage of evolution. There are a plethora of highly evolved cellular and innate metazoan processes, not represented in Protist biology, that are modulated by L. pneumophila; including TLR2 signaling, NF-B, apoptotic and inflammatory processes, histone modification, caspases, and the NLRC-Naip5 inflammasomes. Importantly, L. pneumophila infects hemocytes of the invertebrate Galleria mellonella, kill G. mellonella larvae, and proliferate in and kill Drosophila adult flies and Caenorhabditis elegans. Although co-evolution with protist hosts has provided a substantial blueprint for L. pneumophila to infect macrophages, we discuss the further evolutionary aspects of co-evolution of L. pneumophila and its adaptation to modulate various highly evolved innate metazoan processes prior to becoming a human pathogen.
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J Androl,
2010]
Male infertility accounts for approximately 50% of the cases of sterile human couples, and in many instances the genetic or molecular defects involved remain unknown. Studies conducted in animal models have elucidated the key role played by RNA-binding proteins and by the posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression during spermatogenesis. Ablation of proteins involved in each of the steps required for the processing and the utilization of messenger RNAs impairs the production of fertile spermatozoa. Recent evidence indicates that the RNA-binding protein Sam68 is absolutely required for the correct progression of spermatogenesis and for male fertility in the mouse. Sam68 belongs to the evolutionary conserved signal transduction and activation of RNA (STAR) family of RNA-binding proteins. The members of this family have been demonstrated to play crucial roles in cell differentiation and development, including male and female gametogenesis. In this review we will summarize the observations gathered on the functions of STAR proteins in different organisms, with particular emphasis on the role of Sam68 in male fertility.
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Int J Biochem Cell Biol,
2013]
Dicarbonyl/L-xylulose reductase (DCXR) is a highly conserved and phylogenetically widespread enzyme converting L-xylulose into xylitol. It also reduces highly reactive -dicarbonyl compounds, thus performing a dual role in carbohydrate metabolism and detoxification. Enzymatic properties of DCXR from yeast, fungi and mammalian tissue extracts are extensively studied. Deficiency of the DCXR gene causes a human clinical condition called pentosuria and low DCXR activity is implicated in age-related diseases including cancers, diabetes, and human male infertility. While mice provide a model to study clinical condition of these diseases, it is necessary to adopt a physiologically tractable model in which genetic manipulations can be readily achieved to allow the fast genetic analysis of an enzyme with multiple biological roles. Caenorhabditis elegans has been successfully utilized as a model to study DCXR. Here, we discuss the biochemical properties and significance of DCXR activity in various human diseases, and the utility of C. elegans as a research platform to investigate the molecular and cellular mechanism of the DCXR biology.
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Parasitol Res,
2015]
Parasites including helminthes, protozoa, and medical arthropod vectors are a major cause of global infectious diseases, affecting one-sixth of the world's population, which are responsible for enormous levels of morbidity and mortality important and remain impediments to economic development especially in tropical countries. Prevalent drug resistance, lack of highly effective and practical vaccines, as well as specific and sensitive diagnostic markers are proving to be challenging problems in parasitic disease control in most parts of the world. The impressive progress recently made in genome-wide analysis of parasites of medical importance, including trematodes of Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis viverrini, Schistosoma haematobium, S. japonicum, and S. mansoni; nematodes of Brugia malayi, Loa loa, Necator americanus, Trichinella spiralis, and Trichuris suis; cestodes of Echinococcus granulosus, E. multilocularis, and Taenia solium; protozoa of Babesia bovis, B. microti, Cryptosporidium hominis, Eimeria falciformis, E. histolytica, Giardia intestinalis, Leishmania braziliensis, L. donovani, L. major, Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax, Trichomonas vaginalis, Trypanosoma brucei and T. cruzi; and medical arthropod vectors of Aedes aegypti, Anopheles darlingi, A. sinensis, and Culex quinquefasciatus, have been systematically covered in this review for a comprehensive understanding of the genetic information contained in nuclear, mitochondrial, kinetoplast, plastid, or endosymbiotic bacterial genomes of parasites, further valuable insight into parasite-host interactions and development of promising novel drug and vaccine candidates and preferable diagnostic tools, thereby underpinning the prevention and control of parasitic diseases.
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PLoS Negl Trop Dis,
2018]
We briefly review cysteine proteases (orthologs of mammalian cathepsins B, L, F, and C) that are expressed in flatworm and nematode parasites. Emphasis is placed on enzyme activities that have been functionally characterized, are associated with the parasite gut, and putatively contribute to degrading host proteins to absorbable nutrients [1-4]. Often, gut proteases are expressed as multigene families, as is the case with Fasciola [5] and Haemonchus [6], presumably expanding the range of substrates that can be degraded, not least during parasite migration through host tissues [5]. The application of the free-living planarian and Caenorhabditis elegans as investigative models for parasite cysteine proteases is discussed. Finally, because of their central nutritive contribution, targeting the component gut proteases with small-molecule chemical inhibitors and understanding their utility as vaccine candidates are active areas of research [7].
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Wiad Parazytol,
2007]
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are amongst the most highly conserved in the evolution of receptor family, being found in both immune and other cells. TLRs were observed in vascular endothelial cells, epithelial cells, microglia cells, adipocytes, and intestinal and renal cells. TLRs plays a key role in the innate immune response to a variety of pathogens. At present, very little is known about the role of TLRs in host defense against parasitic pathogen infections. The first study shows that TLRs contribute to both innate and adaptive immune responses following infection with protozoan parasite Leishmania major. The TLRs recognizing PAMPs associated with the parasite L. major are essential for the activation of the innate and adaptive immune responses to infection. A study concerning recognition of the role of TLRs in the host-parasite relationship would be an interesting challenge for future study.