Showing 1271 - 1280 of 2040 Items

Functions of the ectodomain and cytoplasmic tyrosine phosphatase domains of receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase Dlar in vivo

Date: 2003-10-01

Creator: Neil X. Krueger

R. Sreekantha Reddy

Karl Johnson

Jack Bateman

Nancy, Kaufmann

Daniella Scalice

David Van Vactor

Haruo Saito

Access: Open access

The receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) Dlar has an ectodomain consisting of three immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domains and nine fibronectin type III (FnIII) repeats and a cytoplasmic domain consisting of two PTPase domains, membrane-proximal PTP-D1 and C-terminal PTP-D2. A series of mutant Dlar transgenes were introduced into the Drosophila genome via P-element transformation and were then assayed for their capacity to rescue phenotypes caused by homozygous loss-of-function genotypes. The Ig-like domains, but not the FnIII domains, are essential for survival. Conversely, the FnIII domains, but not the Ig-like domains, are required during oogenesis, suggesting that different domains of the Dlar ectodomain are involved in distinct functions during Drosophila development. All detectable PTPase activity maps to PTP-D1 in vitro. The catalytically inactive mutants of Dlar were able to rescue Dlar -/- lethality nearly as efficiently as wild-type Dlar transgenes, while this ability was impaired in the PTP-D2 deletion mutants DlarΔPTP-D2 and Dlarbypass. Dlar-C1929S, in which PTP-D2 has been inactivated, increases the frequency of bypass phenotype observed in Dlar-/- genotypes, but only if PTP-D1 is catalytically active in the transgene. These results indicate multiple roles for PTP-D2, perhaps by acting as a docking domain for downstream elements and as a regulator of PTP-D1.


The receptor tyrosine phosphatase Dlar and integrins organize actin filaments in the Drosophila follicular epithelium

Date: 2001-09-04

Creator: Jack Bateman

R. Srekantha Reddy

Haruo Saito

David Van Vactor

Access: Open access

Background: Regulation of actin structures is instrumental in maintaining proper cytoarchitecture in many tissues. In the follicular epithelium of Drosophila ovaries, a system of actin filaments is coordinated across the basal surface of cells encircling the oocyte. These filaments have been postulated to regulate oocyte elongation; however, the molecular components that control this cytoskeletal array are not yet understood. Results: We find that the receptor tyrosine phosphatase (RPTP) Dlar and integrins are involved in organizing basal actin filaments in follicle cells. Mutations in Dlar and the common β-integrin subunit mys cause a failure in oocyte elongation, which is correlated with a loss of proper actin filament organization. Immunolocalization shows that early in oogenesis Dlar is polarized to membranes where filaments terminate but becomes generally distributed late in development, at which time β-integrin and Enabled specifically associate with actin filament terminals. Rescue experiments point to the early period of polar Dlar localization as critical for its function. Furthermore, clonal analysis shows that loss of Dlar or mys influences actin filament polarity in wild-type cells that surround mutant tissues, suggesting that communication between neighboring cells regulates cytoskeletal organization. Finally, we find that two integrin α subunits encoded by mew and if are required for proper oocyte elongation, implying that multiple components of the ECM are instructive in coordinating actin fiber polarity. Conclusions: Dlar cooperates with integrins to coordinate actin filaments at the basal surface of the follicular epithelium. To our knowledge, this is the first direct demonstration of an RPTP's influence on the actin cytoskeleton.


The guanine nucleotide exchange factor trio mediates axonal development in the Drosophila embryo

Date: 2000-01-01

Creator: Jack Bateman

Huidy Shu

David Van Vactor

Access: Open access

Recent analysis of Rho subfamily GTPases in Drosophila revealed roles for Rac and Cdc42 during axonogenesis. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of the Drosophila counterpart of Trio, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) that associates with the receptor phosphatase LAR and regulates GTPase activation in vertebrate cells. Mutants deficient in trio activity display defects in both central and peripheral axon pathways reminiscent of pheno-types observed in embryos deficient in small GTPase function. Double mutant analysis shows that trio interacts with Rac in a dose-sensitive manner but not with Rho. Moreover, reduction of trio activity potentiates the phenotype of mutations in the LAR homolog Dlar, suggesting that these proteins collaborate in orchestrating the cytoskeletal events that underlie normal axonogenesis.


Inclusive decay B→ηX

Date: 1996-01-01

Creator: Y. Kubota

M. Lattery

M. Momayezi

J. K. Nelson

S., Patton

R. Poling

V. Savinov

S. Schrenk

R. Wang

M. S. Alam

I. J. Kim

Z. Ling

A. H. Mahmood

J. J. O’Neill

H. Severini

C. R. Sun

F. Wappler

G. Crawford

C. M. Daubenmier

R. Fulton

D. Fujino

K. K. Gan

K. Honscheid

H. Kagan

R. Kass

J. Lee

M. Sung

C. White

A. Wolf

M. M. Zoeller

F. Butler

Access: Open access

Using data samples taken at the Υ(4S) resonance and nearby continuum e+e- annihilation with the CLEO-II detector at CESR, we have measured the inclusive branching fraction B(B→ηX)=(17.6±1.1±1.2)%, and the momentum distribution of the η mesons from B meson decay. The η yield cannot be explained as arising solely from the decay of intermediate charmed mesons. © 1996 The American Physical Society.


Measurement of the decay asymmetry parameters in Λc+ → Λπ+ and Λc+ → Σ+π0

Date: 1995-05-11

Creator: M. Bishai

J. Fast

E. Gerndt

J. W. Hinson

R. L., McIlwain

T. Miao

D. H. Miller

M. Modesitt

D. Payne

E. I. Shibata

I. P.J. Shipsey

P. N. Wang

M. Battle

J. Ernst

L. Gibbons

Y. Kwon

S. Roberts

E. H. Thorndike

C. H. Wang

J. Dominick

M. Lambrecht

S. Sanghera

V. Shelkov

T. Skwarnicki

R. Stroynowski

I. Volobouev

G. Wei

M. Artuso

M. Gao

M. Goldberg

D. He

Access: Open access

We have measured the weak decay asymmetry parameters (αΛc) for two Λc+ decay modes. Our measurements are αΛc = -0.94-0.06-0.06+0.21+0.12 for the decay mode Λc+ → Λπ+ and αΛc = -0.45 ±0.31 ±0.06 for the decay mode Λc → Σ+ π0. By combining these measurements with the previously measured decay rates, we have extracted the parity-violating and parity-conserving amplitudes. These amplitudes are used to test models of nonleptonic charmed baryon decay. © 1995.


Targeted identification of glycosylated proteins in the gastric pathogen helicobacter pylori (Hp)

Date: 2013-09-01

Creator: Kanokwan Champasa

Scott A. Longwell

Aimee M. Eldridge

Elizabeth A. Stemmler

Danielle H., Dube

Access: Open access

Virulence of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is directly linked to the pathogen's ability to glycosylate proteins; for example, Hp flagellin proteins are heavily glycosylated with the unusual nine-carbon sugar pseudaminic acid, and this modification is absolutely essential for Hp to synthesize functional flagella and colonize the host's stomach. Although Hp's glycans are linked to pathogenesis, Hp's glycome remains poorly understood; only the two flagellin glycoproteins have been firmly characterized in Hp. Evidence from our laboratory suggests that Hp synthesizes a large number of as-yet unidentified glycoproteins. Here we set out to discover Hp's glycoproteins by coupling glycan metabolic labeling with mass spectrometry analysis. An assessment of the subcellular distribution of azide-labeled proteins by Western blot analysis indicated that glycoproteins are present throughout Hp and may therefore serve diverse functions. To identify these species, Hp's azide-labeled glycoproteins were tagged via Staudinger ligation, enriched by tandem affinity chromatography, and analyzed by multidimensional protein identification technology. Direct comparison of enriched azide-labeled glycoproteins with a mock-enriched control by both SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry-based analyses confirmed the selective enrichment of azide-labeled glycoproteins. We identified 125 candidate glycoproteins with diverse biological functions, including those linked with pathogenesis. Mass spectrometry analyses of enriched azide-labeled glycoproteins before and after cleavage of O-linked glycans revealed the presence of Staudinger ligation-glycan adducts in samples only after beta-elimination, confirming the synthesis of O-linked glycoproteins in Hp. Finally, the secreted colonization factors urease alpha and urease beta were biochemically validated as glycosylated proteins via Western blot analysis as well as by mass spectrometry analysis of cleaved glycan products. These data set the stage for the development of glycosylation-based therapeutic strategies, such as new vaccines based on natively glycosylated Hp proteins, to eradicate Hp infection. Broadly, this report validates metabolic labeling as an effective and efficient approach for the identification of bacterial glycoproteins. © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.


Luminosity measurement with the CLEO II detector

Date: 1994-07-01

Creator: G. Crawford

C. M. Daubenmier

R. Fulton

D. Fujino

K. K., Gan

K. Honscheid

H. Kagan

R. Kass

J. Lee

R. Malchow

Y. Skovpen

M. Sung

C. White

F. Butler

X. Fu

G. Kalbfleisch

W. R. Ross

P. Skubic

M. Wood

J. Fast

R. L. McIlwain

T. Miao

D. H. Miller

M. Modesitt

D. Payne

E. I. Shibata

I. P.J. Shipsey

P. N. Wang

M. Battle

J. Ernst

L. Gibbons

Access: Open access

A measurement of absolute integrated luminosity is presented using the CLEO II detector operating at the CESR e+e- storage ring. Independent analyses of three different final states (e+e-, γγ, and μ+μ-) at √s {reversed tilde equals} 10 GeV normalize to the expected theoretical cross sections and correct for detection efficiencies. The resulting luminosities are measured with systematic errors of ±1.8%, ±1.6%, and ±2.2%, respectively, and are consistent with one another. The combined luminosity has a systematic error of ±1.0%. © 1994.


Study of the decay Λc+→λl+νl

Date: 1994-03-10

Creator: T. Bergfeld

B. I. Eisenstein

G. Gollin

B. Ong

M., Palmer

M. Selen

J. J. Thaler

A. J. Sadoff

R. Ammar

S. Ball

P. Baringer

A. Bean

D. Besson

D. Coppage

N. Copty

R. Davis

N. Hancock

M. Kelly

N. Kwak

H. Lam

Y. Kubota

M. Lattery

J. K. Nelson

D. Patton

D. Perticone

R. Poling

V. Savinov

S. Schrenk

R. Wang

M. S. Alam

I. J. Kim

Access: Open access

Using the CLEO II detector at CESR we observe 500 Λl+ pairs consistent with the semileptonic decay Λc+ → λ+ν We measure σ(e+e- → Λ+cX) · B(Λ+c → Λl+νl) = 4.77±0.25±0.66 pb. Combining with the charm semileptonic width and the lifetime of the Λc we also obtain B(Λ+c → pK-π+). We find no evidence for Λl+νl final states in which there are additional Λ+c decay products. We measure the decay asymmetry parameter of Λ+c → Λe+νe to be αΛc = -0.89+0.17+0.09-0.11-0.05. © 1994.


Matrix-model description of N = 2 gauge theories with non-hyperelliptic Seiberg-Witten curves

Date: 2003-12-08

Creator: Stephen G. Naculich

Howard J. Schnitzer

Niclas Wyllard

Access: Open access

Using matrix-model methods we study three different N=2 models: U(N)×U(N) with matter in the bifundamental representation, U(N) with matter in the symmetric representation, and U(N) with matter in the antisymmetric representation. We find that the (singular) cubic Seiberg-Witten curves (and associated Seiberg-Witten differentials) implied by the matrix models, although of a different form from the ones previously proposed using M-theory, can be transformed into the latter and are thus physically equivalent. We also calculate the one-instanton corrections to the gauge-coupling matrix using the perturbative expansion of the matrix model. For the U(N) theories with symmetric or antisymmetric matter we use the modified matrix-model prescription for the gauge-coupling matrix discussed in our paper: Cubic curves from matrix models and generalized Konishi anomalies (hep-th/0303268). Moreover, in the matrix model for the U(N) theory with antisymmetric matter, one is required to expand around a different vacuum than one would naively have anticipated. With these modifications of the matrix-model prescription, the results of this paper are in complete agreement with those of Seiberg-Witten theory obtained using M-theory methods. © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Tame combing and almost convexity conditions

Date: 2011-12-01

Creator: Sean Cleary

Susan Hermiller

Melanie Stein

Jennifer Taback

Access: Open access

We give the first examples of groups which admit a tame combing with linear radial tameness function with respect to any choice of finite presentation, but which are not minimally almost convex on a standard generating set. Namely, we explicitly construct such combings for Thompson's group F and the Baumslag-Solitar groups BS(1, p) with p ≥ 3. In order to make this construction for Thompson's group F, we significantly expand the understanding of the Cayley complex of this group with respect to the standard finite presentation. In particular we describe a quasigeodesic set of normal forms and combinatorially classify the arrangements of 2-cells adjacent to edges that do not lie on normal form paths. © 2010 Springer-Verlag.