modular domains
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2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremiah P. C. Stinson ◽  
Cooper A. Brett ◽  
Julianne B. Carroll ◽  
Mark L. Gabriele

Guidance errors and unrefined neural map configurations appear linked to certain neurodevelopmental conditions, including autism spectrum disorders. Deficits in specific multisensory tasks that require midbrain processing are highly predictive of cognitive and behavioral phenotypes associated with such syndromes. The lateral cortex of the inferior colliculus (LCIC) is a shell region of the mesencephalon that integrates converging information from multiple levels and modalities. Mature LCIC sensory maps are discretely-organized, mimicking its compartmental micro-organization. Intermittent modular domains receive patchy somatosensory connections, while inputs of auditory origin terminate in the encompassing extramodular matrix.Eph-ephrin signaling mechanisms instruct comparable topographic arrangements in a variety of other systems. Whether Eph-ephrin interactions also govern the assembly of LCIC multimodal maps remains unaddressed. Previously, we identified EphA4 and ephrin-B2 as key mediators, with overlapping expression patterns that align with emerging LCIC modules. Here, we implicate another member of this guidance family, ephrin-B3, and quantify its transient expression with respect to neurochemically-defined LCIC compartments. Multiple-labeling studies in GAD67-GFP knock-in mice reveal extramodular ephrin-B3 expression, complementary to that of EphA4 and ephrin-B2. This distinctive pattern sharpens over the early postnatal period (birth to P8), prior to ephrin-B3 downregulation once multimodal LCIC inputs are largely segregated (P12). Channel-specific sampling of LCIC ROIs show ephrin-B3 signal periodicities that are out-of-phase with glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD;modular marker) signal fluctuations, and match calretinin (CR) waveforms (matrix marker). Taken together, the guidance mosaic registry with emerging LCIC compartments and its interfacing afferent streams suggest a prominent role for Eph-ephrins in ordering behaviorally significant multisensory midbrain networks.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lian He ◽  
Peng Tan ◽  
Yun Huang ◽  
Yubin Zhou

ABSTRACTAs two prominent examples of intracellular single-domain antibodies or antibody mimetics derived from synthetic protein scaffolds, monobodies and nanobodies are gaining wide applications in cell biology, structural biology, synthetic immunology, and theranostics. We introduce herein a generally-applicable method to engineer light-controllable monobodies and nanobodies, designated as moonbody and sunbody, respectively. These engineered antibody-like modular domains enable rapid and reversible antibody-antigen recognition by utilizing light. By paralleled insertion of two LOV2 modules into a single sunbody and the use of bivalent sunbodies, we substantially enhance the range of dynamic changes of photo-switchable sunbodies. Furthermore, we demonstrate the use of moonbodies or sunbodies to precisely control protein degradation, gene transcription, and base editing by harnessing the power of light.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingting Li ◽  
Jiaqing Xing ◽  
Tao Li ◽  
Teng Li ◽  
Weihua Li

Abstract Many proteins have been demonstrated to participate in 3D genome organization through liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) such as RNPII, HP1a. However, systematic investigation of relationships between LLPS and 3D genome organization remains lacking. Here, we predicted the intrinsic disordered regions (IDRs) and modular domains of all human proteins and performed GSEA analysis according to their proportions of IDRs. Our results showed that main biological processes involved in 3D genome organization are highly enriched with IDRs, including chromatin organization, RNA splicing and histone modification, demonstrating the key role of LLPS in regulating nuclear structure. Of the 3885 IDR-rich proteins, 1427 proteins are involved in 3D genome organization. IDR regions of these proteins have strong preference of Ser, Leu, Pro, Ala, Gly, Glu and Lys, and lack of hydrophobic amino acids such as Trp, Tyr, Phe and Met, suggesting dipolar interactions rather than aromatic-involved interactions involved. Further motif enrichment analysis suggests that RNA recognition motif and zinc finger motif are the two most abundant repeatedly-occurred modular domains within IDR-containing proteins. Finally, we developed a Shiny APP named phasepro that interactively analyze and visualize a protein’s potential of LLPS, including IDRs, motifs, amino acid preferences and electric charges.


2020 ◽  
Vol 133 (10) ◽  
pp. jcs240416
Author(s):  
Kelly L. Dunlevy ◽  
Valentina Medvedeva ◽  
Jade E. Wilson ◽  
Mohammed Hoque ◽  
Trinity Pellegrin ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly L. Dunlevy ◽  
Valentina Medvedeva ◽  
Jade E. Wilson ◽  
Mohammed Hoque ◽  
Trinity Pellegrin ◽  
...  

AbstractA large fraction of epigenetically silent heterochromatin is anchored to the nuclear periphery via “tethering proteins” that function to bridge heterochromatin and the nuclear membrane or nuclear lamina. We identified previously a human tethering protein, PRR14, that binds heterochromatin through an N-terminal domain, but the mechanism and regulation of nuclear lamina association remained to be investigated. Here we identify a centrally located, evolutionarily conserved PRR14 nuclear lamina binding domain (LBD) that is both necessary and sufficient for positioning of PRR14 at the nuclear lamina. We also show that PRR14 associates dynamically with the nuclear lamina, and provide evidence that such dynamics are regulated through phosphorylation of the LBD. We also show that the evolutionary conserved PRR14 C-terminal Tantalus domain encodes a PP2A phosphatase recognition site that regulates PRR14 nuclear lamina association. The overall findings demonstrate a heterochromatin anchoring mechanism whereby the PRR14 tether simultaneously binds heterochromatin and the nuclear lamina through two modular domains. Furthermore, the identification of a modular LBD may provide an engineering strategy for delivery of cargo to the nuclear lamina.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (19) ◽  
pp. 4770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael C. Owens ◽  
Sean C. Clark ◽  
Allison Yankey ◽  
Srinivas Somarowthu

Long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) biology is a rapidly growing area of study. Thousands of lncRNAs are implicated as key players in cellular pathways and cancer biology. However, the structure–function relationships of these novel biomolecules are not well understood. Recent structural studies suggest that lncRNAs contain modular structural domains, which play a crucial role in their function. Here, we hypothesized that such structural domains exist in lncTCF7, a conserved lncRNA implicated in the development and progression of several cancers. To understand the structure–function relationship of lncTCF7, we characterized its secondary structure using chemical probing methods. Our model revealed structural domains and conserved regions in lncTCF7. One of the modular domains identified here coincides with a known protein-interacting domain. The model reported herein is, to our knowledge, the first structural model of lncTCF7 and thus will serve to direct future studies that will provide fundamental insights into the function of this lncRNA.


Biology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuri Nozawa ◽  
Megumi Hagihara ◽  
Md Sohanur Rahman ◽  
Shigeyoshi Matsumura ◽  
Yoshiya Ikawa

The modular structural domains of multidomain RNA enzymes can often be dissected into separate domain RNAs and their noncovalent assembly can often reconstitute active enzymes. These properties are important to understand their basic characteristics and are useful for their application to RNA-based nanostructures. Bimolecular forms of bacterial RNase P ribozymes consisting of S-domain and C-domain RNAs are attractive as platforms for catalytic RNA nanostructures, but their S-domain/C-domain assembly was not optimized for this purpose. Through analysis and engineering of bimolecular forms of the two bacterial RNase P ribozymes, we constructed a chimeric ribozyme with improved catalytic ability and S-domain/C-domain assembly and developed a pair of bimolecular RNase P ribozymes the assembly of which was considerably orthogonal to each other.


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (9) ◽  
pp. S25
Author(s):  
Warren Pear ◽  
Yumi Yashiro-Ohtani ◽  
Jelena Petrovic ◽  
Shuqian Yu ◽  
Vicki Mercado ◽  
...  

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