Monthly Archives: June 2013

Capturing Molecular Movies of DNA Replication and Repair

Posted: June 11, 2013 at 3:50 pm

THUWAL, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, June 11, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Biology and Principal Investigator of the Laboratory of DNA Replication and Recombination, Dr. Samir M. Hamdan, and his team, have published a groundbreaking paper on the mechanism of flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1), in Cell Reports journal. The other authors of the paper, entitled "Sequential and Multistep Substrate Interrogation Provides the Scaffold for Specificity in Human Flap Endonuclease 1," are: Mohamed A. Sobhy, Luay I. Joudeh, Xiaojuan Huang, and Masateru Takahashi.

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5' nucleases, the superfamily to which FEN1 belongs,represent structure-specific nucleases essential for DNA replication, repair, and recombination. Deficiencies in their genes have been linked to several types of cellular stress and genomic instability.Their outstanding puzzle is that they are highly conserved proteins, yet they recognize a diverse range of RNA and DNA structures and cleave them primarily at the same position relative to a 5' end of a junction.

Structural studies propose a solution for this geometrical puzzle by capturing a DNA bending intermediary step that position the 5' end in the enzyme active pocket and unify the 5' nucleases cleavage site. However, these structures remain a static image of the DNA bending intermediary step based on which speculation was made to address the most important questions regarding how this intermediary step is induced and how 5' nucleases utilize the same intermediary step to recognize diverse range of substrates.

The team from KAUST's Division of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering employed a sophisticated single molecule imaging technique, Frster resonance energy transfer (smFRET), to capture "molecular movies" detailing the structure, dynamics, and reaction mechanisms occurring during this process. The KAUST scientists were able to build a timeline of up to seven intermediary steps before FEN1 commits to catalysis. Such information cannot be accessed through conventional approaches.

These findings will influence how researchers think about the mechanism of other members of 5' nucleases and provide a new concept as to how biological macromolecules can diversify their substrate specificity while maintaining a high degree of structural similarities.

Dr. Hamdan explained that the surprising finding is that FEN1 utilizes a highly complex mechanism that sequentially verifies all substrate features before inducing the superfamily unifying DNA bending intermediary. This sequential and multistep substrate recognition process provides a scaffold that allows different 5' nucleases to recognize different substrates and restrict the induction of DNA bending to the last common step. "We hope that our findings will serve as a base to design inhibitors against FEN1, whose expression is highly correlated with tumor aggressiveness," said Prof. Hamdan.

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Capturing Molecular Movies of DNA Replication and Repair

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Bacterial Genome COG – Video

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Bacterial Genome COG
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Bio305 Bacterial Genome Dynamics and Evolution – Video

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Bio305 Bacterial Genome Dynamics and Evolution
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Dynamic Genome Outreach Group at UCR does a strawberry DNA extraction en español! – Video

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Dynamic Genome Outreach Group at UCR does a strawberry DNA extraction en espaol!
DGOG got together on Sunday June 9th at the Neil A. Campbell Science Learning Laboratory at UCR to record a how-to video on strawberry DNA extraction en espaol! Enjoy and share with your...

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Methotrexate/Azathioprine for Eczema – Video

Posted: at 3:49 pm


Methotrexate/Azathioprine for Eczema
This video was taken on 8th June 2013 Azathioprine dose 25mg increased up to 100mg over the course of approx. 2 years. Result: some relief however eczema still quite prominent.

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Scalp Eczema 3 – Video

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Scalp Eczema 3
Scalp Eczema 3 If you have scalp eczema, then you know just how horribly irritating and potentially embarrassing it can be. However, you are not alone. Many people worldwide also suffer daily...

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Full body eczema – Video

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Full body eczema
Genuine hobo Shea butter beats full body eczema.

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Big Country boy with severe food allergies, eczema gets surprise of lifetime

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ABILENE, Texas -

About 5 percent of children in the United States have food allergies.

Kids with food allergies are likely to have asthma and suffer from eczema, a skin condition that can be serious.

One child in the Big Country has all three asthma, food allergies and eczema.

Kason McDowell has been in and out of the hospital since he was three months old.

Food or anything in the air could trigger an allergic reaction.

He's like any other 3-year-old boy, except he has a nebulizer machine and his mother has to carry epinephrine (epi) pens wherever they go.

When Kason was an infant, his eczema was so bad he would scratch his face until it bled. The open wounds caused many infections, some so bad he was even quarantined.

His mother, Mary, said the diagnosis was hard to bear, especially since there is no cure.

"How do I deal with it?" McDowell said. "It was kind of almost like anyone would grieve a situation. It was anger, then hostility, then depression. You realize once you get the diagnosis, it's like okay ... they tell you how to deal with it, but when what they tell you doesn't work, you're like, 'What now?'"

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Big Country boy with severe food allergies, eczema gets surprise of lifetime

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New Hope For Psoriasis Sufferers – Video

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New Hope For Psoriasis Sufferers
Warm weather normally means a return to shorts and T-shirts and relaxing trips to the beach, but for the millions of Americans with psoriasis, it can be a mo...

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Baidu censorship lawsuit gets new life in US

Posted: at 3:48 pm

A US judge has given a lawsuit by pro-democracy activists against Baidu and the People's Republic of China new life, even after the country invoked its authority as a sovereign nation to block the censorship case.

US District Judge Jesse Furman in Manhattan said the activists were entitled to serve their lawsuit on Baidu's lawyer in New York, without infringing China's sovereign protections.

Saying the issue had never been analyzed in detail, Furman on Friday night rejected Baidu's contention that allowing service would turn the part of the Hague Convention that China invoked into a "dead letter" by letting a court circumvent it.

The convention is a multilateral treaty that makes it easier to serve court papers internationally.

In their May 2011 lawsuit, eight New York writers and video producers had accused Baidu and China of conspiring to suppress their political speech from Baidu's search engine, the country's most widely used.

The plaintiffs said the content could be found via search engines such as Google, Yahoo and Microsoft's Bing, and Google's YouTube. They sought millions of dollars in damages for alleged violations of their First Amendment rights and human rights law.

Furman had dismissed the lawsuit on March 25 but put the dismissal on hold to let the plaintiffs propose another means to serve Baidu.

In giving the plaintiffs another chance to pursue their case, Furman said the Hague Convention was designed to ensure "sufficient" notice to recipients abroad of court documents.

Allowing service in the United States "in a manner that does not call upon China to effect service (in that country) does not override its invocation of its own sovereignty and security; to the contrary, it honors that invocation," the judge wrote.

Carey Ramos, a partner at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan representing Baidu, declined to comment.

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