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| Open AccessAntigen-specific Fab profiling achieves molecular-resolution analysis of human autoantibody repertoires in rheumatoid arthritis
Although many autoimmune diseases are characterized by the presence of autoantibodies, complete characterisation of autoantibody repertoires is lacking. Here, the authors introduce an autoantigen-specific Fab profiling method to show that the autoantibody repertoire in rheumatoid arthritis is diverse yet dominated only by a few clones.
- Eva Maria Stork
- , Danique M. H. van Rijswijck
- & Albert Bondt
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Article
| Open AccessA chemical proteomics approach for global mapping of functional lysines on cell surface of living cell
Ligand discovery against membrane proteins has been a major challenge, mainly due to the peculiar nature of their natural habitat. Here, the authors designed a new chemical proteomic probe that targets the lysines exposed on the cell surface and developed a chemical proteomic strategy for global analysis of surface functionality in living cells.
- Ting Wang
- , Shiyun Ma
- & Haojie Lu
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Article
| Open AccessThe assembly platform FimD is required to obtain the most stable quaternary structure of type 1 pili
Type 1 pili are crucial cell surface bacterial virulence factors. Here, the authors show that FimD is required to assemble the most stable quaternary pilus structure by ensuring that the resulting protein polymer is free of structural defects.
- Dawid S. Zyla
- , Thomas Wiegand
- & Rudi Glockshuber
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Article
| Open AccessCryo-EM structure of the human Asc-1 transporter complex
The human Asc-1-4F2hc complex plays an important role in the neural development and stability. Here, authors determine the cryo-EM structures of Asc-1-4F2hc complex in three states, revealing its substrate recognition and transport mechanism.
- Yaning Li
- , Yingying Guo
- & Renhong Yan
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Article
| Open AccessEngineering an artificial catch bond using mechanical anisotropy
Catch bonds are unique protein-protein interactions where the bond lifetime increases under external pulling forces. Here, the authors engineer an artificial catch bond based on a non-catch bonding human gut bacterial adhesion protein complex.
- Zhaowei Liu
- , Haipei Liu
- & Michael A. Nash
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Article
| Open AccessStructure and mechanisms of transport of human Asc1/CD98hc amino acid transporter
Asc1/CD98hc is a key regulator of small neutral amino acid transport in the brain and adipose tissue. Here, authors report the structure of semi-occluded hAsc1/CD98hc and provide a model for Asc1 exchange and facilitated diffusion modes of transport.
- Josep Rullo-Tubau
- , Maria Martinez-Molledo
- & Oscar Llorca
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Article
| Open AccessProbing altered receptor specificities of antigenically drifting human H3N2 viruses by chemoenzymatic synthesis, NMR, and modeling
Binding modes of antigenically drifted hemagglutinins of human influenza A viruses have been determined by NMR using synthetic N-glycans having 13C-labeled monosaccharides to pinpoint which monosaccharides of extended LacNAc chains engage with the HAs.
- Luca Unione
- , Augustinus N. A. Ammerlaan
- & Geert-Jan Boons
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Article
| Open AccessChemical unclonable functions based on operable random DNA pools
Physical unclonable functions provide algorithm-independent cryptography based on non-distributable unique tokens. Here, the authors introduce unclonable functions based on random DNA pools, enabling secure decentralized authentication.
- Anne M. Luescher
- , Andreas L. Gimpel
- & Robert N. Grass
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Article
| Open AccessCryo-EM structures of prokaryotic ligand-gated ion channel GLIC provide insights into gating in a lipid environment
Gloeobacter proton-gated ion channel (GLIC) is a convenient model of pentameric ligand-gated ion channels. Here, Bharambe & Li et al. report structures and simulations of GLIC with insights into the role of lipids in GLIC gating mechanism.
- Nikhil Bharambe
- , Zhuowen Li
- & Sandip Basak
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Article
| Open AccessCryo-EM structures of pannexin 1 and 3 reveal differences among pannexin isoforms
Pannexins are large pore channels involved in ion and ATP release. Here the authors use cryo-EM structures of Pannexins 1 and 3 to demonstrate the effects of distinct residue substitutions on channel structure and function.
- Nazia Hussain
- , Ashish Apotikar
- & Aravind Penmatsa
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Article
| Open AccessDiscovery of a small-molecule inhibitor that traps Polθ on DNA and synergizes with PARP inhibitors
Here the authors discover a small-molecule that inhibits DNA polymerase theta by trapping the enzyme on DNA in the closed conformation. The inhibitor selectively kills BRCA-mutant cells and exhibits strong synergistic activity with PARP inhibitors.
- William Fried
- , Mrityunjay Tyagi
- & Richard T. Pomerantz
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Article
| Open AccessArchitecture and regulation of filamentous human cystathionine beta-synthase
Cystathionine beta-synthase is a conserved essential enzyme of one-carbon metabolism. Here, the authors show that the enzyme oligomerises to form filaments that undergo conformational and morphological changes in response to its activator S-adenosyl-L-methionine, the global methyl donor.
- Thomas J. McCorvie
- , Douglas Adamoski
- & Wyatt W. Yue
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Article
| Open AccessLegume rhizodeposition promotes nitrogen fixation by soil microbiota under crop diversification
Sustainability in agriculture can be improved harnessing biological N2 fixation in legumes. Here, the authors combine different crops with peanut plants finding that maize and oilseed rape are the most successful combinations which have potential to enhance rhizosphere microbiota N2 fixation.
- Mengjie Qiao
- , Ruibo Sun
- & Yan Chen
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Article
| Open AccessDbf4-dependent kinase promotes cell cycle controlled resection of DNA double-strand breaks and repair by homologous recombination
The repair of DNA double strand breaks is strictly controlled during the cell cycle by the CDK kinase. Here the authors identify the DDK kinase as a second major regulator for this cell cycle regulation and elucidate its functional targets.
- Lorenzo Galanti
- , Martina Peritore
- & Boris Pfander
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Article
| Open AccessReLo is a simple and rapid colocalization assay to identify and characterize direct protein–protein interactions
Characterising interactions between proteins that are large and poorly soluble remains challenging. Here, the authors describe ReLo, a rapid and versatile eukaryotic cell culture-based method for detecting and studying direct interactions between structurally complex proteins.
- Harpreet Kaur Salgania
- , Jutta Metz
- & Mandy Jeske
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Article
| Open AccessEndocytic vesicles act as vehicles for glucose uptake in response to growth factor stimulation
Growth factors rapidly raise cellular glycolysis. Here, authors unveil a mechanism where RTK/GLUT1-containing endocytic vesicles deliver glucose to glycolytic enzymes near mitochondria without upregulating cell surface glucose transporters.
- Ryouhei Tsutsumi
- , Beatrix Ueberheide
- & Yoshiro Saito
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Article
| Open AccessPARP2 promotes Break Induced Replication-mediated telomere fragility in response to replication stress
Here the authors show that PARP2 drives telomere fragility by orchestrating the Break-induced replication (BIR) pathway. This promotes DNA end resection and DNA synthesis via the regulation of POLD3.
- Daniela Muoio
- , Natalie Laspata
- & Elise Fouquerel
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Article
| Open AccessNative-state proteomics of Parvalbumin interneurons identifies unique molecular signatures and vulnerabilities to early Alzheimer’s pathology
Native state proteomics of PV interneurons revealed unique molecular features of high translational and metabolic activity, and enrichment of Alzheimer’s risk genes. Early amyloid pathology exerted unique effects on mitochondria, mTOR signaling and neurotransmission in PV neurons.
- Prateek Kumar
- , Annie M. Goettemoeller
- & Srikant Rangaraju
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Article
| Open AccessStructural basis for phage-mediated activation and repression of bacterial DSR2 anti-phage defense system
The bacterial DSR2 defense system counters phage invasion by depleting NAD+. Here, Zhang et al. reveal molecular mechanisms underlying phage-mediated activation and repression of DSR2, enhancing our understanding of the bacterial-phage arms race.
- Jun-Tao Zhang
- , Xiao-Yu Liu
- & Ning Jia
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Article
| Open AccessStructural bases of inhibitory mechanism of CaV1.2 channel inhibitors
CaV1.2 is crucial in cardiac, vascular and neuronal function, serving as a target for many drugs. Here, authors identify the binding site of herb-derived drug tetrandrine, and explore inhibitory mechanism of L/T-type selective DHP drug benidipine.
- Yiqing Wei
- , Zhuoya Yu
- & Yan Zhao
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Article
| Open AccessMyeloid-derived suppressor cell mitochondrial fitness governs chemotherapeutic efficacy in hematologic malignancies
Myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSC) are associated with tumourigenesis and therapy response. Here, the authors show that beta 2-adrenergic receptor activation in MDSC leads to metabolic rewiring which regulates chemotherapy response in preclinical models of blood cancer.
- Saeed Daneshmandi
- , Jee Eun Choi
- & Hemn Mohammadpour
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Article
| Open AccessMembrane fission via transmembrane contact
While fission of single-membrane systems is well understood, the mechanism helping split double membranes (as in organelle division) is unclear. Here, the authors use experiment and theory to discover double membrane fission pathways, and find that a second membrane actually enables splitting.
- Russell K. W. Spencer
- , Isaac Santos-Pérez
- & Marcus Müller
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Article
| Open AccessDevelopment and crystal structures of a potent second-generation dual degrader of BCL-2 and BCL-xL
Here, the authors have determined structures of 753b PROTAC, BCL-xL/BCL-2 and VHL E3 ligase ternary complexes which reveal the basis for the dual degrader activity of 753b. The structures and subsequent functional analyses facilitated design of WH244 PROTAC, with enhanced degrader activity in cells.
- Digant Nayak
- , Dongwen Lv
- & Shaun K. Olsen
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Article
| Open AccessCorrelating fluorescence microscopy, optical and magnetic tweezers to study single chiral biopolymers such as DNA
It is hard to correlate force, torque and localization information. The authors report Combined Optical and Magnetic BIomolecule TWEEZers, COMBI-Tweez, that integrates optical trapping, time-resolved electromagnetic tweezers, and fluorescence microscopy: they demonstrate visualisation of higher order structural motifs in DNA.
- Jack W. Shepherd
- , Sebastien Guilbaud
- & Mark C. Leake
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Article
| Open AccessIdentifying a key spot for electron mediator-interaction to tailor CO dehydrogenase’s affinity
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenases (CODH) employ artificial electron mediators like viologens for biocatalysis, but little is known about the interaction between the mediators and the enzyme. Here, the authors discover the critical site for viologen interactions at the D-cluster of Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans CODH2 via alanine mutations and crystallography, and report variants with increased ethyl viologen affinity.
- Suk Min Kim
- , Sung Heuck Kang
- & Yong Hwan Kim
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Article
| Open AccessMethyl transfer in psilocybin biosynthesis
The natural hallucinogen psilocybin — produced by so-called magic mushrooms — holds promise for the treatment of depression and other mental health conditions. Here, the authors provide a structural and biochemical analysis of the Psilocybe methyl transferase PsiM that provides mechanistic insight into the last step of psilocybin biosynthesis.
- Jesse Hudspeth
- , Kai Rogge
- & Sebastiaan Werten
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Article
| Open AccessStructure and function of Semaphorin-5A glycosaminoglycan interactions
Semaphorin 5A (Sema5A) forms complexes with heparan and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans to regulate neuronal migration. Here, the authors show that the thrombospondin-like repeat 4 (TSR4) of Sema5A enables glycosaminoglycan association, multimerization, and neural progenitor cell distribution.
- Gergely N. Nagy
- , Xiao-Feng Zhao
- & E. Yvonne Jones
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Article
| Open AccessArchitecture and activation of human muscle phosphorylase kinase
High-resolution cryo-EM study of human muscle phosphorylase kinase reveals its complex structure and how calcium ions activate it, offering insights into glycogen metabolism and kinase regulation.
- Xiaoke Yang
- , Mingqi Zhu
- & Junyu Xiao
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Article
| Open AccessRemodeling of the postsynaptic proteome in male mice and marmosets during synapse development
The proteomic changes that occur during synapse development are not fully understood. In this work, the authors characterise the postsynaptic proteome changes that occur during development in male mice and marmosets.
- Takeshi Kaizuka
- , Takehiro Suzuki
- & Toru Takumi
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Article
| Open AccessBioorthogonal photocatalytic proximity labeling in primary living samples
Studying subcellular proteomes in primary living cells is crucial for understanding health and disease. Here, the authors introduce CAT-S, a non-genetic method based on photocatalysis, enabling in situ deciphering of mitochondrial proteomes in primary cells from mouse tissues and human blood.
- Ziqi Liu
- , Fuhu Guo
- & Xinyuan Fan
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Article
| Open AccessNaked mole-rats have distinctive cardiometabolic and genetic adaptations to their underground low-oxygen lifestyles
The naked mole-rat exhibits extreme longevity, resistance to hypoxia and absence of cardiovascular disease. Here, Faulkes et al. identify mechanisms behind these traits by comparing cardiac metabolomes and transcriptomes of naked more-rats to other African mole-rat genera and evolutionary divergent mammals.
- Chris G. Faulkes
- , Thomas R. Eykyn
- & Dunja Aksentijevic
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Article
| Open AccessDiverse roles of the metal binding domains and transport mechanism of copper transporting P-type ATPases
Controlling copper levels is essential for life, causing disease when impaired. Here, structures of a copper transporter sheds light on the function of its metal binding domains and unifies previous theories on the details of copper transport.
- Zongxin Guo
- , Fredrik Orädd
- & Pontus Gourdon
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Article
| Open AccessPhosphorylation and O-GlcNAcylation at the same α-synuclein site generate distinct fibril structures
Here, the authors use cryo-EM to show that phosphorylating or O-GlcNAcylating α-synuclein on serine 87 leads to the formation of two distinct fibril structures. Both structures display reduced neurotoxicity and propagation activity.
- Jinjian Hu
- , Wencheng Xia
- & Yan-Mei Li
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Article
| Open AccessInsights into the modulation of bacterial NADase activity by phage proteins
The defense-associated sirtuin 2 (DSR2) effector protects bacteria from phage infection by depleting NAD+. Here, the authors employ biochemical and structural approaches to reveal the inhibition and activation mechanisms of DSR2 by the phage anti-DSR2 protein (DSAD1) and tail tube protein (TTP).
- Hang Yin
- , Xuzichao Li
- & Heng Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessStructure of the intact tail machine of Anabaena myophage A-1(L)
The Myoviridae cyanophage A-1(L) specifically infects the model cyanobacteria Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. Here, authors present the high-resolution cryo-EM structure of its intact tail machine, and identify multiple hydrolytic and binding modules.
- Rong-Cheng Yu
- , Feng Yang
- & Cong-Zhao Zhou
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Article
| Open AccessDiverging co-translational protein complex assembly pathways are governed by interface energy distribution
Protein complex assembly can occur co-translationally. Here, the authors uncover diverging assembly pathways and hotspot disruptions in N-terminal acetyltransferases, enzymes implicated in neurodegenerative diseases. Their model predicts co-translational assembly based on interface energy distribution.
- Johannes Venezian
- , Hagit Bar-Yosef
- & Ayala Shiber
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Article
| Open AccessSolar-driven sugar production directly from CO2 via a customizable electrocatalytic–biocatalytic flow system
Solar-driven artificial food synthesis from CO2 provides an approach to overcome the limitations of natural photosynthesis, but it is very challenging. Here, the authors report a hybrid electrocatalytic-biocatalytic flow system, coupling photovoltaics-powered electrocatalysis (CO2 to formate) with a five enzyme cascade platform (formate to sugar), which achieves conversion of CO2 to C6 sugar (L-sorbose) with a solar-to-food energy conversion efficiency of 3.5%.
- Guangyu Liu
- , Yuan Zhong
- & Yujie Xiong
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Article
| Open AccessActivation of the insulin receptor by insulin-like growth factor 2
IGF2 has a distinct binding affinity for two insulin receptor (IR) isoforms and mimics insulin’s function. Here, the authors present the activation mechanism of IR by IGF2 and reveal the molecular basis for IGF2’s different affinity for two IR isoforms.
- Weidong An
- , Catherine Hall
- & Eunhee Choi
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Article
| Open AccessBidirectional ATP-driven transport of cobalamin by the mycobacterial ABC transporter BacA
ABC transporters are generally considered to be unidirectional. Here, the authors develop a fluorescence-based transport assay and show that the mycobacterial ABC transporter BacA instead acts as a bidirectional transporter for cobalamin.
- Mark Nijland
- , Solène N. Lefebvre
- & Dirk J. Slotboom
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Article
| Open AccessPredicting nuclear G-quadruplex RNA-binding proteins with roles in transcription and phase separation
RNA G-quadruplexes are important regulatory elements, yet our knowledge of their structure-based interactions is at present limited. Here the authors combine experimental and computational methods to develop a predictive tool, G4-FUNNIES, to estimate proteins’ RNA G4-binding propensities.
- Johanna Luige
- , Alexandros Armaos
- & Ulf Andersson Vang Ørom
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Article
| Open AccessStructural basis for peroxidase encapsulation inside the encapsulin from the Gram-negative pathogen Klebsiella pneumoniae
Peroxidase encapsulins are self-assembling protein compartments involved in oxidative stress response found in many pathogens. Here, the authors characterize the structural basis of peroxidase encapsulation inside the Klebsiella pneumoniae encapsulin.
- Jesse A. Jones
- , Michael P. Andreas
- & Tobias W. Giessen
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Article
| Open AccessA concise and scalable chemoenzymatic synthesis of prostaglandins
Prostaglandins are of interest to synthetic chemists due to their biological activities. Here, the authors present a concise chemoenzymatic synthesis method for several representative prostaglandins, achieved in 5 to 7 steps, via the common intermediate bromohydrin, a radical equivalent of Corey lactone.
- Yunpeng Yin
- , Jinxin Wang
- & Jian Li
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Article
| Open AccessMutational scanning pinpoints distinct binding sites of key ATGL regulators in lipolysis
ATGL is a key enzyme in intracellular lipolysis. Here, the authors use deep mutational scanning to define the determinants of protein interaction between ATGL and its regulatory partners, gaining insights into lipolysis mechanisms in cells.
- Johanna M. Kohlmayr
- , Gernot F. Grabner
- & Ulrich Stelzl
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Article
| Open AccessThe binding and mechanism of a positive allosteric modulator of Kv3 channels
To promote the development of effective small molecule modulators that may help treat diverse neuropsychiatric disorders, this study elucidates the mechanism of a specific positive modulator of neuronal potassium channels at near-atomic resolution.
- Qiansheng Liang
- , Gamma Chi
- & Manuel Covarrubias
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Article
| Open AccessA structure-based designed small molecule depletes hRpn13Pru and a select group of KEN box proteins
Here, the authors identify a small molecule degrader (XL44) for hRpn13 and solve the XL44-hRpn13 structure. XL44 induces apoptosis in myeloma cells with hRpn13 dependency and also targets KEN box proteins PCLAF and RRM2. Loss of hRpn13 and PCLAF abrogates XL44 restriction of cell viability.
- Xiuxiu Lu
- , Monika Chandravanshi
- & Kylie J. Walters
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Article
| Open AccessTgfbr1 controls developmental plasticity between the hindlimb and external genitalia by remodeling their regulatory landscape
Development of hindlimbs and external genitalia share several regulatory factors. Lozovska et al. show that Tgfbr1 controls the response to those factors; embryos lacking Tgfbr1 develop two sets of hindlimbs at the expense of the external genitalia.
- Anastasiia Lozovska
- , Artemis G. Korovesi
- & Moisés Mallo
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Article
| Open AccessWidespread extracellular electron transfer pathways for charging microbial cytochrome OmcS nanowires via periplasmic cytochromes PpcABCDE
How do cells put electrons to rest? Using a minimal pathway to get rid of excess metabolic electrons, diverse environmentally important microbes overcome large spatial, kinetic, and thermodynamic barriers in order to survive in extreme anoxic conditions.
- Pilar C. Portela
- , Catharine C. Shipps
- & Nikhil S. Malvankar
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Article
| Open AccessThe evolutionary origin of naturally occurring intermolecular Diels-Alderases from Morus alba
Diels-Alderases (DAs), enzymes catalyzing [4 + 2] cycloaddition reactions, are of high interest, but insights into their evolution are lacking. Here, the authors investigate the evolutionary origins of the intermolecular DAs in the biosynthesis of Moraceae plant-derived Diels-Alder-type secondary metabolites, suggesting they evolved from an ancestor functioning as a flavin adenine dinucleotide-dependent oxidocyclase.
- Qi Ding
- , Nianxin Guo
- & Xiaoguang Lei
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Article
| Open AccessStructure of antiviral drug bulevirtide bound to hepatitis B and D virus receptor protein NTCP
Hepatitis B and D viruses require docking to the NTCP receptor protein for cell entry, an interaction that can be blocked by the drug bulevirtide. Here the authors use cryo-EM to reveal the structural basis of bulevirtide activity.
- Hongtao Liu
- , Dariusz Zakrzewicz
- & Kaspar P. Locher
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