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  1. Dietary salt promotes cognitive impairment through repression of SIRT3/PINK1-mediated mitophagy and fission

    Dietary salt is increasingly recognized as an independent risk factor for cognitive impairment. However, the exact mechanisms are not yet fully...

    Haixia Fan, Minghao Yuan, ... Zhiyou Cai in Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry
    Article 13 July 2024
  2. 12 Baker’s Yeast: a rising foundation for eukaryotic sphingolipid-mediated cell signaling

    Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been an invaluable tool for the dissection of sphingolipid metabolic pathways and cloning of enzymes involved in...
    L. Ashley Cowart, Yusuf A. Hannun in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  3. 1 Phospholipid synthesis in mammalian cells

    Phospholipids are the main components of biological membranes and as such act as the major permeability barrier between cells and the extracellular...
    Christopher R. McMaster, Trevor R. Jackson in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  4. 2 Phospholipid synthesis and dynamics in plant cells

    Phospholipids represent the second family of lipids after the galactolipids in photosynthetic tissues and the first in non-photosynthetic tissues....
    Jean-Jacques Bessoule, Patrick Moreau in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  5. 11 Plant sphingolipids

    Plants contain a multiplicity of sphingolipid metabolites, such as long-chain bases, long-chain base phosphates, ceramides, glycosylceramides,...
    Petra Sperling, Dirk Warnecke, Ernst Heinz in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  6. 5 Sterol metabolism and functions in higher plants

    Higher plants synthesize a bewildering array of sterols, with sitosterol, stigmasterol, and 24-methylcholesterol as major compounds. All plant...
    Marie-Andrée Hartmann in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  7. 6 Sterol biochemistry and regulation in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

    Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been a major model system for the study of sterol biosynthesis and function. All of the genes encoding the enzymes...
    N. Douglas Lees, Martin Bard in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  8. 7 Mammalian ACAT and DGAT2 gene families

    Mammalian isozymes of ACAT, DGAT, and MGAT are encoded by the ACAT and DGAT2 gene families. These enzymes catalyze the synthesis of neutral lipid...
    Dong Cheng, Jay Liu, ... Ta-Yuan Chang in Lipid Metabolism and Membrane Biogenesis
    Chapter
  9. Cholera toxin: mechanisms of entry into host cells

    Cholera toxin moves from the plasma membrane to the ER of host cells to cause disease. Trafficking in this pathway depends on toxin binding to...
    David E. Saslowsky, Michael Kothe, Wayne I. Lencer in Microbial Protein Toxins
    Chapter
  10. The Ustilago maydis killer toxins

    Killer toxins are small proteins secreted by a number of fungi that are lethal to susceptible cells (generally fungi of the same or related species)....
    Jeremy Bruenn in Microbial Protein Toxins
    Chapter
  11. Biosynthesis and function of 1-methyladenosine in transfer RNA

    Determining the function of single nucleotide modifications in tRNA has been elusive because so many tRNA modification enzymes are not essential for...
    James T. Anderson, Louis Droogmans in Fine-Tuning of RNA Functions by Modification and Editing
    Chapter
  12. Transfer RNA modifications and modifying enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

    Transfer RNAs are adaptor molecules, which decode mRNA into protein and, thereby, play a central role in gene expression. During the maturation of a...
    Marcus J.O. Johansson, Anders S. Byström in Fine-Tuning of RNA Functions by Modification and Editing
    Chapter
  13. Checkpoint and Coordinated Cellular Responses to DNA Damage

    The DNA damage and replication checkpoints are signaling mechanisms that regulate and coordinate cellular responses to genotoxic conditions. The...
    **aohong H. Yang, Lee Zou in Cell Cycle Regulation
    Chapter
  14. Systems biology of apoptosis

    New approaches are required for the mathematical modelling and system identification of complex signal transduction networks, which are characterized...
    Martin Bentele, Roland Eils in Systems Biology
    Chapter
  15. Crystallographic Studies of Native and Mutant Orotidine 5′phosphate Decarboxylases

    This review aims to use the results of an approach combining crystallographic structure analysis with mutational studies as a framework for the...
    Ning Wu, Emil F. Pai in Orotidine Monophosphate Decarboxylase
    Chapter
  16. S. cerevisiae K28 toxin – a secreted virus toxin of the A/B family of protein toxins

    Since the initial discovery of toxin-secreting killer strains in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae more than 40 years ago, continuous research on...
    Susanne Leis, Jenny Spindler, ... Manfred J. Schmitt in Microbial Protein Toxins
    Chapter
  17. The biosynthesis and functional roles of methylated nucleosides in eukaryotic mRNA

    Modified nucleosides are present in mRNA of all eukaryotes, albeit at much lower levels than in other RNA moieties such as rRNA, tRNA, and snRNA....
    Chapter
  18. Taxonomy and phylogenetic diversity among the yeasts

    Yeasts are among the economically and scientifically most important eukaryotic microorganisms known. At present, there are 1,500 recognized species,...
    Cletus P. Kurtzman, Jure Piškur in Comparative Genomics
    Chapter
  19. Adenosine to inosine RNA editing in animal cells

    Major advances in the understanding of adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADARs) have come from the generation of ADAR mutant animals. In mice,...
    Barry Hoopengardner, Mary A. O’Connell, ... Liam P. Keegan in Fine-Tuning of RNA Functions by Modification and Editing
    Chapter
  20. Scientific and technical challenges for systems biology

    Systems biology is an emergent discipline, yet can be rooted back almost a century when pioneering thoughts on system-oriented views were discussed....
    Hiroaki Kitano in Systems Biology
    Chapter
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