Shendelman, Shoshana Jonason, Alan Martinat, Cecile Leete, Thomas Abeliovich, Asa
Published in
PLoS biology
Parkinson's disease (PD) pathology is characterized by the degeneration of midbrain dopamine neurons (DNs) ultimately leading to a progressive movement disorder in patients. The etiology of DN loss in sporadic PD is unknown, although it is hypothesized that aberrant protein aggregation and cellular oxidative stress may promote DN degeneration. Homo...
Schwab, Susan R Shugart, Jessica A Horng, Tiffany Malarkannan, Subramaniam Shastri, Nilabh
Published in
PLoS biology
Major histocompatibility class I molecules display tens of thousands of peptides on the cell surface for immune surveillance by T cells. The peptide repertoire represents virtually all cellular translation products, and can thus reveal a foreign presence inside the cell. These peptides are derived from not only conventional but also cryptic transla...
Dassonville, Paul Bala, Jagdeep Kaur
Published in
PLoS biology
A prominent and influential hypothesis of vision suggests the existence of two separate visual systems within the brain, one creating our perception of the world and another guiding our actions within it. The induced Roelofs effect has been described as providing strong evidence for this perception/action dissociation: When a small visual target is...
Smith, David L Dushoff, Jonathan McKenzie, F Ellis
Published in
PLoS biology
A common assumption about malaria, dengue, and other mosquito-borne infections is that the two main components of the risk of human infection--the rate at which people are bitten (human biting rate) and the proportion of mosquitoes that are infectious--are positively correlated. In fact, these two risk factors are generated by different processes a...
Leichert, Lars I Jakob, Ursula
Published in
PLoS biology
Thiol-disulfide interconversions play a crucial role in the chemistry of biological systems. They participate in the major systems that control the cellular redox potential and prevent oxidative damage. In addition, thiol-disulfide exchange reactions serve as molecular switches in a growing number of redox-regulated proteins. We developed a differe...
Reed, David L Smith, Vincent S Hammond, Shaless L Rogers, Alan R Clayton, Dale H
Published in
PLoS biology
Parasites can be used as unique markers to investigate host evolutionary history, independent of host data. Here we show that modern human head lice, Pediculus humanus, are composed of two ancient lineages, whose origin predates modern Homo sapiens by an order of magnitude (ca. 1.18 million years). One of the two louse lineages has a worldwide dist...
Hondorp, Elise R Matthews, Rowena G
Published in
PLoS biology
In nature, Escherichia coli are exposed to harsh and non-ideal growth environments-nutrients may be limiting, and cells are often challenged by oxidative stress. For E. coli cells confronting these realities, there appears to be a link between oxidative stress, methionine availability, and the enzyme that catalyzes the final step of methionine bios...
Brickner, Jason H Walter, Peter
Published in
PLoS biology
The spatial arrangement of chromatin within the nucleus can affect reactions that occur on the DNA and is likely to be regulated. Here we show that activation of INO1 occurs at the nuclear membrane and requires the integral membrane protein Scs2. Scs2 antagonizes the action of the transcriptional repressor Opi1 under conditions that induce the unfo...
McCouch, Susan
Published in
PLoS biology
Bradbury, Jane
Published in
PLoS biology