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51.
Salman Goudarzi Luke J. M. Smith Steffen Schütz Sassan Hafizi 《Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS》2013,70(9):1663-1672
The gene for Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) is amongst the most significant risk genes for schizophrenia. The DISC1 protein is an intracellular scaffolding molecule thought to act an important hub for protein interactions involved in signalling for neural cell differentiation and function. Tensin2 is an intracellular actin-binding protein that bridges the intracellular portion of transmembrane receptors to the cytoskeleton, thereby regulating signalling for cell shape and motility. In this study, we probed in molecular detail a novel interaction between DISC1 and Tensin2. Western blot and confocal microscopic analyses revealed widespread expression of both DISC1 and Tensin2 proteins throughout the mouse brain. Furthermore, we have developed novel anti-DISC1 antibodies that verified the predominant expression of a 105-kDa isoform of DISC1 in the rodent brain as well as in human cells. In the mouse brain, both proteins showed region-specific expression patterns, including strong expression in the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampus and dentate gyrus. DISC1–Tensin2 colocalisation was most clearly observed in the Purkinje cells of the mouse cerebellum. Biochemical coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed an interaction between endogenous DISC1 and Tensin2 proteins in the mouse brain. Further pulldown studies in human cells using Myc-tagged Tensin2 constructs revealed that DISC1 specifically interacts with the C-terminal PTB domain of Tensin2 in a phosphorylation-independent manner. This new knowledge on the DISC1–Tensin2 interaction, as part of the wider DISC1 interactome, should further elucidate the signalling pathways that are perturbed in schizophrenia and other mental disorders. 相似文献
52.
Scherer SE Muzny DM Buhay CJ Chen R Cree A Ding Y Dugan-Rocha S Gill R Gunaratne P Harris RA Hawes AC Hernandez J Hodgson AV Hume J Jackson A Khan ZM Kovar-Smith C Lewis LR Lozado RJ Metzker ML Milosavljevic A Miner GR Montgomery KT Morgan MB Nazareth LV Scott G Sodergren E Song XZ Steffen D Lovering RC Wheeler DA Worley KC Yuan Y Zhang Z Adams CQ Ansari-Lari MA Ayele M Brown MJ Chen G Chen Z Clerc-Blankenburg KP Davis C Delgado O Dinh HH Draper H Gonzalez-Garay ML Havlak P Jackson LR Jacob LS 《Nature》2006,440(7082):346-351
Human chromosome 12 contains more than 1,400 coding genes and 487 loci that have been directly implicated in human disease. The q arm of chromosome 12 contains one of the largest blocks of linkage disequilibrium found in the human genome. Here we present the finished sequence of human chromosome 12, which has been finished to high quality and spans approximately 132 megabases, representing approximately 4.5% of the human genome. Alignment of the human chromosome 12 sequence across vertebrates reveals the origin of individual segments in chicken, and a unique history of rearrangement through rodent and primate lineages. The rate of base substitutions in recent evolutionary history shows an overall slowing in hominids compared with primates and rodents. 相似文献
53.
Experimental realization of Shor's quantum factoring algorithm using nuclear magnetic resonance. 总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19
L M Vandersypen M Steffen G Breyta C S Yannoni M H Sherwood I L Chuang 《Nature》2001,414(6866):883-887
The number of steps any classical computer requires in order to find the prime factors of an l-digit integer N increases exponentially with l, at least using algorithms known at present. Factoring large integers is therefore conjectured to be intractable classically, an observation underlying the security of widely used cryptographic codes. Quantum computers, however, could factor integers in only polynomial time, using Shor's quantum factoring algorithm. Although important for the study of quantum computers, experimental demonstration of this algorithm has proved elusive. Here we report an implementation of the simplest instance of Shor's algorithm: factorization of N = 15 (whose prime factors are 3 and 5). We use seven spin-1/2 nuclei in a molecule as quantum bits, which can be manipulated with room temperature liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. This method of using nuclei to store quantum information is in principle scalable to systems containing many quantum bits, but such scalability is not implied by the present work. The significance of our work lies in the demonstration of experimental and theoretical techniques for precise control and modelling of complex quantum computers. In particular, we present a simple, parameter-free but predictive model of decoherence effects in our system. 相似文献
54.
S Seshagiri EW Stawiski S Durinck Z Modrusan EE Storm CB Conboy S Chaudhuri Y Guan V Janakiraman BS Jaiswal J Guillory C Ha GJ Dijkgraaf J Stinson F Gnad MA Huntley JD Degenhardt PM Haverty R Bourgon W Wang H Koeppen R Gentleman TK Starr Z Zhang DA Largaespada TD Wu FJ de Sauvage 《Nature》2012,488(7413):660-664