TABLE OF CONTENTS |
December 2013 Volume 9, Issue 12 |
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| Focus Editorial Commentary Research Highlights News and Views Perspective Reviews Brief Communication Articles
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Focus | Top |
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| Peptides in Immunology Peptides play a role in all aspects of the immunological responses to invading pathogens and tumor cells. The review, perspective and commentary pieces in this issue explore the generation and molecular mechanisms of peptides and the considerations and strategies needed to harness them to treat disease. Peptides in Immunology
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Editorial | Top |
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Mobilizing peptides in immunity p747 doi:10.1038/nchembio.1409 Harnessing the immune system to treat disease will be facilitated by a greater understanding of the origins and roles of peptides in immunity.
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Commentary | Top |
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Designing immunogenic peptides pp749 - 753 Darren R Flower doi:10.1038/nchembio.1383 Peptides fulfill many roles in immunology, yet none are more important than their role as immunogenic epitopes driving the adaptive immune response, our ultimate bulwark against infectious disease. Peptide epitopes are mediated primarily by their interaction with major histocompatibility complexes (T-cell epitopes) and antibodies (B-cell epitopes). As pathogen genomes continue to be revealed, both experimental and computational epitope mapping are becoming crucial tools in vaccine discovery. Immunoinformatics offers many tools, techniques and approaches for in silico epitope characterization, which is capable of greatly accelerating epitope design.
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Research Highlights | Top |
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Regeneration: Reversing MS | Glycobiology: Mimi mimicry | Epigenetics: RNA takes control | Prokaryotic immunology: A measure of RNA | Protein dynamics: Pomp and SERCAmstance | Metabolism: AMP is the champ | Reaction discovery: Now we're clicking | Metal regulation: SOD1 off zinc
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News and Views | Top |
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Perspective | Top |
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Immune modulation by multifaceted cationic host defense (antimicrobial) peptides pp761 - 768 Ashley L Hilchie, Kelli Wuerth and Robert E W Hancock doi:10.1038/nchembio.1393
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Reviews | Top |
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A peptide's perspective on antigen presentation to the immune system pp769 - 775 Jacques Neefjes and Huib Ovaa doi:10.1038/nchembio.1391
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Adaptive immune activation: glycosylation does matter pp776 - 784 Margreet A Wolfert and Geert-Jan Boons doi:10.1038/nchembio.1403
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Brief Communication | Top |
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Articles | Top |
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Elementary tetrahelical protein design for diverse oxidoreductase functions pp826 - 833 Tammer A Farid, Goutham Kodali, Lee A Solomon, Bruce R Lichtenstein, Molly M Sheehan et al. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1362
Assembled helical maquettes have been used to mimic basic oxidoreductase activities, but the requisite design symmetry limited advanced functions. Construction of a single-chain protein now enables intra- and interprotein electron transfer and complex cofactor interactions at rates comparable to those of natural proteins.
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Riboswitches in eubacteria sense the second messenger c-di-AMP pp834 - 839 James W Nelson, Narasimhan Sudarsan, Kazuhiro Furukawa, Zasha Weinberg, Joy X Wang et al. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1363
Cyclic diadenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) is a newly identified nucleotide second messenger in bacteria. Though protein receptors for c-di-AMP are known, the ydaO riboswitch has now been validated as a physiological sensor of cellular c-di-AMP levels.
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Niche-based screening identifies small-molecule inhibitors of leukemia stem cells pp840 - 848 Kimberly A Hartwell, Peter G Miller, Siddhartha Mukherjee, Alissa R Kahn, Alison L Stewart et al. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1367
High-throughput screening systems that better mimic the physiological complexity of diseased tissues may aid the discovery of more efficacious compounds. A co-culture system that mimics the microenvironment of leukemia stem cells (LSCs) in bone marrow enables the discovery of compounds, including lovastatin, that selectively kill LSCs. Chemical compounds
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