Artikel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Highlight: Signal Transduction and Disease
-
Fred Wittinghofer
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
4. März 2010
Published Online: 2010-03-04
Published in Print: 2010-02-26
©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- EDITORIAL
- Highlight: Signal Transduction and Disease
- HIGHLIGHT: SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION AND DISEASE
- Phosphorylase and the origin of reversible protein phosphorylation
- β-Catenin as a multilayer modulator of zonal cytochrome P450 expression in mouse liver
- Glycome profiling using modern glycomics technology: technical aspects and applications
- Ubiquitin ligase complexes: from substrate selectivity to conjugational specificity
- MAP3K1 functionally interacts with Axin1 in the canonical Wnt signalling pathway
- Signal transduction by the atopy-associated human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) receptor depends on Janus kinase function
- GENES AND NUCLEIC ACIDS
- 6S RNA-dependent inhibition of RNA polymerase is released by RNA-dependent synthesis of small de novo products
- PROTEIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
- Analysis of the DNA-binding activity of p53 mutants using functional protein microarrays and its relationship to transcriptional activation
- Peptides from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv1980c protein involved in human cell infection: insights into new synthetic subunit vaccine candidates
- The epimerase activity of anthocyanidin reductase from Vitis vinifera and its regiospecific hydride transfers
- Antibacterial activity of radical scavengers against class Ib ribonucleotide reductase from Bacillus anthracis
- CELL BIOLOGY AND SIGNALING
- Signal transduction in CHO cells stably transfected with domain-selective forms of murine ACE
- The impact of methylmercury on 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-induced transcriptomic responses in dolphin skin cells
- PROTEOLYSIS
- An examination of the proteolytic activity for bovine pregnancy-associated glycoproteins 2 and 12
- Analysis of an autoproteolytic activity of rice yellow mottle virus silencing suppressor P1
- Identification of novel peptide inhibitors for human trypsins
Artikel in diesem Heft
- EDITORIAL
- Highlight: Signal Transduction and Disease
- HIGHLIGHT: SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION AND DISEASE
- Phosphorylase and the origin of reversible protein phosphorylation
- β-Catenin as a multilayer modulator of zonal cytochrome P450 expression in mouse liver
- Glycome profiling using modern glycomics technology: technical aspects and applications
- Ubiquitin ligase complexes: from substrate selectivity to conjugational specificity
- MAP3K1 functionally interacts with Axin1 in the canonical Wnt signalling pathway
- Signal transduction by the atopy-associated human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) receptor depends on Janus kinase function
- GENES AND NUCLEIC ACIDS
- 6S RNA-dependent inhibition of RNA polymerase is released by RNA-dependent synthesis of small de novo products
- PROTEIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
- Analysis of the DNA-binding activity of p53 mutants using functional protein microarrays and its relationship to transcriptional activation
- Peptides from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv1980c protein involved in human cell infection: insights into new synthetic subunit vaccine candidates
- The epimerase activity of anthocyanidin reductase from Vitis vinifera and its regiospecific hydride transfers
- Antibacterial activity of radical scavengers against class Ib ribonucleotide reductase from Bacillus anthracis
- CELL BIOLOGY AND SIGNALING
- Signal transduction in CHO cells stably transfected with domain-selective forms of murine ACE
- The impact of methylmercury on 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-induced transcriptomic responses in dolphin skin cells
- PROTEOLYSIS
- An examination of the proteolytic activity for bovine pregnancy-associated glycoproteins 2 and 12
- Analysis of an autoproteolytic activity of rice yellow mottle virus silencing suppressor P1
- Identification of novel peptide inhibitors for human trypsins