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The book provides an overview of the advancement of fundamental knowledge and applications of antimicrobial peptides in biomedical, agricultural, veterinary, food, and cosmetic products. Antimicrobial peptides stand as potentially great alternatives to current antibiotics, and most research in this newly-created area has been published in journals and other periodicals. It is the editors’ opinion that it is timely to sum up the most important achievements in the field and provide the scientific community with a reference book. The goals of this project include illustrating the achievements made so far, debating the state of the art, and drawing new perspectives.
Bacteriology. --- Chemistry. --- Food science. --- Microbiology. --- Prokaryotes --- Peptide antibiotics --- Pore Forming Cytotoxic Proteins --- Natural Science Disciplines --- Cells --- Biological Science Disciplines --- Peptides --- Biology --- Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins --- Disciplines and Occupations --- Membrane Proteins --- Anatomy --- Chemicals and Drugs --- Proteins --- Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides --- Genetics --- Chemistry --- Pharmacology --- Prokaryotic Cells --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Physical Sciences & Mathematics --- Pharmacy, Therapeutics, & Pharmacology --- Chemistry - General --- Peptide antibiotics. --- Prokaryotes. --- Genetics. --- Monera --- Procaryotae --- Procaryotes --- Prokaryonta --- Prokaryotae --- Prokaryotic protists --- Antimicrobial peptides --- Food --- Applied Microbiology. --- Food Science. --- Biotechnology. --- Microorganisms --- Antibiotics --- Science --- Microbiology --- Microbial biology --- Food—Biotechnology.
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Chemical structure --- Food science and technology --- voedingschemie --- protein-engineering --- voedingsleer --- eiwitten
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Lasso peptides form a growing family of fascinating ribosomally-synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides produced by bacteria. They contain 15 to 24 residues and share a unique interlocked topology that involves an N-terminal 7 to 9-residue macrolactam ring where the C-terminal tail is threaded and irreversibly trapped. The ring results from the condensation of the N-terminal amino group with a side-chain carboxylate of a glutamate at position 8 or 9, or an aspartate at position 7, 8 or 9. The trapping of the tail involves bulky amino acids located in the tail below and above the ring and/or disulfide bridges connecting the ring and the tail. Lasso peptides are subdivided into three subtypes depending on the absence (class II) or presence of one (class III) or two (class I) disulfide bridges. The lasso topology results in highly compact structures that give to lasso peptides an extraordinary stability towards both protease degradation and denaturing conditions. Lasso peptides are generally receptor antagonists, enzyme inhibitors and/or antibacterial or antiviral (anti-HIV) agents. The lasso scaffold and the associated biological activities shown by lasso peptides on different key targets make them promising molecules with high therapeutic potential. Their application in drug design has been exemplified by the development of an integrin antagonist based on a lasso peptide scaffold. The biosynthesis machinery of lasso peptides is therefore of high biotechnological interest, especially since such highly compact and stable structures have to date revealed inaccessible by peptide synthesis. Lasso peptides are produced from a linear precursor LasA, which undergoes a maturation process involving several steps, in particular cleavage of the leader peptide and cyclization. The post-translational modifications are ensured by a dedicated enzymatic machinery, which is composed of an ATP-dependent cysteine protease (LasB) and a lactam synthetase (LasC) that form an enzymatic complex called lasso synthetase. Microcin J25, produced by Escherichia coli AY25, is the archetype of lasso peptides and the most extensively studied. To date only around forty lasso peptides have been isolated, but genome mining approaches have revealed that they are widely distributed among Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, particularly in Streptomyces, making available a rich resource of novel lasso peptides and enzyme machineries towards lasso topologies.
Biomedicine. --- Medical Microbiology. --- Immunology. --- Vaccine. --- Medicine. --- Microbiology. --- Vaccines. --- Médecine --- Immunologie --- Microbiologie --- Vaccins --- Peptides --- Bacteria --- Protein Modification, Translational --- Complex Mixtures --- Proteins --- Biological Science Disciplines --- Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins --- Protein Biosynthesis --- Chemicals and Drugs --- Natural Science Disciplines --- Peptide Biosynthesis --- Disciplines and Occupations --- Biochemical Processes --- Biochemical Phenomena --- Chemical Phenomena --- Phenomena and Processes --- Bacterial Proteins --- Physiology --- Biological Products --- Protein Processing, Post-Translational --- Biology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Microbiology & Immunology --- Structure --- Synthesis --- Physiological effect --- Peptide antibiotics. --- Antimicrobial peptides --- Medical microbiology. --- Antibiotics --- Biologicals --- Immunobiology --- Life sciences --- Serology --- Microbial biology --- Microorganisms
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The book provides an overview of the advancement of fundamental knowledge and applications of antimicrobial peptides in biomedical, agricultural, veterinary, food, and cosmetic products. Antimicrobial peptides stand as potentially great alternatives to current antibiotics, and most research in this newly-created area has been published in journals and other periodicals. It is the editors' opinion that it is timely to sum up the most important achievements in the field and provide the scientific community with a reference book. The goals of this project include illustrating the achievements made so far, debating the state of the art, and drawing new perspectives.
Chemical structure --- Food science and technology --- voedingschemie --- protein-engineering --- voedingsleer --- eiwitten
Choose an application
Lasso peptides form a growing family of fascinating ribosomally-synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides produced by bacteria. They contain 15 to 24 residues and share a unique interlocked topology that involves an N-terminal 7 to 9-residue macrolactam ring where the C-terminal tail is threaded and irreversibly trapped. The ring results from the condensation of the N-terminal amino group with a side-chain carboxylate of a glutamate at position 8 or 9, or an aspartate at position 7, 8 or 9. The trapping of the tail involves bulky amino acids located in the tail below and above the ring and/or disulfide bridges connecting the ring and the tail. Lasso peptides are subdivided into three subtypes depending on the absence (class II) or presence of one (class III) or two (class I) disulfide bridges. The lasso topology results in highly compact structures that give to lasso peptides an extraordinary stability towards both protease degradation and denaturing conditions. Lasso peptides are generally receptor antagonists, enzyme inhibitors and/or antibacterial or antiviral (anti-HIV) agents. The lasso scaffold and the associated biological activities shown by lasso peptides on different key targets make them promising molecules with high therapeutic potential. Their application in drug design has been exemplified by the development of an integrin antagonist based on a lasso peptide scaffold. The biosynthesis machinery of lasso peptides is therefore of high biotechnological interest, especially since such highly compact and stable structures have to date revealed inaccessible by peptide synthesis. Lasso peptides are produced from a linear precursor LasA, which undergoes a maturation process involving several steps, in particular cleavage of the leader peptide and cyclization. The post-translational modifications are ensured by a dedicated enzymatic machinery, which is composed of an ATP-dependent cysteine protease (LasB) and a lactam synthetase (LasC) that form an enzymatic complex called lasso synthetase. Microcin J25, produced by Escherichia coli AY25, is the archetype of lasso peptides and the most extensively studied. To date only around forty lasso peptides have been isolated, but genome mining approaches have revealed that they are widely distributed among Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, particularly in Streptomyces, making available a rich resource of novel lasso peptides and enzyme machineries towards lasso topologies.
Immunology. Immunopathology --- Medical microbiology, virology, parasitology --- immunologie --- vaccins --- medische microbiologie --- Escherichia --- vaccinatie
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Ecologie chimique offre une vision holistique des nouveaux champs de recherche de cette discipline à travers une grande diversité d'approches.Il traite de systèmes complexes dans un monde changeant à travers un grand nombre d'organismes modèles en passant des micro-organismes aux mammifères incluant l'homme.Il couvre une grande diversité de milieux allant des tropiques aux régions polaires et décrypte le rôle de la médiation chimique qui permet aux organismes vivants de communiquer entre individus de la même espèce ou entre espèces différentes, et avec leur environnement.Dans un contexte de changements globaux où le maintien de la biodiversité représente un véritable défi,cet ouvrage permet de comprendre la structure et le fonctionnement des écosystèmes. Les chercheurs qui ont contribué à cet ouvrage - biologistes, écologistes, biochimistes, chimistes, biostatisticiens - observent les milieux terrestres, aquatiques, marins et d'eau douce.
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