40 research outputs found
Cortical morphological markers in children with autism: a structural magnetic resonance imaging study of thickness, area, volume, and gyrification
Molecular Weight of Dissolved Organic Carbon, Nitrogen, and Phenolics in Grassland Soils
Development and Testing of a Mobile Phone App for Self-Monitoring of Calcium Intake in Young Women
Parental nutrient intake and risk of retinoblastoma resulting from new germline RB1 mutation
Stratifying risks for patients with localized rectal cancer: Do all stage II patients require adjuvant radiation or chemoradiation?
Intestinal Angina Due to Atherosclerosis in a 45-year-old Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Patient
Diverse HIV viruses are targeted by a conformationally dynamic antiviral
Rhesus macaque TRIMCyp (RhTC) is a potent primate antiviral host protein that inhibits the replication of diverse HIV viruses. Here we show that it has acquired the ability to target multiple viruses by evolving an active site that interconverts between multiple conformations. Mutations that have relieved active site constraints allow RhTC to dynamically sample conformational space, including radically different conformers that target both HIV-1 and HIV-2 viruses. Introduction of a reversible constraint into RhTC allows specificity to be switched between a single conformation specific for HIV-1 and a dynamic ensemble that targets multiple viruses. These results show that conformational diversity can be used to expand the target diversity of innate immune receptors by supplementing their limited genetic variability with variability in protein structure
