Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Ina, Catrein"'
Autor:
Cristina Alaimo, Cristina L. Marolda, Ina Catrein, Miguel A. Valvano, Mario F. Feldman, Nico Callewaert, Markus Aebi, Laura Morf
Publikováno v:
The EMBO Journal. 25:967-976
Translocation of lipid-linked oligosaccharide (LLO) intermediates across membranes is an essential but poorly understood process in eukaryotic and bacterial glycosylation pathways. Membrane proteins defined as translocases or flippases are implicated
Publikováno v:
FEBS Journal. 272:2892-2900
Although the annotation of the complete genome sequence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae did not reveal a bacterial type I signal peptidase (SPase I) we showed experimentally that such an activity must exist in this bacterium, by determining the N-terminus o
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Medical Microbiology. 292:513-525
Mycoplasma pneumoniae isolates from patients, collected over a period of 12 years in Germany, were characterized by various methods (parameters) including multilocus sequence typing, restriction fragment length polymorphisms, Western blotting with mo
Autor:
Richard Herrmann, Ina Catrein
Publikováno v:
Proteomics. 11(18)
This review covers progress in proteome research on Mycoplasma pneumoniae made over the last 5 years. This bacterium is one of the smallest known self-replicating bacteria. With fewer than 700 proposed proteins, it is well suited to a comprehensive p
Autor:
Nico Callewaert, Markus Aebi, Mario F. Feldman, Shin Numao, Ina Catrein, Benjamin L. Schulz, Michael Kowarik, Eva Kiermaier
Publikováno v:
Science (New York, N.Y.). 314(5802)
N-linked protein glycosylation is found in all domains of life. In eukaryotes, it is the most abundant protein modification of secretory and membrane proteins, and the process is coupled to protein translocation and folding. We found that in bacteria
Publikováno v:
The FEBS journal. 272(11)
Although the annotation of the complete genome sequence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae did not reveal a bacterial type I signal peptidase (SPase I) we showed experimentally that such an activity must exist in this bacterium, by determining the N-terminus o
Publikováno v:
Microbiology (Reading, England). 150(Pt 12)
The genes P1 (MPN141) and ORF6 (MPN142) are essential for the successful colonization of the human respiratory tract by Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Both genes are located in the P1 operon, which consists of three genes. The P1 gene is the second gene in t
Publikováno v:
International journal of medical microbiology : IJMM. 294(2-3)
The interaction between Mycoplasma pneumoniae and its natural host, humans, cannot be studied directly for obvious reasons. Therefore, we used guinea pigs instead, which had been recently introduced as an acceptable alternative host organism. The fol