Тёмный

Anna Marie Pyle (Yale U./HHMI) Part 3: RNA Helicases and RNA-triggered Signaling Proteins 

Science Communication Lab
Подписаться 182 тыс.
Просмотров 17 тыс.
50% 1

www.ibiology.o...
Lecture Overview:
In Part 1, Dr. Pyle explains that many RNA molecules have elaborate structures that are essential for their functions. Even mRNA, a relatively linear molecule, can contain distinctive three- dimensional structures. RNA duplexes are the units of secondary structure, and these form in regions where base-pairing occurs. Duplex regions often include internal or terminal loops, and they can contain unusual types of base-pairing. These secondary structural elements can arrange themselves to form highly complex tertiary structures. It is the variety of these tertiary structures that allows for the great functional diversity of RNA.
In her second talk, Pyle focuses on the self-splicing Group II introns. These molecules are very large ribozymes that catalyze their own splicing and transposition, employing a reaction and an active-site similar to that of the eukaryotic spliceosome. To better understand the chemistry of pre-mRNA splicincg, Pyle and her group obtained a high-resolution crystal structure of the Oceanobacillus iheyensis Group IIC intron. The crystal structure provided insights into the key roles that divalent and monovalent ions play in RNA chemistry and tertiary architecture.
During the final talk in this series, Pyle switches her focus to a specialized class of mechanical proteins that bind and manipulate RNA molecules. This protein family includes RNA helicases, which translocate along RNA strands and strip away associated macromolecules. However, a related set of proteins display functions different from helicase activity, including a role as RNA-activated biosensors. Through crystallographic, biochemical and cell-based studies of innate immune receptor RIG-I, Pyle has shown that this human surveillance protein recognizes and binds to small viral double stranded RNAs. The subsequent binding of ATP induces protein conformational changes that contribute to signal transduction and activation of the interferon response in vivo.
Speaker Bio:
Anna Marie Pyle is the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and Professor of Chemistry at Yale University and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Pyle received her BA from Princeton University and her PhD in Chemistry from Columbia University. She was a post-doctoral fellow with Tom Cech at the University of Colorado. Before joining Yale, Pyle was a faculty member at Columbia from 1992-2002.
Pyle’s lab uses enzymatic and biophysical methods to explore the complex structures of large RNA molecules, such as self-splicing introns. Her lab also studies the molecular motor proteins that operate on RNA, such as RNA helicases and RNA-activated biosensors that contribute to the vertebrate antiviral response.
More information is available on Dr. Pyle’s lab page at pylelab.org/

Опубликовано:

 

12 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 13   
@rickfearn3663
@rickfearn3663 5 лет назад
Thanks again Dr. Pyle. An exciting and inspiring presentation on the complexities of RNA Helicases and Signaling Proteins.
@5eZa
@5eZa 5 лет назад
These videos need more exposure
@kyokkigo2341
@kyokkigo2341 4 года назад
Amazing lecture! wish this kind could be introduced when i was in high school
@RickyLewis-h3g
@RickyLewis-h3g 9 месяцев назад
😊
@VVargames1
@VVargames1 4 года назад
Wow
@nanotech_republika
@nanotech_republika 5 лет назад
Alien construction module? ... Err... ancient construction module. Just an emergent phenomenon of the complex adaptive system.
@tomjerry84
@tomjerry84 5 лет назад
Amazing nano-machines As if they were designed
@flymasterA
@flymasterA 5 лет назад
They were designed. A gift from God to give the gift of our curiosity something challenging for millennia to come. God called it "incomprehensible" 3500 years ago. The more we find out, the less we actually know. Why? He takes pleasure in this, like we do when we challenge our kids. Part of being created in God's image. I guarantee you this, when Carl Sagan proclaimed that they could create life in a test tube from the 'elements of life', then zap them to life, how close was he, and do you think God appreciated his pride and audacity?
@SimonJackson13
@SimonJackson13 Год назад
Sounds mice.
@SimonJackson13
@SimonJackson13 Год назад
Have we helicased to the 5' end yet?
@flymasterA
@flymasterA 5 лет назад
So, are you going to pick up the quest of Carl Sagan to create the simplest life forms in a test tube?
@nomoregoodlife1255
@nomoregoodlife1255 3 года назад
wow
Далее
Anna Marie Pyle (Yale U./HHMI) Part 1: RNA Structure
23:04
Your Unstoppable Copy Machine|DNA Replication
15:21
What is Epigenetics? - with Nessa Carey
39:26
Просмотров 363 тыс.
Protein synthesis animation
19:13
Просмотров 2,2 млн