Results 271 to 280 of about 294,920 (307)
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Complementation of coat protein-defective TMV mutants in transgenic tobacco plants expressing TMV coat protein

Virology, 1990
Transgenic tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Xanthi) which express tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) U1 strain coat protein (CP) can complement both the assembly and the long-distance spread of CP-defective (DT1) or coat proteinless (DT1G) mutants of TMV.
J K, Osbourn, S, Sarkar, T M, Wilson
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Insoluble coat protein mutants of TMV: Their origin, and characterization of the defective coat proteins

Virology, 1973
A method is described for the purification of the defective protein of TMV mutants, from a class of mutants which engender an insoluble coat protein in their host. These proteins are unable to aggregate with TMV-RNA to form a functional virion. Amino acid compositions of one isolate each of mutant PM1 and PM2I and two of mutant PM4 showed a small ...
V, Hariharasubramanian   +2 more
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Properties of the Coat Protein of a New Tobacco Mosaic Virus Coat Protein ts-Mutant

Journal of Protein Chemistry, 1997
Amino acid substitutions in a majority of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) coat protein (CP) ts-mutants have previously been mapped to the same region of the CP molecule tertiary structure, located at a distance of about 70 A from TMV virion axis. In the present work some properties of a new TMV CP ts-mutant ts21-66 (two substitutions I21=>T and D66=>G, both
E N, Dobrov   +4 more
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Plasma membrane proteins ofDictyostelium: The spore coat proteins

Developmental Biology, 1979
Spore coats were isolated following germination ofDictyostelium discoideum spores. They were found to contain five major proteins of apparent molecular weights of 60,000 (SP60), 68,000 (SP68), 70,000 (SP70), 96,000 (SP96), and 200,000 (SP200). Of these SP68 and SP96 were found to be glycoproteins.
M, Orlowski, W F, Loomis
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Coat protein of Potyviruses

Archives of Virology, 1988
Three strains of passionfruit woodiness virus, Tip Blight (PWV-TB), Severe (PWV-S) and Mild (PWV-M), were compared on the basis of their biological, serological and coat protein structural properties. Each of the strains could be distinguished on the basis of their reactions on selected test plant species but no differences were observed in the ...
D D, Shukla, N M, McKern, C W, Ward
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Filamentous Bacteriophage Coat Protein

2007
The sections in this article are 1 Introduction 2 Structural Form of Coat Protein in Virus Particles 3 Membrane-Bound Form of Coat Protein 4 Procoat Protein 5 Comparisons Among the Various Forms of Coat Protein 6 Acknowledgements 7 Biographical Sketch Related ...
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Protein-coated and polysaccharide-coated liposomes as drug carriers.

Critical reviews in therapeutic drug carrier systems, 1986
Saccharides on the surface of cell membranes play an important role in cell-cell recognition, which is the most important process utilizable for targeting of drugs encapsulated in an artificial cell, liposome. To design a targetable drug carrier, hence, employing synthesized or natural glycolipids as the recognition site of the liposomal drug carrier ...
J, Sunamoto, K, Iwamoto
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Coat Proteins

2004
Annette Boman, Tommy Nilsson
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Coat of proteins

Nature Nanotechnology, 2008
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