Results 211 to 220 of about 897,439 (267)
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Protein phosphorylation and photorespiration

Plant Biology, 2013
AbstractPhotorespiration allows the recycling of carbon atoms of 2‐phosphoglycolate produced by ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) oxygenase activity, as well as the removal of potentially toxic metabolites. The photorespiratory pathway takes place in the light, encompasses four cellular compartments and interacts with several ...
M, Hodges   +3 more
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Protein phosphorylation in the brain

Nature, 1983
Protein phosphorylation represents an approach, sometimes the only approach available, to study the molecular basis for a wide variety of neurophysiological phenomena. The injection of protein kinases or protein kinase inhibitors into neurones has provided direct evidence that activation of protein kinases has an obligatory role in the mechanisms by ...
E J, Nestler, P, Greengard
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Overview of Protein Phosphorylation

Current Protocols in Protein Science, 1995
AbstractThis overview provides a history of protein phosphorylation research and provides the reader with an understanding of how and why labeling studies are performed. The various sites of protein phosphorylation are described along with the roles of the many kinases and phosphatases that regulate phosphorylation.
B M, Sefton, S, Shenolikar
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Protein phosphorylation in peroxisomes

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1986
The possible presence of phosphorylated proteins in peroxisomes was studied in hepatocytes from nafenopin-treated and normal rats. A 63 kDa phosphorylated protein was consistently and exclusively found in the membrane of peroxisomes from hepatocytes incubated in the presence of 32P-phosphate.
C, Skorin   +3 more
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Platelet Protein Phosphorylation

1985
As can be seen from this review, protein phosphorylation appears involved in both positive and negative regulation of platelets. To date, good evidence has been presented for the involvement of protein phosphorylation in the regulation of granule centralization (i.e. myosin light chain phosphorylation).
J M, Gerrard   +4 more
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Protein phosphorylation in microorganisms

Biotechnology Advances, 1990
The covalent modification of proteins by phosphorylation constitutes a major regulatory mechanism. It was first recognized in mammalian tissues. A conclusive evidence for the occurrence of protein phosphorylation and protein kinases in coliform bacteria was obtained in 1978.
J, Janecek, Z, Dobrová
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Phosphorylation of the Myofibrillar Proteins

Annual Review of Physiology, 1980
In muscle, protein phosphorylation takes place in both the sarcoplasm and the myofibrils. This review deals only with those myofibrillar proteins that can be phosphorylated-i.e. myosin light chain and in a few cases the heavy chain, the inhibitory and tropomyosin-binding subunits of troponin, and tropomyosin.
M, Bárány, K, Bárány
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Protein arginine phosphorylation in organisms

International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, 2021
Protein arginine phosphorylation (pArg), a novel molecular switch, plays a key role in regulating cellular processes. The intrinsic acid lability, hot sensitivity, and hot-alkali instability of "high-energy" phosphoamidate (PN bond) in pArg, make the investigation highly difficult and challenging.
Biling, Huang   +3 more
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The origins of protein phosphorylation

Nature Cell Biology, 2002
The reversible phosphorylation of proteins is central to the regulation of most aspects of cell function but, even after the first protein kinase was identified, the general significance of this discovery was slow to be appreciated. Here I review the discovery of protein phosphorylation and give a personal view of the key findings that have helped to ...
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