Four inherited neurodegenerative diseases are linked to abnormally expanded repeats of glutamine residues in the affected proteins. Molecular modeling followed by optical, electron, and x-ray diffraction studies of a synthetic poly(L-glutamine) shows that it forms beta-sheets strongly held together by hydrogen bonds. Glutamine repeats may function as polar zippers, for example, by joining specific transcription factors bound to separate DNA segments. Their extension may cause disease either by increased, nonspecific affinity between such factors or by gradual precipitation of the affected proteins in neurons.
AUosteric proteins control and coordinate chemical events in the living cell. When Monod conceived that idea he said that he had discovered the second secret of life. The first was the structure of DNA. The theory as published by Monod et al. (1963) was concerned chiefly with cooperativity and feedback inhibition of enzymes, such as the inhibition of threonine deaminase, the first enzyme in the pathway of the synthesis of isoleucine, by isoleucine, and its activation by valine. Two years later the theory was formalized by Monod et al. (1965).
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