AbstractFive neurodegenerative diseases are caused by proteins with expanded polyglutamine domains. Toxicity of these proteins has been previously identified only in mammals, and no simple model systems are available. In this paper, we demonstrate in E. coli that long polyglutamine domains (59–81 residues) as GST-fusion proteins inhibit growth while smaller glutamine (10–35 residues) or polyalanine (61 residues) domains have no effect. Analogously in humans, polyglutamine repeats less than 35–40 glutamines produce a normal phenotype, while expansion greater than 40 glutamines is always associated with disease. Expression of polyglutamine proteins in E. coli may help identify the molecular mechanism of pathogenesis of CAG trinucleotide repea...
SummaryPolyglutamine expansion diseases are triggered by the accumulation of toxic proteins. A new s...
Abnormally expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts provide a gain of toxic functions to nine otherwise...
Polyglutamine expansions in certain proteins are the genetic determinants for nine distinct progress...
AbstractFive neurodegenerative diseases are caused by proteins with expanded polyglutamine domains. ...
Although the genetic basis of polyglutamine diseases has been recognized for 20 years, their molecul...
AbstractNine inherited neurodegenerative disorders result from polyglutamine expansions. Two recentl...
Polyglutamine diseases are neurodegenerative disorders caused by expansion of polyglutamine tracts i...
Nine genetic diseases arise from expansion of CAG repeats in seemingly unrelated genes. They are ref...
Homopolymeric amino acid repeat sequences in proteins are of particular interest due to the discover...
ABSTRACT Polyglutamine expansion diseases are caused by the abnormal lengthening of a glu-tamine rep...
The polyglutamine expansion diseases are a class of inherited neurodegenerative disorders in which e...
ABSTRACT Proteins containing polyglutamine (polyQ) regions are found in almost all eukaryotes, albei...
At least nine inherited neurodegenerative diseases are known to be caused by expanded CAG repeats en...
The polyglutamine diseases are caused by an expansion of a CAG repeat sequence. This group of late-...
Expansion of CAG trinucleotide repeats coding for polyglutamine in unrelated proteins causes at leas...
SummaryPolyglutamine expansion diseases are triggered by the accumulation of toxic proteins. A new s...
Abnormally expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts provide a gain of toxic functions to nine otherwise...
Polyglutamine expansions in certain proteins are the genetic determinants for nine distinct progress...
AbstractFive neurodegenerative diseases are caused by proteins with expanded polyglutamine domains. ...
Although the genetic basis of polyglutamine diseases has been recognized for 20 years, their molecul...
AbstractNine inherited neurodegenerative disorders result from polyglutamine expansions. Two recentl...
Polyglutamine diseases are neurodegenerative disorders caused by expansion of polyglutamine tracts i...
Nine genetic diseases arise from expansion of CAG repeats in seemingly unrelated genes. They are ref...
Homopolymeric amino acid repeat sequences in proteins are of particular interest due to the discover...
ABSTRACT Polyglutamine expansion diseases are caused by the abnormal lengthening of a glu-tamine rep...
The polyglutamine expansion diseases are a class of inherited neurodegenerative disorders in which e...
ABSTRACT Proteins containing polyglutamine (polyQ) regions are found in almost all eukaryotes, albei...
At least nine inherited neurodegenerative diseases are known to be caused by expanded CAG repeats en...
The polyglutamine diseases are caused by an expansion of a CAG repeat sequence. This group of late-...
Expansion of CAG trinucleotide repeats coding for polyglutamine in unrelated proteins causes at leas...
SummaryPolyglutamine expansion diseases are triggered by the accumulation of toxic proteins. A new s...
Abnormally expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts provide a gain of toxic functions to nine otherwise...
Polyglutamine expansions in certain proteins are the genetic determinants for nine distinct progress...