The molecular evolution of the adaptive response at the host–pathogen interface has been frequently referred to as an 'arms race' between the host and bacterial pathogens. The innate immune system employs multiple strategies to starve microbes of metals. Pathogens, in turn, develop successful strategies to maintain access to bioavailable metal ions under conditions of extreme restriction of transition metals, or nutritional immunity. However, the processes by which evolution repurposes or re-engineers host and pathogen proteins to perform or refine new functions have been explored only recently. Here we review the molecular evolution of several human metalloproteins charged with restricting bacterial access to transition metals. These inclu...
Understanding the driving forces behind protein evolution requires the ability to correlate the mole...
Zn(II) is an essential metal ion in living organisms, playing a wide variety of roles as a structura...
Trace metals such as Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu are essential for various biological functions including prop...
Transition metals from manganese to zinc function as catalytic and structural cofactors for an amazi...
Transition metals are essential nutrients for all organisms and important players in the host-microb...
CONSPECTUS: The human innate immune system has evolved the means to reduce the bioavailability of fi...
Understanding the evolution of metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs) is fundamental to deciphering the mechani...
From simple inorganic catalysts to vital biological cofactors, divalent transition metals are instru...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Transition metals such as Mn, Zn, Fe and Cu are essential micronutrients to living organisms but hav...
Hosts and pathogens are locked in an endless battle to gain selective advantages over one another. H...
Hosts and pathogens are locked in an endless battle to gain selective advantages over one another. H...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Carbapenems, 'last-resort' β-lactam antibiotics, are inactivated by zinc-dependent metallo-β-lactama...
Understanding the driving forces behind protein evolution requires the ability to correlate the mole...
Zn(II) is an essential metal ion in living organisms, playing a wide variety of roles as a structura...
Trace metals such as Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu are essential for various biological functions including prop...
Transition metals from manganese to zinc function as catalytic and structural cofactors for an amazi...
Transition metals are essential nutrients for all organisms and important players in the host-microb...
CONSPECTUS: The human innate immune system has evolved the means to reduce the bioavailability of fi...
Understanding the evolution of metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs) is fundamental to deciphering the mechani...
From simple inorganic catalysts to vital biological cofactors, divalent transition metals are instru...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Transition metals such as Mn, Zn, Fe and Cu are essential micronutrients to living organisms but hav...
Hosts and pathogens are locked in an endless battle to gain selective advantages over one another. H...
Hosts and pathogens are locked in an endless battle to gain selective advantages over one another. H...
Transition metal ions are essential micronutrients for all living organisms. In mammals, these ions ...
Carbapenems, 'last-resort' β-lactam antibiotics, are inactivated by zinc-dependent metallo-β-lactama...
Understanding the driving forces behind protein evolution requires the ability to correlate the mole...
Zn(II) is an essential metal ion in living organisms, playing a wide variety of roles as a structura...
Trace metals such as Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu are essential for various biological functions including prop...