Retinol-binding protein is in the molten globule state at low pH.
暂无分享,去创建一个
O. Ptitsyn | V. Bychkova | G. Rossi | R. Berni | V. Kutyshenko | O B Ptitsyn | V E Bychkova | R Berni | G L Rossi | V P Kutyshenko
[1] D. Goodman,et al. Extraction and recombination studies of the interaction of retinol with human plasma retinol-binding protein. , 1972, Journal of lipid research.
[2] A. Gotto,et al. Circular dichroic studies of human plasma retinol-binding protein and prealbumin. , 1972, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[3] P. A. Peterson,et al. Conformational studies of the human vitamin A-transporting protein complex. , 1972, Biochemistry.
[4] D. Goodman,et al. Fluorescence studies of human plasma retinol-binding protein and of the retinol-binding protein-prealbumin complex. , 1972, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[5] L. Jaenicke. A rapid micromethod for the determination of nitrogen and phosphate in biological material. , 1974, Analytical biochemistry.
[6] J. Heller. Interactions of plasma retinol-binding protein with its receptor. Specific binding of bovine and human retinol-binding protein to pigment epithelium cells from bovine eyes. , 1975, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[7] P. A. Peterson,et al. In vitro uptake of vitamin A from the retinol-binding plasma protein to mucosal epithelial cells from the monkey's small intestine. , 1976, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[8] U. Cogan,et al. Binding affinities of retinol and related compounds to retinol binding proteins. , 1976, European journal of biochemistry.
[9] P. Privalov,et al. Papain denaturation is not a two‐state transition , 1978, FEBS letters.
[10] P. A. Peterson,et al. The primary structure of the human retinol‐binding protein , 1979, FEBS letters.
[11] O. Ptitsyn,et al. α‐lactalbumin: compact state with fluctuating tertiary structure? , 1981, FEBS letters.
[12] S. Ottonello,et al. Crystallization of human plasma apo-retinol-binding protein. , 1984, Journal of molecular biology.
[13] S. Ottonello,et al. Purification of human plasma retinol-binding protein by hydrophobic interaction chromatography. , 1985, Analytical biochemistry.
[14] J. Teissié,et al. Lateral proton conduction at lipid–water interfaces and its implications for the chemiosmotic-coupling hypothesis , 1986, Nature.
[15] P. Kraulis,et al. The structure of β-lactoglobulin and its similarity to plasma retinol-binding protein , 1986, Nature.
[16] P. Privalov,et al. Cold denaturation of myoglobin. , 1986, Journal of molecular biology.
[17] O. Ptitsyn. Protein folding: Hypotheses and experiments , 1987 .
[18] S. Ottonello,et al. Vitamin A uptake from retinol-binding protein in a cell-free system from pigment epithelial cells of bovine retina. Retinol transfer from plasma retinol-binding protein to cytoplasmic retinol-binding protein with retinyl-ester formation as the intermediate step. , 1987, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[19] O. Ptitsyn,et al. Sequential mechanism of refolding of carbonic anhydrase B , 1987, FEBS letters.
[20] G. Fex,et al. Studies of the spontaneous transfer of retinol from the retinol:retinol-binding protein complex to unilamellar liposomes. , 1987, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[21] J. Findlay,et al. The interaction of retinol-binding protein with its plasma-membrane receptor. , 1988, The Biochemical journal.
[22] O. Ptitsyn,et al. The ‘molten globule’ state is involved in the translocation of proteins across membranes? , 1988, FEBS letters.
[23] J. Findlay,et al. The mechanism of uptake of retinol by plasma-membrane vesicles. , 1988, The Biochemical journal.
[24] R. Doms,et al. Protein-mediated membrane fusion. , 1989, Annual review of biophysics and biophysical chemistry.
[25] R. Woody,et al. Theoretical study of the contribution of aromatic side chains to the circular dichroism of basic bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. , 1989, Biochemistry.
[26] C M Dobson,et al. Characterization of a partly folded protein by NMR methods: studies on the molten globule state of guinea pig alpha-lactalbumin. , 1989, Biochemistry.
[27] S. McLaughlin,et al. The electrostatic properties of membranes. , 1989, Annual review of biophysics and biophysical chemistry.
[28] K. Kuwajima,et al. The molten globule state as a clue for understanding the folding and cooperativity of globular‐protein structure , 1989, Proteins.
[29] N. Noy,et al. Thermodynamic parameters of the binding of retinol to binding proteins and to membranes. , 1990, Biochemistry.
[30] N. Noy,et al. Interactions of retinol with binding proteins: implications for the mechanism of uptake by cells. , 1990, Biochemistry.
[31] T A Jones,et al. Crystallographic refinement of human serum retinol binding protein at 2Å resolution , 1990, Proteins.
[32] O. Ptitsyn,et al. Evidence for a molten globule state as a general intermediate in protein folding , 1990, FEBS letters.
[33] W. Blaner,et al. Interactions of retinol with binding proteins: studies with rat cellular retinol-binding protein and with rat retinol-binding protein. , 1991, Biochemistry.
[34] J. Lakey,et al. A 'molten-globule' membrane-insertion intermediate of the pore-forming domain of colicin A , 1991, Nature.
[35] N. A. Rodionova,et al. Study of the “molten globule” intermediate state in protein folding by a hydrophobic fluorescent probe , 1991, Biopolymers.
[36] F. Hartl,et al. Chaperonin-mediated protein folding at the surface of groEL through a 'molten globule'-like intermediate , 1991, Nature.
[37] P. A. Peterson,et al. Identification and partial characterization of a retinal pigment epithelial membrane receptor for plasma retinol-binding protein. , 1991, The Journal of biological chemistry.