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'A-Like' tumor antigens
[[Pathology]] ====See Also==== * [[Aberrent glycosylation in malignant and pre-malignant states]] * [[Forssman . . . with the Tn antigen (GalNAc directly linked to serine or threonine), which is formed by incomplete . . .
16K - last updated 2006-06-30 17:45 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Aberrent glycosylation in malignant and pre-malignant states
[[Glycomics]] ====See Also==== * [['A-Like' tumor antigens]] * [[Thomsen-Friedenreich (T-Tn) antigen]] . . . by the presence of many clustered glycosylated serines and threonines in tandem repeat regions. Most . . .
7K - last updated 2006-06-04 05:43 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Alpha 1-antitrypsin (A1AT)
[[Physiology]] ====See Also==== * [[Serum pepsinogen levels and ABO blood groups]] (one study reports . . . or α1-antitrypsin (A1AT) is a serine protease inhibitor (serpin).[1] It protects . . . gram/liter. ====Function==== A1AT is a 52 kDa serine protease inhibitor, and in medicine it is considered . . . the connective tissue fiber elastin. Like all serine protease inhibitors, A1AT has a characteristic . . . This disorder proves the point that the serine protease inhibitors have a closely related structure. . . .
4K - last updated 2006-05-27 14:58 UTC by TomGreenfield
Antigen, ABH
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Blood group antigen proteins (chart)]] * [[Antigen]] * [[ABO Antibodies]] . . . glycosidic bond to the hydroxyl group of serine or threonine. Most of the oligosaccharide chains . . . other, and unrelated to blood-group specificity. Serine and threonine constitute more than 40 per cent . . .
21K - last updated 2006-06-30 16:34 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Complement System
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Collectin]] * [[Opsonization]] * [[Mannan-binding lectin (MBL)]] . . . Anaphylatoxins are proteolytic products of the serine proteases of the complement system: C3a, C4a . . . which leads to the activation of two C1r (serine protease) molecules. Then they cleave C1s (another . . . serine protease). The C1-complex now binds to and splits . . . surface, which activates the MBL-associated serine proteases, MASP-1, MASP-2, MASP-3, which can . . .
16K - last updated 2006-04-26 12:43 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Cysteine metabolism
[[Biochemistry]] ====See Also==== * [[Cysteine]] ====Description==== '''Cysteine metabolism''' is comprised . . . L-cysteine is also a product of glycine, [[serine]], and [[threonine]] metabolism. |||||| <b>L-cysteine . . . chemical || → || enzyme || || O-acetyl-L-serine || → || cysteine synthase || || L-cystine . . .
3K - last updated 2006-08-20 06:10 UTC by TomGreenfield
Glycoproteins
[[Glycomics]] ====See Also==== * [[Glycoconjugates]] * [[Carbohydrate]] * [[Carbohydrates as Biological . . . or at hydroxylysine, hydroxyproline, serine, or threonine, and is termed [[O-glycosylation]]. . . .
3K - last updated 2006-05-03 20:17 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Serine proteases
[[Physiology]] ====See Also==== * [[Serpins]] * [[Zymogen]] ====Description==== In biochemistry, serine . . . proteases or serine endopeptidases (newer name) are a class of peptidases . . . that are characterised by the presence of a serine residue in the active center of the enzyme. . . . Serine proteases are grouped into clans that share . . . hydrolase, and signal peptidase clans. Serine proteases participate in a wide range of functions . . .
12K - last updated 2006-05-23 05:55 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Serpins
[[Physiology]] ====See Also==== * [[Alpha 1-antitrypsin (A1AT)]] * [[Serine proteases]] * [[Serum pepsinogen . . . ===Description==== '''Serpins''' (short for serine protease inhibitor) are a group of structurally . . . function. ====Form and function==== Serine proteases are defined by the presence of a serine . . . same mechanism as other serpins use to inhibit serine proteases. Cysteine proteases differ from serine . . . presence of a cysteine residue, rather than a serine residue, in their active domain. Nonetheless, . . .
6K - last updated 2006-05-27 15:23 UTC by TomGreenfield
Signal transduction
[[Physiology]] ====See Also==== * [[Nitric Oxide]] * [[Proteasome]] * [[Second messengers]] ====Description==== . . . activity can be enhanced by phosphorylation of serine residues at their N-terminal end, as a result . . .
21K - last updated 2006-07-07 11:58 UTC by PeterDAdamo
What's New
<table><tr><td> http://www.dadamo.com/wiki/coral-sm.jpg </td><td>Articles . . . "Cysteine metabolism" "Functome" "Alanine" "Serine" "Proline" "Threonine" "Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal . . .
2K - last updated 2007-08-20 01:47 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
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