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    <title>Nature Precedings - Yaroslav Nikolaev</title>
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    <description>Documents posted by Yaroslav Nikolaev</description>
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      <title>Rethinking Leucine Zipper &#8211; a ubiquitous signal transduction motif</title>
      <link>http://precedings.nature.com/documents/3271/version/1</link>
      <description>In this essay we attempt to reconsider the concept of the &#8220;Leucine Zipper&#8221; (LZ) protein oligomerization motif. Reasoning on the wealth of existing data, we suggest that despite of the structural similarity with highly stable extended &#8220;Coiled Coil&#8221; motifs, on the functional level short and moderately stable &#8220;Leucine Zippers&#8221; might stand out as a distinct group. Namely, this family of oligomerization motifs facilitates combinatorial protein-protein recognition in the course of signal transduction events, thus going beyond the structural role of the extended &#8220;Coiled Coils&#8221;. Summarizing the existing knowledge on stability, specificity and folding of Leucine Zippers we demonstrate how a simple set of rules, applied in the context of the universal coiled coil scaffold, creates a robust LZ interaction vocabulary. Owing to the high abundance of Leucine Zippers, this motif might account for coupling of distinct protein signalling pathways into a unified intracellular signalling network. In the last part of this essay we provide examples demonstrating prevalence of the LZ-mediated signal transduction and illustrate applicability of the &#8220;LZ code&#8221; formalism to interpret evidences of couplings between cytoplasmic and nuclear signalling networks. </description>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 22 May 2009 15:19:37 UTC</pubDate>
      <dc:title>Rethinking Leucine Zipper &#8211; a ubiquitous signal transduction motif</dc:title>
      <dc:identifier>hdl:10101/npre.2009.3271.1</dc:identifier>
      <dc:date>2009-05-22</dc:date>
      <dc:creator>Yaroslav Nikolaev</dc:creator>
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      <prism:publicationDate>2009-05-22T15:19:37Z</prism:publicationDate>
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      <prism:section>Cancer</prism:section>
      <prism:section>Immunology</prism:section>
      <prism:section>Molecular Cell Biology</prism:section>
      <prism:section>Bioinformatics</prism:section>
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