Key Highlights
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Two proteins, p120 and plakophilin-4, help build different types of cell-to-cell adhesions, with p120 forming the main “glue” that holds cells together and plakophilin-4 creating specialized junctions for other functions. This discovery explains how our bodies create a variety of cell connections tailored for specific tissues and roles, moving beyond a one-size-fits-all model.
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A protein called ZAP-S acts as a cellular quality inspector, detecting and destroying the mRNA instructions for proteins that have faulty “address labels” meant to guide them to the cell’s packaging center. This prevents the buildup of misplaced proteins and protects the cell from stress, highlighting a crucial early checkpoint in protein production.
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During the process where cells “swallow” external material, a motor protein called class-I myosin senses and responds to changes in the tension of the cell’s outer membrane. This shows that the physical force on the membrane itself is a key signal that helps coordinate the complex machinery of cellular eating.
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Researchers have pinpointed the exact spot where a key protein (MLE) binds to a long non-coding RNA molecule (roX2), which is essential for regulating genes on the X chromosome. This nucleotide-level mapping provides a precise blueprint for understanding how this critical gene-silencing complex is assembled.
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In the human green cone opsin (a light-sensing protein), a specific amino acid (E129) is critical for absorbing long-wavelength light by balancing the charge of the light-catching retinal molecule. The electrical environment in this cone protein is distinctly different from that in the rod protein used for night vision, which may explain their different color sensitivities.
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