首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   4511篇
  免费   444篇
  国内免费   2篇
  4957篇
  2022年   29篇
  2021年   62篇
  2020年   41篇
  2019年   46篇
  2018年   36篇
  2017年   34篇
  2016年   87篇
  2015年   156篇
  2014年   158篇
  2013年   198篇
  2012年   298篇
  2011年   274篇
  2010年   207篇
  2009年   161篇
  2008年   245篇
  2007年   293篇
  2006年   240篇
  2005年   240篇
  2004年   210篇
  2003年   194篇
  2002年   186篇
  2001年   57篇
  2000年   50篇
  1999年   57篇
  1998年   54篇
  1997年   44篇
  1996年   47篇
  1995年   35篇
  1994年   51篇
  1993年   42篇
  1992年   43篇
  1991年   55篇
  1990年   48篇
  1989年   35篇
  1988年   37篇
  1987年   26篇
  1986年   49篇
  1985年   48篇
  1984年   54篇
  1983年   39篇
  1982年   49篇
  1981年   45篇
  1980年   48篇
  1979年   39篇
  1978年   37篇
  1977年   33篇
  1976年   29篇
  1975年   37篇
  1974年   35篇
  1973年   36篇
排序方式: 共有4957条查询结果,搜索用时 31 毫秒
111.
Reversible phosphorylation of proteins regulates numerous aspects of cell function, and abnormal phosphorylation is causal in many diseases. Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) is central to the regulation of glucose homeostasis. PDC exists in a dynamic equilibrium between de-phospho-(active) and phosphorylated (inactive) forms controlled by pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatases (PDP1,2) and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases (PDK1-4). In contrast to the reciprocal regulation of the phospho-/de-phospho cycle of PDC and at the level of expression of the isoforms of PDK and PDP regulated by hormones and diet, there is scant evidence for regulatory factors acting in vivo as reciprocal "on-off" switches. Here we show that the putative insulin mediator inositol phosphoglycan P-type (IPG-P) has a sigmoidal inhibitory action on PDK in addition to its known linear stimulation of PDP. Thus, at critical levels of IPG-P, this sigmoidal/linear model markedly enhances the switchover from the inactive to the active form of PDC, a "push-pull" system that, combined with the developmental and hormonal control of IPG-P, indicates their powerful regulatory function. The release of IPGs from cell membranes by insulin is significant in relation to diabetes. The chelation of IPGs with Mn2+ and Zn2+ suggests a role as "catalytic chelators" coordinating the traffic of metal ions in cells. Synthetic inositol hexosamine analogues are shown here to have a similar linear/sigmoidal reciprocal action on PDC exerting push-pull effects, suggesting their potential for treatment of metabolic disorders, including diabetes.  相似文献   
112.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protein Vif recruits the host E3 ubiquitin ligase, composed of cullin 5 (Cul5), Rbx2, Elongin B, and Elongin C (EloBC), to polyubiquitinate the antiviral protein APOBEC3G. Multiple regions in the C-terminal half of Vif interact with the E3 ligase. We have purified individual regions of Vif and investigated their thermodynamic contributions to the ligase assembly in vitro using isothermal titration calorimetry and fluorescence anisotropy. Our results quantify the high-affinity interactions between the Vif BC box and EloBC and between the Vif zinc finger and Cul5, as well as the modest interaction between the Vif cullin box and Cul5. Our purified Vif constructs also provide direct biochemical evidence that the Vif cullin box, containing the PPLP region, leads to the dimerization of Vif-EloBC complexes but not Cul5-Vif-EloBC complexes.HIV Vif antagonizes the human antiviral protein APOBEC3G by hijacking the human Elongin B/C (EloBC)-cullin-SOCS box (ECS)-type E3 ubiquitin ligase, resulting in the polyubiquitination of APOBEC3G and subsequently its proteasomal degradation. Canonical ECS-type ubiquitin ligases consist of a cullin scaffold protein to which adaptor and substrate receptor proteins bind at the N terminus. HIV Vif serves as a substrate receptor protein—its N terminus recruits APOBEC3G, while multiple C-terminal regions assemble with the E3 ligase (9, 13, 24). The E3 ligase interacting regions include a zinc finger (residues 100 to 140), a BC box (residues 141 to 154), and a cullin box (residues 155 to 176) (Fig. (Fig.11).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.(A) A sequence schematic of Vif showing the regions that interact with A3G, A3F, EloBC, and Cul5. (B) An illustration of the assembly of the Vif-E3 ubiquitin ligase. (C) A homology model of Vif-Cul5-EloBC, where the Vif BC box-EloBC is actual structural data (PDB ID 3DCG).Vif binds the cullin adaptor proteins EloB and EloC through the BC-box region (24). The BC box is a loop-helix motif with the consensus sequence (T/S)LxxxCxxx(V/L/I) (7), and it also exists in cellular proteins that interact with EloBC. While Vif does not fit this consensus perfectly, it still binds EloBC with high affinity, and this interaction is lost upon mutation or deletion of consensus BC-box residues (10, 24, 25). This interaction has been described previously for the cellular proteins VHL (15), SOCS2 (3), SOCS3 (1), SOCS4 (4), and recently HIV Vif (14).Both the Vif zinc finger and cullin box interact with the E3 ligase scaffold protein cullin 5 (Cul5) (11, 12, 20, 21). It has been established that the zinc finger is required for Vif to bind Cul5. Mutation of critical histidine or cysteine residues in this region or the addition of the zinc chelator N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)-ethylenediamine (TPEN) abolishes the Vif-Cul5 interaction (8, 11, 25). The sequence of the Vif cullin box is not as conserved as those of cellular SOCS-box proteins, which have a defined structure and determine the specificities of their respective cullins (6). The role of the Vif cullin box is not clear, but it has been suggested to promote dimerization of Vif, involving the conserved PPLP region (22, 23), and has recently been implicated in APOBEC3G binding (5, 17). While its importance in Cul5 binding has been demonstrated in coimmunoprecipitation experiments (14), experimental data also exist showing that the Vif zinc finger alone still immunoprecipitates Cul5 (11, 21).To dissect the assembly of the Vif-E3 ubiquitin ligase, we quantified the binding interactions between various C-terminal Vif constructs, EloBC, and Cul5 by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and fluorescence polarization (FP). We additionally probed the effects of the cullin box on Vif dimerization.  相似文献   
113.
114.
115.
The thrombin mutant W215A/E217A (WE) is a potent anticoagulant both in vitro and in vivo. Previous x-ray structural studies have shown that WE assumes a partially collapsed conformation that is similar to the inactive E* form, which explains its drastically reduced activity toward substrate. Whether this collapsed conformation is genuine, rather than the result of crystal packing or the mutation introduced in the critical 215–217 β-strand, and whether binding of thrombomodulin to exosite I can allosterically shift the E* form to the active E form to restore activity toward protein C are issues of considerable mechanistic importance to improve the design of an anticoagulant thrombin mutant for therapeutic applications. Here we present four crystal structures of WE in the human and murine forms that confirm the collapsed conformation reported previously under different experimental conditions and crystal packing. We also present structures of human and murine WE bound to exosite I with a fragment of the platelet receptor PAR1, which is unable to shift WE to the E form. These structural findings, along with kinetic and calorimetry data, indicate that WE is strongly stabilized in the E* form and explain why binding of ligands to exosite I has only a modest effect on the E*-E equilibrium for this mutant. The E* → E transition requires the combined binding of thrombomodulin and protein C and restores activity of the mutant WE in the anticoagulant pathway.Thrombin is the pivotal protease of blood coagulation and is endowed with both procoagulant and anticoagulant roles in vivo (1). Thrombin acts as a procoagulant when it converts fibrinogen into an insoluble fibrin clot, activates clotting factors V, VIII, XI, and XIII, and cleaves PAR12 and PAR4 on the surface of human platelets thereby promoting platelet aggregation (2). Upon binding to thrombomodulin, a receptor present on the membrane of endothelial cells, thrombin becomes unable to interact with fibrinogen and PAR1 but increases >1,000-fold its activity toward the zymogen protein C (3). Activated protein C generated from the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex down-regulates both the amplification and progression of the coagulation cascade (3) and acts as a potent cytoprotective agent upon engagement of EPCR and PAR1 (4).The dual nature of thrombin has long motivated interest in dissociating its procoagulant and anticoagulant activities (512). Thrombin mutants with anticoagulant activity help rationalize the bleeding phenotypes of several naturally occurring mutations and could eventually provide new tools for pharmacological intervention (13) by exploiting the natural protein C pathway (3, 14, 15). Previous mutagenesis studies have led to the identification of the E217A and E217K mutations that significantly shift thrombin specificity from fibrinogen toward protein C relative to the wild type (1012). Both constructs were found to display anticoagulant activity in vivo (10, 12). The subsequent discovery of the role of Trp-215 in controlling the balance between pro- and anti-coagulant activities of thrombin (16) made it possible to construct the double mutant W215A/E217A (WE) featuring >19,000-fold reduced activity toward fibrinogen but only 7-fold loss of activity toward protein C (7). These properties make WE the most potent anticoagulant thrombin mutant engineered to date and a prototype for a new class of anticoagulants (13). In vivo studies have revealed an extraordinary potency, efficacy, and safety profile of WE when compared with direct administration of activated protein C or heparin (1719). Importantly, WE elicits cytoprotective effects (20) and acts as an antithrombotic by antagonizing the platelet receptor GpIb in its interaction with von Willebrand factor (21).What is the molecular mechanism underscoring the remarkable functional properties of WE? The mutant features very low activity toward synthetic and physiological substrates, including protein C. However, in the presence of thrombomodulin, protein C is activated efficiently (7). A possible explanation is that WE assumes an inactive conformation when free but is converted into an active form in the presence of thrombomodulin. The ability of WE to switch from inactive to active forms is consistent with recent kinetic (22) and structural (23, 24) evidence of the significant plasticity of the trypsin fold. The active form of the protease, E, coexists with an inactive form, E*, that is distinct from the zymogen conformation (25). Biological activity of the protease depends on the equilibrium distribution of E* and E, which is obviously different for different proteases depending on their physiological role and environmental conditions (25). The E* form features a collapse of the 215–217 β-strand into the active site and a flip of the peptide bond between residues Glu-192 and Gly-193, which disrupts the oxyanion hole. These changes have been documented crystallographically in thrombin and other trypsin-like proteases such as αI-tryptase (26), the high temperature requirement-like protease (27), complement factor D (28), granzyme K (29), hepatocyte growth factor activator (30), prostate kallikrein (31), prostasin (32, 33), complement factor B (34), and the arterivirus protease nsp4 (35). Hence, the questions that arise about the molecular mechanism of WE function are whether the mutant is indeed stabilized in the inactive E* form and whether it can be converted to the active E form upon thrombomodulin binding.Structural studies of the anticoagulant mutants E217K (36) and WE (37) show a partial collapse of the 215–217 β-strand into the active site that abrogates substrate binding. The collapse is similar to, but less pronounced than, that observed in the structure of the inactive E* form of thrombin where Trp-215 relinquishes its hydrophobic interaction with Phe-227 to engage the catalytic His-57 and residues of the 60-loop after a 10 Å shift in its position (24). These more substantial changes have been observed recently in the structure of the anticoagulant mutant Δ146–149e (38), which has proved that stabilization of E* is indeed a molecular mechanism capable of switching thrombin into an anticoagulant. It would be simple to assume that both E217K and WE, like Δ146–149e, are stabilized in the E* form. However, unlike Δ146–149e, both E217K and WE carry substitutions in the critical 215–217 β-strand that could result into additional functional effects overlapping with or mimicking a perturbation of the E*-E equilibrium. A significant concern is that both structures suffer from crystal packing interactions that may have biased the conformation of side chains and loops near the active site (24). The collapsed structures of E217K and WE may be artifactual unless validated by additional structural studies where crystal packing is substantially different.To address the second question, kinetic measurements of chromogenic substrate hydrolysis by WE in the presence of saturating amounts of thrombomodulin have been carried out (37), but these show only a modest improvement of the kcat/Km as opposed to >57,000-fold increase observed when protein C is used as a substrate (7, 37). The modest effect of thrombomodulin on the hydrolysis of chromogenic substrates is practically identical to that seen upon binding of hirugen to exosite I (37) and echoes the results obtained with the wild type (39) and other anticoagulant thrombin mutants (7, 9, 10, 12, 38). That argues against the ability of thrombomodulin alone to significantly shift the E*-E equilibrium in favor of the E form. Binding of a fragment of the platelet receptor PAR1 to exosite I in the D102N mutant stabilized in the E* form (24) does trigger the transition to the E form (23), but evidence that a similar long-range effect exists for the E217K or WE mutants has not been presented.In this study we have addressed the two unresolved questions about the mechanism of action of the anticoagulant thrombin mutant WE. Here we present new structures of the mutant in its human and murine versions, free and bound to a fragment of the thrombin receptor PAR1 at exosite I. The structures are complemented by direct energetic assessment of the binding of ligands to exosite I and its effect on the E*-E equilibrium.  相似文献   
116.
Comparative phylogeography has emerged as a means of understanding the spatial patterns of genetic divergence of codistributed species. However, researchers are often frustrated because of the lack of appropriate statistical tests to assess concordancy of multiple phylogeographic trees. We develop a method for testing congruence across multiple species and synthesizing the data into a regional supertree. Nine phylogeographic data sets of species with different life histories and ecologies were statistically compared using maximum agreement subtrees (MAST) and showed a high degree of concordancy. A supertree combining the different phylogeographic trees was then computed using matrix representation with parsimony, and the groups defined by this supertree were tested against climatic data to investigate a potential mechanism driving divergence. Our data suggest that species and genetic lineages in California are shaped by climatic regimes. The supertree method in combination with MAST represents a new approach to test congruence hypotheses and detect common geographic signals in comparative phylogeography.  相似文献   
117.
When young wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) or barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) plants were deprived of an external sulphate supply (-S plants), the capacity of their roots to absorb sulphate, but not phosphate or potassium, increased rapidly (derepression) so that after 3–5 d it was more than tenfold that of sulphate-sufficient plants (+S plants). This increased capacity was lost rapidly (repression) over a 24-h period when the sulphate supply was restored. There was little effect on the uptake of L-methionine during de-repression of the sulphate-transport system, but S input from methionine during a 24-h pretreatment repressed sulphate influx in both+S and-S plants.Sulphate influx of both+S and-S plants was inhibited by pretreating roots for 1 h with 4,4-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2-disulphonic acid (DIDS) at concentrations > 0.1 mol · m-3. This inhibition was substantially reversed by washing for 1 h in DIDS-free medium before measuring influx. Longer-term pretreatment of roots with 0.1 mol·m-3 DIDS delayed de-repression of the sulphatetransport system in-S plants but had no influence on+S plants in 3 d.The sulphydryl-binding reagent, n-ethylmaleimide, was a very potent inhibitor of sulphate influx in-S roots, but was much less inhibitory in +S roots. Its effects were essentially irreversible and were proportionately the same at all sulphate concentrations within the range of operation of the high-affinity sulphate-transport system. Inhibition of influx was 85–96% by 300 s pretreatment by 0.3 mol·m-3 n-ethylmaleimide. No protection of the transport system could be observed by including up to 50 mol·m-3 sulphate in the n-ethylmaleimide pre-treatment solution. A similar differential sensitivity of-S and+S plants was seen with p-chloromercuriphenyl sulphonic acid.The arginyl-binding reagent, phenylglyoxal, supplied to roots at 0.25 or 1 mol·m-3 strongly inhibited influx in-S wheat plants (by up to 95%) but reduced influx by only one-half in+S plants. The inhibition of sulphate influx in-S plants was much greater than that of phosphate influx and could not be prevented by relatively high (100 mol·m-3 sulphate concentrations accompanying phenylglyoxal treatment. Effects of phenylglyoxal pretreatment were unchanged for at least 30 min after its removal from the solution but thereafter the capacity for sulphate influx was restored. The amount of new carrier appearing in-S roots was far greater than in+S roots over a 24-h period.The results indicate that, in the de-repressed state, the sulphate transporter is more sensitive to reagents binding sulphydryl and arginyl residues. This suggests a number of strategies for identifying the proteins involved in sulphate transport.Abbreviations DIDS 4,4-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2-disulphonic acid - NEM n-ethylmaleimide - PCMBS p-chloromercuriphenyl sulphonic acid  相似文献   
118.
119.
Vosshall LB  Stensmyr MC 《Neuron》2005,45(2):179-181
Odorant binding proteins (OBPs) are abundant proteins of unknown function expressed at high levels in insect and vertebrate chemosensory organs. In this issue of Neuron, Xu et al. show that Drosophila OBP76a is necessary for fruit flies to respond to the aggregation pheromone 11-cis vaccenyl acetate. The results suggest a mechanism by which this OBP is intimately involved in pheromone signal transduction.  相似文献   
120.
The Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) Gag polyprotein undergoes transient nuclear trafficking as an intrinsic part of the virus assembly pathway. Nuclear export of Gag is crucial for the efficient production of viral particles and is accomplished through the action of a leptomycin B (LMB)-dependent nuclear export signal (NES) in the p10 domain (L. Z. Scheifele, R. A. Garbitt, J. D. Rhoads, and L. J. Parent, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99:3944-3949, 2002). We have now mapped the nuclear export activity to the C-terminal portion of the p10 sequence and identified the four hydrophobic amino acids within this region that comprise a leucine-rich NES. Alteration of these hydrophobic residues resulted in the accumulation of Gag proteins within the nucleus and a budding defect greater than that obtained with LMB treatment of cells expressing the wild-type Gag protein (Scheifele et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99:3944-3949, 2002). In addition, export of Gag from the nucleus was found to be a rate-limiting step in virus-like particle production. Consistent with a role for the NES sequence in viral replication, this cluster of hydrophobic residues in p10 is conserved across a wide range of avian retroviruses. Furthermore, naturally occurring substitutions within this region in related viruses maintained nuclear export activity and remained sensitive to the activity of LMB. Using gain-of-function approaches, we found that the hydrophobic motif in p10 was sufficient to promote the nuclear export of a heterologous protein and was positionally independent within the Gag polyprotein. Finally, the export pathway was further defined by the ability of specific nucleoporin inhibitors to prevent the egress of Gag from the nucleus, thereby identifying additional cellular mediators of RSV replication.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号