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57 results on '"Eva Žerovnik"'

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1. Human stefin B: from its structure, folding, and aggregation to its function in health and disease

3. Amyloid Fibrils of Stefin B Show Anisotropic Properties

4. Synergy of the Inhibitory Action of Polyphenols Plus Vitamin C on Amyloid Fibril Formation: Case Study of Human Stefin B

5. Viroporins vs. Other Pore-Forming Proteins: What Lessons Can We Take?

6. Prediction of Transmembrane Regions, Cholesterol, and Ganglioside Binding Sites in Amyloid-Forming Proteins Indicate Potential for Amyloid Pore Formation

7. Assessing autophagy in archived tissue or how to capture autophagic flux from a tissue snapshot

8. From Oxidative Stress Damage to Pathways, Networks, and Autophagy via MicroRNAs

9. The effect of three polyphenols and some other antioxidant substances on amyloid fibril formation by Human cystatin C

10. Prolines Affect the Nucleation Phase of Amyloid Fibrillation Reaction; Mutational Analysis of Human Stefin B

11. Inhibition of Protein Aggregation by Several Antioxidants

12. Transautophagy: Research and Translation of Autophagy Knowledge

13. Proline Residues as Switches in Conformational Changes Leading to Amyloid Fibril Formation

14. Gain in toxic function of stefin B EPM1 mutants aggregates: Correlation between cell death, aggregate number/size and oxidative stress

15. Amyloid fibrils compared to peptide nanotubes

16. The Role of Initial Oligomers in Amyloid Fibril Formation by Human Stefin B

17. Co-chaperoning by amyloid-forming proteins: cystatins vs. crystallins

18. Putative alternative functions of human stefin B (cystatin B): binding to amyloid-beta, membranes, and copper

19. Mechanisms of amyloid fibril formation - focus on domain-swapping

20. Possible Mechanisms by which Stefin B could Regulate Proteostasis and Oxidative Stress

21. Intracellular aggregation of human stefin B: confocal and electron microscopy study

22. Stefin B Interacts with Histones and Cathepsin L in the Nucleus

23. Interactions of alkylureas with l-valine, l-valyl-l-valine, l-leucine, and l-leucyl-l-leucine

24. Assembly of Stefin B into Polymorphic Oligomers Probed by Discrete Molecular Dynamics

25. The effect of tyrosine residues on α-synuclein fibrillation

26. A single prion protein peptide can elicit a panel of isoform specific monoclonal antibodies

27. Interaction of human stefin B in the prefibrillar oligomeric form with membranes

28. Protein aggregation as a possible cause for pathology in a subset of familial Unverricht–Lundborg disease

30. Major differences in stability and dimerization properties of two chimeric mutants of human stefins

31. On the mechanism of human stefin B folding: II. Folding from GuHCl unfolded, TFE denatured, acid denatured, and acid intermediate states

32. Refolding of recombinant sulphonated procathepsin S and of reduced chicken cystatin; implications for renaturation experiments

33. Impaired autophagy: a link between neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric diseases

34. Contributors

35. On Possible Function and Toxicity of Multiple Oligomeric/Conformational States of a Globular Protein – Human Stefin B

36. Partial rotational lattice order-disorder in stefin B crystals

37. Membrane damage by an alpha-helical pore-forming protein, Equinatoxin II, proceeds through a succession of ordered steps

38. Putative alternative functions of human stefin B (cystatin B): binding to amyloid-beta, membranes, and copper

39. Influence of partial unfolding and aggregation of human stefin B (cystatin B) EPM1 mutants G50E and Q71P on selective cleavages by cathepsins B and S

40. The cross-road between the mechanisms of protein folding and aggregation; study of human stefin B and its H75W mutant

41. Mechanisms of amyloid fibril formation--focus on domain-swapping

42. Binding of amyloid peptides to domain-swapped dimers of other amyloid-forming proteins may prevent their neurotoxicity

43. Modulation of contact order effects in the two-state folding of stefins A and B

44. Essential role of Pro 74 in stefin B amyloid-fibril formation: dual action of cyclophilin A on the process

45. Folding studies of the cysteine proteinase inhibitor — human stefin A

46. USING STEFIN B AS A MODEL AMYLOIDOGENIC PROTEIN –OVERVIEW

47. Amyloid fibril formation by human stefin B: influence of pH and TFE on fibril growth and morphology

48. Amyloid fibril formation by human stefin B: influence of the initial pH-induced intermediate state

49. Human stefin B readily forms amyloid fibrils in vitro

50. Human Stefin B Role in Cell's Response to Misfolded Proteins and Autophagy

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