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Actinomycin
Some antibiotics attack cells by intercalating between the bases in a DNA double helix
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Anaphase-Promoting Complex / Cyclosome
APC/C guards the checkpoints that regulate key steps in the cell cycle
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Apoptosomes
Apoptosomes make life or death decisions in cells
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ATM and ATR Kinases
Dividing cells use ATM and ATR kinases to respond to DNA damage.
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c-Abl Protein Kinase and Imatinib
Protein kinases are being targeted by new anti-cancer drugs
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Caspases
Caspases disassemble proteins during the process of programmed cell death
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Chimeric Antigen Receptors
T cells may be engineered with chimeric antigen receptors to attack cancer cells.
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Cisplatin and DNA
Cisplatin treats cancer by causing damage to the DNA of cancer cells.
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Cyclin and Cyclin-dependent Kinase
Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases control when cells divide, making them important targets for cancer therapy.
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Dihydrofolate Reductase
DHFR is a target for cancer chemotherapy and bacterial infection
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Epidermal Growth Factor
EGF is part of a family of proteins that controls aspects of cell growth and development
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Estrogen Receptor
Estrogen binds to receptors in the nucleus and affects key genes in development
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Glutathione Transferases
Glutathione transferase tags toxic molecules, making them easy to recognize and remove.
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Hepatitis C Virus Protease/Helicase
Structures of hepatitis C viral proteins have led to the discovery of direct-acting antivirals.
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HER2/neu and Trastuzumab
Trastuzumab monoclonal antibodies targeting HER2 receptors are at the forefront of breast cancer treatment
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Histone Deacetylases
Histone deacetylases regulate access to genetic information by modifying histones
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Hsp90
Heat shock proteins ensure that proteins remain folded and active under harsh conditions
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Human Papillomavirus and Vaccines
The capsid protein of papillomavirus is used in vaccines that prevent cervical cancer.
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Initiation Factor eIF4E
Initiation factors for protein synthesis interact through disordered chains.
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Major Histocompatibility Complex
MHC displays peptides on the surfaces of cells, allowing the immune system to sense the infection inside
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MDM2 and Cancer
MDM2 controls the action of p53 tumor suppressor, making it a target for cancer chemotherapy.
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Microtubules
The largest filaments of the cytoskeleton provide tracks for transport throughout the cell
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Nanodiscs and HDL
Nanodiscs conveniently package a small piece of membrane for experimental studies.
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Nicotine, Cancer, and Addiction
Nicotine causes addiction by interacting with receptors in the brain
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Non-Homologous End Joining Supercomplexes
Lethal double-strand breaks in the DNA genome are repaired by NHEJ
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p53 Tumor Suppressor
p53 tumor suppressor protects the body from DNA damage and cancer
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PD-1 (Programmed Cell Death Protein 1)
PD-1 and its ligands are a new target for cancer therapy
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Pyruvate Kinase M2
Pyruvate kinases are the paradoxical gatekeepers for cancer cell metabolism and growth.
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RAF Protein Kinases
A single mutation in a RAF protein kinase can help transform a normal cell into a cancer cell.
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Ras Protein
Mutation of the growth-controlling ras protein can lead to cancer
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RecA and Rad51
Broken DNA strands may be repaired by matching sequences in a duplicate copy of the DNA
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Ribonucleotide Reductase
Ribonucleotide reductase creates the building blocks of DNA
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Simian Virus 40
SV40 hijacks the cells it infects using only a handful of proteins
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Small Interfering RNA (siRNA)
Our cells continually look for pieces of double-stranded RNA, a possible sign of viral infection
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Spliceosomes
Cryoelectron microscropy is revealing how spliceosomes cut-and-paste messenger RNA molecules.
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Src Tyrosine Kinase
Growth signaling proteins play an important role in the development of cancer
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Telomerase
Telomerase maintains the ends of our chromosomes.
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Thymine Dimers
Ultraviolet light damages our DNA, but our cells have ways to correct the damage
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Topoisomerases
Topoisomerases untangle and reduce the tension of DNA strands in the cell
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Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VegF) and Angiogenesis
VegF promotes blood vessel formation (angiogenesis), affecting cancer proliferation, wound healing, and other bodily processes.
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