In a paper published in Nature Cell Biology 1, Gan and colleagues detailed a new form of cellular sabotage called disulfidptosis, in which cells are overwhelmed by disulfide-containing compounds.
To overcome these challenges, a research team including specially appointed Associate Professor Hiroshi Kadokura and Professor Hideki Taguchi from the Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan, developed an ...
A newly developed luciferase-based reporter can detect problems in protein translocation and disulfide bond formation in the ...
A newly developed luciferase-based reporter can detect problems in protein translocation and disulfide bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), as reported by researchers at Science Tokyo.