Linda M. Benson
University of Rochester
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Featured researches published by Linda M. Benson.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000
Jiri Adamec; Frank Rusnak; Whyte G. Owen; Stephen Naylor; Linda M. Benson; A. Marquis Gacy; Grazia Isaya
Frataxin deficiency is the primary cause of Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), an autosomal recessive cardiodegenerative and neurodegenerative disease. Frataxin is a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein that is widely conserved among eukaryotes. Genetic inactivation of the yeast frataxin homologue (Yfh1p) results in mitochondrial iron accumulation and hypersensitivity to oxidative stress. Increased iron deposition and evidence of oxidative damage have also been observed in cardiac tissue and cultured fibroblasts from patients with FRDA. These findings indicate that frataxin is essential for mitochondrial iron homeostasis and protection from iron-induced formation of free radicals. The functional mechanism of frataxin, however, is still unknown. We have expressed the mature form of Yfh1p (mYfh1p) in Escherichia coli and have analyzed its function in vitro. Isolated mYfh1p is a soluble monomer (13,783 Da) that contains no iron and shows no significant tendency to self-associate. Aerobic addition of ferrous iron to mYfh1p results in assembly of regular spherical multimers with a molecular mass of approximately 1. 1 MDa (megadaltons) and a diameter of 13+/-2 nm. Each multimer consists of approximately 60 subunits and can sequester >3,000 atoms of iron. Titration of mYfh1p with increasing iron concentrations supports a stepwise mechanism of multimer assembly. Sequential addition of an iron chelator and a reducing agent results in quantitative iron release with concomitant disassembly of the multimer, indicating that mYfh1p sequesters iron in an available form. In yeast mitochondria, native mYfh1p exists as monomer and a higher-order species with a molecular weight >600,000. After addition of (55)Fe to the medium, immunoprecipitates of this species contain >16 atoms of (55)Fe per molecule of mYfh1p. We propose that iron-dependent self-assembly of recombinant mYfh1p reflects a physiological role for frataxin in mitochondrial iron sequestration and bioavailability.
The Journal of Asian Studies | 1999
Linda M. Benson; Ingvar Svanberg
This study, based on Chinese publications and archival materials as well as on recent fieldwork, provides an up-to-date treatment of Kazak history and culture, emphasizing the Kazaks in 20th-century China and, in particular, their status today as one of Chinas minority nationalities.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 1994
Dennis C. Mays; Albert N. Nelson; Linda M. Benson; Kenneth L. Johnson; Stephen Naylor; James J. Lipsky
Sulfiram, a drug applied topically to treat scabies, produces effects similar to those of disulfiram after subsequent ingestion of ethanol. Disulfiram, used in aversion therapy in the treatment of alcoholism, inhibits hepatic aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) causing an accumulation of acetaldehyde after ethanol ingestion. The increased tissue levels of acetaldehyde cause a spectrum of undesirable side-effects including flushing, nausea, vomiting, and tachycardia, which are referred to as the disulfiram reaction. Previous studies have shown that in vitro sulfiram is a very weak inhibitor of ALDH, but solutions of sulfiram markedly increase in potency with time. In the present study, fresh solutions of sulfiram were exposed to fluorescent room light under ambient conditions and analyzed at timed intervals by HPLC. At least eight products, including disulfiram, were formed in the light-exposed sulfiram solutions, but not in solutions kept in the dark. Structural characterization of two of the photolysis products was obtained by on-line microbore HPLC-mass spectrometry (mu LC-MS) and on-line microbore HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry (mu LC-MS/MS) using continuous flow-liquid secondary ion mass spectrometry (CF-LSIMS) as the primary ionization method. Sulfiram was converted to disulfiram at an initial rate of 0.7%/hr, and the formation of disulfiram correlated with the increase in ALDH inhibition in vitro. The results of this investigation show that while sulfiram is a weak inhibitor of ALDH in vitro, it is readily photoconverted to disulfiram, a very potent inhibitor of ALDH, which may explain the adverse reaction to ethanol after sulfiram therapy.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017
Xiuhong Zhai; Yong Guang Gao; Shrawan K. Mishra; Dhirendra K. Simanshu; Ivan A. Boldyrev; Linda M. Benson; H. Robert Bergen; Lucy Malinina; John Mundy; Julian G. Molotkovsky; Dinshaw J. Patel; Rhoderick E. Brown
Genetic models for studying localized cell suicide that halt the spread of pathogen infection and immune response activation in plants include Arabidopsis accelerated-cell-death 11 mutant (acd11). In this mutant, sphingolipid homeostasis is disrupted via depletion of ACD11, a lipid transfer protein that is specific for ceramide 1-phosphate (C1P) and phyto-C1P. The C1P binding site in ACD11 and in human ceramide-1-phosphate transfer protein (CPTP) is surrounded by cationic residues. Here, we investigated the functional regulation of ACD11 and CPTP by anionic phosphoglycerides and found that 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidic acid or 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol (≤15 mol %) in C1P source vesicles depressed C1P intermembrane transfer. By contrast, replacement with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylserine stimulated C1P transfer by ACD11 and CPTP. Notably, “soluble” phosphatidylserine (dihexanoyl-phosphatidylserine) failed to stimulate C1P transfer. Also, none of the anionic phosphoglycerides affected transfer action by human glycolipid lipid transfer protein (GLTP), which is glycolipid-specific and has few cationic residues near its glycolipid binding site. These findings provide the first evidence for a potential phosphoglyceride headgroup-specific regulatory interaction site(s) existing on the surface of any GLTP-fold and delineate new differences between GLTP superfamily members that are specific for C1P versus glycolipid.
Techniques in Protein Chemistry | 1997
Andy J. Tomlinson; Linda M. Benson; Norberto A. Guzman; Stephen Naylor
Publisher Summary In attempts to overcome the poor concentration limits of detection (CLOD) of capillary electrophoresis (CE), several groups have developed a number of injection techniques, including analyte stacking, field amplification, and transient isotachophoresis (tITP) that facilitate the analysis of larger sample volumes. However, as these techniques are carried out within the conventional CE capillary, the maximum sample volume that can be analyzed is predetermined by the total capillary volume. Hence, even in most favorable cases such optimized injection techniques can normally only tolerate the introduction of
Published in <b>2004</b> in Armonk (N.Y.) by Sharpe | 2004
Frederick S Starr; James A Millward; Peter C. Perdue; Nabijan Tursun; Dru C. Gladney; Yitzhak Shichor; Calla Wiemer; Linda M. Benson; Sean R Roberts; Stanley Toops; Jay Dautcher; Graham Rudelson; William Jankowiak; Graham E Fuller; Jonathan N Lipman; Gardner Bovingdon
Archive | 1995
Stephen Naylor; Andrew J. Tomlinson; Linda M. Benson; Walter David Braddock; Robert P. Oda
Analytical Chemistry | 2003
John Cavanagh; Linda M. Benson; Richele J. Thompson; Stephen Naylor
Biochemistry | 2002
John Cavanagh; Richele J. Thompson; Benjamin G. Bobay; Linda M. Benson; Stephen Naylor
Analytical Biochemistry | 2002
Laura A. Cassiday; Lori L. Lebruska; Linda M. Benson; Stephen Naylor; Whyte G. Owen; L. James Maher