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      Architecture of the paracellular channels formed by claudins of the blood-brain barrier tight junctions : Blood-brain barrier tight junctions

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          Tight junctions: from simple barriers to multifunctional molecular gates.

          Epithelia and endothelia separate different tissue compartments and protect multicellular organisms from the outside world. This requires the formation of tight junctions, selective gates that control paracellular diffusion of ions and solutes. Tight junctions also form the border between the apical and basolateral plasma-membrane domains and are linked to the machinery that controls apicobasal polarization. Additionally, signalling networks that guide diverse cell behaviours and functions are connected to tight junctions, transmitting information to and from the cytoskeleton, nucleus and different cell adhesion complexes. Recent advances have broadened our understanding of the molecular architecture and cellular functions of tight junctions.
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            Claudin-1 and -2: Novel Integral Membrane Proteins Localizing at Tight Junctions with No Sequence Similarity to Occludin

            Occludin is the only known integral membrane protein localizing at tight junctions (TJ), but recent targeted disruption analysis of the occludin gene indicated the existence of as yet unidentified integral membrane proteins in TJ. We therefore re-examined the isolated junction fraction from chicken liver, from which occludin was first identified. Among numerous components of this fraction, only a broad silver-stained band ∼22 kD was detected with the occludin band through 4 M guanidine-HCl extraction as well as sonication followed by stepwise sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Two distinct peptide sequences were obtained from the lower and upper halves of the broad band, and similarity searches of databases allowed us to isolate two full-length cDNAs encoding related mouse 22-kD proteins consisting of 211 and 230 amino acids, respectively. Hydrophilicity analysis suggested that both bore four transmembrane domains, although they did not show any sequence similarity to occludin. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy revealed that both proteins tagged with FLAG or GFP were targeted to and incorporated into the TJ strand itself. We designated them as “claudin-1” and “claudin-2”, respectively. Although the precise structure/function relationship of the claudins to TJ still remains elusive, these findings indicated that multiple integral membrane proteins with four putative transmembrane domains, occludin and claudins, constitute TJ strands.
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              The structure of proteins: Two hydrogen-bonded helical configurations of the polypeptide chain

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
                Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci.
                Wiley
                00778923
                October 2017
                October 2017
                June 14 2017
                : 1405
                : 1
                : 131-146
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering; Syracuse University; Syracuse New York
                Article
                10.1111/nyas.13378
                28614588
                82a70b01-ed8c-43c5-9b62-5883b2823b95
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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