15 results on '"Brit Winnen"'
Search Results
2. Hierarchical effector protein transport by the Salmonella Typhimurium SPI-1 type III secretion system.
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, Markus C Schlumberger, Alexander Sturm, Kaspar Schüpbach, Stefan Siebenmann, Patrick Jenny, and Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Type III secretion systems (TTSS) are employed by numerous pathogenic and symbiotic bacteria to inject a cocktail of different "effector proteins" into host cells. These effectors subvert host cell signaling to establish symbiosis or disease. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have studied the injection of SipA and SptP, two effector proteins of the invasion-associated Salmonella type III secretion system (TTSS-1). SipA and SptP trigger different host cell responses. SipA contributes to triggering actin rearrangements and invasion while SptP reverses the actin rearrangements after the invasion has been completed. Nevertheless, SipA and SptP were both pre-formed and stored in the bacterial cytosol before host cell encounter. By time lapse microscopy, we observed that SipA was injected earlier than SptP. Computer modeling revealed that two assumptions were sufficient to explain this injection hierarchy: a large number of SipA and SptP molecules compete for transport via a limiting number of TTSS; and the TTSS recognize SipA more efficiently than SptP. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This novel mechanism of hierarchical effector protein injection may serve to avoid functional interference between SipA and SptP. An injection hierarchy of this type may be of general importance, allowing bacteria to precisely time the host cell manipulation by type III effectors.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Gomesin inhibits melanoma growth by manipulating key signaling cascades that control cell death and proliferation
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, John J. Miles, Pablo Cabezas-Sainz, Manuel A. Fernandez-Rojo, Paul F. Alewood, Maria P. Ikonomopoulou, Glenn F. King, Andreas Brust, Rodrigo A.V. Morales, Grant A. Ramm, Sandy S. Pineda, Laura Sánchez, and Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Departamento de Zooloxía, Xenética e Antropoloxía Física
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,MAPK/ERK pathway ,Cell ,Population ,lcsh:Medicine ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Biologics ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Article ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Foreskin ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Animals ,education ,lcsh:Science ,Melanoma ,Zebrafish ,Cell Proliferation ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Cell Death ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Drug discovery ,lcsh:R ,Cell cycle ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Control cell ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,Disease Models, Animal ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cell culture ,Cancer research ,Key (cryptography) ,Heterografts ,lcsh:Q ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Consistent with their diverse pharmacology, peptides derived from venomous animals have been developed as drugs to treat disorders as diverse as hypertension, diabetes and chronic pain. Melanoma has a poor prognosis due in part to its metastatic capacity, warranting further development of novel targeted therapies. This prompted us to examine the anti-melanoma activity of the spider peptides gomesin (AgGom) and a gomesin-like homolog (HiGom). AgGom and HiGom dose-dependently reduced the viability and proliferation of melanoma cells whereas it had no deleterious effects on non-transformed neonatal foreskin fibroblasts. Concordantly, gomesin-treated melanoma cells showed a reduced G0/G1 cell population. AgGom and HiGom compromised proliferation of melanoma cells via activation of the p53/p21 cell cycle check-point axis and the Hippo signaling cascade, together with attenuation of the MAP kinase pathway. We show that both gomesin peptides exhibit antitumoral activity in melanoma AVATAR-zebrafish xenograft tumors and that HiGom also reduces tumour progression in a melanoma xenograft mouse model. Taken together, our data highlight the potential of gomesin for development as a novel melanoma-targeted therapy This work was supported by Perpetual IMPACT Grant IDIPAP2015/1585 (to J.J.M.), Discovery Grants DP1095728 (to J.J.M.) and DP130103813 (to G.F.K.) from the Australian Research Council, and by QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute crowd funding and salary support (to M.P.I.). M.P.I. is a “Marie Curie” AMAROUT Fellow. M.A.F.R. is a fellow supported by the Talent Program from the Madrid Government of Spain (Grant No. T1-BIO-1854 to M.A.F.R.). J.J.M. is supported by a NHMRC Career Development Fellowship (APP1131732) and G.F.K. by a NHMRC Principal Research Fellowship (APP1136889) SI
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Zinc-binding to the cytoplasmic PAS domain regulates the essential WalK histidine kinase of Staphylococcus aureus
- Author
-
Glenn F. King, Brit Winnen, Benjamin P Howden, Brett M. Collins, Christopher A. McDevitt, Timothy P. Stinear, Michael J. Kuiper, Ian R. Monk, Torsten Seemann, Mike Gajdiss, Jean Y. H. Lee, Nausad Shaikh, Stephanie L. Begg, Sacha J. Pidot, Rikki N. Hvorup, and Gabriele Bierbaum
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Chemistry ,Histidine kinase ,Mutant ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Regulon ,PAS domain ,Phosphorylation ,Kinase activity ,Histidine ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
WalKR (YycFG) is the only essential two-component regulator in the human pathogenStaphylococcus aureus.WalKR regulates peptidoglycan synthesis, but this function alone appears not to explain its essentiality. To understand WalKR function we investigated a suppressor mutant that arose when WalKR activity was impaired; a single histidine to tryptophan substitution (H271Y) in the cytoplasmic Per-Arnt-Sim (PASCYT) domain of the histidine kinase WalK. Introduction of the WalKH271Ymutation into wild-typeS.aureusactivated the WalKR regulon. Structural analyses of the WalK PASCYTdomain revealed a hitherto unknown metal binding site, in which a zinc ion (Zn2+) was tetrahedrally-coordinated by four amino acid residues including H271. The WallkH271Ymutation abrogated metal binding, increasing WalK kinase activity and WalR phosphorylation. Thus, Zn2+-binding negatively regulates WalKR activity. Identification of a metal ligand sensed by the WalKR system substantially expands our understanding of this criticalS.aureusregulon.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Membrane Curvature Protein Exhibits Interdomain Flexibility and Binds a Small GTPase
- Author
-
Gordon J. King, Shu-Hong Hu, Andrew E. Whitten, Jagath Reddy Junutula, Jacqueline Stöckli, Christopher C. Meoli, David E. James, Russell Jarrott, Brit Winnen, Jennifer L. Martin, and Wilko Duprez
- Subjects
Surface Properties ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Static Electricity ,Calorimetry ,Biology ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Phosphatidylinositols ,Biochemistry ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Protein–protein interaction ,Protein structure ,Protein Interaction Mapping ,Humans ,Scattering, Radiation ,Small GTPase ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Monomeric GTP-Binding Proteins ,Cell Nucleus ,Binding Sites ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,X-Rays ,Cell Membrane ,Signal transducing adaptor protein ,Isothermal titration calorimetry ,Cell Biology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Pleckstrin homology domain ,Kinetics ,rab GTP-Binding Proteins ,Membrane curvature ,Protein Structure and Folding ,Solvents ,Biophysics ,Rab ,Crystallization ,Dimerization ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The APPL1 and APPL2 proteins (APPL (adaptor protein, phosphotyrosine interaction, pleckstrin homology (PH) domain, and leucine zipper-containing protein)) are localized to their own endosomal subcompartment and interact with a wide range of proteins and small molecules at the cell surface and in the nucleus. They play important roles in signal transduction through their ability to act as Rab effectors. (Rabs are a family of Ras GTPases involved in membrane trafficking.) Both APPL1 and APPL2 comprise an N-terminal membrane-curving BAR (Bin-amphiphysin-Rvs) domain linked to a PH domain and a C-terminal phosphotyrosine-binding domain. The structure and interactions of APPL1 are well characterized, but little is known about APPL2. Here, we report the crystal structure and low resolution solution structure of the BARPH domains of APPL2. We identify a previously undetected hinge site for rotation between the two domains and speculate that this motion may regulate APPL2 functions. We also identified Rab binding partners of APPL2 and show that these differ from those of APPL1, suggesting that APPL-Rab interaction partners have co-evolved over time. Isothermal titration calorimetry data reveal the interaction between APPL2 and Rab31 has a K(d) of 140 nM. Together with other biophysical data, we conclude the stoichiometry of the complex is 2:2.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Transport capabilities of eleven gram-positive bacteria: Comparative genomic analyses
- Author
-
Ravi D. Barabote, Li-Wen Huang, Can Tran, Rikki N. Hvorup, Aaron J. Stonestrom, Graciela L. Lorca, David S. H. Kim, Milton H. Saier, Brit Winnen, Elizabeth Nguyen, and Vladimir Zlotopolski
- Subjects
Gram-positive bacteria ,Biophysics ,Biology ,Gram-Positive Bacteria ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Microbiology ,Bacterial genetics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Species Specificity ,Energetics ,Lactic acid bacteria ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Transport proteins ,Biological Transport ,Brevibacterium ,Genomics ,Cell Biology ,PEP group translocation ,Genomic analyses ,biology.organism_classification ,Transmembrane protein ,Major facilitator superfamily ,Metabolism ,Efflux ,Carrier Proteins ,Genome, Bacterial ,Bacteria ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The genomes of eleven Gram-positive bacteria that are important for human health and the food industry, nine low G+C lactic acid bacteria and two high G+C Gram-positive organisms, were analyzed for their complement of genes encoding transport proteins. Thirteen to eighteen percent of their genes encode transport proteins, larger percentages than observed for most other bacteria. All of these bacteria possess channel proteins, some of which probably function to relieve osmotic stress. Amino acid uptake systems predominate over sugar and peptide cation symporters, and of the sugar uptake porters, those specific for oligosaccharides and glycosides often outnumber those for free sugars. About 10% of the total transport proteins are constituents of putative multidrug efflux pumps with Major Facilitator Superfamily (MFS)-type pumps (55%) being more prevalent than ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-type pumps (33%), which, however, usually greatly outnumber all other types. An exception to this generalization is Streptococcus thermophilus with 54% of its drug efflux pumps belonging to the ABC superfamily and 23% belonging each to the Multidrug/Oligosaccharide/Polysaccharide (MOP) superfamily and the MFS. These bacteria also display peptide efflux pumps that may function in intercellular signalling, and macromolecular efflux pumps, many of predictable specificities. Most of the bacteria analyzed have no pmf-coupled or transmembrane flow electron carriers. The one exception is Brevibacterium linens, which in addition to these carriers, also has transporters of several families not represented in the other ten bacteria examined. Comparisons with the genomes of organisms from other bacterial kingdoms revealed that lactic acid bacteria possess distinctive proportions of recognized transporter types (e.g., more porters specific for glycosides than reducing sugars). Some homologues of transporters identified had previously been identified only in Gram-negative bacteria or in eukaryotes. Our studies reveal unique characteristics of the lactic acid bacteria such as the universal presence of genes encoding mechanosensitive channels, competence systems and large numbers of sugar transporters of the phosphotransferase system. The analyses lead to important physiological predictions regarding the preferred signalling and metabolic activities of these industrially important bacteria.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Real-time imaging of type III secretion: Salmonella SipA injection into host cells
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, Markus C. Schlumberger, Bärbel Stecher, Kristin Ehrbar, Wolf-Dietrich Hardt, Iwan Duss, and Andreas Müller
- Subjects
DNA, Bacterial ,Salmonella typhimurium ,Salmonella ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Biological Transport, Active ,Virulence ,medicine.disease_cause ,Time-lapse microscopy ,Microbiology ,Bacterial Proteins ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,medicine ,Animals ,Secretion ,Adhesins, Bacterial ,Multidisciplinary ,COS cells ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Effector ,Microfilament Proteins ,Biological Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Kinetics ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Genes, Bacterial ,COS Cells ,Signal transduction ,Bacteria - Abstract
Many pathogenic and symbiotic Gram-negative bacteria employ type III secretion systems to inject “effector” proteins into eukaryotic host cells. These effectors manipulate signaling pathways to initiate symbiosis or disease. By using time-lapse microscopy, we have imaged delivery of the Salmonella type III effector protein SipA/SspA into animal cells in real time. SipA delivery mostly began 10-90 sec after docking and proceeded for 100-600 sec until the bacterial SipA pool (6 ± 3 × 10 3 molecules) was exhausted. Similar observations were made for the effector protein SopE. This visualization of type III secretion in real time explains the efficiency of host cell manipulation by means of this virulence system.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The multidrug/oligosaccharidyl-lipid/polysaccharide (MOP) exporter superfamily
- Author
-
Rikki N. Hvorup, Xiaofeng Zhou, Brit Winnen, Yong Jiang, Milton H. Saier, and Abraham B. Chang
- Subjects
Genetics ,Phylogenetic tree ,Phylogenetics ,Gene duplication ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Flippase ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Gene ,Transmembrane protein ,Function (biology) - Abstract
The multidrug/oligosaccharidyl-lipid/polysaccharide (MOP) exporter superfamily (TC #2.A.66) consists of four previously recognized families: (a) the ubiquitous multi-drug and toxin extrusion (MATE)< family; (b) the prokaryotic polysaccharide transporter (PST) family; (c) the eukaryotic oligosaccharidyl-lipid flippase (OLF) family and (d) the bacterial mouse virulence factor family (MVF). Of these four families, only members of the MATE family have been shown to function mechanistically as secondary carriers, and no member of the MVF family has been shown to function as a transporter. Establishment of a common origin for the MATE, PST, OLF and MVF families suggests a common mechanism of action as secondary carriers catalyzing substrate/cation antiport. Most protein members of these four families exhibit 12 putative transmembrane alpha-helical segments (TMSs), and several have been shown to have arisen by an internal gene duplication event; topological variation is observed for some members of the superfamily. The PST family is more closely related to the MATE, OLF and MVF families than any of these latter three families are related to each other. This fact leads to the suggestion that primordial proteins most closely related to the PST family were the evolutionary precursors of all members of the MOP superfamily. Here, phylogenetic trees and average hydropathy, similarity and amphipathicity plots for members of the four families are derived and provide detailed evolutionary and structural information about these proteins. We show that each family exhibits unique characteristics. For example, the MATE and PST families are characterized by numerous paralogues within a single organism (58 paralogues of the MATE family are present in Arabidopsis thaliana ), while the OLF family consists exclusively of orthologues, and the MVF family consists primarily of orthologues. Only in the PST family has extensive lateral transfer of the encoding genes occurred, and in this family as well as the MVF family, topological variation is a characteristic feature. The results serve to define a large superfamily of transporters that we predict function to export substrates using a monovalent cation antiport mechanism.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The tripartite tricarboxylate transporter (TTT) family
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, Milton H. Saier, and Rikki N. Hvorup
- Subjects
Genetics ,Bacteria ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic transporter ,Microbial metabolism ,Biological Transport, Active ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Bacterial Proteins ,Phylogenetics ,Active transport ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Carrier Proteins ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Phylogeny ,Archaea - Abstract
Extracytoplasmic solute binding receptors are constituents of primary and secondary active transport systems. Previous studies have shown that the constituents of two such families (ABC and TRAP-T) occur in bacteria and archaea and have undergone minimal shuffling of constituents between systems during evolutionary history. We here show that a third family of binding receptor-dependent transporters, the tripartite tricarboxylate transporter (TTT) family, the prototype of which is the TctABC system of Salmonella typhimurium, occurs in many bacteria but not in archaea or eukaryotes. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that these systems have evolved from a primordial tripartite system with only two out of 39 possible examples of shuffling of constituents between systems. The occurrence of TctA homologues in many bacteria and archaea that apparently lack corresponding TctB and TctC homologues suggests that the appearance of tripartite systems was a relatively recent evolutionary invention that occurred after the divergence of archaea and eukaryotes from bacteria.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Role of the PAS sensor domains in the Bacillus subtilis sporulation kinase KinA
- Author
-
Eric Anderson, Susan Rowland, James L. Cole, Brit Winnen, and Glenn F. King
- Subjects
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Mutant ,Histidine kinase ,Autophosphorylation ,fungi ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Bacillus subtilis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Articles ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Protein structure ,Biochemistry ,Bacterial Proteins ,Biophysics ,Ultracentrifuge ,Protein Multimerization ,Molecular Biology ,Protein Kinases ,Ultracentrifugation ,Histidine - Abstract
Histidine kinases are sophisticated molecular sensors that are used by bacteria to detect and respond to a multitude of environmental signals. KinA is the major histidine kinase required for initiation of sporulation upon nutrient deprivation in Bacillus subtilis . KinA has a large N-terminal region (residues 1 to 382) that is uniquely composed of three tandem Per-ARNT-Sim (PAS) domains that have been proposed to constitute a sensor module. To further enhance our understanding of this “sensor” region, we defined the boundaries that give rise to the minimal autonomously folded PAS domains and analyzed their homo- and heteroassociation properties using analytical ultracentrifugation, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and multiangle laser light scattering. We show that PAS A self-associates very weakly, while PAS C is primarily a monomer. In contrast, PAS B forms a stable dimer ( K d [dissociation constant] of B , but not PAS A , in autophosphorylation of KinA. Our findings suggest that dimerization of PAS B is important for keeping the catalytic domain of KinA in a functional conformation. We use this information to propose a model for the structure of the N-terminal sensor module of KinA.
- Published
- 2013
11. Host-mediated invasion: theSalmonellaTyphimurium trigger
- Author
-
Wolf-Dietrich Hardt and Brit Winnen
- Subjects
Salmonella ,Shigella flexneri ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Host cell invasion ,Host (biology) ,medicine ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Epithelium ,Microbiology - Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The chaperone binding domain of SopE inhibits transport via flagellar and SPI-1 TTSS in the absence of InvB
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, Kristin Ehrbar, and Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
- Subjects
Salmonella typhimurium ,Genomic Islands ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Flagellum ,Microbiology ,Bacterial Proteins ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,Animals ,Secretion ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Alanine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Host cell cytosol ,Effector ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Cell biology ,Amino acid ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Protein Transport ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Flagella ,Chaperone (protein) ,COS Cells ,Chaperone binding ,biology.protein ,Sequence Alignment ,Molecular Chaperones ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Type III secretion systems (TTSS) are used by many Gram-negative pathogens for transporting effector proteins into eukaryotic host cells. Two modes of type III effector protein transport can be distinguished: transport into the surrounding medium (secretion) and cell-contact induced injection of effector proteins directly into the host cell cytosol (translocation). Two domains within the N-terminal regions of effector proteins determine the mode of transport. The amino terminal approximately 20 amino acids (N-terminal secretion signal, NSS) mediate secretion. In contrast, translocation generally requires the NSS, the adjacent approximately 100 amino acids (chaperone binding domain, CBD) and binding of the cognate chaperone to this CBD. TTSS are phylogenetically related to flagellar systems. Because both systems are expressed in Salmonella Typhimurium, correct effector protein transport involves at least two decisions: transport via the Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1) but not the flagellar TTSS (= specificity) and translocation into the host cell instead of secretion into the surrounding media (= transport mode). The mechanisms guiding these decisions are poorly understood. We have studied the S. Typhimurium effector protein SopE, which is specifically transported via the SPI-1 TTSS. Secretion and translocation strictly require the cognate chaperone InvB. Alanine replacement of amino acids 30-42 (and to some extent 44-54) abolished tight InvB binding, abolished translocation into the host cell and led to secretion of SopE via both, the flagellar and the SPI-1 TTSS. In clear contrast to wild-type SopE, secretion of SopE(Ala30-42) and SopE(Ala44-54) via the SPI-1 and the flagellar export system did not require InvB. These data reveal a novel function of the CBD: the CBD inhibits secretion of wild-type SopE via the flagellar and the SPI-1 TTSS in the absence of the chaperone InvB. Our data provide new insights into mechanisms ensuring specific effector protein transport by TTSS.
- Published
- 2005
13. Genomic Analyses of Transporter Proteins in Corynebacterium glutamicum and Corynebacterium efficiens
- Author
-
Brit Winnen, J. Felce, and Milton H. Saier
- Subjects
Biochemistry ,ved/biology ,Chemistry ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Transporter ,Corynebacterium efficiens ,Microbiology ,Corynebacterium glutamicum - Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Identification of the l-Aspartate Transporter in Bacillus subtilis
- Author
-
Milton H. Saier, Brit Winnen, and Graciela L. Lorca
- Subjects
endocrine system diseases ,Amino Acid Transport Systems, Acidic ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Glutamic Acid ,Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Bacillus subtilis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Substrate Specificity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bacterial Proteins ,Aspartic acid ,medicine ,Asparagine ,Amino Acids ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mutation ,Aspartic Acid ,biology ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Transporter ,Glutamic acid ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Polyamine ,Carrier Proteins ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Cell Division - Abstract
YveA of Bacillus subtilis , a putative transporter of the amino acid/polyamine/organocation (APC) superfamily, is shown to mediate uptake of both l -aspartate and l -glutamate as well as having sensitivity to l -aspartate hydroxamate. This 14 TMS protein is the primary aspartate uptake system in B. subtilis and serves as the prototype for a new family within the APC superfamily.
- Published
- 2003
15. 64. Centipede Venoms: Old and Unusual
- Author
-
Eivind A. B. Undheim, Alun Jones, Rodrigo A.V. Morales, Glenn F. King, Brit Winnen, John W. Holland, and Bryan G. Fry
- Subjects
biology ,Zoology ,Venom ,Toxicology ,Proteomics ,biology.organism_classification ,Centipede - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.