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The syndecans represent an ongoing research field focused on their regulatory roles in normal and pathological conditions. Syndecans role in cancer progression becomes well-documented, implicating their importance in diagnosis and even proposing various cancer potential treatments. Thus, the characterization of the unbinding properties at the single molecules level will appeal to their use as targets for therapeutics. In our study, syndecan-1 and syndecan-4 were measured during the interaction with the vitronectin HEP II binding site. Our findings show that syndecans are calcium ion-dependent molecules that reveal distinct, unbinding properties indicating the alterations in heparin sulfate chain structure, possibly in the chain sequence or sulfation pattern. In that way, we suppose that HS chain affinity to ECM proteins may govern cancer invasion by altering syndecan ability to interact with cancer-related receptors present in the tumor microenvironment, thereby promoting the activation of various signaling cascades regulating tumor cell behavior.
We derive approximate equations of motion for excited state dynamics of a multilevel open quantum system weakly interacting with light to describe fluorescence detected single molecule spectra. Based on the Frenkel exciton theory, we construct a mode
Voltage-gated sodium (Na$_mathrm{v}$) channels are responsible for the depolarizing phase of the action potential in most nerve cells, and Na$_mathrm{v}$ channel localization to the axon initial segment is vital to action potential initiation. Na$_ma
One of the most intriguing results of single molecule experiments on proteins and nucleic acids is the discovery of functional heterogeneity: the observation that complex cellular machines exhibit multiple, biologically active conformations. The stru
Force and conductance were simultaneously measured during the formation of Cu-C60 and C60-C60 contacts using a combined cryogenic scanning tunneling and atomic force microscope. The contact geometry was controlled with submolecular resolution. The ma
Single-molecule force spectroscopy has proven to be a powerful tool for studying the kinetic behavior of biomolecules. Through application of an external force, conformational states with small or transient populations can be stabilized, allowing the