What is it about?

Objectives: Bio-informatics methodologies have made possible to profile the global composition of tissue or organelle at a specific point or under particular developmental or disease state. In schizophrenia, research has extensively focused on identification of the alterations associated with gene and protein expression profiling. An additional target of the present study is the assorted mechanisms by which post-translational modifications can regulate these functions. As phosphorylation, s-nitrosylation and glycosylation are the familiar post-translational modification; the phosphorylation offers a foremost regulatory system due to the high variability in the protein structure, particularly flanking amino acid residues, the reliable prediction of these sites still remains a vital issue. Post-translational modifications modulate protein's cellular function critically involved in cell signaling and regulatory mechanisms in the molecular context. The gene mutations greatly influence these modification sites and believed as a disease biomarker.

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Why is it important?

Current study expressed remarkable results that propose unique possibilities to investigate post-translational modifications at gene / protein level could further enhance understanding towards the biological function that altered during schizophrenia progression.

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This page is a summary of: Insilico Analysis of Post-Translational Modifications in DRD2 Receptor Protein in Schizophrenic Patients, Current Proteomics, February 2017, Bentham Science Publishers,
DOI: 10.2174/1570164613666161123122040.
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