Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: CAS:56-41-7 (alanine)
70,945 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Hepatic carbohydrate metabolism was studied by an intravenous galactose test in control patients, malnourished non-septic patients, patients with prolonged severe sepsis and patients after recovery from sepsis. 2. Blood galactose half-life was not significantly increased in the septic group despite abnormal liver-function tests, whereas it was approximately doubled in the malnourished patients. 3. The rise in blood glucose after galactose injection was less in both the septic and malnourished groups, as compared with that in the control subjects. 4. Fasting blood glucose, lactate and pyruvate concentrations were similar in all groups, whereas blood ketone bodies were increased in the malnourished and septic groups, and blood alanine was decreased only in the septic group. 5. The changes in hepatic metabolism and function were reversible on recovery from sepsis. 6. It is suggested that alterations in hepatic blood flow and the metabolic fate of galactose within the liver may explain the changes in the metabolic response to galactose observed in malnourished or septic patients.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1978 Aug
PMID:Galactose and hepatic metabolism in malnutrition and sepsis in man. 67 28

Internal regularities of amino acid sequences of flavodoxins, FMN-containing, low molecular weight flavoproteins, were statistically examined using the minimum mutation method. The sequence of Clostridium pasteurianum flavodoxin shows statistically significant evidence of repetitious internal gene duplications at different levels of structure. Peptide pairs with a low chance probabilitiy of occurrence were frequently observed at a shift of 5 residues. The pairs with the lowest chance probabilities are a pair of heptapeptides at positions39--45 vs. 44--50, a 5 residue shift (p = 9 x 10(-6)). Most of the related pairs are consistent and could best be explained by the repeating pentapeptide sequence: (Lys-Gly-Ala-Asp-Val-)n and appropriate gaps. Internal repetitions with longer shifts were also suggested for other flavodoxins. Repetitious gene duplication is proposed for the early stages of flavodoxin evolution.
J Mol Evol 1978 Aug 02
PMID:The evolution of protein sequences by repetitious gene duplication: clostridial flavodoxin. 69 Oct 74

The manual sequencing of the tryptic peptic from the alpha and beta chains of dog hemoglobin is described, including evidence for the existence of two alphaT-13 peptides and thus 2 alpha chains, one with threonine and one with alanine at position 130. Although the actual sequence was published in 1970, the evidence on which it was based has not previously appeared.
J Mol Evol 1977 May 13
PMID:The amino acid sequence of dog (Canis familiaris) hemoglobin. 86 26

1. A jejunal perfusion technique has been used in normal volunteer subjects to study jejunal absorption of amino acid residues from a partial enzymic hydrolysate of casein in which about 50% of the amino acids existed as small peptides, and also from an equivalent mixture of free amino acids. 2. The effect of a high concentration of the dipeptide glycylglycine on the absorption of amino acid residues from these preparations was studied to quantify the importance of mucosal uptake of intact peptides during absorption of the partial hydrolysate of casein. 3. The results were unexpected. Glycylglycine significantly inhibited absorption of several amino acid residues (aspartic acid + asparagine, serine, glutamic acid + glutamine, proline, alanine, phenylalanine, threonine and isoleucine) from the free amino acid mixture, whereas it significantly inhibited the absorption of only two (serine, glutamin acid + glutamine) from the peptide-containing partial casein hydrolysate. 4. The effect of glycylglycine on absorption of amino acids from the mixture of free amino acids was apparently due to inhibition of amino acid uptake by free glycine liberated from the dipeptide during perfusion. The reason for the failure of glycylglycine to cause extensive inhibition of absorption from the partial hydrolysate is not clear. It may be due to glycylglycine being only a weak inhibitor of peptide uptake, but the possibility that some peptides are taken up by a system unavailable to glycylglycine has to be considered.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Jul
PMID:Effect of glycylglycine on absorption from human jejunum of an amino acid mixture simulating casein and a partial enzymic hydrolysate of casein containing small peptides. 87 18

Alanine, starting from alanine-adenylate, has been polymerized in the presence of non-swelling Al-montmorillonite. The yield of polymerization is much lower than that obtained in the presence of swelling Na-montmorillonite. The possibility that the changing interlayer spacing in Na-montmorillonite might be responsible for its catalytic properties, is discussed.
J Mol Evol 1977 Sep 20
PMID:Polymerization of alanine in the presence of a non-swelling montmorillonite. 90 86

Arginine-rich basic protein from cytoplasma of Guerin epitheliomas has been isolated and characterized. It contains five amino acids: arginine, lysine, glycine, alanine and glutamic acid which make together 74% of all amino acid residues. The protein has a cationic character with an isoelectric point of 8.2. No carbohydrate component was found in this protein. The significance of arginine-rich basic protein in the cytoplasma of Guerin epithelioma is discussed briefly.
Mol Cell Biochem 1977 Aug 19
PMID:Characterization of cytoplasmic arginine-rich basic protein of Guerin epithelioma. 90 17

1. Administration of dexamethasone, 8 mg/day (0-02 mmol/day), for 5 days to normal subjects produced negative nitrogen balance, due to early and sustained increases in urinary urea nitrogen excretion 2. In eight subjects ingesting 0-9--1-6 g of protein day-1 kg-1 body weight the cumulative increment in urea nitrogen excretion averaged + 12-5 g (SEM 2-8, P less than 0-01) over the 5 days of glucocorticoid administration. 3. Increases in urinary urea nitrogen excretion could be related to both plasma alanine and blood glutamine changes by using a multiple regression equation. 4. These results suggest that corticosteroids induce increased release of alanine and glutamine by peripheral tissues, which may augment urea formation and negative nitrogen balance. 5. The correlation between increments in urea nitrogen excretion and increases in plasma arginine remains unexplained.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Sep
PMID:The role of alanine and glutamine in steroid-induced nitrogen wasting in man. 91 44

The A-protein of coliphage MS2 was purified to a state of sufficient homogeneity to study its primary structure. The NH2-terminal sequence was determined for the first 8 residues. Comparison with the reported sequence of R17 protein (Weiner, A. M., Platt, T., and Weber, K. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247, 3242-3251) shows a difference at position 6 where alanine in R17 is replaced by threonine in MS2. The COOH-terminal sequence was shown to be -Arg-Leu-Ser-Arg, confirming the existence of UAG as the termination codon of the maturation protein (Comtreras, R., Ysebaert, M., Min Jou, W., and Fiers, W. (19731 Nature New Biol. 241, 99-101; Vandekerckhove, J., Nolf, F., and Van Montagu, M. C. (1973) Nature New Biol. 241, 102; Remaut E., and Fiers, W. (1972) J. Mol. Biol. 71, 243-261). Peptides obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis with trypsin were fractionated by a combination of gel filtration and paper electrophoresis and chromatography. Thirty-eight peptides were analyzed for amino acid composition and sequence. They provide information for 312 of the 393 residues of the A-protein polypeptide chain.
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PMID:Sequence of the A-protein of coliphage MS2. I. Isolation of A-protein, determination of the NH2- and COOH-terminal sequences, isolation and amino acid sequence of the tryptic peptides. 91 36

The periodic protein collagen is of special interest for the study of the relationship which exists between the structure of a protein and that of its mRNA, because oligopeptides containing glycine, proline (hydroxyproline) and alanine occur with great frequency in it. Collagen is particularly rich in these amino acids, which have codons containing only G and/or C in the obligatory first and second positions. If unlimited choice of codons for all amino acids were to occur, the stretch of mRNA coding for an alpha-chain should contain about 40% G and 31% C (Bachra et al., 1974). These high values suggest that a considerable degree of secondary structure will occur, unless selective codon use would result in the avoidance of G and C in optional third codon positions. In the present paper putative secondary structure formation in collagen mRNA was studied. This was done by studying the positions and frequencies of hairpin structures which could contain stem sections composed of the coding triplets of the above mentioned amino acids and hairpin sections of 4-40 bases. Calculation of the free energy contributions of such hairpin structures, using published values for the contributions of base-pair stacking, hairpin, bulge and interior loops and also taking into account the possible minimum number of base-pairs required for helix nucleation from a single-strand RNA (3 adjacent AU-pairs or 1 or 2 adjacent GC-pairs) led to the following conclusions. A considerable number of alternative, mutually exclusive hairpins can be constructed.
J Mol Evol 1976 Aug 03
PMID:Self complementarity in messenger RNA of collagen. I. Possible hairpin structures in regions coding for oligopeptides of glycine, proline (hydroxyproline) and alanine. 96 90

The primary structure of the major component of human skeletal muscle troponin C has been established. The troponin C was purified by ammonium sulphate and isoelectric fractionation, followed by two chromatographic steps on DEAE Sephadex. The sequence was determined from the different overlapping enzymic peptides and by dansyl-Edman degradation. The only difference between rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C and the major component of human skeletal troponin C was found at position 112: Ala (rabbit), Pro (human). The partial amino acid sequence of the first 86 residues of the minor component of human skeletal troponin C was found to resemble the troponin C from bovine cardiac muscle. The only difference between them, has tentatively been located at position 62: Glu (human), Asp (bovine). These similarities suggest that troponin C is, from the point of view of molecular, one of the most conservative proteins so far studied.
J Mol Evol 1976 Oct 27
PMID:Human skeletal muscle proteins. The primary structure of troponin C. 97 49


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