Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.10.3.1 (tyrosinase)
9,065 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Enzymes were investigated for their occurrence in the cell wall fraction (4,000 g sediment of the homogenate) of Agaricus bisporus sporocarps. Besides the markers malate dehydrogenase (MalDH), hexokinase (HK) and ATPase, the range of entities studied included gamma-glutamyl transferase (gamma-GT), mannitol dehydrogenase (MDH), phenoloxidase, chitin and beta-1,3-glucan synthases (ChS, beta-GS), chitinase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase (HexNAc'ase) and beta-glucanase. Using the extractability in dilute buffer, digitonin and NaCl at high ionic strength as the operational criteria, four categories (I-IV) of enzyme-wall associations could be discerned: category I encompasses enzymes which are artefactually present (i.e. contaminants); category II, enzymes that are hydrophobically bound (which may or may not be genuinely wall-associated), III includes enzymes that are ionically bound and IV, enzymes whose bonding to the wall is in all probability covalent. The same enzyme entity may have representatives in more than one category, e.g. ChS and beta-GS (I, II, IV), phenolase (I, II, III, IV), beta-glucanase, chitinase and HexNAc'ase (I, IV). It is thought that the categorization presented could be of general applicability in fungi as well as in higher plants to specify enzyme-wall associations in a straightforward, comparable manner, thus avoiding some of the ambiguous terms prevailing in the literature, such as "weakly", "strongly" or "tightly" wall bound. The results are discussed in more detail for several of the more economically important enzymes studied.
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PMID:A system of categorizing enzyme-cell wall associations in Agaricus bisporus, using operational criteria. 1160 7

Molecular characterisation of clonal apple rootstocks using isozymes was carried out to identify isozyme polymorphism in seven clonal apple rootstocks and to identify the most characteristic and stable enzyme markers for each individual rootstock. Five enzyme systems were studied out of which polyphenol oxidase, malate dehydrogenase, acid phosphatase and peroxidase were useful in discriminating among the rootstocks. The peroxidase enzyme system showed maximum variation and esterase showed the least variation among the rootstocks. Out of seven rootstocks, three were distinguished on the basis of one enzyme system only (M.3 with MDH or PER, M.7 with PPO or PER and MM. 111 with MDH). Out of the sixteen loci studied seven were found to be polymorphic. Genetic variation among the rootstocks was explained on the basis of various parameters. The percentage of polymorphic loci varied from 13.33 to 35.71 per cent.
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PMID:Distinguishing clonal apple rootstocks by isozymes banding patterns. 1190 9

The biochemical changes occurring during the natural senescence of apple leaf tissue (Pyrus malus L., Golden Delicious) coincided with specific changes in the environment. Protein, sugars, and total nitrogen began declining in leaf tissue when the daylength first became less than 14 hours in the second week of August. The activity of triose phosphate dehydrogenase declined shortly afterwards, while the activities of malate dehydrogenase, glutamic dehydrogenase, and aspartate aminotransaminase increased. Chlorophyll, DNA, RNA, and fresh weight began declining when the daylength first became less than 12 hours at the end of September. At the same time sugars and the activities of RNase, polyphenol oxidase, and proteolytic enzymes began increasing. Protein synthesis, total nitrogen, and the activities of malate dehydrogenase, glutamic dehydrogenase, and aspartate aminotransaminase began declining rapidly and amino acids began to accumulate after the first frost of the year. RNase, polyphenol oxidase, and proteolytic activity reached their highest specific activities after the first frost.
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PMID:Biochemical and Enzymatic Changes in Apple Leaf Tissue during Autumnal Senescence. 1665 41

Growth inhibition in acid soils due to Al stress affects crop production worldwide. To understand mechanisms in sensitive crops that are affected by Al stress, a proteomic analysis of primary tomato root tissue, grown in Al-amended and non-amended liquid cultures, was performed. DIGE-SDS-MALDI-TOF-TOF analysis of these tissues resulted in the identification of 49 proteins that were differentially accumulated. Dehydroascorbate reductase, glutathione reductase, and catalase enzymes associated with antioxidant activities were induced in Al-treated roots. Induced enzyme proteins associated with detoxification were mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase, catechol oxidase, quinone reductase, and lactoylglutathione lyase. The germin-like (oxalate oxidase) proteins, the malate dehydrogenase, wali7 and heavy-metal associated domain-containing proteins were suppressed. VHA-ATP that encodes for the catalytic subunit A of the vacuolar ATP synthase was induced and two ATPase subunit 1 isoforms were suppressed. Several proteins in the active methyl cycle, including SAMS, quercetin 3-O-methyltransferase and AdoHcyase, were induced by Al stress. Other induced proteins were isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase and the GDSL-motif lipase hydrolase family protein. NADPH-dependent flavin reductase and beta-hydroxyacyl-ACP dehydratase were suppressed.
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PMID:Proteome changes induced by aluminium stress in tomato roots. 1982 Mar 57