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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.21.1 (
DNase
)
7,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ribonucleic acid extracts of lymphoid cells from immune hosts were used to transfer in vivo and in vitro cell-mediated immune reactivity to a variety of antigens. The in vivo immune responses transferred by RNA included the delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity reaction to fungal and chemically-defined antigens and the tumor-rejection reaction to guinea pig hepatoma antigens. The in vitro immune responses transferred by RNA included macrophage migration inhibition by fungal, chemically-defined, and tumor antigens. The transfer activity of RNA preparations was contained in the 8 s to 18 s species of RNA and was sensitive to RNase but not to
DNase
or trypsin. Antigen was not detectable in the RNA preparations and appeared to have no role in the transfer activity. Syngeneic, allogeneic, or xenogeneic sources of RNA could transfer immune reactivity. In each system tested, the transfer of cell-mediated reactivity by RNA was specific for the antigen used to sensitize the RNA donor. The potential use of RNA-mediated transfer of immunity is discussed.
...
PMID:Some perspectives on the transfer of cell-mediated immunity by immune-RNA. 11 79
A cytoplasmic component from group A streptococci produced complete suppression of human lymphocyte transformation induced by phytohaemagglutinin or the mixed lymphocyte reaction in vitro. It also suppressed antibody-forming cells in mice against sheep erythrocytes. The active substance was eluted as second and third fractions form Sephadex G-200 chromatography of the 100,000 g supernatant of sonically ruptured group A streptococci. The antimitogenic activity was not susceptible to trypsin, pronase, RNase or
DNase
digestion, but the activity was completely lost when it was sequentially digested, first with RNase and
DNase
and then with pronase. The active substance was not antigenic nor heat-labile at 56 degrees. It may be a protein component of a nucleoprotein.
...
PMID:A potent antimitogenic factor from group A streptococci. 12 16
Mucopolysaccharides have been isolated, fractionated, and characterized from the nuclei of cultured B16 mouse melanoma cells grown in the presence of (3-H)-glucosamine and (35-S)sulfate. Digestion of the nuclei with
DNase
followed by Pronase gave a mixture of complex carbohydrates from which the mucopolysaccharides were isolated by precipitation with cetylpyridinium chloride. After fractionation by differential salt extraction and chromatography on controlled pore glass bead columns, the components were identified by chemical and enzymatic methods. The major polysaccharide components were a family of high-molecular-weight chondroitin sulfates with different degrees of sulfation; a minor component has been characterized as heparan sulfate.
...
PMID:Mucopolysaccharides associated with nuclei of cultured mammalian cells. 12 40
Staphylococcus aureus strains 7-8 and 57 that produce beta-hemolysin but not staphylokinase (beta + K-) were lysogenically converted by certain serological group F bacteriophages to the loss of beta-hemolysin production and the gain in staphylokinase production (beta-K+). Serological group A phage 42E was found to convert S. aureus strains 7-8(beta-K-) and 57 (beta + K-) to beta - K-. Conversion of beta-hemolysin by lysogenization of a serological group A phage has not previously been reported. Phage 42E conversions differed from the group F conversions since staphylokinase was not affected. This indicates that conversion to beta-K+ involves separate loci on the phage chromosome. Several characteristics associated with virulence of staphylococci of human or animal origin other than staju;plomase production (coagulase,
DNase
, lipase, gelatinase, mannitol fermentation, and phage-sensitivity patterns) were not correlated with lysogenic conversions to loss of beta-hemolysin.
...
PMID:Characteristics of Staphylococcus aureus associated with lysogenic conversion to loss of beta-hemolysin production. 12 46
The protein encoded by the gam gene of bacteriophage lambda ("gamma protein") is a specific inhibitor of the recBC enzyme of Escherichia coli. The lambda protein has been purified approximately 2,000-fold, and its structure and inhibitory activity have been characterized. It appears to be composed of two identical subunits of 16,500 daltons, inhibits all of the catalytic activities of the recBC enzyme with apparently equal efficiency, but has no effect upon any other E. coli or lambda-
DNase
tested. Inhibition does not occur unless recBC enzyme is exposed to gamma protein prior to reaction of the enzyme with DNA. The inhibitory activity is independent of temperature, and no catalytic activity has been detected that might fulfill the inhibitory function. It appears instead that the inhibition involves a stoichiometric, rather than a catalytic interaction between gamma protein and the enzyme. Reaction kinetics for the recBC enzyme inhibited by gamma protein show no anomalous protein--only a depressed rate. Inhibition is not competitive and does not appear to affect the enzyme's affinity for DNA. The enzyme remains inhibited after it is separated from "excess" gamma protein by gel filtration or sedimentation in a glycerol gradient, and inhibited enzyme has a reduced electrophoretic mobility compared to that of uninhibited enzyme. Gamma Protein inhibits recBC enzyme which has been reconstituted from cell-free extracts by complementation in vitro, but at least one of the complementing factors present in extracts from recB- cells does not by itself form a complex with gamma protein. The mechanism of inhibition and the implications of these results from gamma replication and recombination are discussed.
...
PMID:The gamma protein specified by bacteriophage gamma. Structure and inhibitory activity for the recBC enzyme of Escherichia coli. 12 36
Infection of Escherichia coli with bacteriophage T7 results in an inhibition of the host exonuclease V (recB, C
DNase
) activity. This inhibition is not observed when cells are infected in the presence of chloramphenicol or with a gene 1 mutant. The protein responsible for the inhibition of exonuclease V has been partially purified from T7-infected cells. The protein which does not possess nuclease or ATPase activity can inhibit all nucleolytic activities associated with exonuclease V. The protein does not, however, inhibit the DNA-dependent ATPase activity associated with exonuclease V. The inhibitory protein has a molecular weight of about 12,000, as determined from sedimentation analysis in glycerol gradients.
...
PMID:Partial purification and properties of a bacteriophage T7 inhibitor of the host exonuclease V activity. 12 51
In the myocardium of 30 human hearts of all age groups quantitative deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) measurements were performed and the results of the measurements were correlated with the pure myocardium weight. By means of the diphenylamine reaction the total amount of DNA (DNA concentration and DNA amount) in the myocardium was estimated. By means of Feulgen cytophotometry the DNA amount exclusively in the heart muscle cell nuclei was measured. With the use of myocardial tissue spread on slides, the nuclear areas of the heart muscle nuclei were planimetrically measured. After preparation with
DNase
and staining with gallocyanine chromalumn the nucleoli in heart muscle nuclei were specifically presented and their number per nucleus as well as their area values were demonstrated. From the biochemical and cytophotometric results of the myocardial DNA content it was possible to estimate the absolute cell number of the hearts, keeping the pure myocardium weight in consideration. The investigations led to the following results. In growing childrens' hearts the DNA concentration decreases to a constant level of 0.3-0.4 mg/g. The amount of DNA rises with increasing heart weight. During the growth of the heart of a child between the ages of 8 and 12 the DNA amount doubles in the heart muscle nuclei, and most of the muscle nuclei of an adult have a tetraploid DNA content. In pathological heart hypertrophy a further polyploidization of the heart muscle nuclei occurs. The areas of the nuclei increases with growing polyploidization. The nuclear areas form the same grouping as the ploidy classes. With growing nuclear areas, the total areas of the nucleoli and their number per nucleus also increase. Right after birth an increase in the number of connective tissue and heart muscle cells follows. A normal heart contains about 2 x 10(9) muscle cells. In hypertrophic hearts the number of muscle cells can double.
...
PMID:Relationship between deoxyribonucleic acid content and nucleoli in human heart muscle cells and estimation of cell number during cardiac growth and hyperfunction. 12 34
Infection by bacteriophage T4 has previously been shown to cause a rapid inhibition of the host recBC
DNase
, an ATP-dependent DNase that is required for genetic recombination in Escherichia coli. We report here the partial purification of a protein ("T4 rec inhibitor") from extracts of T4-infected cells and some characteristics of the in vitro inhibition reaction with purified inhibitor and recBC nuclease. This inhibitory activity could not be purified from extracts of uninfected E. coli. Both the ATP-dependent exonuclease and DNA-dependent ATPase activities of recBC
DNase
are inhibited by T4 rec inhibitor. Experiments suggest that the inhibitor interacts with the nuclease in a stoichiometric manner. The biological significance of this inhibition is discussed with respect to control reactions in phage-infected cells.
...
PMID:Postinfection control by bacteriophage T4 of Escherichia coli recBC nuclease activity. 13 May 1
After lysis of Pseydomonas testosteroni with lysozyme and non-ionic detergents different DNA-protein complexes can be separated in 5-25% (w/v) neutral sucrose gradient. The protein to DNA ratio of these complexes varies between 0.5-4.5 to 1, whereby the faster sedimenting forms contain more protein than the slower sedimenting ones. Different initial rates of
DNase
digestion may indicate various degrees of DNA packing in these complexes. The chromosomal complexes of Pseudomonas testosteroni are relatively stable towards pronase. Treatment with RNase or sodium dodecylsulphate is accompanied by a dramatic increase in viscosity and decrease in relative density. It suggests that DNA in these complexes is maintained in its supercoiled form by RNA molecule(s) in a similar way as in isolated chromosome of E. coli.
...
PMID:[Chromosomal structures of Pseudomonas testosteroni. I. Isolation and characterization of the chromosomal complexes. (author's transl)]. 13 46
DNA synthesis in rat and rabbit polyvinyl sponge induced granulation tissue has been studied using thymidine (methyl-3H). Synthesis was determined by measurement of thymidine incorporation into cold trichloroacetic acid insoluble material and by autoradiography. Granulation tissue was removed and immediately incubated in vitro in the presence of thymidine (methyl-3H) for three hours. The label was incorporated into the nuclei of fibroblasts and, to a lesser extent, of endothelial cells. The labeled material was 93% lysable by
DNase
and its synthesis was inhibited by hydroxyurea and bleomycin. In this system synthesis was linear for two hours and then ceased. A marked increase in DNA synthesis occurred in tissue harvested at 44 hours after sponge implantation. This rise was confirmed by autoradiographic studies which showed an increase in nuclear labeling at two days after implantation. Neutropenia produced by injections of antineutrophil serum or cyclophosphamide failed to inhibit activation of DNA synthesis in fibroblasts or endothelial cells. Amonocytosis also had no effect on this process. Rates of thymidine incorporation into DNA and thymidine phosphates in vivo were similar to those found during in vitro incubations of granulation tissue.
...
PMID:Fibroblast DNA synthesis activation in sponge induced granulation tissue. The effect of antineutrophil serum and cyclophosphamide. 13 30
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