Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (ribonuclease)
6,589 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A heterobifunctional reagent, N-succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate, was synthesized. Its N-hydroxysuccinimide ester group reacts with amino groups and the 2-pyridyl disulphide structure reacts with aliphatic thiols. A new thiolation procedure for proteins is based on this reagent. The procedure involves two steps. First, 2-pyridyl disulphide structures are introduced into the protein by the reaction of some of its amino groups with the N-hydroxysuccinimide ester sie of the reagent. The protein-bound 2-pyridyl disulphide structures are then reduced with dithiothreitol. This reaction can be carried out without concomitant reduction of native disulphide bonds. The technique has been used for the introduction of thiol groups de novo into ribonuclease, gamma-globulin, alpha-amylase and horseradish peroxidase. N-Succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate can also be used for the preparation of protein-protein conjugates. This application is based on the fact that protein-2-pyridyl disulphide derivatives (formed from the reaction of non-thiol proteins with the reagent) react with thiol-containing proteins (with native thiols or thiolated by, for example, the method described above) via thiol-disulphide exchange to form disulphide-linked protein-protein conjugates. This conjugation technique has been used for the preparation of an alpha-amylase-urease, a ribonuclease-albumin and a peroxidase-rabbit anti-(human transferrin) antibody conjugate. The disulphide bridges between the protein molecules can easily be split by reduction or by thiol-disulphide exchange. Thus conjugation is reversible. This has been demonstrated by scission of the ribonuclease-albumin and the alpha-amylase-urease conjugate into their components with dithiothreitol. N-Succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate has been prepared in crystalline form, in which state (if protected against humidity) it is stable on storage at room temperature (23 degrees C).
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PMID:Protein thiolation and reversible protein-protein conjugation. N-Succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate, a new heterobifunctional reagent. 70 70

The usefulness of plasma ribonuclease assays was studied in (i) patients with possible protein deficiency, (ii) patients with myelomatosis, (iii) patients with carcinoma of the breast. In each group, the major factor associated with elevation of plasma ribonuclease was impairment of renal function. The assay was therefore of little value in the assessment of patients with myelomatosis or carcinoma of the breast. However, in the patients with possible protein deficiency and normal renal function, an elevation of plasma ribonuclease is, in general, associated with a decrease in serum albumin, transferrin and cholinesterase. Plasma ribonuclease may therefore be a useful parameter in the assessment of protein nutritional status.
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PMID:An assessment of the clinical usefulness of plasma ribonuclease assays. 97 78

Members of the pancreatic ribonuclease (RNase) family have diverse activities toward RNA that could cause them to function during host defense and physiological cell death pathways. This activity could be harnessed by coupling RNases to cell binding ligands for the purpose of engineering them into cell-type specific cytotoxins. Therefore, the cytotoxic potential of RNase was explored by linking bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A via a disulfide bond to human transferrin or antibodies to the transferrin receptor. The RNase hybrid proteins were cytotoxic to K562 human erythroleukemia cells in vitro with an IC50 around 10(-7) M, whereas > 10(-4) M of native RNase was required to inhibit protein synthesis. Cytotoxicity required both components of the conjugate since excess transferrin or ribonuclease inhibitors added to the medium protected the cells from the transferrin-RNase toxicity. Importantly, the RNase conjugates were found to have potent antitumor effects in vivo. Chimeric RNase fusion proteins were also developed. F(ab')2-like antibody-enzyme fusions were prepared by linking the gene for human RNase to a chimeric antitransferrin receptor heavy chain gene. The antibody enzyme fusion gene was introduced into a transfectoma that secreted the chimeric light chain of the same antibody, and cell lines were cloned that synthesized and secreted the antibody-enzyme fusion protein of the expected size at a concentration of 1-5 ng/mL. Culture supernatants from clones secreting the fusion protein caused inhibition of growth and protein synthesis toward K562 cells that express the human transferrin receptor but not toward a nonhuman derived cell line. Since human ribonucleases coupled to antibodies also exhibited receptor mediated toxicities, a new approach to selective cell killing is provided. This may allow the development of new therapeutics for cancer treatment that exhibit less systemic toxicity and, importantly, less immunogenicity than the currently employed ligand-toxin conjugates.
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PMID:Rational immunotherapy with ribonuclease chimeras. An approach toward humanizing immunotoxins. 128 24

A convenient precolumn labeling method was developed for the analysis of neutral and sialic acid-containing oligosaccharides in glycoproteins using 1-(p-methoxy)phenyl-3-methyl-5-pyrazolone (PMPMP). PMPMP reacts with a reducing oligosaccharide under slightly alkaline conditions (pH 8.3) to form a 2:1 adduct (bis-PMPMP derivative). Sialic acid residues in the oligosaccharides remain intact during the reaction. Tryptic glycopeptides digested with glycopeptidase A for oligosaccharide liberation can be directly derivatized with PMPMP without prior treatment. Separation of the labeled oligosaccharides was performed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography on a C-18 column with aqueous acetonitrile, and positional isomers such as isomeric triantennary tetradecasaccharides from bovine fetuin were completely resolved. The bis-PMPMP derivatives were labile in alkaline media to form mono-PMPMP derivatives; however, the mono-PMPMP derivatives could be easily reconverted to the original bis-PMPMP derivatives. The proposed method is simpler than the reductive pyridylamination method, and detection sensitivity could reach subnanomole range with a uv detector. Oligosaccharides from ribonuclease B (bovine pancreas), ovalbumin, thyroglobulin (porcine thyroid), fetuin (bovine), and transferrin (human) have been successfully analyzed to demonstrate the usefulness of this method as an alternative to the existing methods.
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PMID:Precolumn labeling of reducing carbohydrates with 1-(p-methoxy)phenyl-3-methyl-5-pyrazolone: analysis of neutral and sialic acid-containing oligosaccharides found in glycoproteins. 172 51

Various plasma proteins, for example, transferrin, are synthesized not only in the liver, but also in the brain. The proportion of transferrin mRNA in total RNA from different regions of brains from various mammalian species was studied by Northern blot analysis. Absolute amounts of transferrin mRNA were determined in brain, choroid plexus, and liver from rats, sheep, and pigs by hybridization in solution followed by ribonuclease protection assay. Corrections for differences in yields of RNA were made using internal RNA standards. Large proportions of transferrin mRNA in total RNA and high absolute levels of transferrin mRNA in choroid plexus were found only in rats. Small proportions of transferrin mRNA were observed in RNA from choroid plexus from mice, dogs, and rabbits, while no transferrin mRNA at all was detected in choroid plexus from humans, sheep, pigs, cows, and guinea pigs. In further analysis of sheep and pigs, various amounts of transferrin mRNA were found in many parts of the brain, in contrast to the absence of transferrin mRNA from choroid plexus. In conclusion, a striking species specificity was observed for the pattern of cerebral expression of the transferrin gene.
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PMID:The distribution of cerebral expression of the transferrin gene is species specific. 184 50

Pancreatic RNase injected into Xenopus oocytes abolishes protein synthesis at concentrations comparable to the toxin ricin yet has no effect on oocyte protein synthesis when added to the extracellular medium. Therefore RNase behaves like a potent toxin when directed into a cell. To explore the cytotoxic potential of RNase toward mammalian cells, bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A was coupled via a disulfide bond to human transferrin or antibodies to the transferrin receptor. The RNase hybrid proteins were cytotoxic to K562 human erythroleukemia cells in vitro with an IC50 around 10(-7) M whereas greater than 10(-5) M native RNase was required to inhibit protein synthesis. Cytotoxicity requires both components of the conjugate since excess transferrin or ribonuclease inhibitors added to the medium protected the cells from the transferrin-RNase toxicity. Compounds that interfere with transferrin receptor cycling and compartmentalization such as ammonium chloride decreased the cytotoxicity of transferrin-RNase. After a dose-dependent lag period inactivation of protein synthesis by transferrin-RNase followed a first-order decay constant. In a clonogenic assay that measures the extent of cell death 1 x 10(-6) M transferrin-RNase killed at least 4 logs or 99.99% of the cells whereas 70 x 10(-6) M RNase was nontoxic. These results show that RNase coupled to a ligand can be cytotoxic. Human ribonucleases coupled to antibodies also may exhibit receptor-mediated toxicities providing a new approach to selective cell killing possibly with less systemic toxicity and importantly less immunogenicity than the currently employed ligand-toxin conjugates.
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PMID:Cytotoxic potential of ribonuclease and ribonuclease hybrid proteins. 193 62

The technique of high-pH anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection has recently been shown to be a powerful method for resolving closely related oligosaccharides [M. R. Hardy and R. R. Townsend, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 85 (1988) 3289-3293]. This report describes separations involving a total of nineteen different high-mannose, hybrid and complex-type oligosaccharides isolated after peptide: N-glycosidase F (PNGase F) or endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H digestion of glycoproteins. Separations were carried out at a constant base concentration (0.1 M NaOH) using linear gradients from 0 to 0.2 M sodium acetate. The applicability of this chromatography for profiling the N-linked oligosaccharides of glycoproteins was demonstrated by generating "oligosaccharide maps" of PNGase F-liberated oligosaccharides from recombinant human tissue plasminogen activator, ribonuclease b, human transferrin, and bovine fetuin. Methods for recovering salt-free oligosaccharides after this chromatography were also investigated. On-line ion suppression with an anionic micromembrane suppressor cartridge was found to be capable of effective desalting up to a total sodium ion concentration of 0.15-0.2 M at a flow-rate of 1 ml/min. After high-pH anion-exchange chromatography with ion suppression, collected oligosaccharides were analyzed by fast-atom bombardment mass spectrometry after conversion to permethyl derivatives or after reductive amination with rho-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester.
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PMID:Analysis of glycoprotein-derived oligosaccharides by high-pH anion-exchange chromatography. 232 8

This paper describes a method which enables the simultaneous measurement of both the concentration of cell surface receptors and the DNA content of individual lymphoid cells. Cells fixed with PLP (periodate-lysine-paraformaldehyde) were treated with ribonuclease (RNase). Transferrin receptors were then successively bound with monoclonal antibody against them and FITC-labeled antibody against the monoclonal antibody. Cells thus treated were stained with propidium iodide and two-parameter flow cytometric analysis was carried out. Using this method, the expression of transferrin receptors on lymphoid cells was analyzed in relation to the action of T-cell growth factor (IL 2). It was found that cells in the G1 phase were stimulated by IL 2 which increased transferrin receptor concentration after a lag of a few hours. Subsequently, the cells entered the S phase and the receptor levels remained high throughout the S, G2 and M phases of the cell cycle.
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PMID:Simultaneous measurement of transferrin receptor and DNA content of human IL 2 dependent T cells by flow cytometry. 325 77

K562 human erythroleukemia cells can be induced to make hemoglobin by a variety of inducing agents. Most of these agents are effective in media supplemented with fetal bovine serum (FBS), but not in media supplemented with newborn bovine serum (NBS). The active factor in FBS has an apparent molecular weight of 30,000 daltons and appears to be a protein on the basis of the following properties: lability at 100 degrees C, inactivation by desferrioxamine plus trypsin, resistance to periodate, and resistance to ribonuclease. Media containing NBS can be used for induction if supplemented by either this factor or transferrin of bovine or human origin. The small size of the active factor (mol. wt. approximately 30,000 daltons) indicates that it is not identical to bovine transferrin (mol. wt. approximately 77,000 daltons). However, when iron-saturated bovine transferrin is digested with trypsin, the peptide fragments produced resemble the FBS factor in activity, size, and reaction with antibovine serum transferrin.
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PMID:K562 cell erythroid differentiation: requirement for a factor in fetal bovine serum. 392 91

The effects of different intravenous nutritional regimens on a number of biochemical indices of nutritional status were studied during the 8-day period following severe trauma. The inclusion of large amounts of amino acids (high nitrogen (N) was shown to greatly improve N balance over an isocaloric regimen containing no amino acids (O g N). The concentration of serum albumin, transferrin, prealbumin, and retinol-binding protein all fell during the study period in both patient groups, whereas the serum concentrations of acute phase reactants and of ribonuclease increased in the two groups. The sum of plasma levels of branched-chain amino acids and the essential amino acids was increased to a greater extent in the high N group. These amino acid totals and the ratio of glycine/valine showed a significant correlation with N balance in this group. Despite the marked difference in N balance, 3-methylhistidine excretion was increased but equal in the two nutritional groups, suggesting an increased rate of muscle protein breakdown in both groups, which appears not to be influenced by amino acid nutrition. It is concluded that N balance can be significantly improved in the immediate posttrauma period by provision of amino acids together with energy substrates. None of the biochemical variables measured, with the exception of plasma levels of essential amino acids, reflected these marked differences in N balance.
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PMID:Biochemical changes associated with severe trauma. 677 18


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