Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Exposure of mycobacterial growth inhibitory factor (MycoIF) to
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, or neuraminidase decrease its ability to produce intracellular inhibition of mycobacterial growth within macrophages, suggesting that MycoIF was a glycoprotein. MycoIF was unaffected by deoxyribonuclease or
ribonuclease
. Supernatant fluids from antigenically stimulated H37Ra-immunized mouse spleen cells exposed to puromycin were unable to produce significant intracellular inhibition. This indicated that the presence of MycoIF activity in supernatant fluids required protein synthesis. The filtration of MycoIF-containing supernatant fluids on Sephadex G-150 demonstrated that significant MycoIF activity appeared only in those fractions which eluted on the downward side of the serum albumin peak. Based on protein standards filtered through the Sephadex gel, the molecular weight of MycoIF was calculated to be between 20,000 and 35,000. These calculations assumed that MycoIF is a globular protein. Attempts to purify MycoIF by anion exchange chromatography (diethylaminoethylcellulose) was not successful.
...
PMID:Molecular weight and other characteristics of mycobacterial growth inhibitory factor produced by spleen cells obtained from mice immunized with viable attenuated mycobacterial cells. 81 60
Extracts of vaccinia-infected HeLa cells were rendered free from infectious virus by centrifugation followed by membrane filtration and were shown to be toxic to uninfected HeLa cells in the presence of hypertonic MgSO4, used as a macromolecular uptake inducer, under conditions which did not kill control cells. Extracts from uninfected cells were nontoxic. This biological test was adapted to a semi-quantitative assay which was used to monitor the purification of the cytotoxic factor by DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-100 chromatography. The cytotoxic factor was purified 100-fold, shown to be of molecular weight 30 -- 100,000 daltons, acidic and completely inactivated by soluble
trypsin
but not by
ribonuclease
under conditions believed to degrade both single- and double-stranded RNA species. It was demonstrated to be virus specific by approrpiate immunosorbent chromatography. Extracts were also prepared from vaccinia-infected HEp-2, RK and W-K cells respectively. A virus-specific factor, toxic to uninfected HeLa cells, with similar chromatographic properties to that isolated from infected HeLa cells, was isolated from these three additional cell lines. The concept of virus induced cytotoxins, substances which exert their toxic effect in the host cells in which they are made, is discussed.
...
PMID:Vaccinia virus cytotoxin. 85 98
A strain of Actinomyces odontolyticus, originally isolated from human dental plaque, produced a non-dialyzable,
trypsin
-sensitive substance that was bactericidal for certain strains of bifidobacteria at 42 degrees C but not at 37 degrees C. Detectable quantities of the bacteriocin were not produced in liquid media. Experimentally useful yields were obtained by extraction from pour plate cultures of producer cells. At 42 degrees C, exponential killing did not occur until indicator cells had doubled at least once. At 37 degrees C, the bacteriocin effected a transient bacteriostasis. Partially purified concentrates were obtained by diethylaminoethyl-cellulose chromatography, and such material was not inactivated by
ribonuclease
, deoxyribonuclease, or lipase. Pronase,
trypsin
, and exposure to 100 degrees C for 20 min completely abolished activity. Inhibitory activity was considerably reduced by exposure to a pH of either 3 or 11. Treatment of producer cells with curing agents did not induce a high frequency of non-bacteriocinogenic cells. The odontolyticin was adsorbed by susceptible, as well as resistant, bacteria.
...
PMID:Bacteriocin from Actinomyces odontolyticus with temperature-dependent killing properties. 90 31
Limited proteolysis of RNAase-Aa(1) (monodeamidated
ribonuclease
-A) by subtilisin results in the formation of an active RNAase-S type of derivative, namely RNAase-Aa(1)S. RNAase-Aa(1)S was chromatographically distinct from RNAase-S, but exhibited very nearly the same enzymic activity, antigenic conformation and susceptibility to
trypsin
as did RNAase-S. Fractionation of RNAase-Aa(1)S by trichloroacetic acid yielded RNAase-Aa(1)S-protein and RNAase-Aa(1)S-peptide, both of which are inactive by themselves, but regenerate active RNAase-Aa(1)S' when mixed together. RNAase-Aa(1)S-peptide was identical with RNAase-S-peptide, whereas the protein part was distinct from that of RNAase-S-protein. Titration of RNAase-Aa(1)S-protein with S-peptide exhibited slight but noticeably weaker binding of the peptide to the deamidated S-protein as compared with that of native protein. Unlike the subtilisin digestion of RNAase-A, which gives nearly 100% conversion into RNAase-S, the digestion of RNAase-Aa(1) gives only a 50% conversion. The resistance of RNAase-Aa(1) to further subtilisin modification after 50% conversion is apparently due to the interaction of RNAase-Aa(1) with its subtilisin-modified product. RNAase-S was also found to undergo activity and structural changes in acidic solutions, similar to those of RNAase-A. The initial reaction product (RNAase-Sa(1)) isolated by chromatography was not homogeneous. Unlike the acid treatment of RNAase-A, which affected only the S-protein part, the acid treatment of RNAase-S affected both the S-protein and the S-peptide region of the molecule.
...
PMID:Subtilisin modification of monodeamidated ribonuclease-A. 92 53
The permeability of standard Soviet ultrafiltration membranes prepared from cellulose acetates was investigated with respect to biologically active substances (hemoglobin,
trypsin
,
ribonuclease
, vitamin B12, hydroxytetracycline) and inorganic salt (KH2PO4). The arrest of a substance by a membrane of a certain structure depended primarily on the size of the substance macromolecule in the solution. The filtration rate was related to the membrane type, pressure gradient and composition of the filtered solution. Potential use of the tested membranes is described.
...
PMID:[Permeability of acetylcellulose ultrafiltration membranes with regard to biologically active substances]. 100 67
Erythrocyte-sensitising antigens (AE) were prepared from Vibrio cholerae serotypes, from EL-Tor vibrio, Escherichia coli and Salmonella enteritidis by digesting the organisms with NaOH followed by precipitation with alcohol. When AE was used in indirect haemagglutination (IHA) tests, the results in a number of cases were somewhat more sensitive and more specific than those obtained in classical agglutination tests. No cross reactions occurred between V. cholerae serotypes and E. coli and S. enteritidis. Much of the reactive part of the AE was not sedimentable at 100,000 g for 1 h. The eluant from the B. cholerae AE on Sephadex G-200 yielded three fractions, one of which was the most active in IHA tests. Treatment of the AE with
trypsin
resulted in an appreciable increase in the heterotypic serum titres in IHA tests. The spectrophotometric absorption of the AE at 260 nm showed a hump that may have been indicative of the presence of nucleic acid. Treatment of the antigen with
ribonuclease
reduced its nucleic acid content but did not change to any significant extent the reactivity of the preparation. The AE antigen of V. cholerae was Molisch-positive and was capable of sensitising untanned erythrocytes in IHA tests. It is suggested that the reactive part of the AE antigen is a carbohydrate complex.
...
PMID:An erythrocyte-sensitising antigen from Vibrio cholerae. 109 60
An in vitro system of guinea pig pancreatic lobules convenient for the study of secretory processes is described in this paper. In this system: (a) the over-all glandular architecture of the tissue is preserved: lobules remain morphologically intact through 5 hours; (b) amylase discharge from unstimulated lobules is low (similar to 4%/hour) and linear over the 5 hours tested; (c) response to carbamylcholine chloride (10-5 M) is energy-dependent, rapid, and extensive (92% discharge of amylase by 5 hours); (d) initial rates of discharge remain stable over the first 3 hours; and (e) no autoactivation of zymogens occurs in incubation medium or tissue. The activation of four zymogens, i.e. chymotrypsinogen, trypsinogen, and procarboxypeptidases A and B, was studied using the following criteria for optimal activation: (a) maximal activation attainable under experimental conditions; (b) stability at the level of maximal activation; and (c) linear relationship between amounts of protein activated and enzyme activity elicited by activation. The concentration of activators (
trypsin
or enterokinase) and secretory protein, the presence or agents (bovine plasma albumin or Triton X-100) which minimize adsorptive losses of secretory protein on glass or plastic surfaces, and the temperature at which activation is carried out were found to be critical and different for each of the zymogens tested. The kinetics of the appearance of three enzyme activities (amylase, lipase, and
ribonuclease
) and four potential proteolytic activities (chymotrypsinogen, trypsinogen, and procarboxypeptidases A and B) into the incubation medium was studied under different conditions; i.e. rest and stimulation with various secretogogues (carbamylcholine chloride, caerulein, and pancreozymin). All seven activities estimated to represent similar to 75% of the secretory protein output of the exocrine pancreas were discharged in synchrony and in constant proportions and were released from the tissue to the same extent under each experimental condition investigated.
...
PMID:Studies on the guinea pig pancreas. Parallel discharge of exocrine enzyme activities. 112 25
The addition of
trypsin
[
EC 3.4.21.4
]-digested liver microsimes induced cyanideinsensitive respiration in guinea pig polymorphonuclear leucocytes with concomitant acceleration of the hexose monophosphate oxidative pathway. The respiration was insensitive to inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration but sensitive to glycolytic inhibitors. These metabolic alterations are similar to those associated with phagocytosis, though the digested mocrosomes were apparently not taken up by the cells and prpbably trigger the netabolic changes by interaction with the cellular membrane. Intact microsomes or microsomes treated with chymotrypsin [EC 3.4.21.1], bacterial proteinase,
ribonuclease
[EC 3.1.4.22], or neuraminidase [EC 3.2.1.18] could not induce such respiration.
...
PMID:Metabolic pattern of polymorphonuclear leucocytes induced by trypsin-digested microsomes. 115 Jun 33
1. RNAase (
ribonuclease
) U2, a purine-specific RNAase, was reduced, aminoethylated and hydrolysed with
trypsin
, chymotrypsin and thermolysin. On the basis of the analyses of the resulting peptides, the complete amino acid sequence of RNAase U2 was determined, 2. When the sequence was compared with the amino acid sequence of RNAase T1 (EC 3.1.4.8), the following regions were found to be similar in the two enzymes; Tyr-Pro-His-Gln-Tyr (38-42) in RNAase U2 and Tyr-Pro-His-Lys-Tyr (38-42) in RNAase T1, Glu-Phe-Pro-Leu-Val (61-65) in RNAase U2 and Glu-Trp-Pro-Ile-Leu (58-62) in RNAase T1, Asp-Arg-Val-Ile-Tyr-Gln (83-88) in RNAase U2 and Asp-Arg-Val-Phe-Asn (76-81) in RNAase T1 and Val-Thr-His-Thr-Gly-Ala (98-103) in RNAase U2 and Ile-Thr-His-Thr-Gly-Ala (90-95) in RNAase T1. All of the amino acid residues, histidine-40, glutamate-58, arginine-77 and histidine-92, which were found to play a crucial role in the biological activity of RNAase T1, were included in the regions cited here. 3. Detailed evidence for the amino acid sequence of the sequence of the proteins has been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50041 (33 PAGES) AT THE British Library (Lending Division)(formerly the National Lending Library for Science and Technology), Boston Spa, Yorks. LS23 7BQ, U.K., from whom copies can be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1975), 145, 5.
...
PMID:The amino acid sequence of ribonuclease U2 from Ustilago sphaerogena. 115 64
Data from two assay systems show that the kinetics of the hydrolysis of cytidine 2':3'-cyclic monophosphate by bovine pancreatic RNAase (
ribonuclease
) is not consistent with conventional models. An allosteric model involving a substrate-dependent change in the equilibrium between two enzyme conformations is proposed. Such a model gives rise to a calculated curve of velocity versus substrate concentration which fits the experimental data. The model is also consistent with the results of an examination of the tryptic digestion of RNAase. Substrate analogues are able to protect RNAase against hydrolysis by
trypsin
and the percentage of RNAase activity which remains after digestion increases sigmoidally as the analogue concentration is increased. The model also explains the pattern seen in the Km values quoted in the literature and is consistent with strong physical evidence for a ligand-induced conformational change for RNAase reported in the literature.
...
PMID:An allosteric model for ribonuclease. 116 52
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