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)

The myofibrillar protein synthesis rate in old human skeletal muscle is slower than that in young adult muscle. To examine whether this difference in protein synthesis rate is explained by reduced availability of the mRNAs that encode the most abundant myofibrillar proteins, we determined relative hybridization signals from probes for actin mRNA, myosin heavy chain mRNA, and total polyadenylated RNA in vastus lateralis muscle biopsies taken from young (22- to 31-yr-old) and old (61- to 74-yr-old) human subjects. The mean fractional rate of myofibrillar synthesis was 38% slower in the older muscles, as determined by incorporation of a stable isotope tracer. Total actin and myosin heavy chain mRNAs, and polyadenylated RNA, were determined using slot-blot assays. Isoform-specific determinations of alpha-actin mRNA, type I myosin heavy chain mRNA, and type IIa myosin heavy chain mRNA were done with ribonuclease protection assays. Hybridization signals were expressed relative to tissue DNA content. There was no difference between age groups in total polyadenylated RNA or in any of the specific mRNAs. We conclude that the slower myofibrillar synthesis rate in older muscle is not caused by reduced mRNA availability.
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PMID:Polyadenylated RNA, actin mRNA, and myosin heavy chain mRNA in young and old human skeletal muscle. 877 42

When seedlings of two rice (Oryza sativa L.) cvs. Malviya-36 and Pant-12 were raised under 25 and 50 microM As2O3 in the medium an increase in the level of RNA, proteins and proline accompanied with a decline in the level of free amino acid pool was observed under arsenic supplementation compared to controls. In situ As3+ treatment caused a marked inhibition in activities of ribonuclease (RNase, EC 3.1.27.1), protease and leucine aminopeptidase (LAP, EC 3.4.11.1) whereas the activity level of carboxypeptidase (EC 3.4.16.5) was enhanced. In vitro supply of As2O3 in the enzyme assay medium beyond 400 microM resulted in gradual inhibition of RNase and beyond 5 microM inhibition of LAP activities. Addition of 1M proline in the assay medium significantly restored the loss in RNase activity due to in vitro arsenic treatment or due to osmotic stress created by incorporation of polyethylene glycol (PEG). Isoform pattern of RNase extracted from As3+ -exposed seedlings showed a significant alteration compared to its pattern in unexposed seedlings. Results suggest that arsenic exposure impairs hydrolysis of RNA and proteins in rice seedlings due to inhibition of RNase and proteases activities and that proline accumulating under As3+ toxicity appears to serve as enzyme protectant.
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PMID:Inhibition of ribonuclease and protease activities in arsenic exposed rice seedlings: role of proline as enzyme protectant. 1694 56