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Enzyme
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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 levels of several enzymes have been studied during sporulation of Saccharomyces cerevisia. The specific activities of
ribonuclease
and aminopeptidase I raised several-fold after transfer of the cells to sporulation medium, whereas the specific activities of phosphofructokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, tryptophan synthase and pyruvate decarboxylase were not significantly altered. The specific activities of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase, isocitrate lyase, malate dehydrogenase and fructose bisphosphatase all decreased from the onset of sporulation. The inactivation of these latter enzymes was inhibited by cycloheximide and by inhibitors of energy metabolism. Hexokinase, alcohol dehydrogenase and glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase were partially lost from the cells during the period of ascus maturation. None of the enzyme changes observed proved to be 'sporulation-specific' in that it occurred exclusively in sporulating diploid yeast cells. Therefore it is postulated that the meiotic events and the metabolic changes required for ascospore formation are under separate genetic control in this organism. During sporulation, the cellular content of cytochromes b, c, and aa3 was reduced to 20% or less of that present in vegetative derepressed cells. Since the relative percentage of total to cycloheximide-insensitive mitochondrial protein synthesis was not significantly altered throughout sporulation, and the pattern of mitochondrially synthesized polypeptides was rather similar both in vegetative and in sporulating cells, it appeared that not only degradation but also synthesis and therefore turnover of the mitochondrially coded polypeptides of cytochromes b and aa3 took place during sporulation. The activity ratio of cytochrome c oxidase to F1-ATPase in submitochondrial particles isolated from vegetative cells and from purified asci was almost identical. This indicates that the loss of
membrane-bound
mitochondrial cytochromes during sporulation is probably due to a nonselective degradation of inner mitochondrial membrane proteins.
...
PMID:Protein degradation during yeast sporulation. Enzyme and cytochrome patterns. 18 44
The peripheral membrane protein fraction released by washing Acholeplasma laidlawii membranes with low-ionic strength buffers contained about 50% of the total
membrane-bound
ribonuclease
and deoxyribonuclease activities. The ATPase, NADH oxidase and p-nitrophenylphosphatase activities remained bound to the membrane even when EDTA was added to the wash fluids, and thus appear to belong to the integral membrane protein group. Serving as a marker for peripheral membrane proteins, the
membrane-bound
ribonuclease
activity was solubilized by bile salts much more effectively than the integral
membrane-bound
enzymes. On the other hand, the solubilized
ribonuclease
showed a much lower capacity to reaggregate with other solubilized membrane components to membranous structures. Yet, most of the
ribonuclease
molecules which were bound to the reaggregated membranes could not be released by low-ionic strength buffer. The reaggregated membranes differed from the native membranes in the absence of particles on their fracture faces obtained by freeze cleaving, and by their much higher labeling by the [125-I]lactoperoxidase iodination system. These results suggest that most of the proteins are exposed on the reaggregated membrane surfaces, with very little, if any, protein embedded in its lipid bilayer core. Enzyme disposition in the A. laidlawii membrane was studied by comparing the activity of isolated membranes with that of membranes of intact cells after treatment with pronase or with an antiserum to membranes. The data indicate the asymmetrical disposition of these activities, the ATPase and NADH oxidase being localized on the inner membrane surface, while the nucleases are exposed on the external membrane surface.
...
PMID:Characterization of the mycoplasma membrane proteins. V. Release and localization of membrane-bound enzymes in Acholeplasma laidlawii. 23 52
The quantity and activities of
membrane-bound
and free polysomes in livers from chick embryos at successive stages of development were compared in cell-free protein-synthesizing systems. Membrane-bound polysomes increased 2-fold between 8 and 18 days of development, while total ribosome content remained constant. Free polysome activity also remained constant during this period, while that of
membrane-bound
(total--free) polysomes decreased, possibly because of an increase in
ribonuclease
activity in this fraction. Serum albumin biosynthesis occurred primarily on
membrane-bound
polysomes. With liver development, increased secretion of serum proteins may be correlated with synthesis of serum albumin on increasing numbers of membrane bound polyribosomes.
...
PMID:Polymorphism in fowl serum albumin. VII. Distribution and activity of free and membrane-bound polysomes in developing fowl liver. 56 16
After homogenization of intestinal mucosa from vitamin D-replete chicks and high speed centrifugation, the major proportion of the vitamin D-induced calcium-binding protein is present in the supernatant fraction. However, the centrifugate, after repeated washing, contains significant amounts of bound calcium-binding protein that can be solubilized by Triton X-100. The bound calcium-binding protein is identical to soluble calcium-binding protein by the criteria of immunological identity, electrophoretic mobility, and molecular size, as determined by gel filtration chromatography. The bound calcium-binding protein is only partially released by sonication, osmotic shock or by
ribonuclease
treatment. Bound and soluble calcium-binding protein are not present in rachitic chick intestine. The addition of calcium-binding protein to rachitic mucosa prior to homogenization does not yield a Triton X-100 solubilizable form, indicating that bound calcium-binding protein in vitamin D-replete intestine is not due to adsorption or vesicular entrapment of soluble calcium-binding protein. The overall evidence suggests that part of the intestinal calcium-binding protein is
membrane-bound
.
...
PMID:Evidence for a membrane-bound fraction of chick intestinal calcium-binding protein. 63 6
Adenylate cyclase from purified beef thyroid membranes has been solubilized by the use of Triton N-101 after preactivation with guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imido)-triphosphate. The soluble activity passed a 0.22- micron filter, was not sedimented at 100,000 X g for 2 h, and behaved like aldolase in sucrose density gradients and on Sepharose 6B. From comparison of the sedimentation in D2O and H2O the partial specific volume was found to be like that of globular proteins (0.75 +/- 0.006), hence little detergent appeared to be bound to the enzyme. The sedimentation coefficient was 7.4 +/- 0.15, the Stokes radius 45 A, and the molecular weight 159,000. Prestimulation by thyrotropin did not survive solubilization. The stimulation produced by guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate persisted as did the more active state resulting from pretreatment with both this nucleotide plus thyrotropin. Thyrotropin did not stimulate the solubilized enzyme. The Km for ATP, thermal stability, and inhibition by Ca2+ were identical for the
membrane-bound
and soluble enzyme, while the pH optimum was increased 0.5 unit in the latter. Polyanions and phenothiazines inhibited both preparations equally, whereas only membranes responded to stimulation by polylysine and
ribonuclease
.
...
PMID:Soluble adenylate cyclase from thyroid membranes. 67 Jan 96
The rRNA species from the total cytoplasmic, free and
membrane-bound
fractions of HeLa cells were compared. With the use of T1
ribonuclease
and combined T1
ribonuclease
plus pancreatic ribonuclease 'fingerprinting' procedures, no significant differences were found between the rRNA species from the different subcellular fractions.
...
PMID:Comparison between the ribosomal ribonucleic acids from free and membrane-bound ribosomal fractions of HeLa cells. 82 Mar 34
Over half of the chloroplast ribosomes isolated from growing cultures of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii are bound to chloroplast thylakoid membranes if completion of nascent polypeptide chains is prevented by chloramphenicol. The free chloroplast ribosomes are recovered in homogenate supernatants, and presumably originate from the chloroplast stroma. Only about 10% of these free chloroplast ribosomes are polyribosomes, even under conditions when 70% of free cytoplasm ribosomes are recovered as polyribosomes. The nonionic detergent Nonidet P-40 liberates atypical polyribosomes (Type I), from membranes, which require both
ribonuclease
and proteases for complete conversion to monomeric ribosomes. Thus Type I particles are held together by mRNA but are also held together by peptide bonds. These Type I polyribosomes probably are not bound to intact membrane, but might be bound to some protein-containing sub-membrane particle. The Type I polyribosomes are dissociated to ribosomal subunits by puromycin and high salt, and contained 0.2 to 1 nascent chain per ribosome. If membranes are treated with Nonidet and proteases at the same time, polyribosomes which are digested to monomeric ribosomes by
ribonuclease
alone (Type II) are obtained. Type II polyribosomes are smaller than Type I, and probably represent the true size distribution of polyribosomes on the membranes. At least 50% of the
membrane-bound
ribosomes are polyribosomes, since that much membrane bound chloroplast RNA is recovered as Type I or Type II polyribosomes.
...
PMID:Free and membrane-bound chloroplast polyribosomes Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 116 19
Mild
ribonuclease
treatment of the membrane fraction of P3K cells released three types of
membrane-bound
ribosomal particles: (a) all the newly made native 40S subunits detected after 2 h of [3H]uridine pulse. Since after a 3-min pulse with [35S]methionine these membrane native subunits appear to contain at least sevenfold more Met-tRNA per particle than the free native subunits, they may all be initiation complexes with mRNA molecules which have just become associated with the membranes; (b) about 50% of the ribosomes present in polyribosomes. Evidence is presented that the released ribosomes carry nascent chains about two and a half to three times shorter than those present on the ribosomes remaining bound to the membranes. It is proposed that in the
membrane-bound
polyribosomes of P3K cells, only the ribosomes closer to the 3' end of the mRNA molecules are directly bound, while the latest ribosomes to enter the polyribosomal structures are indirectly bound through the mRNA molecules; (c) a small number of 40S subunits of polyribosomal origin, presumably initiation complexes attached at the 5' end of mRNA molecules of polyribosomes. When the P3K cells were incubated with inhibitors acting at different steps of protein synthesis, it was found that puromycin and pactamycin decreased by about 40% the proportion of ribosomes in the membrane fraction, while cycloheximide and anisomycin had no such effect. The ribosomes remaining on the membrane fraction of puromycin-treated cells consisted of a few polyribosomes, and of an accumulation of 80S and 60S particles, which were almost entirely released by high salt treatment of the membranes. The
membrane-bound
ribosomes found after pactamycin treatment consisted of a few polyribosomes, with a striking accumulation of native 60S subunits and an increased number of native 40S subunits. On the basis of the observations made in this and the preceding papers, a model for the binding of ribosomes to membranes and for the ribosomal cycle on the membranes is proposed. It is suggested that ribosomal subunits exchange between free and
membrane-bound
polyribosomes through the cytoplasmic pool of free native subunits, and that their entry into
membrane-bound
ribosomes is mediated by mRNA molecules associated with membranes.
...
PMID:Membrane-bound ribosomes of myeloma cells. III. The role of the messenger RNA and the nascent polypeptide chain in the binding of ribosomes to membranes. 117 34
A procedure is described for the preparation of free and bound polysomes from whole homogenates of rat liver tissue. Liver is homogenized in a conventional medium containing glutathione; then after a 12-min centrifugation at 131000g, the free polysomes in the supernatant are saved, while the
membrane-bound
polysomes in the pellet are suspended in a mixture of
ribonuclease
inhibitors (cell sap, 250 mM KCl, and glutathione), homogenized in the presence of detergent (Triton X-100), centirfuged for 5 min at 1470g, decanted, and treated with deoxycholate; the polysomes in the two supernatants are harvested by centrifugation through sucrose gradients containing 250 mM KCl and cell sap. Free and bound polysomes prepared in this manner are undegraded, equally active in cell-free protein synthesis, and virtually free of
ribonuclease
, membranous material, glycogen, deoxycholate, completed protein, and cross-contamination. The recovery of polysomes is approximately 95% and the distribution between the free and
membrane-bound
state is 25 and 75%, respectively. The molecular weight profiles after sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis of the polypeptides completed and released by free and bound polysomes in vitro are different, indicating that there are quantitative differences in the synthesis of various size polypeptides between the two polysome classes. The differential centrifugation procedure is rapid and reproducible, requires much less ultracentrifugation than the isopycnic technique, and provides a nearly quantitative means of separating free and bound polysomes.
...
PMID:A procedure for the quantitative recovery of homogeneous populations of undegraded free and bound polysomes from rat liver. 126 92
The primary structure of the
ribonuclease
inhibitor from pig liver has been determined by amino acid sequence analysis. The N alpha-acetylated polypeptide chain of 456 amino acids consists of 15 homologous leucine-rich repeats, characterized by leucyl residues at constant positions. Two types of alternating repeats occur, 29 (A) and 28 (B) residues long. The degree of identity between repeats of a given type ranged from 25 to 60%. Only one deletion in the B-repeat was necessary to perfectly align the leucyl residues between the two repeats. Leucine-rich repeats have previously been found in four
membrane-bound
proteins and one extracellular protein, and their amphiphilic character suggested that they could be involved in membrane binding. Ribonuclease inhibitor is the first example of a cytoplasmic protein containing this type of repeat. It seems likely, therefore, that leucine-rich repeats can have functions other than forming membrane binding structures.
...
PMID:Amino acid sequence of the ribonuclease inhibitor from porcine liver reveals the presence of leucine-rich repeats. 321 61
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