Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (RNase)
16,360 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fourier transform infrared and laser Raman spectroscopies were used to study the effects of dodecylpyridinium bromide on the conformation of haemoglobin, myoglobin, bovine serum albumin, ribonuclease, ovalbumin, lysozyme, trypsin and beta-lactoglobulin in aqueous solution. Addition of the cationic detergent caused a decrease in alpha-helix conformation in highly helical proteins. At low detergent concentrations stabilization of beta-sheet conformation was observed.
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PMID:Protein-cationic detergent interaction. Fourier transform infrared and laser Raman spectroscopic studies on the interaction between proteins and dodecylpyridinium bromide. 49 44

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.
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PMID:Polymorphism in fowl serum albumin. VII. Distribution and activity of free and membrane-bound polysomes in developing fowl liver. 56 16

Undegraded rat liver polysomes were obtained after homogenizing the tissue in a medium containing NH4Cl, heparine, and yeast tRNA. Purification of poly(A)-containing RNA from polysomal RNA was accomplished by affinity chromatography on oligo(dT)-cellulose columns. Poly(A)-containing RNA molecules were monitored by the formation of ribonuclease-resistant hybrids with [3H]poly(U). To improve the separation of messenger RNA and ribosomal RNA by oligo(dT)-cellulose it was found essential to dissociate the aggregates formed between both molecular species by heat treatment in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide (Me2SO) prior to chromatography. Sucrose gradient analysis under denaturing conditions showed that the preparations obtained were virtually free of ribosomal RNA. Poly(A)-containing RNA constituted approx. 2.2% of the total polysomal RNA and the number average size was 1500--1800 nucleotides, as judged by sedimentation analysis on sucrose density gradients containing Me2SO. Approximately 8.2% of the purified preparation obtained was able to anneal with [3H]poly(U); the number average nucleotide length of the poly(A) segment of the RNA population was calculated to be 133 adenylate residues. Based on these values, our preparations appear to be greater than 90% pure. The RNA fractions obtained after oligo(dT)-cellulose chromatography were used to direct the synthesis of liver polypeptides in a heterologous cell-free system derived from wheat-germ. The system was optimized with respect to monovalent and divalent cations, and presence of polyamines (spermine). More than 65% of the translational activity present in the unfractionated polysomal RNA was recovered in the final poly(A)-containing RNA fraction. However, about 25% of the activity was found to be associated with the unbound fraction which was essentially free of poly(A)-containing RNA. Immunoprecipitation analysis with a specific antiserum to rat serum albumin demonstrated that about 6--8% of the labeled synthetic products translated from the poly(A)-containing RNA sample corresponded to serum albumin. Analysis of the translation products by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a heterogeneous distribution of molecular sizes ranging from 15 000 to greater than 70 000 daltons. Spermine not only increased the overall yield and extent of protein synthesis, but also resulted in higher yields of large protein products. Under optimal translation conditions a discrete peak representing about 7% of the total radioactivity was observed to migrate with rat serum albumin.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of poly(adenylic acid)-containing messenger ribonucleic acid from rat liver polysomes. 66 61

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.
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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

Incubation of intracellulary perfused squid giant axons in [3H]leucine demonstrated that newly synthesized proteins appeared in the perfusate after a 45-min lag period. The transfer of labeled proteins was shown to occur steadily over 8 h of incubation, in the presence of an intact axonal plasma membrane as evidenced by the ability of the perfused axon to conduct propagated action potentials over this time-period. Intracellularly perfused RNase did not affect this transfer, whereas extracellularly applied puromycin, which blocked de novo protein synthesis in the glial sheath, prevented the appearance of labeled proteins in the perfusate. The uptake of exogenous 14C-labeled bovine serum albumin (BSA) into the axon had entirely different kinetics than the endogenous glial labeled protein transfer process. The data provide support for the glia-neuron protein transfer hypothesis.
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PMID:Evidence for the glia-neuron protein transfer hypothesis from intracellular perfusion studies of squid giant axons. 88 14

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

A new rapid method for the quantitative and routine determination of free amino groups in intact pure proteins has been developed. Primary amino groups are labeled with fluorescamine and the labeled groups are detected by absorption spectroscopy in the range 375-390 nm. The amino group concentration can be determined in a few minutes without hydrolyzing the labeled protein and extracting a lysine derivative. The method was tested with the following proteins: lysozyme, alpha-lactalbumin, beta-lactoglobulin, bovine serum albumin, ribonuclease, ribonuclease-S-peptide, and alphasl-casein B. Application of this method to the estimation of available lysine is discussed.
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PMID:New method for determination of free amino groups in intact pure proteins: relationship to available lysine. 99 78

The hydroxyl groups of poly(ethyleneglycol) have been esterified (partly) with a number of carboxylic acids. When these esters are included in dextranpoly(ethyleneglycol)-water biphasic systems the partitions of proteins and membranes between the two phases (and the interface) are in some cases strongly affected. The affinity of serum albumin for the poly(ethyleneglycol)-rich phase is strongly increased when the fatty acid group consists of more than 10 carbon atoms. The partition also depends on the number of double bonds in the fatty acid. A corresponding relationship is found for membranes from spinach chloroplasts. The partitions of ovalbumin, lysozyme (EC 3.2.1.17) and ribonuclease (EC 3.1.4.22) are not influenced by the fatty acid esters. Esters of dibasic carboxylic acids show a minute but marked effect on the partition of proteins in general while malate and tartrate esters affect strongly the partition of chloroplast membranes. The partitions of both proteins and membranes are influenced by poly(ethyleneglycol) deoxycholate. Experiments with malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37), lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27), fumarase (EC 4.2.1.2), enolase (EC 4.2.1.11) and glutamate-ocaloacetate transaminase (EC 2.6.1.1) show that their partitions, measured on enzymic activity basis, is changed when esters of benzoic, linolenic, tartaric or deoxycholic acid are included in the biphasic system. The mechanism behind the effect of the esterified poly (ethyleneglycol) on the partition of biomaterial, in this type of aqueous biphasic systems, is discussed in terms of a direct binding of the esters to the partitioned material.
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PMID:The effect of poly(ethyleneglycol) esters on the partition of proteins and fragmented membranes in aqueous biphasic systems. 99 68

To clarify the mode of interaction between sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and protein polypeptides with special reference to SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the binding of SDS to several protein polypeptides was investigated by the equilibrium dialysis technique. Each of the binding isotherms was characterized by the presence of two phases: an initial gradual increase in the amount of binding to 0.3-0.6 g/g (first phase) and a subsequent steep increase to 1.2-1.5 g/g (second phase). The binding was completed at a concentration of SDS below the critical micelle concentration. Throughout the first and second phases, the isotherms obtained were different for each kind of protein. On the basis of experiments with bovine serum albumin and ribonuclease (EC 3.1.4.22], the isotherms were profoundly affected by the method used for modification of the sulfhydryl groups. The claim of Reynolds and Tanford (Proc. Natl, Acad. Sci. U.S., 66, 1002 (1970)) that the isotherms are virtually identical for many kinds of proteins was not supported by the present data. Changes in the gross and local conformations were examined with reference to the isotherms by measurements of CD spectrum, free boundary electrophoresis, and gel filtration. The results obtained were collectively interpreted based on the model of SDS-protein polypeptide complexes proposed by the present authors (J. Biochem., 75, 309 (1974)).
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PMID:Binding isotherms of sodium dodecyl sulfate to protein polypeptides with special reference to SDS-polyacylamide gel electrophoresis. 115 59

The hydrophobic nature of proteins is characterized by a degree of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate (TNS) affinity to them and is pronounced quantitatively in the semi-saturated (C1/2) concentrations. This index correlates directly with the position of TNS emission maximum after the binding with proteins and reversely with the yield of fluorescence. The preparations of phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase, xantinoxidase, glyceratekinase, lysozyme, RNase during the long (1-2 h) contact with TNS change the values C1/2, that evidences for interaction with the hydrophobic indicator of new structures of protein molecule or for a change in the nature of its linkage itself. An attempt is made to characterize the accessible for TNS hydrophobic nature of individual proteins by a coefficient of molar hydrophobic nature which unites three mentioned characteristics. Serum albumin, insulin, glucogon, alpha chemotrypsin, DNase are most hydrophobic, pyruvate kinase, aldolase, urease, RNase--least hydrophobic, Glycerate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, xanthinoxidase, trypsin, lysozyme are in intermediate position.
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PMID:[Comparative characteristics of hydrophobic nature of certain proteins by their interaction with 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonates]. 120 4


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