Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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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)
A protein kinase which is intimately associated with equine herpesvirus (equine abortion virus) was found by using adenosine triphosphate-gamma-(32)P as a phosphate donor and virus protein as an acceptor. Consistent demonstration of the activity requires prior removal of phosphohydrolase. The kinase activity requires Mg(2+), is not stimulated by cyclic adenosine monophosphate, but is enhanced by added protamine or arginine-rich histone. The labeled product is resistant to
ribonuclease
, deoxyribonuclease, and
chloroform
-methanol but is sensitive to Pronase. Other tests suggest that serine and threonine residues are the acceptor sites. In the in vitro reaction, the incorporation represents an average of approximately 4,500 phosphate residues per virion, and all 17 virus protein bands resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis appear to be labeled.
...
PMID:Protein kinase activity in equine herpesvirus. 433 15
Large plaque (4LP) and small plaque (4SP) variants were derived from a parent bovine virus strain by serial plaque passage. Both 4LP and 4SP were resistant to
chloroform
and stabilized at 50 degrees C for one hour by 1.0 M magnesium chloride. Both 4LP and 4SP had buoyant densities in cesium chloride of 1.36 gm/ml. Antigenically, 4LP and 4SP were reciprocally cross neutralizable. The nucleic acid of 4LP was shown to be ribonucleic acid (RNA) by resistance of its infectivity to deoxynuclease (DNase) but not
ribonuclease
(
RNase
) and by increased incorporation of [(3)H]-uridine into cytoplasmic RNA in cells of virus infected cultures. In growth characteristics, both 4LP and 4SP had maximum adsorption times of 75 to 90 minutes but 4LP had more rapid replication and release rates and yielded nearly twice as many infectious units per cell as 4SP. The differences in growth properties correlated directly with the differential in plaque diameter which was 40-50%.
...
PMID:Physical, chemical and biological characteristics of two bovine enterovirus plaque variants. 434 Mar 47
Phage X was isolated from sewage as plating on Escherichia coli or Salmonella typhimurium strains harbouring the incompatibility group X plasmid R6K. It also plated on a strain of Serratia marcescens carrying this plasmid. It failed to form plaques on Proteus mirabilis, P. morganii or Providencia alcalifaciens harbouring R6K, but did multiply on them. No phage increase occurred with homologous R- strains. Phage X also plated or registered an increase in titre on E. coli or S. typhimurium strains carrying various plasmids of incompatibility groups M, N, P-1, U or W as well as the unassigned plasmid R775. It adsorbed to pili determined by a group P-10 plasmid in a Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain but did not multiply on this organism. The phage was filamentous and curly, resistant to
ribonuclease
and diethyl ether and sensitive to
chloroform
. It adsorbed to the tips of pili.
...
PMID:Phage X: a plasmid-dependent, broad host range, filamentous bacterial virus. 612 39
A processing endoribonuclease was isolated from the cytoplasm of chick embryos. The enzyme was easily obtained using an RNA extraction procedure based on a mild deproteinization with Sarkosyl and cold phenol/
chloroform
. This technique assured the recovery of several proteins and the endoribonuclease in association with the RNA. It was demonstrated that this endoribonuclease was capable of promoting, in vitro, a precise processing of naked 45-S ribosomal RNA precursor to molecules resembling the intermediates as well as the 28-S and 18-S cytoplasmic RNAs found in vivo. The presence of magnesium ions was required for the correct processing function of the enzyme. In addition, under the same conditions, the mature ribosomal RNA substrates were degraded at a slower rate by this RNA-associated
RNase
. It was possible to fractionate the enzymatic preparation into two different populations by means of a sucrose gradient: one associated and the other partially free of an RNA component. The effect of the intrinsic RNA associated with the endoribonuclease on the enzymatic activity was tested by analyzing both the enzymatic populations and the total enzymatic preparation treated with pronase or with immobilized pancreatic RNase. In all cases in which the RNA component was present, the enzyme showed processing activity. On the other hand, when the RNA component was absent or at least partially degraded the enzyme proved to be more active in processing precursor molecules and in promoting extensive degradation of mature RNA species. Although the presence of RNA in association with the enzyme was demonstrated, its role in the regulation of the enzymatic activity is yet not clear.
...
PMID:Processing of naked 45-S ribosomal RNA precursor in vitro by an RNA-associated endoribonuclease. 616 85
Sixteen strains of Capnocytophaga were isolated from the pocket of a localized juvenile periodontitis patient. These strains were divided into four groups on the basis of morphological and physiological traits. Strains from group I and group III were identified as C. ochracea and group II as C. sputigena. An antigen common to genus Capnocytophaga was purified utilizing immunoabsorbent chromatography from lysates obtained by sodium dodecyl sulfate treatment of C. ochracea strain S1. An antigen specific to C. ochracea was prepared by sequential gel filtration and preparative isoelectric focusing. The genus common and species specific antigens isolated were immunologically unique and pure when tested by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion against rabbit antisera prepared to Capnocytophaga and other gram-negative rods. The genus common antigen was susceptible to trypsin and pronase digestion, was soluble in
chloroform
-methanol, but was unaltered by
ribonuclease
and deoxyribonuclease treatments and periodate oxidation. Antigenicity of the species specific antigen was destroyed by periodate oxidation. The genus common antigen appeared to be lipid-associated protein, while the species specific antigen consisted mainly of carbohydrate. These specific immunological reagents would be valuable in diagnosing and monitoring diseases.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of a genus common antigen and species specific antigen of Capnocytophaga. 618 10
Male-specific bacteriophages adsorb to F-pili and thus can only infect male host strains. A method was developed for the selective enumeration of these phages, based on the observation that in sewage there are few phages capable of infecting F- -salmonellas--usually less than 10 pfu/ml. Using a male Salmonella strain, constructed by the introduction of the plasmid F'42 lac::Tn5 into Salmonella typhimurium phage type 3, plaque counts in secondary effluent were found to be in the range of 60-8200 pfu/ml. Practically all the phages detected had a host range restricted to male Salmonella or Escherichia coli strains, were resistant to
chloroform
and their infectivity was inhibited by
RNase
. Electron microscopy of lysates revealed phage particles that were morphologically identical to the male-specific single-strand RNA phages. Similar results were obtained with a strain of Salm. indiana carrying F'42 lac. A derivative of the Salm. typhimurium LT2 strain carrying an F-plasmid (F'42 lac fin P301) derepressed for fertility inhibition by the resident plasmid pSLT was equally sensitive to male-specific phages, but from sewage samples many other phages infecting F- E. coli but not F- Salmonella were isolated using this host strain.
...
PMID:A method for the enumeration of male-specific bacteriophages in sewage. 637 73
An extracellular bactericidal substance was isolated from the supernatant of Streptococcus mutans Rm-10 culture fluid and partially purified with 60% ammonium sulfate precipitation, differential centrifugation, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. There was a good correlation of the sensitivity profiles of indicator strains whether assayed on solid medium or with purified material from cell-free culture fluid, indicating that the same inhibitory substance is produced on solid medium and in broth. Vapor from organic solvents such as
chloroform
, acetone, ethanol, and ether as well as heat treatment at 100 degrees C for 30 min had little effect on the bactericidal factor. It was sensitive to trypsin and pronase and resistant to deoxyribonuclease,
ribonuclease
, lysozyme, and phospholipase C. The inhibitor was not infective, and electron microscopic studies failed to reveal phage or phage-like particles in concentrated solutions of the bactericidal material. The results indicate that the extracellular bactericidal substance is indeed a bacteriocin. Activity in broth cultures reached a maximum only after exponential growth had ceased. It was active against other streptococcal strains as well as strains of Actinomyces naeslundii, A. viscosus, Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, but not against strains of Fusobacterium nucleatum and Escherichia coli.
...
PMID:Isolation, partial purification and preliminary characterization of a bacteriocin from Streptococcus mutans Rm-10. 641 23
Previous studies have identified several cellular requirements for mevalonic acid that appear unrelated to cholesterol, dolichol, or ubiquinone. To search for other products of mevalonic acid that might account for these requirements we cultured Swiss 3T3 cells in the presence of mevinolin, an inhibitor of mevalonic acid biosynthesis, then labeled the cells with exogenous radioactive mevalonic acid. Upon analyzing the radioactive material formed, we found that 40-50% of it was not extractable into lipid solvents, and that most of the lipid-insoluble material behaved like protein when treated with sodium dodecyl sulfate:
chloroform
:phenol,
RNase
, or proteinase K. Further analysis by electrophoresis revealed that radioactivity was associated with a few specific proteins that had apparent molecular weights of 13,000-58,000. Control experiments indicated that authentic radioactive (R)-mevalonic acid was the active precursor. Other lines of evidence suggested that mevalonate was first converted to an isoprenoid compound, then covalently incorporated into proteins by way of a cycloheximide-insensitive mechanism. These results suggest that Swiss 3T3 cells possess novel metabolic products of mevalonic acid metabolism that are formed by post-translational incorporation of isoprenoids into specific cell proteins.
...
PMID:Evidence for post-translational incorporation of a product of mevalonic acid into Swiss 3T3 cell proteins. 656 5
We have improved the protocol for RNA quantification by using
RNase
protection. Instead of precipitation and extraction with phenol and
chloroform
, we use a faster and more reliable precipitation based on guanidinium thiocyanate (GdSCN). The internal standard is produced by in vitro transcription of a DNA template constructed so as to allow simultaneous detection of the in vitro transcript and the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) mRNA by use of the same probe and hybridization. Addition of this internal standard at the step for RNA isolation reduced the analytical imprecision from 40.8% to 19.3%. Estimates of the within- and between-subject biological variations of the LDLR mRNA content in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from healthy volunteers were 21.5% and 13.6%, respectively, and the analytical imprecision was 22.6%. The mean content of LDLR mRNA in PBMCs from healthy individuals was 0.78 copies per cell.
...
PMID:Improved RNase protection assay for quantifying LDL-receptor mRNA; estimation of analytical imprecision and biological variance in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. 758 50
We reported (Scates et al. Carcinogenesis 1994, 15, 2945-2948) that incubating a range of bile acids with DNA in vitro, with or without exogenous metabolic activation, gave no evidence of DNA adduct formation as judged by the nuclease P1 method of 32P-postlabelling. In contrast Hamada et al. (Carcinogenesis 1994, 15, 1911-1915), also using postlabelling, claimed that chenodeoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, glycolithocholic acid and taurolithocholic acid bound covalently to DNA in vitro. To investigate this discordance we incubated solutions of salmon sperm DNA for 1 h at 37 degrees C with 1 mg/ml of cholic acid, chenodeoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, glycolithocholic acid or taurolithocholic acid. Each incubate was extracted extensively with diethyl ether after which a sample of DNA was taken and 32P-postlabelled using the nuclease P1 method. The DNA in the remaining incubate was precipitated from high salt solution with ethanol. Aliquots of this DNA were postlabelled. The remainder of the DNA was purified with proteinase-K,
ribonuclease
, phenol-
chloroform
, precipitated and postlabelled. Parallel incubates were made with the same bile acids, under the same conditions but in the absence of DNA and were then extracted, precipitated and postlabelled as described above. When DNA was present in the incubate but was not precipitated, chenodeoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, glycolithocholic acid and taurolithocholic acid, but not cholic acid, produced spots similar to those reported by Hamada et al. No such spots were seen when DNA was postlabelled after precipitation, or after precipitation and purification. These same bile acids produced spots when postlabelled in the absence of DNA, but spots were absent when these incubates were precipitated and purified before postlabelling. We conclude that the spots obtained when bile acids are incubated with DNA which is not precipitated from high salt before it is postlabelled are technical artefacts, and cannot be regarded as evidence that bile acids bind covalently to DNA to form adducts. We also confirm reports (Vulimiri et al. Carcinogenesis 1994, 15, 2061-2064) that bile acids alone can produce spots when incubated with T4 polynucleotide kinase and [gamma-32P]ATP.
...
PMID:Appearance of artefacts when using 32P-postlabelling to investigate DNA adduct formation by bile acids in vitro: lack of evidence for covalent binding. 761 81
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