Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.3 (RNase T1)
1,228 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Incubation of Neurospora crassa conidia with ribonuclease (RNase) A reduces transport of L-phenylalanine by those cells. Under similar conditions, oxidized RNase A, RNase T1, and RNase T2 do not have this effect. Incubation of conidia with active RNase covalently attached to polyacrylamide beads reduces L-phenylalanine transport. This indicates that the site of enzymatic action is at the cell surface. At the lower concentration of enzyme used in this study, incubation with RNase A reduces transport of L-phenylalanine by the general (G) amino acid permease. Increasing the enzyme concentration results in reduction of transport by the neutral aromatic (N)-specific permease. The increased transport activity that accompanies onset of conidial germination is also sensitive to incubation with RNase A. Application of the enzyme to actively transporting cells does not release amino acid transported prior to enzyme addition. Cells cultured on media supplemented with [2-14C] uridine release isotopic activity after RNase A incubation. Analogous treatments with Pronase, RNase T1, RNase T2, or deoxyribonuclease I do not release isotope activity. Pronase treatment does reduce L-phenylalanine transport. Incubation of conidia with RNase A also inhibits germination of those conidia.
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PMID:Effects of ribonuclease A on amino acid transport in Neurospora crassa. 12 24

A number of molecular agents that can efficiently quench the room temperature phosphorescence of tryptophan were identified, and their ability to quench the phosphorescence lifetime of tryptophan in nine proteins was examined. For all quenchers, the quenching efficiency generally follows the same sequence, namely, N-acetyltryptophanamide (NATA) greater than parvalbumin approximately lactoglobulin approximately ribonuclease T1 greater than liver alcohol dehydrogenase greater than aldolase greater than Pronase approximately edestin greater than azurin greater than alkaline phosphatase. Quenching rate constants for O2 and CO are relatively insensitive to protein differences, while H2S and CS2 are somewhat more sensitive. These small molecule agents appear to act by penetrating into the proteins. However, penetration to truly buried tryptophans is less favorable than previously suggested; in five proteins studied, quenching efficiency by O2 is 20-1000 times lower than for NATA, and up to 10(5) lower for H2S and CS2. Larger and more polar quenchers--including organic thiols, conjugated ketones and amides, and anionic species--were also studied. The efficiency of these quenchers does not correlate with quencher size or polarity, the quenching reaction has low energy of activation, and quenching rates are insensitive to solvent viscosity. These results indicate that the larger quenchers do not approach the buried tryptophans by penetrating into the proteins, even on the long phosphorescence time scale, and are also inconsistent with a mechanism in which quencher encounter with the tryptophan occurs in free solution, as in a protein-opening reaction. The results obtained suggest that the quenching process involves a long-range radiationless transfer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Quenching of room temperature protein phosphorescence by added small molecules. 324 96