Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.4 (ribonuclease)
6,621 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Brief exposure of Chinese hamster ovary cell monolayers prelabeled with [(32)P]phosphate and [(3)H]leucine to 1 mug/ml of trypsin under conditions in which cells remain fully viable causes the release of macromolecular (32)P and (3)H. Whereas ribonuclease treatment was found to affect markedly both the (32)P and (3)H radioactivity, Pronase treatment had little effect on the macromolecular (32)P. Treatment of cells prelabeled with [(3)H]glucosamine and [(32)P]phosphate with insolubilized papain also revealed a parallel release of macromolecular glucosamine together with ribonuclease-susceptible macromolecular phosphate. Lactoperoxidase-mediated radioiodination of surface components in cells prelabeled with [(32)P]phosphate revealed electrophoretic comigration between the (125)I and the (32)P that are removed from the cells by mild proteolysis. Growth of the cells in Bt(2)cAMP-testosterone altered the kinetics of release and nature of the macromolecular (32)P liberated by proteolysis.
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PMID:An "external" RNA removable from mammalian cells by mild proteolysis. 453 Oct 29

The vitamin B(12)-binding property of Lactobacillus leichmannii ATCC 7830 has been studied. The organism could bind 0.52 mug of B(12) per mg of cells. With regard to the cellular site for B(12) accumulation, three-quarters of the B(12) bound to the cell was found in the crude cell wall fraction, and the remaining one-quarter was found in the particulate (ribosome) fraction. After receiving enzymatic treatments with ribonuclease, lipase, and trypsin, the wall fraction retained three-fifths of the initial B(12). The possibility of cross-contamination of the wall and particulate fractions was excluded by measuring the contents of ribonucleic acid and hexosamines in each fraction. The B(12)-binding activity of the wall was destroyed by pretreatment of the wall with pepsin, Pronase, or trypsin. However, once bound to the wall, the B(12) was not released by the same treatments. These facts suggest that B(12) is bound to a polypeptide in the wall on which these enzymes act and that, once bound, B(12) somehow inhibits the enzymatic actions as described earlier with L. delbrueckii no. 1. A B(12)-polypeptide complex was isolated by treatment with 0.2 n HCl from walls to which B(12) had been bound. The complex was then purified. The complex moves as a single band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its molecular weight was estimated around 21,500 with microheterogeneity on a Sephadex G-75 column. The mode of B(12) binding was found to be similar to that of L. delbrueckii.
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PMID:Further studies on the binding of vitamin B 12 to the cell wall of a B 12 -requiring Lactobacillus. 455 Jun 59

Synaptic vesicles isolated from guinea-pig cerebral cortex had an electrophoretic mobility of -3.55mum.s(-1).V(-1).cm in saline-sorbitol, pH7.2, at 25 degrees C (ionic strength 0.015g-ions/1). The mobility was pH-dependent, varied with ionic strength and indicated that the vesicular surface contained weak acidic functions with a pK(a) in the range 3.0-3.8. Although the vesicular surface was determined to be highly negatively charged, treatment with neuraminidase had no effect on mobility and indicated that the relatively strong carboxyl groups of sialic acid do not contribute significantly to vesicular electrokinetic properties. Treatment of synaptic vesicles with trypsin or trypsinized concanavalin A resulted in increases in mobility, but treatment with ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, chrondroitinase ABC or hyaluronidase had no significant effect on mobility. Mn(2+) or Ca(2+) was more effective in decreasing vesicle mobility than was Mg(2+), Sr(2+) or Ba(2+). The electrokinetic properties of the synaptic vesicle surface are discussed and contrasted with the properties of the synaptosomal membrane.
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PMID:Electrokinetic properties of isolated cerebral-cortex synaptic vesicles. 478 38

Osteoclast-activating factor (OAF) is a soluble mediator found in supernates of human peripheral leukocytes which have been cultured with antigens or phytomitogens. OAF is a potent stimulator of osteoclastic resorption of fetal bone in organ culture. The present studies were designed to characterize OAF chemically. Bone resorbing activity from supernates of leukocytes cultured without added plasma was not lost on dialysis using a membrane with a molecular weight cutoff of 3,500, but was lost when heated to 60 degrees C for 30 min. The activity was lost after treatment with trypsin or pronase but not after treatment with ribonuclease or neuraminidase. Papain, which inactivated parathyroid hormone at a concentration of 25 mug/ml, did not inactivate OAF at 250 mug/ml. OAF did not react with an antibody to bovine parathyroid hormone which cross-reacts with human parathyroid hormone. OAF was also distinguished from active metabolites of vitamin D and from prostaglandin by extraction procedures and immunoassay for prostaglandin E(2). When the medium from activated leukocytes cultured with autologous plasma was fractionated by gel filtration on Sephadex, bone resorbing activity eluated both with plasma proteins and in lower molecular weight fractions. However, when medium from leukocytes cultured without added plasma was chromatographed, all the OAF activity was eluted in a sharp low molecular weight peak located between chymotrypsinogen (25,000 molecular weight) and ribonuclease A (13,700 molecular weight). This peak contained about 4% of the total protein originally present in the supernate. Its activity was destroyed by overnight incubation at 37 degrees C at pH 6 or 8, but not at pH 7.2. After incubation at 4 degrees C, the activity was lost at pH 3 or 10, but not at pH 4-9. The active fraction from Sephadex G-100 was therefore chromatographed at pH 7.2 on DEAE cellulose and carboxymethyl cellulose. The active material was not adsorbed; however, about sevenfold further purification was achieved by removal of contaminants. The material obtained after sequential Sephadex, DEAE and, carboxymethyl cellulose chromatography stimulated resorption of fetal rat bone in culture at concentrations of 0.75-3 mug protein/ml, indicating that this preparation of OAF was nearly as potent as bovine parathyroid hormone in this system.
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PMID:Partial purification of osteoclast-activating factor from phytohemagglutinin-stimulated human leukocytes. 482 37

The architecture of the nucleolus in Allium porum and Triticum vulgare meristematic cells has been investigated by means of digestions with various enzymes. After staining with azure B at pH4, plant nucleoli exhibit lighter regions which, under electron microscopy, correspond to the fibrillar zones characterizing these organelles. Evidence is presented indicating that these latter zones contain coarse convoluted filaments quite similar to the loops first demonstrated by La Cour (24) and which are assumed to originate from the nucleolar-organizing chromosomes. These coarse, 0.2micro wide filaments are remarkably resistant to the action of deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease, pepsin, trypsin, or of various combinations of these enzymes and, moreover, they show insignificant incorporation of labeled thymidine even after long exposure to this DNA precursor. The clearing action of pepsin on different regions of the nucleolus lends support to the hypothesis that an amorphous material or matrix pervades the mass of this organelle. This effect is particularly striking within the particulate nucleolar zones themselves. Both ribonuclease and trypsin disorganize the RNP (ribonucleoprotein) nucleolar particles. The effect of the latter enzyme on the RNP particles is taken to indicate that they contain proteins particularly susceptible to trypsin which are essential for maintenance of their morphological integrity. Trypsin also interferes with azure B-staining of the nucleolar mass as a whole and, according to radioautographic data, extracts RNA throughout this organelle. Accordingly, the hypothesis is considered that RNA is complexed with proteins not only within the particulate nucleolar portions, as is already well known, but also in the fibrillar zones.
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PMID:The organization of the nucleolus in meristematic plant cells. A cytochemical study. 488 77

Youmans, Anne S. (Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Ill.), and Guy P. Youmans. Effect of trypsin and ribonuclease on the immunogenic activity of ribosomes and ribonucleic acid isolated from Myobacterium tuberculosis. J. Bacteriol. 91:2146-2154. 1966.-The ribosomal fraction of the attenuated strain, H37Ra, of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was treated with trypsin alone, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) alone, EDTA and pancreatic ribonuclease, or with trypsin and ribonuclease. After each of these treatments, the ribosomal fractions were injected intraperitoneally into male CF-1 mice to test their capacity to produce an immune response to infection with virulent tubercle bacilli, strain H37Rv. Removal of protein with trypsin left the immunogenicity unchanged; EDTA alone reduced immunogenicity in the smaller vaccinating doses; EDTA plus ribonuclease reduced the immunogenicity by approximately 50% in the highest (1.0 mg) vaccinating dose; ribonuclease alone, after treatment with trypsin, reduced immunogenicity also approximately 50%. A crude mycobacterial ribonucleic acid (RNA) was prepared by extraction of the ribosomal fraction with alcohol. This RNA preparation was as effective in producing an immune response as the ribosomal fraction from which it was prepared, unless the RNA was partially or completely degraded during the preparation. The effect of ribonuclease on the immunogenicity of the RNA was similar to that obtained with the ribosomal fractions, except that ribonuclease completely destroyed the immunogenicity of a partially degraded RNA. RNA appears to be an essential part of an immunizing substance in attenuated tubercle bacilli, which produces a high degree of immunity in mice; 50 mug (dry weight) will protect approximately 80% of the mice, and as little as 0.5 mug will protect approximately 30% of the mice. Mycobacterial RNA not incorporated in Freund's incomplete adjuvant was nonimmunogenic. Yeast RNA incorporated in Freund's incomplete adjuvant was not immunogenic.
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PMID:Effect of trypsin and ribonuclease on the immunogenic activity of ribosomes and ribonucleic acid isolated from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 495 10

1. Ribosomes isolated from the cortex tissue of goat brain contain very small amounts of spermidine and spermine. Ribosomes isolated from spermidine-treated slices have a higher spermidine content. 2. The polyamines partially prevent the temperature-dependent breakdown of ribosomes into acid-soluble nucleotides. 3. The ;melting' temperature of ribosomes rises slightly when the ribosomes are heated slowly in the presence of polyamines. 4. The pH-dependent breakdown of ribosomes into protein, RNA and acid-soluble nucleotide is markedly decreased by polyamines present in media in which ribosomes are suspended. 5. The breakdown of ribosomes in the presence of high concentrations of salts and EDTA is partially checked by the concurrent presence of polyamines. 6. Spermidine and spermine make ribosomes less susceptible to enzymic digestion by crystalline trypsin and ribonuclease.
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PMID:Effect of polyamines on the stability of brain-cortex ribosomes. 498 Oct 36

A procedure for the isolation and purification of competence factor produced in a defined medium by group H streptococci, strain Challis-6, is presented. Partial characterization and chemical analysis of the product are described. The procedure yields competence factor of high purity, as shown by homogeneity in electrofocusing, by electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels, and by chemical analysis. The data indicate that competence factor is a small, dialyzable, highly basic compound. It is free from lipids, phosphorus, and carbohydrates, and is colorless and thermoresistant. Its biological activity is destroyed by trypsin but not by deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease, lipase, or lysozyme. Its high isoelectric point of above pH 11.0 suggests that competence factor may be a protamine or a polymer of basic amino acids. The possibility that a polyamine may be an integral part of the polypeptide molecule has not been excluded.
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PMID:Purification and properties of Streptococcal competence factor isolated from chemically defined medium. 501 23

Intact cells of Agrobacterium tumefaciens were examined for ability to take up biologically active LR-4 phage deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) from the surrounding medium. DNA incorporation as measured by subsequent plaque formation (transfection) failed to occur when the bacteria were grown in defined minimal salts media, and was restricted to a 4-hr period in the early log phase of growth in enriched media. In the latter case, maximal transfection frequencies were obtained after a 25- to 30-min incubation with 22.5 mug of phage DNA/ml. Higher DNA concentrations or longer incubation times were inhibitory. Transfection was completely inhibited by deoxyribonuclease but not by ribonuclease, trypsin, or phage-specific antisera.
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PMID:Transfection in Agrobacterium tumefaciens. 504 Mar 85

Group H streptococci (strain Challis) which are competent for transformation release a bacteriocin into liquid medium which is bacteriocidal for another group H streptococcus (strain Wicky). The streptocin (STH(1)) is resistant to treatment with deoxyribonuclease and ribonuclease but is sensitive to trypsin, phospholipase C, and alkaline phosphatase. Such enzyme sensitivity experiments indicate that the bacteriocin may be a complex molecule (protein and lipid) containing phosphate groups essential for activity. STH(1), which is readily distinguishable from competence factor and bacteriophage activity, appears to have no role in the initiation of the competent state in strain Wicky. The presence of this factor in Challis culture supernatant fluids indicates that a reevaluation of earlier studies performed with the Challis-Wicky transformation system may be necessary.
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PMID:Bacteriocin production by transformable group H streptococci. 508 61


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