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)

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

Cells of Bacillus subtilis heated in high concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (5%) and then washed free of detergent with a hot salt solution (80 C) become structurally reorganized into regions of densely compacted cytoplasm (termed zebras) and regions of sparsely filled material (termed spaces). Size distribution studies of zebras indicate that division-suppressed mutants and wild-type cells both yield zebras of comparable length. Similarly the lengths of zebras found in populations emerging from spores are uniform in one-, two-, three-, and four-zebra-containing cells. In contrast, the length of spaces is slightly larger than that of zebras and is unusually large in two-zebra-containing cells. The locations of zebras and spaces along cell length have been studied in spore out-growth populations. A statistical procedure developed previously in genome location investigations was used to analyze the location of zebras along cell length. The data indicate that as cells elongate, new sites arise where the cell contents are strongly bound to the cell surface. Within filament populations produced by division-suppressed mutants there is a linear relationship of mean filament length and zebra number per filament. These data indicate that cytoplasm in filaments with no obvious structural compartmentalizations may be organized into units associated with particular regions of cell surface. The attachment of cell contents to the cell surface may involve deoxyribonucleic acid. Zebra-containing cells digested with proteolytic enzyme and ribonuclease are converted to cells that contain a crystalline-like granule fixed at the location of each zebra. Exposure to deoxyribonuclease mobilizes these granules within the cell wall.
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PMID:Cellular organization of Bacillus subtilis: sodium dodecyl sulfate-induced cell partitioning into zebra structures. 82 Jun 87

Spleen lymphocytes of BCG-immunized mice contain a soluble factor that inhibits in vitro the growth of the H37Rv strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis within normal peritoneal macrophages. The water-soluble extracts of sensitized lymphocytes, disrupted by freezing and thawing, although less active than the corresponding viable cells retained a significant growth-inhibiting activity. Dialysis against distilled water, lyophilization, exposure to ribonuclease and deoxyribonuclease, and storage at -20 degrees C of the water-soluble extracts did not affect their antimycobacterial activity, whereas extracts heated at 100 degrees C were completely devoid of such an activity. All the inhibiting activity was recovered in the void volume of the column after chromatography on Sephadex G-200. Water-soluble constitutents of sensitized lymphocytes did not affect BCG grown in vitro, and on repeated treatments of tuberculous mice they led to a negligible protection against pulmonary tuberculosis. Preliminary observations seem to indicate that other soluble factors in lymphocytes of BCG-sensitized mice have the capacity to potentiate in vitro the phagocytic activity of normal macrophages.
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PMID:Partial characterization of a factor extracted from sensitized lymphocytes that inhibits the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis within macrophages in vitro. 82 9

Nuclei from seminal vesicle epithelium of adult guinea pigs were isolated in hypertonic sucrose solution. The incorporation of [3H]UTP by the isolated nuclei into acid-precipitable products was studied. Incorporation required ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP, and Mg+2. It was inhibited by addition of actinomycin D, deoxyribonuclease, or pyrophosphate to the reaction mixture. Thus, incorporation of [3H]UTP by isolated nuclei had the same characteristics that have been demonstrated for the reactions catalyzed by nuclear RNA polymerases. Using alpha-amanitin as a metabolic tool, we established concentrations of (NH4)2SO4. Mg+2, and nucleotides that give maximum assayable activities of nuclear RNA polymerases I and II. When the activities of polymerases I and II were measured in isolated seminal vesicle nuclei of guinea pigs that had been castrated 4 days earlier, a marked decrease in activities was found relative to control values (nuclei from intact animals). No further decrease was found 8 days after castration. Diminished accessibility to the nuclear DNA template and a decrease in the concentration of RNA polymerase molecules seemed to be responsible for the observed effects of castration on activities of RNA polymerases. An increase in ribonuclease activity did not seem to be responsible for the effects of castration. Activities of the enzymes did not change 2, 3, or 4 hours after intraperitoneal injection (2 mg/kg body weight) of each of five different androgens. Similarly, a single intraperitoneal injection of testosterone did not restore enzyme activity of polymerade I or II at any time during the first 24-hour period after hormone administration.
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PMID:RNA polymerase activities in isolated nuclei of guinea pig seminal vesicle epithelium: influence of castration and androgen administration. 90 9

A strain of Actinomyces odontolyticus, originally isolated from human dental plaque, produced a non-dialyzable, trypsin-sensitive substance that was bactericidal for certain strains of bifidobacteria at 42 degrees C but not at 37 degrees C. Detectable quantities of the bacteriocin were not produced in liquid media. Experimentally useful yields were obtained by extraction from pour plate cultures of producer cells. At 42 degrees C, exponential killing did not occur until indicator cells had doubled at least once. At 37 degrees C, the bacteriocin effected a transient bacteriostasis. Partially purified concentrates were obtained by diethylaminoethyl-cellulose chromatography, and such material was not inactivated by ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, or lipase. Pronase, trypsin, and exposure to 100 degrees C for 20 min completely abolished activity. Inhibitory activity was considerably reduced by exposure to a pH of either 3 or 11. Treatment of producer cells with curing agents did not induce a high frequency of non-bacteriocinogenic cells. The odontolyticin was adsorbed by susceptible, as well as resistant, bacteria.
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PMID:Bacteriocin from Actinomyces odontolyticus with temperature-dependent killing properties. 90 31

The enzyme content and the secretory behaviour of normal rat salivary glands were compared with these properties in glands made hypertrophic and hyperplastic by the chronic administration of isoproterenol. The enlarged glands displayed reductions in the concentrations of ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease and amylase. The secretory behaviour in vivo was similar for all enzymes in both types of glands, but the enlarged glands secreted a lower percentage of their content in vitro. The reduction in amylase activity was shown by immunological techniques to be due to a reduction in the number of enzyme molecules. The reduction in ribonuclease activity was not due to changes in the level of ribonuclease inhibitors.
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PMID:Secretory behaviour of hypertrophic and hyperplastic salivary gland. 91 52

It was shown that normal nonimmune C3H mouse spleen cells became specifically cytotoxic to chemically-induced syngeneic C3H tumor cells by incubation with xenogeneic I-RNA extracted from the lymphoid organs of specifically immunized guinea pigs. This response was specific for the tumor used to immunize the I-RNA donor. In a totally syngeneic system, we showed that syngeneic I-RNA extracted from the spleens of tumor-bearing rats mediated cytotoxic immune reactions which were directed specifically against the tumor-associated antigens of syngeneic rat tumor target cells. Active antitumor I-RNA synthesis in the lymphoid organs of I-RNA donor animals reached a maximum between days 14 and 21, depending on the route of administration and the nature of the immunizing tumor. Active I-RNA preparations were insensitive to treatment with deoxyribonuclease or pronase, but were inactivated by ribonuclease treatment; thereby indicating that the active moiety was one or more species of RNA. The active fractions of the I-RNA preparations had sedimentation values in sucrose density gradients of 12-16S, and comprised only a small fraction of the total RNA present in the lymphoid cells. Active antitumor I-RNA appeared to be localized in the cytoplasm of sensitized lymphoid cells, rather than in the nucleus. Lymphocytes from normal human donors as well as from cancer patients, when incubated with xenogeneic or allogeneic I-RNA, became specifically cytotoxic for human tumor cells in vitro. Crossreactivity among tumors of the same histologic type was observed, but not crossreactivity with tumors of other histologic types. Xenogeneic I-RNA extracted from the lymphoid organs of donor animals immunized either iwth tumor cells or normal tissues, following incubation with normal allogeneic lymphocytes, mediated cytotoxic immune reactions which were directed both against tumor-associated antigens and normal transplantation antigens. However, when autologous lymphocytes were used as effector cells, only immune reactions directed against tumor-associated antigens were observed. Allogeneic I-RNA extracted from peripheral blood lymphocytes of human cancer patients mediated specific cytotoxic immune reactions that were directed against common tumor-associated antigens shared by human tumors of similar histologic type. I-RNA's directed against "self" normal cell surface antigens appear to be recognized as self by lymphocytes, and immune responses against these self antigens are not elicited. On the other hand, I-RNA's directed against "nonself" tumor-associated antigens induce lymphocytes to effect specific antitumor immune responses. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that I-RNA is an information-containing ribonucleic acid molecule capable of mediating immune reactions in vitro which are specific for the tumor-associated antigens of the tumor used to immunize the I-RNA donor.
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PMID:Mediation of immune responses to tumor antigens in vitro by immune RNA. 107 64

The Mg-2+-Sarkosyl crystals (M band) procedure was used to study the effect of ribonuclease (RNase) A on the association of Escherichia coli deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) with membrane. Incubation of gently prepared cell extracts with RNase results in the release of DNA from membrane. This effect appears to result from the activation, by RNase, of endonuclease I and subsequent limited activity of this deoxyribonuclease. In support of this explanation, it is demonstrated (i) that the extent of the RNase-induced loss of DNA from membrane is directly correlated with the endogenous level of endonuclease I, and (ii) that endonucleolytic activity occurs when gently lysed cell preparations are incubated in the presence of RNase.
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PMID:Effect of ribonuclease on the association of deoxyribonucleic acid with the membrane in Escherichia coli. 109 60

The proteins of the secretory granules of the rat parotid gland were characterized by sodium dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis, by chromatography of [3-H]proline-labeled proteins on DEAE-cellulose and by amino acid analysis. Sodium dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis of the secretory granule content showed five principal proteins and a limited number of minor components. Only two of the principal bands could be identified as known secretory enzymes of the parotid gland. One was identified as the alpha-amylase and one as deoxyribonuclease. Peroxidase and ribonuclease form minor portions of the secretory proteins. The other three major proteins constitute, together, about 60% by weight, of the secretory granule content proteins. Of these, one which represents more than 30% of the total granule protein was found to contain uniquely high amounts of leucine residues (21 mole%). Another one of these principal proteins was relatively rich in cysteine residues (7 mole%). The fifth principal protein was found to contain high amounts of proline (28 mole%) glutamic acid (17 mole%) and glycine (18 mole%) residues. Its amino acid composition was very similar to that of the proline-se granules. This protein, however, differed from the "membranous" proline-rich proteins by several criteria. Two minor glycoproteins of the secretory granule content were also found to be rich in proline residues (37 mole%). As with the other proline-rich proteins of the granule, they contained no sulphur-containing amino acids, stained faintly pink with Coomassie Blue and were underestimated by the Lowry method. They differ however, from all the other proline-rich proteins of the granule by having a significantly higher content of threonine, less glycine (9 mole%) and much less glutamic acid (3 mole%). Of the principal proteins, only the deoxyribonuclease and the half-cystine-rich proteins were positively stained by periodic acid Schiff staining. The possible functions of the leucine-rich, the half cystine-rich and the various proline-rich proteins are discussed.
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PMID:The proteins of the content of the secretory granules of the rat parotid gland. 112 45

An inhibitor of ribonucleic acid polymerases has been obtained from the mycelial phase of Histoplasma capsulatum and partially characterized. The inhibitor, called histin, was purified 200-fold by heat treatment at 100 C and electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels. Histin moved in electrophoresis as if negatively charged; it was insensitive to treatment with ribonuclease of deoxyribonuclease but was completely digested by Pronase. Sucrose gradient centrifugation suggests a molecular weight of 24,000. The possibility of a regulatory role for histin in the life cycle of H. capsulatum is discussed.
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PMID:Characterization of an inhibitor of ribonucleic acid polymerase from the mycelial phase of Histoplasma capsulatum. 112 17


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