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Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (
RNase
)
17,967
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Tat protein of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) can enter cells efficiently when added exogenously in tissue culture. To assess if Tat can carry other molecules into cells, we chemically cross-linked Tat peptides (residues 1-72 or 37-72) to beta-galactosidase, horseradish
peroxidase
,
RNase A
, and domain III of Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) and monitored uptake colorimetrically or by cytotoxicity. The Tat chimeras were effective on all cell types tested, with staining showing uptake into all cells in each experiment. In mice, treatment with Tat-beta-galactosidase chimeras resulted in delivery to several tissues, with high levels in heart, liver, and spleen, low-to-moderate levels in lung and skeletal muscle, and little or no activity in kidney and brain. The primary target within these tissues was the cells surrounding the blood vessels, suggesting endothelial cells, Kupffer cells, and/or splenic macrophages. Tat-mediated uptake may allow the therapeutic delivery of macromolecules previously thought to be impermeable to living cells.
...
PMID:Tat-mediated delivery of heterologous proteins into cells. 829 May 79
Changes in biological properties of serum albumin, egg white lysozyme, human serum alpha-1 antiproteinase and human leukocyte
ribonuclease
in effect of interaction with the enzyme system composed of
myeloperoxidase
from human neutrophilic polymorphonuclear leukocytes, Cl- and H2O2 were investigated. All the studied proteins lost their biological functions and were denaturated, but the amounts of hydrogen peroxide necessary to produce these effects differed remarkably for each individual protein. The alpha-1 antiproteinase ability of binding to trypsin was abolished upon employing 1.2 mols of H2O2 per mol of alpha-1 antiproteinase. The lysozyme enzymatic activity was abolished when 1.4 mols of H2O2 per mol of lysozyme were employed. Albumin decreased its binding to specific antialbumin antibodies and entirely lost the binding properties when 2 mols and about 10 mols of H2O2 per mol of albumin were employed, respectively. On the other hand 18 mols of H2O2 per mol of human leukocyte
ribonuclease
were necessary to inactivate this enzyme. All the mentioned proteins were protected from losing their biological functions by excess of specific amino acids with affinity to hypochlorite: Alpha-1 antiproteinase by excess of N-acetylmethionine, lysozyme by N-acetylmethionine and N-acetyl glycyltryptophane, albumin by N-acetyl derivatives of methionine, cysteine, tryptophane and lysine, whereas
ribonuclease
was protected from denaturation by all above mentioned amino acid derivatives. None of the studied proteins was protected from denaturation by N-acetyl tyrosine, or phenylalanine.
...
PMID:Inactivation and denaturation of some proteins by enzyme system: myeloperoxidase, chloride and hydrogen peroxide. 840 71
Stable, nonradioactive riboprobes were used in
ribonuclease
protection assays to monitor the changes in cyclin mRNA expression during cell cycle progression in human mammary epithelial cells. Probes labeled with biotin demonstrated sufficient sensitivity (comparable to 32P) to detect these low-abundance mRNAs and thus offer a safe and easy alternative to traditional radioactive assays. Three detection systems based on chemiluminescence generated by horseradish
peroxidase
or alkaline phosphatase were compared for sensitivity, background and ease of use.
...
PMID:Detection of cyclin messenger RNAs by nonradioactive ribonuclease protection assay: a comparison of four detection methods. 858 15
A capillary electrophoresis (CE) method using acidic buffers and capillaries coated with Polybrene, a cationic polymer has been developed for the separation of glycoproteins and glycopeptides. Electrophoretic conditions have been optimized to provide resolution of individual glycoforms observed for different glycoprotein preparations. These conditions were found to be entirely compatible with the operation of electrospray mass spectrometry (ESMS), which facilitated the assignments of possible carbohydrate compositions of glycopeptides arising from digests of glycoproteins. By using operating conditions enhanced the formation of oxonium fragment ions prior to mass spectral analysis, selective identification of glycopeptides was achieved for complex samples such as those from proteolytic digests or chemical cleavages. Examples of applications are presented for
ribonuclease
B, ovalbumin, horseradish
peroxidase
, and a lectin from Erithrina corallodendron using both CE-ESMS and CE with ultraviolet detection (CE-UV).
...
PMID:Development of electrophoretic conditions for the characterization of protein glycoforms by capillary electrophoresis-electrospray mass spectrometry. 860 Dec 4
The allergic pig can be used as a large-animal model for studies of allergic reactions in the airways and the role of eosinophils in such reactions. To measure the activation of eosinophils, the release of eosinophil-derived cationic proteins can be used. The purpose of this study was to isolate and characterize cationic proteins derived from porcine eosinophils. Pigs were infested with live Ascaris suum eggs to induce eosinophilia (greater than or = 40% of leukocytes). Blood was collected and leukocytes were prepared by dextran sedimentation. Granules were obtained from the homogenized leukocytes by ultracentrifugation and cationic proteins were extracted and separated by gel filtration, cation exchange and zinc affinity chromatography. Using these methods, three cationic proteins were isolated from pig granulocytes, two of which were shown to originate from the eosinophil. The proteins were characterized according to molecular weight, amino acid composition, N-terminal sequence, isoelectric point,
peroxidase
and
ribonuclease
activity and antigenicity. One eosinophil protein was identified as
eosinophil peroxidase
and the other showed great similarities with human eosinophil cationic protein. The third protein was not specific for eosinophils, and had no obvious equivalent in human granulocytes. The eosinophil-derived proteins may be useful in the studies of eosinophil activation, e.g. in late-phase asthmatic reactions, where the pig represents a new candidate model for large-animal allergy research.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of porcine cationic eosinophil granule proteins. 864 90
Trifolitoxin (TFX) is a gene-encoded, posttranslationally modified peptide antibiotic. Previously, we have shown that tfxABCDEFG from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii T24 is sufficient to confer TFX production and resistance to nonproducing strains within a distinct taxonomic group of the alpha-proteobacteria (E. W. Triplett, B. T. Breil, and G. A. Splitter, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 60:4163-4166, 1994). Here we describe strain Tn5-2, a Tn5 mutant of T24 defective in the production of TFX, whose insertion maps outside of the tfx cluster. It is not altered in growth compared with T24, nor does it inactivate TFX in its proximity. The wild-type analog of the mutated region of Tn5-2 was cloned. Sequencing, transcriptional fusion mutagenesis, and subcloning were used to identify tfuA, a gene involved in TFX production. On the basis of computer analysis, the putative TfuA protein has a mass of 72.9 kDa and includes a
peroxidase
motif but no transmembrane domains. TFX production studies show that extra copies of the tfxABCDEFG fragment increase TFX production in a T24 background while additional copies of tfuA do not. Lysate
ribonuclease
protection assays suggest that tfuA does not regulate transcription of tfxA. Upstream of tfuA are two open reading frames (ORFs). The putative product of ORF1 shows high similarity to the LysR family of transcriptional regulators. The putative product of ORF2 shows high similarity to the cytosine deaminase (CodA) of Escherichia coli.
...
PMID:A newly discovered gene, tfuA, involved in the production of the ribosomally synthesized peptide antibiotic trifolitoxin. 876 43
Chromium (Cr) at graded levels when added in sand culture of wheat (T. aestivum L. cv. UP2003) under glasshouse conditions resulted in reduction in biomass, chlorophyll and activities of catalase and
peroxidase
while enhanced acid phosphatase and
ribonuclease
activities. Elevated levels of Cr supply significantly reduced the concentration of inorganic phosphorus. With an increase in Cr supply the uptake of chromium also increased significantly in different plant parts especially in roots. Above metabolic lesions due to Cr in wheat provided evidence that the element in nutrient medium if present in excess may be inhibitory to plant growth and development.
...
PMID:Chromium uptake and toxicity effects on growth and metabolic activities in wheat, Triticum aestivum L. cv. UP 2003. 897 7
Four mutants that show the delayed leaf senescence phenotype were isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana. Genetic analyses revealed that they are all monogenic recessive mutations and fall into three complementation groups, identifying three genetic loci controlling leaf senescence in Arabidopsis. Mutations in these loci cause delay in all senescence parameters examined, including chlorophyll content, photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, relative amount of the large subunit of Rubisco, and
RNase
and
peroxidase
activity. Delay of the senescence symptoms was observed during both age-dependent in planta senescence and dark-induced artificial senescence in all of the mutant plants. The results indicate that the three genes defined by the mutations are key genetic elements controlling functional leaf senescence and provide decisive genetic evidence that leaf senescence is a genetically programmed phenomenon controlled by several monogenic loci in Arabidopsis. The results further suggest that the three genes function at a common step of age-dependent and dark-induced senescence processes. It is further shown that one of the mutations is allelic to ein2-1, an ethylene-insensitive mutation, confirming the role of ethylene signal transduction pathway in leaf senescence of Arabidopsis.
...
PMID:Identification of three genetic loci controlling leaf senescence in Arabidopsis thaliana. 935 Dec 40
We have purified an approximately 60 kDa endoribonuclease from Xenopus liver polysomes with properties expected for a messenger
RNase
involved in the estrogen-regulated destabilization of serum protein mRNAs (Dompenciel et al., 1995, J Biol Chem 270:6108-6118). The present report describes the cloning of this protein and its identification as a novel member of the
peroxidase
gene family. This novel enzyme, named polysomal RNase 1, or PMR-1 has 57% sequence identity with
myeloperoxidase
, and like that protein, appears to be processed from a larger precursor. Unlike
myeloperoxidase
, however, PMR-1 lacks N-linked oligosaccharide, heme, and
peroxidase
activity. Western blot and immunoprecipitation experiments using epitope-specific antibodies to the derived protein sequence confirm the identity of the cloned cDNA to the protein originally isolated from polysomes. The 80 kDa pre-PMR-1 expressed in a recombinant baculovirus was not processed to the 60 kDa form in Sf9 cells and lacks
RNase
activity. However, the baculovirus-expressed mature 60-kDa form of the enzyme has
RNase
activity. The recombinant protein is an endonuclease that shows selectivity for albumin versus ferritin mRNA. While it does not cleave at consensus APyrUGA elements, recombinant PMR-1 generates the same minor cleavage products from albumin mRNA as PMR-1 purified from liver. Finally, we show estrogen induces only a small increase in the amount of PMR-1. This result is consistent with earlier data suggesting estrogen activates mRNA decay through a posttranslational pathway.
...
PMID:A polysomal ribonuclease involved in the destabilization of albumin mRNA is a novel member of the peroxidase gene family. 984 52
Reactive aldehydes derived from reducing sugars and peroxidation of lipids covalently modify proteins and may contribute to oxidative tissue damage. We recently described another mechanism for generating reactive aldehydes from free alpha-amino acids. The pathway begins with
myeloperoxidase
, a heme enzyme secreted by activated neutrophils. Conversion of alpha-amino acids to aldehydes requires hypochlorous acid (HOCl), formed from H2O2 and chloride by
myeloperoxidase
. When L-serine is the substrate, HOCl generates high yields of glycolaldehyde. We now demonstrate that a model protein, ribonuclease A (
RNase A
), exposed to free L-serine and HOCl exhibits the biochemical hallmarks of advanced glycation end (AGE) products -- browning, increased fluorescence, and cross-linking. Furthermore, Nepsilon-(carboxymethyl)lysine (CML), a chemically well-characterized AGE product, was generated on
RNase A
when it was exposed to reagent HOCl-serine, the
myeloperoxidase
-H2O2-chloride system plus L-serine, or activated human neutrophils plus L-serine. CML production by neutrophils was inhibited by the H2O2 scavenger catalase and the heme poison azide, implicating
myeloperoxidase
in the cell-mediated reaction. CML was also generated on
RNase A
by a
myeloperoxidase
-dependent pathway when neutrophils were activated in a mixture of amino acids. Under these conditions, we observed both L-serine-dependent and L-serine-independent pathways of CML formation. The in vivo production of glycolaldehyde and other reactive aldehydes by
myeloperoxidase
may thus play an important pathogenic role by generating AGE products and damaging tissues at sites of inflammation.
...
PMID:The myeloperoxidase system of human phagocytes generates Nepsilon-(carboxymethyl)lysine on proteins: a mechanism for producing advanced glycation end products at sites of inflammation. 1039 4
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