Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Incubation of carbohydrate-free human serum albumin (HSA) with fructose in an aqueous buffer at pH 7.4 resulted in glycation of epsilon-amino groups of lysyl residues. A recently developed procedure, involving analysis of hexitol amino acids by high-performance liquid chromatography of phenylthiocarbamyl derivatives, was used to show that 85% of the bound hexose was attached to protein via carbon 2 (C-2). The remainder was attached to protein via carbon 1 (C-1). When incubations were conducted with glucose under identical conditions, all the hexose was attached via C-1. Examination of human ocular lens proteins showed that the majority of the covalently bound hexose was connected to epsilon-amino groups of lysyl residues via C-1; this was attributed mainly to nonenzymatic glucosylation in vivo, which has already been documented. A significant proportion (10-20%) of the bound hexose was connected via C-2. In view of the HSA-hexose incubation results (above), this indicated that the lens proteins had reacted with endogenous fructose; i.e., they had undergone nonenzymatic fructosylation in vivo. The model protein bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A reacted with fructose and glucose at similar rates under physiological conditions. However, covalent, non-disulfide cross-linking, which could be inhibited by D-penicillamine, was induced 10 times more rapidly by fructose than by glucose. It is postulated that some of the protein cross-linking that occurs in vivo is fructose-induced. The possible significance of these processes in diabetic subjects is discussed.
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PMID:Role of fructose in glycation and cross-linking of proteins. 313 3

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a chronic genetic disease mainly affecting the exocrine glands. Its main clinical symptoms are: abnormal production of mucus which blocks the airways, pancreatic insufficiency and increased sweat electrolytes. In the present investigation a series of enzymes and metabolites--mainly of carbohydrate metabolism--was investigated in biological fluids from CF homozygotes, CF heterozygotes and healthy controls under different conditions. CF homozygotes--and to a lesser degree CF heterozygotes--had increased activity of ribonuclease, and increased concentrations of electrolytes and lactate in their saliva and urine at rest. Saliva of CF patients also had augmented levels of protein. When healthy persons were submitted to anaerobic effort, the activity of ribonuclease and the concentrations of protein, electrolytes and lactate increased in their saliva, and thereby, mimicked the values found in the saliva of cystic fibrosis patients at rest. An abnormal response to a sucrose load was found in both CF-homozygotes and CF-heterozygotes. Greater increase in both glucose and lactate concentrations in the blood as well as a more rapid clearance of these metabolites was observed after the sucrose intake. A possible cause for these findings could be a disturbed carbohydrate metabolism in CF. Therefore, enzymes and metabolites connected to the metabolic pathway of glucose were investigated in CF fibroblasts and in animal models for CF. An increased activity of glycolytic enzymes in CF fibroblast were shown. Similar increases in activities of glycolytic enzymes were found in cells of submandibular glands of rats that were killed in a state of induced metabolic acidosis. These cells also showed increased protein and mucus contents, and elemental changes similar to those observed in fibroblasts of cystic fibrosis patients. Contrary to this, decreased activities of the enzymes of the glycolytic pathway were found in the submandibular gland of chronically reserpinized rats. The end-products of glycolysis, pyruvate and lactate, were also decreased, whereas the concentration of phosphoenolopyruvate and creatinphosphate were increased, possibly causing acidosis in the gland. Thus a disturbed glycolytic pathway in CF cells and a decreased intracellular pH might play an important role in the pathogenesis of this disease.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis. Carbohydrate metabolism in CF and in animal models for CF. 347 61

The glycation (nonenzymatic glycosylation) of several proteins was studied in various buffers in order to assess the effects of buffering ions on the kinetics and specificity of glycation of protein. Incubation of RNase with glucose in phosphate buffer resulted in inactivation of the enzyme because of preferential modification of lysine residues in or near the active site. In contrast, in the cationic buffers, 3-(N-morpholino)propane-sulfonic acid and 3-(N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-amino)-2-hydroxypropanesulfonic acid, the kinetics of glycation of RNase were decreased 2- to 3-fold, there was a decrease in glycation of active site versus peripheral lysines, and the enzyme was resistant to inactivation by glucose. The extent of Schiff base formation on RNAse was comparable in the three buffers, suggesting that phosphate, bound in the active site of RNase, catalyzed the Amadori rearrangement at active site lysines, leading to the enhanced rate of inactivation of the enzyme. Phosphate catalysis of glycation was concentration-dependent and could be mimicked by arsenate. Phosphate also stimulated the rate of glycation of other proteins, such as lysozyme, cytochrome c, albumin, and hemoglobin. As with RNase, phosphate affected the specificity of glycation of hemoglobin, resulting in increased glycation of amino-terminal valine versus intrachain lysine residues. 2,3-Diphosphoglycerate exerted similar effects on the glycation of hemoglobin, suggesting that inorganic and organic phosphates may play an important role in determining the kinetics and specificity of glycation of hemoglobin in the red cell. Overall, these studies establish that buffering ions or ligands can exert significant effects on the kinetics and specificity of glycation of proteins.
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PMID:Effect of phosphate on the kinetics and specificity of glycation of protein. 358 12

Bacillus subtilis 168GR10 was shown to contain a mutation, gra-10, which allowed normal temporal activation of alpha-amylase synthesis in the presence of a concentration of glucose that is inhibitory to activation of amylase synthesis in the parent strain, 168. The gra-10 mutation was mapped by phage PBS-1-mediated transduction and by transformation to a site between lin-2 and aroI906, very tightly linked to amyE, the alpha-amylase structural gene. The gra-10 mutation did not pleiotropically affect catabolite repression of sporulation or of the synthesis of extracellular proteases or RNase and was unable to confer glucose-resistance to the synthesis of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase encoded by the cat-86 gene driven by the amyE promoter region (amyR1) inserted into the promoter-probe plasmid pPL603B. It therefore appears that gra-10 defines a cis-regulatory site for catabolite repression, but not for temporal activation, of amyE expression. The evidence shows that temporal activation and glucose-mediated repression of alpha-amylase synthesis in B. subtilis 168 are distinct phenomena that can be separated by mutation.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a cis-acting mutation conferring catabolite repression resistance to alpha-amylase synthesis in Bacillus subtilis. 391 91

Some of the enzymes and metabolites of the glycolytic pathway of an animal model for cystic fibrosis (the chronically reserpine-treated rat) were investigated. The activities of the enzymes phosphofructokinase (P less than 0.002), enolase (P less than 0.03), pyruvate kinase (P less than 0.005), and lactate dehydrogenase (P less than 0.009) were decreased whereas the activity of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was unaffected in the submandibular glands of the treated animals. For metabolites, the reserpine treatment resulted in an increased concentration of glycogen (P less than 0.0002) and phosphoenolpyruvate (P less than 0.001) and a decreased concentration of pyruvate (P less than 0.005) and lactate (P less than 0.002) in the glands. The concentration of glucose and glycerate-2-phosphate was unaffected. The perchloric acid-soluble part of the proteins was also increased (P less than 0.0001) in the submandibular glands of the reserpine-treated animals, as was the activity of ribonuclease. These findings point to a disturbance in the metabolism of glucose and a possible acidosis in the submandibular glands of this animal model for cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:The chronically reserpinized rat: decreased glycolytic activity in the submandibular gland. 399 4

Ribonuclease A has been used as a model protein for studying the specificity of glycation of amino groups in protein under physiological conditions (phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 37 degrees C). Incubation of RNase with glucose led to an enhanced rate of inactivation of the enzyme relative to the rate of modification of lysine residues, suggesting preferential modification of active site lysine residues. Sites of glycation of RNase were identified by amino acid analysis of tryptic peptides isolated by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography and phenylboronate affinity chromatography. Schiff base adducts were trapped with Na-BH3CN and the alpha-amino group of Lys-1 was identified as the primary site (80-90%) of initial Schiff base formation on RNase. In contrast, Lys-41 and Lys-7 in the active site accounted for about 38 and 29%, respectively, of ketoamine adducts formed via the Amadori rearrangement. Other sites reactive in ketoamine formation included N alpha-Lys-1 (15%), N epsilon-Lys-1 (9%), and Lys-37 (9%) which are adjacent to acidic amino acids. The remaining six lysine residues in RNase, which are located on the surface of the protein, were relatively inactive in forming either the Schiff base or Amadori adduct. Both the equilibrium Schiff base concentration and the rate of the Amadori rearrangement at each site were found to be important in determining the specificity of glycation of RNase.
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PMID:Glycation of amino groups in protein. Studies on the specificity of modification of RNase by glucose. 403 Jul 61

A method has been developed for the isolation of outer membranes from Acinetobacter sp. strain MJT/F5/199A. Washed cells were broken in a French press and, after deoxyribonuclease and ribonuclease treatment, removal of intact cells, and four washes in 20 mosmol phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, with centrifugation at 25,000 x g for 10 min, preparations of cell wall fragments from which almost all pieces of plasma membrane had been removed resulted. Treatment of the cell walls with lysozyme and further washing, in the presence of 20 mM MgCl(2), yielded preparations of outer membranes. Electron microscopy of freeze-etched preparations shows that a regular pattern of subunits is present on the outer surfaces of intact cells. After negative staining, these subunits are visible on isolated walls and outer membranes; they can be removed by brief treatment with papain. In section, the cell wall structure is that typical of gram-negative bacteria, but the subunits are not detectable on the surface of the outer membrane. The outer membrane retains the appearance of a "unit membrane" in the cell wall, isolated outer membrane, and papain-treated outer membrane fractions. Both cell walls and outer membranes contain a high percentage of protein (76 and 84%, respectively) and not more than 5% carbohydrate, of which glucose and galactose are constitutents. The outer membranes of this Acinetobacter thus differ in structure and composition from those of bacteria in the Enterobacteriaceae.
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PMID:Isolation of outer membranes with an ordered array of surface subunits from Acinetobacter. 412 37

1. Homogenates of the mucosa of the small intestine of the guinea pig were separated by fractional sedimentation into seven different fractions. The enzymic properties of some of these subcellular fractions were compared with those obtained from the mucosa of the small intestine of the rabbit and cat. 2. The enzymic properties of the low-speed sediment (15000g-min.) were investigated and it was shown that invertase and alkaline ribonuclease were predominantly located in this subcellular fraction, whereas alkaline phosphatase, aryl-amidase, acid phosphatase, acid ribonuclease and phosphoprotein phosphatase, though true constituents of this fraction, occurred to varying degrees in other subcellular structures also. 3. It was shown that the most probable source of the enzymic activities observed in the low-speed sediment was the brush border. Electron micrographs of the purified brush-border fraction indicated vesicles derived from the brush-border membrane. 4. A method is described for the fractionation of mucosal homogenates into a brush border-plus-nuclei fraction, a mitochondrial fraction, a microsomal fraction and a particle-free supernatant. The fractions were shown to be relatively pure, as indicated by the distribution of invertase, DNA, succinate dehydrogenase, glucose 6-phosphatase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. 5. Most of the activity of four lysosomal enzymes present in the nuclei-free homogenate was sedimented at 375000g-min., suggesting the occurrence of lysosomal particles in mucosal homogenates. 6. Further fractionation of the microsomal membranes into three fractions is described. The enzymic composition of the membrane fractions is given and discussed in relation to their structure as seen in electron micrographs.
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PMID:Studies on the fractionation of mucosal homogenates from the small intestine. 428 74

1. The action of beryllium on the following enzymes has been examined: alkaline phosphatase (Escherichia coli and kidney), acid phosphatase, phosphoprotein phosphatase, apyrase (potato), adenosine triphosphatase (liver nuclei, liver mitochondria, brain microsomes), glucose 6-phosphatase, polysaccharide phosphorylases a and b, phosphoglucomutase, hexokinase, phosphoglyceromutase, ribonuclease, A-esterase (rabbit serum), cholinesterase (horse serum), chymotrypsin. Alkaline phosphatase and phosphoglucomutase are inhibited by 1mum-beryllium sulphate whereas the other enzymes are largely unaffected by 1mm-beryllium sulphate. 2. Possible mechanisms for the inhibition of phosphoglucomutase and alkaline phosphatase are discussed.
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PMID:The inhibition of enzymes by beryllium. 428 87

1. Treatment of washed rat liver microsomes in a medium containing 0.12m-sucrose, 12.5mm-potassium chloride, 2.5mm-magnesium chloride and 25mm-tris-hydrochloric acid buffer, pH7.6, with 2m-lithium chloride at 5 degrees for 16hr. leads to the formation of membranes free of ribosomes and ribosomal subunits. 2. Confirmation of the absence of ribosomes from lithium chloride-prepared membranes was obtained by treatment of the membranes with sodium deoxycholate, followed by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation, which showed the complete absence of ribosomes. 3. Treatment of membranes with phenol, followed by sucrose-density-gradient analysis of the isolated RNA, showed the presence of a small amount of 4s material. Repetition of the phenol extraction procedure in the presence of liver cell sap as a ribonuclease inhibitor again showed the presence of only 4s material. The 4s RNA was shown to be transfer RNA by the fact that it had the same capacity for accepting (14)C-labelled amino acids as isolated transfer RNA from rat liver pH5 enzyme. 4. Analysis showed that microsomes and membranes possessed similar glucose 6-phosphatase, NADH-2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol reductase, NADH-neo-tetrazolium reductase, NADH-cytochrome c reductase and ribonuclease activities. 5. (3)H-labelled ribosomal RNA binds to membranes. However, isolation of the bound RNA by the phenol extraction procedure, followed by sucrose-density-gradient analysis, shows the RNA to be degraded to 7s material. Very little breakdown of (3)H-labelled ribosomal RNA bound to membranes occurs if the binding and isolation are carried out in the presence of liver cell sap.
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PMID:Preparation of ribosome-free membranes from rat liver microsomes by means of lithium chloride. 431 14


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