Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.30.1 (
S1 nuclease
)
3,660
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have investigated the heat shock response in the mouse
pneumonitis
strain of Chlamydia trachomatis. The kinetics of the chlamydial heat shock response resembled that of other procaryotes: the induction was rapid, occurring over a 5- to 10-min time period, and was regulated at the level of transcription. Immunoblot analysis and immunoprecipitations with heterologous antisera to the heat shock proteins DnaK and GroEL demonstrated that the rate of synthesis, but not the absolute amount of these two proteins, increased after heat shock. Using a general screen for genes whose mRNAs are induced by heat shock, we identified and cloned two of these. DNA sequence analysis demonstrated that one of the genes is a homolog of dnaK. Further sequence analysis of the region upstream of the dnaK gene revealed that the chlamydial homolog of the grpE gene is located just adjacent to the dnaK gene. The second locus encoded three potential nonoverlapping open reading frames. One of the open reading frames was 52% homologous to the ribosomal protein S18 of Escherichia coli and thus presumably encodes the chlamydial homolog. Interestingly, this ribosomal protein is not known to be induced by heat shock in E. coli.
S1 nuclease
and primer extension analyses located the start site of the dnaK transcript to the last nucleotide of the grpE coding sequence, suggesting that these two genes, although tandemly arranged, are transcribed separately. No promoter sequences resembling the E. coli consensus heat shock promoter could be identified upstream of either the C. trachomatis dnaK, grpE, or S18 gene. The induction of the dnaK and S18 mRNAs by heat shock occurred at a transcriptional level; their induction could be blocked by rifampin. The mechanisms of induction for these two loci were not the same, however; they were differentially sensitive to chloramphenicol. Whereas the induction of dnaK mRNA required de novo protein synthesis, the induction of the S18 mRNA did not. Thus, C. trachomatis utilizes at least two different pathways to induce the transcription of mRNAs encoding proteins induced in the heat shock response.
...
PMID:Heat shock response of murine Chlamydia trachomatis. 225 67
The transcription of omp1, the gene encoding the major outer membrane protein, was studied for two strains of Chlamydia psittaci, guinea pig inclusion conjunctivitis (GPIC) and mouse
pneumonitis
(Mn). The transcriptional initiation sites for the omp1 of each strain were mapped by
S1 nuclease
and primer extension analyses. Three different sizes of omp1 transcripts were observed for GPIC and four were observed for Mn. The production of these transcripts appeared to be the consequence of multiple tandem promoters. The order in which the omp1 RNA transcripts appeared during the growth cycle of the C. psittaci strains was found to differ from that of C. trachomatis.
...
PMID:Multiple tandem promoters of the major outer membrane protein gene (omp1) of Chlamydia psittaci. 238 24
Respiratory failure secondary to acute lung inflammation is associated with quantitative and qualitative abnormalities of pulmonary surfactant. The surfactant-associated proteins (SP)-A, -B, and -C are critical for normal surfactant function, synthesis, and metabolism. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), a primary mediator of acute lung inflammation, decreased SP gene expression in vitro (32, 34). In the present in vivo study, transient T cell activation and TNF-alpha release were initiated by intraperitoneal administration of anti-CD3 antibody 145-2C11. Serum TNF-alpha was elevated 2 h after injection of the antibody. SP-B and -C mRNA were decreased 12 and 24 h after antibody treatment. Intratracheal murine TNF-alpha also resulted in decreased SP-B and SP-C mRNA levels in the bronchiolar and alveolar epithelium of adult FVB/N mice, as demonstrated by
S1 nuclease
protection and in situ hybridization assays, despite minimal histological inflammation. SP-A mRNA was not significantly altered after anti-CD3 antibody and was only mildly decreased after TNF-alpha. As previously reported, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 mRNA was elevated after intratracheal TNF-alpha. SP insufficiency contributes to the pathogenesis of pulmonary diseases associated with increased TNF-alpha, such as adult respiratory distress syndrome and
pneumonia
(8). TNF-alpha-mediated decrease in SP gene expression may contribute to the surfactant dysfunction and atelectasis observed in inflammatory lung diseases.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha decreases surfactant protein B mRNA in murine lung. 896 4