Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.6.1 (sulfatase)
3,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Arylsulfatases are a group of enzymes that remove sulfate moieties from a diverse set of substrates including glycoproteins, steroids, and cerebrosides. We have isolated recombinant cDNA clones corresponding to an arylsulfatase (SpARS) message that encodes an abundant protein of pluteus larvae of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Although vertebrate arylsulfatases have broad tissue distributions, in situ hybridization with a probe for SpARS shows that the sea urchin message accumulates in the embryo only in the single cell type of aboral ectoderm and its precursors. The message is first detectable by RNase protection assays around hatching blastula stage and accumulates through pluteus larva stage. The open reading frame of cDNA clones is 1701 nt long and encodes a deduced protein with a predicted molecular mass of 61 kDa. Analysis of corresponding genomic DNA clones reveals that the pre-mRNA contains six exons. Consistent with the fact that arylsulfatase enzyme activity is extracellular, this polypeptide has a hydrophobic leader sequence and three potential glycosylation sites. Furthermore, hybridization in situ shows that in blastulae arylsulfatase message is preferentially concentrated around nuclei at the basal sides of cells. The S. purpuratus sequence is very similar to that recently reported for the same enzyme from Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus and 30% of the amino acid residues are also identical to those of both human arylsulfatase C (steroid sulfatase) and arylsulfatase A. Sequence relationships among these four mRNAs suggest that, assuming equal rates of evolution, the duplication separating the human genes occurred at about the time of separation of the echinoderm and vertebrate lineages.
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PMID:Structure and tissue-specific developmental expression of a sea urchin arylsulfatase gene. 276 35

A 50 bp region from -194 bp to -144 bp of the arylsulfatase gene (HpArs) of the sea urchin, Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, is related to the temporally regulated expression of this gene. This region contains a Sox (Sry-related HMG box)-binding site, and the introduction of sequence mutations to this site significantly reduced the activity of the HpArs promoter, even in the presence of the C15 enhancer, which consists of HpOtx and CAAT motifs. A protein that binds to the Sox-binding site in the 50 bp region of the HpArs gene was detected in nuclear extracts of mesenchyme blastulae and a protein synthesized in vitro using SoxB1 cDNA of another sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, also bound to this Sox site. These results suggest that HpSox, which is maternally expressed and remains abundant by the pluteus stage, is clearly implicated in regulation of the HpArs gene. The presence of a negatively acting cis element in this 50 bp region has also been detected.
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PMID:Sox regulates transcription of the sea urchin arylsulfatase gene. 1096 43

The Ars insulator is a boundary element identified in the upstream region of the arylsulfatase (HpArs) gene in the sea urchin, Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, and possesses the ability to both block enhancer-promoter communications and protect transgenes from silent chromatin. To understand the molecular mechanism of the Ars insulator, we investigated the correlation between chromatin structure, DNA structure and insulator activity. Nuclease digestion of nuclei isolated from sea urchin embryos revealed the presence of a nuclease-hypersensitive site within the Ars insulator. Analysis of micrococcal nuclease-sensitive sites in the Ars insulator, reconstituted with nucleosomes, showed the exclusion of nucleosomes from the central AT-rich region. Furthermore, the central AT-rich region in naked DNA was sensitive to nucleotide base modification by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC). These observations suggest that non-B-DNA structures in the central AT-rich region may inhibit nucleosomal formation, which leads to nuclease hypersensitivity. Furthermore, comparison of nucleotide sequences between the HpArs gene and its ortholog in Strongylocentrotus purpuratus revealed that the central AT-rich region of the Ars insulator is conserved, and this conserved region showed significant enhancer blocking activity. These results suggest that the central AT-rich nucleosome-free region plays an important role in the function of the Ars insulator.
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PMID:Nucleosome exclusion from the interspecies-conserved central AT-rich region of the Ars insulator. 2193 Jun 54