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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stigmatella aurantiaca is a gram-negative bacterium which forms, under conditions of
starvation
in a multicellular process, characteristic three-dimensional structures: the fruiting bodies. For studying this complex process, mutants impaired in fruiting body formation have been induced by transposon insertion with a Tn5-derived transposon. The gene affected (fbfB) in one of the mutants (AP182) was studied further. Inactivation of fbfB results in mutants which form only clumps during
starvation
instead of wild-type fruiting bodies. This mutant phenotype can be partially rescued, if cells of mutants impaired in fbfB function are mixed with those of some independent mutants defective in fruiting before
starvation
. The fbfB gene is expressed about 14 h after induction of fruiting body formation as determined by measuring
beta-galactosidase
activity in a merodiploid strain harboring the wild-type gene and an fbfB-delta trp-lacZ fusion gene or by Northern (RNA) analysis with the Rhodobacter capsulatus pufBA fragment fused to fbfB as an indicator. The predicted polypeptide FbfB has a molecular mass of 57.8 kDa and shows a significant homology to the galactose oxidase (GaoA) of the fungus Dactylium dendroides. Galactose oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of galactose and primary alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes.
...
PMID:fbfB, a gene encoding a putative galactose oxidase, is involved in Stigmatella aurantiaca fruiting body formation. 949 64
Omega4400 is the site of a Tn5 lac insertion in the Myxococcus xanthus genome that fuses lacZ expression to a developmentally regulated promoter. Cell-cell interactions that occur during development, including C signaling, are required for normal expression of Tn5 lac omega4400. The DNA upstream of the omega4400 insertion has been cloned, the promoter has been localized, and a partial open reading frame has been identified. From the deduced amino acid sequence of the partial open reading frame, the gene disrupted by Tn5 lac omega4400 may encode a protein with an ATP- or GTP-binding site. Expression of the gene begins 6 to 12 h after
starvation
initiates development, as measured by
beta-galactosidase
production in cells containing Tn5 lac omega4400. The putative transcriptional start site was mapped, and deletion analysis has shown that DNA downstream of -101 bp is sufficient for C-signal-dependent, developmental activation of this promoter. A deletion to -76 bp eliminated promoter activity, suggesting the involvement of an upstream activator protein. The promoter may be transcribed by RNA polymerase containing a novel sigma factor, since a mutation in the M. xanthus sigB or sigC gene did not affect Tn5 lac omega4400 expression and the DNA sequence upstream of the transcriptional start site did not match the sequence of any M. xanthus promoter transcribed by a known form of RNA polymerase. However, the omega4400 promoter does contain the sequence 5'-CATCCCT-3' centered at -49 and the C-signal-dependent omega4403 promoter also contains this sequence at the same position. Moreover, the two promoters match at five of six positions in the -10 regions, suggesting that these promoters may share one or more transcription factors. These results begin to define the cis-acting regulatory elements important for cell-cell interaction-dependent gene expression during the development of a multicellular prokaryote.
...
PMID:Identification of the omega4400 regulatory region, a developmental promoter of Myxococcus xanthus. 955 78
In this paper we demonstrate the use of recombinant viral vectors derived from herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) to transfer reporter genes in vitro into rat anterior pituitary cells grown in primary cultures and the anterior pituitary tumour cell lines GH3 and AtT20. The three vectors used were, tsK/
beta-galactosidase
(beta-gal), tsK/CRH and tsK/TIMP, the corresponding transgene products respectively being E. coli beta-gal, pre-procorticotropin releasing hormone (ppCRH), and the chimeric protein TIMP/Thy1 (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP)/linked to the carboxy terminus of Thy1 which confers the addition of a glycolipid glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor in the ER). Double labelling immunofluorescence experiments to detect reporter proteins and transduced cell types indicated that the three vectors could transfer and express the reporter genes in normal and tumour anterior pituitary cells. Virus infection of pituitary cells was characterised, and it was shown that infection with tsK/beta-gal at multiplicities of infection (MOI)=10, 100% of tumour and non-endocrine anterior pituitary cells expressed beta-gal, whereas 75% endocrine anterior pituitary cells expressed the transgene. Long-term expression studies after infection with tsK/beta-gal indicated that anterior pituitary cells in primary cultures expressed the transgene for significant longer periods than tumour anterior pituitary cells. Growth arrest by serum
starvation
markedly decreased the frequency of transgene expression in anterior pituitary cells following infection with tsK/beta-gal. Transgenic products expressed from tsK were targeted to their correct intracellular domain in both anterior pituitary cells in primary cultures and in pituitary tumour cell lines. We conclude that transgenes can be delivered into anterior pituitary cells in primary culture and pituitary tumour cell lines using tsK derived HSV1 vectors. The prospect of employing viral vectors to transfer genes into endocrine cells opens up the potential exploration of various molecular aspects of pituitary cell function both in vitro and in vivo, as well as the use of gene transfer into the pituitary for potentially therapeutic applications, such as the treatment of pituitary tumours.
...
PMID:Use of recombinant herpes simplex virus type 1 vectors for gene transfer into tumour and normal anterior pituitary cells. 970 88
Two differentially regulated catalase genes have been identified in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans. The catA gene belongs to a class whose transcripts are specifically induced during asexual sporulation (conidiation) and encodes a catalase accumulated in conidia. Using a developmental mutant affected in the brlA gene, which is unable to form conidia but capable of producing sexual spores (ascospores), we demonstrated that the catA mRNA accumulated during induction of conidiation but did not produce CatA protein. In contrast, high levels of catalase A activity were detected in the ascospores produced by this mutant, indicating that the catA gene is posttranscriptionally regulated. The same type of regulation was observed for a catA::lacZ translational gene fusion, suggesting that the catA message 5' untranslated region could be involved in translational control during development. In a wild-type strain,
beta-galactosidase
activity driven from the catA::lacZ gene fusion was low in hyphae and increased 50-fold during conidiation and 620-fold in isolated conidia. Consistent with this finding spatial expression of the reporter gene was restricted to metulae, phialides, and conidia. Conidium-associated expression was maintained in a stuA mutant, in which the conidiophore cell pattern is severely deranged. catA mRNA accumulation was also observed when vegetative mycelia was subject to oxidative, osmotic, and nitrogen or carbon
starvation
stress. Nevertheless, catalase A activity was restricted to the conidia produced under nutrient
starvation
. Our results provide support for a model in which translation of the catA message, accumulated during conidiation or in response to different types of stress, is linked to the morphogenetic processes involved in asexual and sexual spore formation. Our findings also indicate that brlA-independent mechanisms regulate the expression of genes encoding spore-specific products.
...
PMID:Posttranscriptional control mediates cell type-specific localization of catalase A during Aspergillus nidulans development. 979 Nov 26
The general stress sigma factor sigmaS (RpoS) of Escherichia coli is strongly induced in response to glucose
starvation
. This increase in the cellular sigmaS level is due to stabilization of sigmaS, which under non-stress conditions is subject to rapid proteolysis. In the present study, it is demonstrated that sigmaS is also induced during the diauxic shift from glucose to lactose, i.e., under conditions of glucose exhaustion in the presence of another, less-preferred carbon source that eventually gets utilized. This sigmaS induction, which is due to stabilization, is transient and precedes the induction of
beta-galactosidase
. In parallel, sigmaS-dependent genes are transiently activated, as was shown here for osmY. Although sigmaS can mediate transcription of lacZ in vitro, sigmaS does not contribute to the induction of
beta-galactosidase
during the diauxic lag phase. Rather, the induction of sigmaS and the general stress response during the diauxic shift plays the role of a rapidly activated emergency system, which is shut off again as soon as the cells are able to cope with the stress situation by utilizing a more specific and more economical system.
...
PMID:The general stress sigma factor sigmaS of Escherichia coli is induced during diauxic shift from glucose to lactose. 982 28
Starvation
for amino acids initiates the developmental cycle in the cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium discoideum. Upon
starvation
one of the earliest developmental events is the selective loss of the ribosomal protein mRNAs from polysomes. This loss depends upon sequences in the 5' non-translated leader of the ribosomal protein (r-protein) mRNAs. Here evidence is presented which indicates that those cells which will become prestalk cells express the ribosomal protein genes during development under
starvation
conditions. Cells which enter the prespore pathway shut off r-protein synthesis. The promoter and 5' non-translated leader sequences from two ribosomal protein genes, the rp-L11 and the rp-S9 genes, are fused to the Escherichia coli
beta-galactosidase
reporter gene. While
beta-galactosidase
enzyme activity is detected in situ in most growing cells, by 15 h of development
beta-galactosidase
enzyme activity is largely lost from the prespore cells although strong
beta-galactosidase
enzyme activity is present in the prestalk cells. These observations suggest the possibility that the ribosomal protein mRNAs are excluded from polysomes in a cell-type-specific manner.
...
PMID:Ribosomal protein gene expression is cell type specific during development in Dictyostelium discoideum. 1055 May 41
The IciA protein from Escherichia coli has been shown specifically to inhibit the in vitro initiation of chromosomal DNA replication. However, the in vivo role of IciA has not yet been established. In order to investigate the in vivo function of this protein, expression of the iciA gene was studied by monitoring the
beta-galactosidase
activity specified by an iciA promoter-lacZ fusion inserted into the chromosome. Among the conditions tested (carbon
starvation
, the stringent response, phosphate
starvation
, and the SOS response), only phosphate depletion increased iciA expression. Supplementation of phosphate-depleted cultures with inorganic phosphate reduced the
beta-galactosidase
activity to basal levels. Enhanced expression of iciA-lacZ was dependent upon the PhoB protein. PhoB is known to be a transcriptional activator of the Pho regulon, expression of which is activated during phosphate
starvation
. It was also found that the iciA promoter contains a PhoB protein-binding sequence, termed the Pho box, which is necessary for the activation of genes of the Pho regulon. These results suggest that the iciA gene is a member of the Pho regulon.
...
PMID:PhoB-dependent transcriptional activation of the iciA gene during starvation for phosphate in Escherichia coli. 1058 31
The uptake and assimilation of nitrogen sources is effectively regulated in bacteria. In the Gram-negative enterobacterium Escherichia coli, the NtrB/C two-component system is responsible for the activation of transcription of different enzymes and transporters, depending on the nitrogen status of the cell. In this study, we investigated regulation of ammonium uptake in Corynebacterium glutamicum, a Gram-positive soil bacterium closely related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. As shown by Northern blot hybridizations, regulation occurs on the level of transcription upon nitrogen
starvation
. In contrast to enterobacteria, a repressor protein is involved in regulation, as revealed by measurements of methylammonium uptake and
beta-galactosidase
activity in reporter strains. The repressor-encoding gene, designated amtR, was isolated and sequenced. Deletion of amtR led to deregulation of transcription of amt coding for the C. glutamicum (methyl)ammonium uptake system. E. coli extracts from amtR-expressing cells were applied in gel retardation experiments, and binding of AmtR to the amt upstream region was observed. By deletion analyses, a target motif for AmtR binding was identified, and binding of purified AmtR protein to this motif, ATCTATAGN1-4ATAG, was shown. Furthermore, the binding of AmtR to this sequence was proven in vivo using a yeast one-hybrid system. Subsequent studies showed that AmtR not only regulates transcription of the amt gene but also of the amtB-glnK-glnD operon encoding an amt paralogue, the signal transduction protein PII and the uridylyltransferase/uridylyl-removing enzyme, key components of the nitrogen regulatory cascade. In summary, regulation of ammonium uptake and assimilation in the high G+C content Gram-positive bacterium C. glutamicum differs significantly from the mechanism found in the low G+C content Gram-positive model organism Bacillus subtilis and from the paradigm of nitrogen control in the Gram-negative enterobacteria.
...
PMID:AmtR, a global repressor in the nitrogen regulation system of Corynebacterium glutamicum. 1097 15
States of increased metabolic demand such as fasting modulate hypothalamic neuropeptide gene expression and decrease circulating leptin levels. This study tested the hypotheses that fasting stimulates gene induction mediated by cAMP response element (CRE)-dependent increases in gene transcription and that fasting-induced decreases in leptin can regulate this CRE-mediated gene induction. Using C57BL/6J mice transgenic for a CRE-lacZ construct, an immunocytochemical study showed that fasting activated reporter gene expression in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (Arc) in a small subset of neurons and increased phosphorylation of CRE binding protein. The increase of
beta-galactosidase
expression caused by fasting was inhibited by a protein kinase A inhibitor, Rp-8-Br-cAMPS, when the compound was microinjected into the medial basal hypothalamus, and enhanced by intraperitoneal injection of selective phosphodiesterase inhibitors. In situ hybridization studies showed that neuropeptide Y (NPY) mRNA levels increased in the Arc during fasting, whereas proopiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA levels decreased. Double labeling of mRNA and
beta-galactosidase
immunoreactivity in the fasted brain indicated that the subpopulation of the neurons expressing
beta-galactosidase
all produced NPY but not POMC. To study the possible involvement of decreased circulating leptin during
starvation
on CRE-mediated gene induction, leptin was administered intraperitoneally to fasted mice. Leptin significantly attenuated both
beta-galactosidase
expression and NPY gene expression stimulated by fasting, suggesting that leptin inhibits fasting-stimulated NPY gene expression at least in part through downregulation of CRE-mediated gene induction in the Arc. Leptin-induced modification of CRE-mediated gene induction in the Arc may play an essential role in the central regulation of feeding behavior and energy expenditure.
...
PMID:Downregulation of fasting-induced cAMP response element-mediated gene induction by leptin in neuropeptide Y neurons of the arcuate nucleus. 1116 Mar 94
We have shown that a deletion mutant form of Bcr [Bcr(64-413)] is a strong inhibitor of the tyrosine kinase of Bcr-Abl in vitro and also inhibits its oncogenic growth effects (Liu et al., Cancer Res., 56: 5120-5124, 1996). To determine the effects of this Bcr-Abl kinase inhibitor on chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cells, we cloned BCR(64-413) into a recombinant, replication-defective adenovirus to express useful quantities of Bcr(64-413) in a wide variety of cells in culture. Infection of Cos1 cells with plaque-purified virus at a multiplicity of infection of 20-40 induced high expression of Bcr(64-413) as detected by Western blotting. Infection of hematopoietic cells at modest multiplicities of infection (20-40) required special conditions involving shifting cycling cells to a nongrowing condition involving serum
starvation
and cell crowding. Under these conditions, both Bcr-Abl-positive and -negative hematopoietic cells can be efficiently infected by adenovirus, as demonstrated by 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside staining of cells infected by
beta-galactosidase
(beta-GAL) adenovirus. We found that expression of Bcr(64-413) in Bcr-Abl-positive K562 and BV-173 cells, but not Bcr-Abl-negative SMS-SB cells, increased cell-cell clumping and inhibited cell growth. In contrast to the effects of the Bcr(64-413) adenovirus, the beta-GAL adenovirus, despite infecting both types of cells, did not block growth or increase cell-cell clumping of Bcr-Abl-positive and -negative hematopoietic cells. Expression of Bcr(64-413) protein in primary cultures of cells from CML patients with active disease interfered with cell growth, induced apoptosis (as measured by annexin staining), and increased cell-cell clumping, whereas the beta-GAL adenovirus and mock-infected cells lacked these effects. In contrast, normal marrow cells did not exhibit these effects on infection with Bcr(64-413) adenovirus. We conclude from these findings that Bcr(64-413) interferes with the oncogenic effects of Bcr-Abl and therefore has the potential for use in therapy of CML.
...
PMID:Expression of a truncated first exon BCR sequence in chronic myelogenous leukemia cells blocks cell growth and induces cell death. 1119 51
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