Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rarobacter faecitabidus protease I (RPI) is a serine protease exhibiting lytic activity toward living yeast cells. RPI is similar to elastase in its substrate specificity and has a lectin-like affinity for mannose. The gene encoding RPI was cloned to elucidate its structure and function. And its nucleotide sequence revealed that it contains an open reading frame encoding a 525-amino acid protein. Homology comparison indicated that pre-pro-RPI consists of three domains: (1) an NH2-terminal prepro domain not found in the mature form of RPI, (2) a protease domain homologous to the trypsin family of serine proteases, and (3) a COOH-terminal domain homologous to the COOH-terminal part of Oerskovia xanthineolytica beta-1,3-glucanase and the NH2-terminal part of the ricin B chain, a lectin isolated from the part of the ricin B chain, a lectin isolated from the castor bean. The RPI gene and its mutant were subsequently expressed in Escherichia coli under its beta-galactosidase promoter to investigate the function of the COOH-terminal domain. The mutant RPI, whose COOH-terminal domain was truncated by site-directed mutagenesis, lost both its mannose-binding and yeast-lytic activity, although the protease activity was not affected. These findings suggest that the COOH-terminal domain actually participates in the mannose-binding activity and is required for yeast-lytic activity.
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PMID:Molecular structure of Rarobacter faecitabidus protease I. A yeast-lytic serine protease having mannose-binding activity. 133 45

We have devised a rapid method for examining the expression of a toxin gene following in vitro transfection using a bacterial beta-galactosidase (lacZ) gene as a reporter gene. Ricin A chain DNA and the lacZ gene, both under the control of the immunoglobulin gene promoter and enhancer, were transfected into mouse fibroblast cells (L cells). Transient expression of the lacZ gene was detected 2 days after transfection by histochemical staining of the transfectants with 5-bromo-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactoside. Cotransfection of the ricin A chain gene resulted in a progressive reduction in the number of lacZ transfectants as the expressed toxin killed the cells. A ricin construct with the intervening sequence from the human beta-actin gene required 4 days instead of 2 days to produce the toxic effect. This is a useful method for examining the expression of toxin gene in a cell.
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PMID:A method for detecting the expression of a toxic gene in cultured cells. 179 5

We have established a ricin-resistant glycosylation-defective PC12 pheochromocytoma cell line to study biochemically glycoprotein traffic from the cell surface to the Golgi apparatus in regulated secretory cells. The strategy employed in this study is a modification of that used previously (Duncan, J. R., and Kornfeld, S. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 617-628) to demonstrate transport of the cation-independent and -dependent mannose 6-phosphate receptors from the cell surface to the trans-Golgi network in nonsecretory cell types. In ricin-resistant PC12 cells, radiolabeled galactose was incorporated enzymatically into surface glycoconjugates, primarily glycoproteins. Resistance to beta-galactosidase was acquired upon reculture at 37 degrees C due to further terminal glycosylation of the galactose residues. Treatment of N-linked oligosaccharides isolated from recultured cells with a variety of glycosidases in conjunction with beta-galactosidase demonstrated the addition of sialic acid N-acetylglucosamine and fucose residues to the galactose residues in recultured cells. Resistance to beta-galactosidase was not acquired in cells recultured at 19 degrees C, indicating that subsequent glycosylation of galactose residues did not occur at the cell surface or in endosomes. While glycosylation of galactose incorporated into asparagine oligosaccharides in Chinese hamster ovary clone 13 cells was not significant (less than 1%) after 6 h of reculture, approximately 10% of the galactose incorporated into surface oligosaccharides was further glycosylated in PC12 cells in this time. Analysis of total labeled versus beta-galactosidase-resistant proteins by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that endocytic traffic to the site of glycosylation activity in mutant PC12 cells was highly selective, but included a much greater number of proteins than were detected in Chinese hamster ovary clone 13 fibroblasts.
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PMID:Endocytic membrane traffic to the Golgi apparatus in a regulated secretory cell line. 212 89

The gene for the A chain of ricin toxin was fused to a beta-galactosidase marker cistron via a DNA sequence encoding a short collagen linker, and the tripartite fusion protein was expressed in Escherichia coli. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to change glutamic acid residue 177 to aspartic acid or alanine. When the mutant proteins were expressed, purified, and tested quantitatively for enzymatic activity, the carboxylate function at position 177 was found not to be absolutely essential for ricin toxin A-chain catalysis.
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PMID:Role of glutamic acid 177 of the ricin toxin A chain in enzymatic inactivation of ribosomes. 268 71

A fetal antigen (FA) was isolated from spent culture medium of a melanoma (M14) cell line. Allogeneic serum samples from melanoma patients, previously characterized with respect to anti-FA activity, were used as the source of anti-FA antibody. The FA activity was partially purified by membrane ultrafiltration, gel filtration, and chloroform:methanol extraction. The partially purified FA was then used to develop an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). By indirect ELISA both the IgG and IgM classes of anti-FA antibodies were detected in the sera of cancer patients and normal volunteers. The incidences of anti-FA antibodies in the sera of cancer patients and normal volunteers were not significantly different. As detected by competitive inhibition in ELISA, FA activity was widely distributed among melanoma, sarcoma, and carcinoma tumor tissues and cultured tumor cells, as well as among fetal brain, skin, and muscle tissues. FA activity was destroyed by treatment with beta-galactosidase and hyaluronidase, but it was not destroyed by proteolytic and lipolytic enzymes. The antigen bound to immobilized ricin, peanut, and soybean lectins. FA activity in material purified by ricin-affinity chromatography was associated with molecules in the 60,000- to 70,000-dalton region as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These results suggest a glycoprotein nature for the FA isolated from the spent culture medium of melanoma (M14) cells; this FA apparently elicits formation of natural antibodies in the cancer patients and normal donors.
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PMID:Immunochemical characterization of fetal antigen isolated from spent medium of a human melanoma cell line. 619 35

Purification of liver membrane insulin receptors on concanavalin A- and ricin I-lectin columns gave a 15-fold enrichment in the insulin binding capacity per milligram of protein. Final receptor and protein recoveries were 53 and 3.8% respectively. Lectin-purification increased the receptor affinity for insulin, as indicated by a left-ward shift in the binding competition curve and a steeper slope in the Scatchard plot. Lectin-purification increased the receptor sensitivity towards the glycosidic probes. The maximal effects of beta-galactosidase, ricin I (galactose-binding lectin) and alpha-mannosidase were markedly amplified: 80, 90 and 60% inhibition, versus 45, 40 and 15% with particulate membranes. The limulus polyphemus (LPA) and wheat germ (WGA) agglutinins (sialic acid- and N-acetyl-glucosaminyl-binding lectins) became effective in modifying the insulin binding: 45 and 80% inhibition, respectively. The effects were dose-dependent, reversed by the monosaccharide competitors (lectin effects) and unrelated to the state of receptor occupancy. These findings indicate that, within the hormone recognition area, peptide chains containing galactose, mannose and N-acetyl-glucosamine are strictly required for insulin-receptor interaction and suggest that change in the receptor affinity is related to the role of carbohydrate in insulin binding.
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PMID:Further evidence for a role of carbohydrates in insulin binding: studies in lectin-purified receptors. 662 Feb 48

Further advantages in the treatment of soft-tissue sarcomas will only be achieved by tailoring the adjuvant therapy after surgery. The photochemically directed release of macro-molecules from endosomes and lysosomes into the cytosol is a novel technology, named photochemical internalization (PCI), that has been evaluated for treatment of sarcoma cells in vitro. Two human synovial sarcoma cell lines (SW 982 and CME-1) were treated with the photosensitizer meso-tetraphenylporphine with two sulfonate groups on adjacent phenyl rings (TPPS2a) and a plasmid encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) complexed to poly-L-lysine to investigate the influence of PCI on gene transfer and with 5 micrograms/mL gelonin to investigate PCI of a Type-I ribosome-inactivating protein toxin. In addition, both cell lines were transduced with an Adenovirus serotype 5 encoding the Escherichia coli lacZ gene (AdHCMV-lacZ, expressing beta-galactosidase) and treated with TPPS2a and light to evaluate the effect of PCI on the transduction rate. Photochemically induced transfection with the reporter gene EGFP in CME-1 cells increased from 0% of cells at no light to 40% of the cells after 60 s of light exposure. In contrast, the SW 982 cells showed no enhanced expression of the gene. The fraction of virally transduced cells was about doubled in both cell lines by means of PCI, although the transduction was more efficient in the CME-1 cells. Both cell lines became up to four-fold more sensitive to light when combining photochemical treatment with gelonin incubation. Our experiments showed that PCI induced the endocytic escape of therapeutic substances in cells derived from human soft-tissue sarcomas.
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PMID:Photochemical internalization enhances the cytotoxic effect of the protein toxin gelonin and transgene expression in sarcoma cells. 1455 16