Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The amino acid sequence in the 8 cyanogen bromide peptides comprising the central segment of beta-galactosidase is presented. This portion of the molecule, about 27% of the protein, contains over 40% of the lysine and tyrosine residues and has a slight excess of basic amino acids.
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PMID:Amino acid sequence of beta-galactosidase. IX. Sequence of the central segment, CNBr peptides 10 to 17, residues 378 to 653. 9 96

The sequence of the COOH-terminal third (omega) of beta-galactosidase is presented. The size of the 7 cyanogen bromide peptides of this segment is larger on the average, about 52 amino acid residues as compared to an average size of 42 for cyanogen bromide peptides in the whole molecule. Tyrosine, phenylalanine, and valine are low in this segment whereas alanine and lysine are high. This region has a slight excess of basic groups.
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PMID:Amino acid sequence of beta-galactosidase. X. Sequence of the COOH-terminal segment, CNBr peptides 18 to 24, residues 654 to 1021. 9 97

We have isolated strains of Escherichia coli in which an amino-terminal portion of the cytoplasmic enzyme beta-galactosidase is replaced by an amino-terminal portion of the periplasmic enzyme alkaline phosphatase. The synthesis of these hybrid proteins is regulated by inorganic phosphate and they are located in the cytoplasm. One of these proteins was purified, and 14 amino acids of the amino-terminal sequence were determined. The first five amino acids, Met-Lys-Gln-Ser-Thr, appear to represent a portion of the signal sequence of the precursor of alkaline phosphatase, and the remaining sequence corresponds to that of beta-galactosidase, beginning at amino acid residue 20. The approach described here could be used for the analysis of signal sequences of exported proteins and for partial amino acid sequence determination of certain of certain other proteins.
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PMID:Use of gene fusions to determine a partial signal sequence of alkaline phosphatase. 11 91

We have previously demonstrated the existence of two types of endopeptidase in Escherichia coli. A purification procedure is described for one of these, designated protease II. It has been purified about 13,500-fold with a recovery of 24%. The isolated enzyme appears homogeneous by electrophoresis and gel filtration. Its molecular weight is estimated by three different methods to be about 58,000. Its optimal pH is around 8. Protease II activity is unaffected by chelating agents and sulfhydryl reagents. Amidase and proteolytic activities are stimulated by calcium ion, which decreases the enzyme stability. Like pancreatic trypsin, this endopeptidase catalyses the hydrolysis of alpha-amino-substituted lysine and arginine esters. It appears distinct from the previously isolated protease I, which is a chymotrypsin-like enzyme. The apparent Michaelis constant for hydrolysis of N-benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester is 4.7 X 10(-4) M. The esterase activity is inhibited by diisopryopylphosphorofluoridate (Ki(app) equals 2.7 X 10(-3) M) and tosyl lysine chloromethyl ketone (Ki(app) equals 1.8 X 10(-5) M), indicating that serine and histidine residues may be present in the active site. However, protease II is insensitive to phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride and several natural trypsin inhibitors. Its amidase and esterase activities are competitively inhibited by free arginine and aromatic amidines. The proteolytic activity measured on axocasein is very low. In contrast to trypsin, protease II is without effect on native beta-galactosidase. It easily degrades aspartokinase I and III. Nevertheless both enzymes are resistant to proteolysis in the presence of their respective allosteric effectors. These results provide further evidence that such differences in protease susceptibility can be related to the conformational state of the substrate. The possible implication of structural changes in the mechanism of preferential proteolysis in vivo, is discussed.
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PMID:Protease II from Escherichia coli. Purification and characterization. 24 Aug 39

A new method has been developed for measuring peptide transport in aminoacid auxotrophs of Escherichia coli by following induction of beta-galactosidase. Appearance of the enzyme was determined after addition of inducer and peptides to amino-acid starved bacteria. For a given number of lysine equivalents, the rate and the extent of enzyme synthesis were the same for lysine and lysyl peptides; similar results were found for glycine and glycl peptides. Saturation constants for peptide transport were determined from the exogenous peptide concentration that gave half maximal rates of enzyme synthesis. The saturation constants, studies with mutants defective in peptide transport, and detection of competition between peptides for uptake, all endorsed earlier conclusions from growth tests about the structural specificities for peptide transport. The new method is quicker, more sensitive and more informative than growth tests.
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PMID:Monitoring enzyme synthesis as a means of studying peptide transport and utilization in Escherichia coli. 32 13

Clinical isolates of rhamnose-positive Yersinia enterocolitica (Y.e.rh+) were compared with typical rhamnose-negative Y. enterocolitica (Y.e.rh-) and with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. The Y.e.rh+ differed from the Y.e.rh- and Y. pseudotuberculosis in their ability to ferment raffinose and lactose, utilize citrate and in their inability to grow on Hektoen enteric agar at 22 or 37 C, on Salmonella-Shigella agar at 37 C, and scant on xylose-lysine-deoxycholate agar at 37 C. An extensive temperature-dependent profile of characteristics was established for the Y.e.rh+: motility, acetoin production, citrate utilization, growth on Salmonella-Shigella agar, and ampicillin resistance occurred at 22 C but not 37 C; fermentation of melibiose, raffinose, and cellobiose occurred within 24 h at 22 C, but not before 5 days at 37 C; fermentation of rhamnose and production of beta-galactosidase occurred within 24 h at 22 C, but not before 48 h at 37 C; greater resistance to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, kanamycin, carbenicillin, and gentamicin was observed at 22 than 37 C; and good growth on xylose-lysine-deoxycholate agar occurred at 22 but not 37 C. For optimal recovery of Y.e.rh+ from mixed culture, e.g., stools, two MacConkey plates should be inoculated and incubated, one at 37 C, and one at 22 C. Lactose-negative colonies appearing after 48 h on the 22 C MacConkey agar but not the 37 C MacConkey agar should be considered possible Y.e.rh+. Biochemicals should be tested in duplicate, one set incubated at 22 C, one set at 37 C. Antibiotic susceptibility tests of Y.e.rh+ isolates should be incubated at both 37 C and at a lower temperature to allow the greatest expression of resistance of these organisms to the various antibiotics.
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PMID:Temperature-dependent cultural and biochemical characteristics of rhamnose-positive Yersinia enterocolitica. 125 9

A 0.9 kb cDNA for the foot and mouth disease virus (FMDV) type Asia 1 63/72, cloned in the plasmid pUR222 by dC/dG tailing method, was expressed into a protein which was immunogenic in guinea pigs and cattle. The protein purified to homogeneity was found to be basic and of 38 kDa. A sequence of 879 nucleotides of the inserted cDNA was obtained. The nucleotide sequence was 65% GC-rich and was homologous to the gene for VPI of FMDV types A5, OIK and C3 to the extent of 35-40%. From the nucleotide sequence, a sequence of 293 amino acids was derived which contained 43 arginine, 4 lysine, 7 glutamic acid and 18 aspartic acid residues making the protein highly basic. The molecular weight was calculated to be 31.6 kDa. The 38 kDa protein produced by the cloned cDNA is a fused protein composed of the 293 amino acids; 5 and 55 amino acids of the alpha-complementation protein of the beta-galactosidase at the N and C terminal, respectively, and 5 amino acid coded by the dG/dC tails used for cloning the cDNA.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence of the cDNA and the derived amino acid sequence for the major antigenic protein of foot and mouth disease virus, type Asia 1 63/72. 131 47

Previous genetic analyses indicated that translational frameshifting in the--1 direction occurs within the run of six adenines in the sequence 5'-TTAAAAAACTC-3' at nucleotide positions 305-315 in IS 1, where the two out-of-phase reading frames insA and B'-insB overlap, to produce transposase with a polypeptide segment Leu-Lys-Lys-Leu at residues 84-87. IS 1 mutants with a 1 bp insertion, which encode mutant transposases with an amino acid substitution within the polypeptide segment at residues 84-87, did not efficiently mediate cointegration, except for an IS 1 mutant which encodes a mutant transposase with a Leu-Arg-Lys-Leu segment instead of Leu-Lys-Lys-Leu. An IS 1 mutant with the DNA segment 5'-CTTAAAAACTC-3' at positions 305-315 carrying the termination codon TAA in the B'-insB reading frame could still mediate cointegration, indicating that codon AAA for Lys corresponding to second, third and fourth positions in the run of adenines is the site of frameshifting. The beta-galactosidase activity specified by several IS 1-lacZ fusion plasmids, in which B'-insB is in-frame with lacZ, showed that the region 292-377 is sufficient for frameshifting. The protein produced by frameshifting from the IS 1-lacZ plasmid in fact contained the polypeptide segment Leu-Lys-Lys-Leu encoded by the DNA segment 5'-TTAAAAAACTC-3', indicating that--1 frameshifting does occur within the run of adenines.
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PMID:Identification of the site of translational frameshifting required for production of the transposase encoded by insertion sequence IS 1. 133 29

The transposase encoded by insertion sequence IS1 is produced from two out-of-phase reading frames (insA and B'-insB) by translational frameshifting, which occurs within a run of six adenines in the -1 direction. To determine the sequence essential for frameshifting, substitution mutations were introduced within the region containing the run of adenines and were examined for their effects on frameshifting. Substitutions at each of three (2nd, 3rd and 4th) adenine residues in the run, which are recognized by tRNA(Lys) reading insA, caused serious defects in frameshifting, showing that the three adenine residues are essential for frameshifting. The effects of substitution mutations introduced in the region flanking the run of adenines and in the secondary structures located downstream were, however, small, indicating that such a region and structures are not essential for frameshifting. Deletion of a region containing the termination codon of insA caused a decrease in beta-galactosidase activity specified by the lacZ fusion plasmid in frame with B'-insB. Exchange of the wild-type termination codon of insA for a different one or introduction of an additional termination codon in the region upstream of the native termination codon caused an increase in beta-galactosidase activity, indicating that the termination codon in insA affects the efficiency of frameshifting.
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PMID:DNA sequences required for translational frameshifting in production of the transposase encoded by IS1. 133 30

Biotinylation of fusion proteins in E. coli was studied using a sequence of Propionibacterium freudenreichii transcarboxylase 1.3S biotin subunit. As the biotinylation sequence, we examined two sequences: one was of amino acid residues [84-123] of 1.3S, a partial sequence containing a region from a conserved tetrapeptide (Ala-Met-Bct-Met) around the biotinyl lysine (Bct) to the carboxyl terminal; the other was of an almost entire sequence [18-123]. We constructed recombinant plasmids for fusion proteins of beta-galactosidase, of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase, and of alkaline phosphatase. We found the biotinylation in the [18-123] sequence fused to alkaline phosphatase.
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PMID:In vivo biotinylation of fusion proteins expressed in Escherichia coli with a sequence of Propionibacterium freudenreichii transcarboxylase 1.3S biotin subunit. 136 26


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