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)

We previously constructed a bifunctionally active membrane-bound fusion protein, in which Escherichia coli proline carrier (the product of the putP gene) was linked with beta-galactosidase (the product of the lacZ gene) through a collagen linker (Hanada, K., Yamato, I., and Anraku, Y. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14100-14104). The proline carrier was purified from this site specifically cleavable fusion protein. Cytoplasmic membranes overproducing the fusion protein were solubilized with dodecylmaltoside, and the solubilized fraction was subjected to anti-beta-galactosidase IgG-Sepharose chromatography. The fusion protein was specifically adsorbed to the immunoaffinity resin and then treated with collagenase for splitting the proline carrier moiety of the fusion protein from the beta-galactosidase moiety. The collagenase used for the collagenolysis was then removed by anti-collagenase IgG-Sepharose chromatography. In this way, the proline carrier was purified to more than 95% homogeneity of the protein. Proline transport in proteoliposomes reconstituted with the purified carrier was dependent on the membrane potential and the chemical gradient of Na+ across the membrane with apparent Michaelis constants for proline and for Na+ stimulation of 3.6 microM and 31 microM, respectively. These results indicated that the proline carrier mediates electrogenic Na+/proline symport.
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PMID:Purification and reconstitution of Escherichia coli proline carrier using a site specifically cleavable fusion protein. 313 Mar 79

1. Both the post-partum involution of the rat uterus and the rapid breakdown of collagen that accompanies it are extensively inhibited by oestrogenic hormones. In the normal rat, 85% of the uterine collagen is degraded within 4 days after parturition; in rats treated with 100mug. of 17beta-oestradiol/day, only 35% of uterine collagen is broken down in the same period. 2. Similar effects are produced by diethylstilboestrol if the dose is increased tenfold. 3. Collagen breakdown is inhibited to a greater extent than is the loss of wet weight by oestradiol but not by diethylstilboestrol. 4. The oestrogens appear to act by blocking the breakdown of collagen. There is a greatly decreased concentration of free hydroxyproline in the uterus of treated animals. 5. Acid hydrolase concentrations (beta-glucuronidase, beta-galactosidase, cathepsin D and acid phosphatase) in the uterus are decreased by oestrogen treatment compared with controls, but the total amounts of these enzymes in the uterus are somewhat elevated. Oestrogens do not appear to inhibit collagen breakdown by altering the concentration and total amount of acid hydrolases.
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PMID:Inhibition by oestrogen of collagen breakdown in the involuting rat uterus. 582 64

1. The rat uterus contains acid cathepsin, beta-glucuronidase, beta-galactosidase, acid phosphatase and deoxyribonuclease II at concentrations comparable with those found in liver. Two non-hydrolytic uterine enzymes, cytochrome c oxidase and aspartate aminotransferase, display only 2-6% of the activity found in liver. 2. The concentrations of acid cathepsin and beta-glucuronidase are significantly decreased in pregnancy and increase 3-4-fold during post-partum involution. 3. The concentrations of beta-galactosidase and acid phosphatase are not decreased in pregnancy and increase only 2-3-fold during involution. 4. The concentrations of these four acid hydrolases increase linearly during the first 4 days post partum and reach their peak values at the same time that wet weight and collagen content fall to their lowest point. 5. The concentration of deoxyribonuclease is depressed in pregnancy but does not rise above normal in the post-partum period. 6. Only a small proportion of each hydrolytic activity can be isolated in the mitochondrial-lysosomal fraction of sucrose homogenates of the rat uterus. This proportion increases during involution. However, the extensive mitochondrial rupture occurring during homogenization indicates that the technique is probably too harsh to obtain a true measure of the proportion of lysosomes present in the intact tissue. 7. There are no significant changes in either the concentration or subcellular distribution of the five acid hydrolases in the livers of the experimental rats during pregnancy or involution. In each case the largest proportion of the activity is found in the mitochondrial-lysosomal fraction of liver homogenates. 8. The results are interpreted in terms of the lysosomal theory of intracellular digestion.
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PMID:Acid hydrolases of the rat uterus in relation to pregnancy, post-partum involution and collagen breakdown. 589 45

We have developed a rapid and general technique for purification of a protein encoded by a cistron contained in a recombinant DNA clone. The technique consists of fusing the target cistron DNA in the correct reading frame to a marker cistron via a piece of DNA that codes for a linker peptide. The target cistron in the example presented here is the replication initiator cistron of the plasmid R6K. The linker is a DNA fragment encoding 60 amino acids from the triple helical region of chicken pro alpha-2 collagen, and the marker cistron encodes the beta-galactosidase protein of Escherichia coli. The tripartite hybrid protein was rapidly purified by selective binding to and elution from a beta-galactosidase specific-affinity column. The hybrid protein was then digested with a purified microbial collagenase to cleave the linker, and high-pressure liquid chromatography allowed the rapid isolation of the target protein from the marker protein. Using this technique, we have purified the highly labile R6K replication initiator to homogeneity, and we have resolved the protein into NH2-terminal and COOH-terminal segments. We have further shown, by in vitro binding, that the COOH-terminal segment has at least one DNA-binding domain. The domain binds to the same restriction fragments of the R6K chromosome as the intact or beta-galactosidase-tagged initiator protein.
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PMID:Rapid purification of a cloned gene product by genetic fusion and site-specific proteolysis. 608 42

Sialyl and galactosyl transferase activities are demonstrated in calf vitreous hyalocytes. For study of sialyl transferase activity, a partially purified vitreous preparation (collagen and hyaluronic acid removed), and bovine submaxillary mucin were treated with an insolubilized neuraminidase before use acceptor of radioactivity from CMP-[3H]-N-acetylneuraminic acid (CMP-[3H]-NAN). For study of galactosyl transferase activity the vitreous preparation was treated first with insolubilized neuraminidase and then with an insolubilized beta-galactosidase before use as acceptor of radioactivity from UDP-[3H]-galactose (UDP-[3H]-gal). Galactosyl transferase requires a divalent metal ion for optimal activity, and the reactions catalyzed by each enzyme are dependent upon pH, time of incubation and concentration of enzyme and/or acceptor.
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PMID:Identification of sialyl and galactosyl transferase activities in calf vitreous hyalocytes. 609 99

In the present study, we demonstrate delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to homologous type I collagen that cross-reacts with type IV collagen. Mice immunized with native or denatured type I collagens and challenged with these same antigens or native type IV collagen develop a peak DTH response on day 7. Challenge with denatured type IV collagen or collagenase-treated type IV collagen failed to elicit DTH in type I collagen-sensitized mice. Type I collagen-sensitized spleen cells adoptively transferred DTH to types IV and I collagen to normal recipients; T cell-depleted spleen cells failed to transfer immunity. Periodate-treated type IV collagen did not elicit DTH in mice sensitized to type I collagen; however, mice sensitized with type IV collagen displayed significant DTH when challenged with periodate-treated type IV collagen. Furthermore, treatment of type IV collagen with a mixed glycosidase or alpha-glucosidase before challenge eliminated the DTH response in type I collagen-sensitized mice; beta-galactosidase treatment of type IV collagen had no effect on this response. Mice sensitized with type IV collagen, however, displayed significant DTH when challenged with these glycosidase-treated antigens. Antibodies produced to types I and IV collagen by repeated immunizations were specific for the sensitizing antigen and did not react with other connective tissue antigens. These studies indicate that a CMI response to type I collagen recognizes similar antigenic determinants on the type IV collagen molecule. These cross-reacting determinants are dependent on conformation and contain carbohydrates, particularly glucose residues.
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PMID:Cross-reactivity of cell-mediated immunity between interstitial (type I) and basement membrane (type IV) collagens. 618 5

The following proteins were subjected to electrophoresis in SDS gels and stained with both Coomassie Brilliant Blue R and Coomassie Brilliant Blue G: the pepsin-treated collagen types I, II, III and V, and non-pepsin-treated type IV collagen, and the non-collagens, laminin, fibronectin, myosin, beta-galactosidase, fibrin, phosphorylase b and serum albumin. The Coomassie Brilliant Blue G stain was formulated as in the dye-binding protein assay reagent of Bradford (Anal. Biochem. 72: 248-254, 1976). Coomassie Brilliant Blue R prominently stained all polypeptides, but the collagen chains, including the type IV chains, stained metachromatically (red or pink) while the non-collagens stained orthochromatically (blue-violet). In the Bradford reagent, however, only the non-collagens and the intact type IV chains were prominently stained; the pepsin-treated collagen chains were virtually undetectable provided that detergent had been exhaustively removed prior to immersion in the stain. Metachromatic staining with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R is attributed to the presence of closely-spaced proline and hydroxyproline residues in sequences from triple-helical domains. The staining of type IV chains with the Bradford reagent is attributed to the presence of binding sites in the sequences from the non-triple-helical domains only, since such binding sites are absent from chains derived from the pepsin-treated collagens.
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PMID:Differential staining of collagens and non-collagens with Coomassie Brilliant Blue G and R. 619 10

We show that a new rat chondrosarcoma (RCS) cell line established in long-term culture from the Swarm tumor displayed a stable differentiated chondrocyte-like phenotype. Indeed, these cells produced the collagen types II, IX, and XI and alcian blue-stainable cartilage-specific proteoglycans, but no type I or type III collagen. To functionally characterize their chondrocytic nature, the cells were stably transfected with a type II collagen/beta geo chimeric gene which confers essentially perfect chondrocyte-specific expression in transgenic mice. RCS cells expressed both beta-galactosidase and G418 resistance, in comparison with similarly transfected 10T1/2 and NIH/3T3 fibroblasts which did not. These cells were then used to perform a systematic deletion analysis of the first intron of the mouse type II collagen gene (Col2a1) using transient expression experiments to determine which segments stimulated expression of a luciferase reporter gene in RCS cells but not in 10T1/2 fibroblasts. Cloning of two tandem copies of a 156-base pair (bp) intron 1 fragment (+2188 to +2343) in a construction containing a 314-bp Col2a1 promoter caused an almost 200-fold increase in promoter activity in RCS cells but no increase in 10T1/2 cells. DNase I footprint analysis over this 156-bp fragment revealed two adjacent protected regions, FP1 and FP2, located in the 3'-half of this segment, but no differences were seen with nuclear extracts of RCS cells and 10T1/2 fibroblasts. Deletion of FP2 to leave a 119-bp segment decreased enhancer activity by severalfold, but RCS cell specificity was maintained. Further deletions indicated that sequences both in the 5' part of the 119-bp fragment and in FP1 were needed simultaneously for RCS cell-specific enhancer activity. A series of deletions in the promoter region of the mouse Col2a1 gene progressively reduced activity when these promoters were tested by themselves in transient expression experiments. However, these promoter deletions were all activated to a similar level in RCS cells by a 231-bp intron 1 fragment that included the 156-bp enhancer. The RCS cell-specific activity persisted even if the Col2a1 promoter was replaced by a minimal adenovirus major late promoter. This 231-bp intron 1 fragment also had strong enhancing activity in transiently transfected mouse primary chondrocytes. Our experiments establish the usefulness of RCS cells as an experimental system for studies of the control of chondrocyte-specific genes, provide an extensive delineation of segments in the Col2a1 first intron involved in chondrocyte-specific activity, and show that promoter sequences are dispensable for chondrocyte specificity.
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PMID:Use of a new rat chondrosarcoma cell line to delineate a 119-base pair chondrocyte-specific enhancer element and to define active promoter segments in the mouse pro-alpha 1(II) collagen gene. 749 38

The fate of the progeny of human oral gingival keratinocytes was mapped in stratified epithelial tissues in vitro by following the expression of a marker gene in genetically related clones. Oral epithelial progenitor cells were genetically marked at high efficiency by transducing them with a retrovirus vector that carried the gene for a histochemically detectable product, Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase (beta-gal). These cells were then grown in submerged cultures and on collagen rafts at the air-liquid interface to demonstrate the distribution of genetically marked cells in a differentiating tissue in vitro. The dynamics of transduced cells showed that clonally related cells were arranged in discrete units of labelled cells and these clusters were defined as 'clonal proliferation units'. The size and configuration of these units were related to the proliferative potential and differentiating capacity of the cell that was initially transduced. This model demonstrates the relation between clonally related cells and tissue architecture for oral keratinocytes in vitro.
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PMID:The fate of genetically marked human oral keratinocytes in vitro. 750 24

An environment of high glucose concentration stimulates the synthesis of extracellular matrix (ECM) in mesangial cell (MC) cultures. This may result from a similar increase in intracellular glucose concentration. We theorized that increased uptake, rather than glucose concentration per se is the major determinant of exaggerated ECM formation. To test this, we compared the effects of 35 mM glucose on ECM synthesis in normal MCs with those of 8 mM glucose in the same cells overexpressing the glucose transporter GLUT1 (MCGT1). Increasing medium glucose from 8 to 35 mM caused normal MCs to increase total collagen synthesis and catabolism, with a net 81-90% increase in accumulation. MCs transduced with the human GLUT1 gene (MCGT1) grown in 8 mM glucose had a 10-fold greater GLUT1 protein expression and a 1.9, 2.1, and 2.5-fold increase in cell myo-inositol, lactate production, and cell sorbitol content, respectively, as compared to control MCs transduced with bacterial beta-galactosidase (MCLacZ). MCGT1 also demonstrated increased glucose uptake (5-fold) and increased net utilization (43-fold), and greater synthesis of individual ECM components than MCLacZ. In addition, total collagen synthesis and catabolism were also enhanced with a net collagen accumulation 111-118% greater than controls. Thus, glucose transport activity is an important modulator of ECM formation by MCs; the presence of high extracellular glucose concentrations is not necessarily required for the stimulation of matrix synthesis.
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PMID:Overexpression of glucose transporters in rat mesangial cells cultured in a normal glucose milieu mimics the diabetic phenotype. 756 72


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