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)

Several neurological diseases which affect the corpus striatum are candidates for gene therapy. We have developed a defective Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV-1) vector system to introduce genes into postmitotic cells, such as neurons. The prototype vector, pHSVlac, contains a transcription unit which places the E. coli Lac Z gene under the control of the HSV-1 immediate early (IE) 4/5 promoter, a constitutive promoter. We now demonstrate that a HSV-1 vector can deliver a gene into striatal neurons. Infection of cultured rat striatal neurons with pHSVlac virus resulted in stable expression of beta-galactosidase for at least two weeks, without cell death. The potential to replace the Lac Z gene with other genes of interest, such as the gene responsible for Huntington's Disease, once it is isolated, may lead to insights about the pathogenesis of this genetic neurodegenerative disease, and may provide a method for performing gene therapy on this disease. Similarly, introduction of the tyrosine hydroxylase gene, which encodes the rate-limiting enzyme in the conversion of tyrosine to dopamine, into striatal neurons might provide a novel gene therapy approach towards treating Parkinson's Disease.
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PMID:Infection of cultured striatal neurons with a defective HSV-1 vector: implications for gene therapy. 166 13

We developed a procedure to introduce and stably express foreign genes into the kidney. The Lac Z reporter gene encoding the bacterial protein beta-galactosidase was introduced by retrovirus-mediated gene transfer into rat nephrogenic mesenchymal cells, which were induced for 24 h with embryonic spinal cord in vitro. The Lac Z-tagged mesenchymal cells were subsequently transplanted underneath the capsule of the neonatal kidney. Two weeks after transplantation, the Lac Z-tagged cells derived from transplants were identified by their beta-galactosidase expression. Well-differentiated Lac Z positive cells were observed in glomerulus and proximal and distal nephron segments. To determine if the tagged mesenchymal cells developed into functional nephrons, fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled dextran was infused into transplanted animals before death. We observed that fluorescent apical vesicles were colocalized to beta-galactosidase positive proximal tubular cells, indicating that the transplanted mesenchymal cells were integrated into reabsorbing nephrons. These results show the feasibility of introducing foreign genes into epithelia of functioning nephron segments.
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PMID:Integration of embryonic nephrogenic cells carrying a reporter gene into functioning nephrons. 171 55

A protocol for colorimetric determination of DNA amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subsequently immobilized to a solid support is described. The protocol consists of three steps: (i) binding of PCR amplified lac operator-containing DNA to magnetic beads; (ii) binding of a Lac repressor-beta-galactosidase fusion protein to the lac operator and (iii) colorimetric detection of the immobilized beta-galactosidase. In practice, steps (i) and (ii) are performed concurrently. The protocol is well suited both for manual and automated procedures and the immobilized template can, after melting, be used directly for solid phase sequencing. The assay is used to demonstrate that template concentration is important for the quality of sequence data obtained from an automated DNA sequencer.
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PMID:Colorimetric quantification of in vitro-amplified template DNA to be used for solid phase sequencing. 177 79

Proteus mirabilis, a common agent of nosocomially acquired and catheter-associated urinary tract infection, is the most frequent cause of infection-induced bladder and kidney stones. Urease-catalyzed urea hydrolysis initiates stone formation in urine and can be inhibited by acetohydroxamic acid and other structural analogs of urea. Since P. mirabilis urease is inducible with urea, there has been some concern that urease inhibitors actually induce urease during an active infection, thus compounding the problem of elevated enzyme activity. Quantitating induction by compounds that simultaneously inhibit urease activity has been difficult. Therefore, to study these problems, we constructed a fusion of ureA (a urease subunit gene) and lacZ (the beta-galactosidase gene) within plasmid pMID1010, which encodes an inducible urease of P. mirabilis expressed in E. coli JM103 (Lac-). The fusion protein, predicted to be 117 kDa, was induced by urea and detected on Western blots (immunoblots) with anti-beta-galactosidase antiserum. Peak beta-galactosidase activity of 9.9 mumol of ONPG (o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside) hydrolyzed per min per mg of protein, quantitated spectrophotometrically, was induced at 200 mM urea. The uninduced rate was 0.2 mumol of ONPG hydrolyzed per min per mg of protein. Induction was specific for urea, as no structural analog of urea (including acetohydroxamic acid, hydroxyurea, thiourea, hippuric acid, flurofamide, or hydroxylamine) induced fusion protein activity. These data suggest that induction by inactivation of UreR, the urease repressor protein that governs regulation of the urease operon, is specific for urea and does not respond to closely related structural analogs.
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PMID:Proteus mirabilis urease: use of a ureA-lacZ fusion demonstrates that induction is highly specific for urea. 189 50

Several spontaneous Lac- deletion derivatives of the beta-galactosidase gene of Lactobacillus bulgaricus were analyzed for their phenotypic stability. We found that one of these mutants, lac139, carrying a deletion of 30 bp within the gene, was able to revert to a Lac+ phenotype. Genetical analysis of revertants indicated that an internal region of 72 bp was duplicated immediately next to the deletion site. The region involved in the duplication event is flanked by direct repeated sequences of 13 bp in length. Both events, the deletion and the duplication, were mediated by the presence of such short direct repeats. Enzymatic studies of the purified proteins indicated identical kinetic parameters, but showed considerable instability of the revertant protein.
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PMID:A beta-galactosidase deletion mutant of Lactobacillus bulgaricus reverts to generate an active enzyme by internal DNA sequence duplication. 190 35

Two genetics markers: the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase and Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase genes were inserted into the 36K protein gene of vaccinia virus located in a HindIII-P DNA fragment. An unstability of recombinant viruses with Lac(+)-phenotype were discovered. A mechanism of viruses unstable variants formation was proposed, it was confirmed by the results of hybridisation analyses of virus recombinant genomes. The importance of a late nonstructural 36K protein gene for virus reproduction was demonstrated.
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PMID:[Molecular biological study of the vaccinia virus genome. IV. The late nonstructural 36K protein of vaccinia virus is vitally important]. 190 41

A beta-galactosidase gene from Clostridium acetobutylicum NCIB 2951 was expressed after cloning into pSA3 and electroporation into derivatives of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis strains H1 and 7962. When the clostridial gene was introduced into a plasmid-free derivative of the starter-type Lact. lactis subsp. lactis strain H1, the resulting construct had high beta-galactosidase activity but utilized lactose only slightly faster than the recipient. beta-galactosidase activity in the construct decreased by over 50% if the 63 kb Lac plasmid pDI21 was also present with the beta-galactosidase gene. Growth rates of Lac+ H1 and 7962 derivatives were not affected after introduction of the clostridial beta-galactosidase, even though beta-galactosidase activity in a 7962 construct was more than double that of the wild-type strain. When pDI21 was electroporated into a plasmid-free variant of strain 7962, the recombinant had high phospho-beta-galactosidase activity and a growth rate equal to that of the H1 wild-type strain. The H1 plasmid-free strain grew slowly in T5 complex medium, utilized lactose and contained low phospho-beta-galactosidase activity. We suggest that beta-galactosidase expression can be regulated by the lactose phosphotransferase system-tagatose pathway and that Lact. lactis subsp. lactis strain H1 has an inefficient permease for lactose and contains chromosomally-encoded phospho-beta-galactosidase genes.
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PMID:Expression of a beta-galactosidase gene from Clostridium acetobutylicum in Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis. 191 34

F plasmid DNA transfer (tra) gene expression in Escherichia coli is regulated by chromosome- and F-encoded gene products. To study the relationship among these regulatory factors, we constructed low-copy plasmids containing a phi(traY'-'lacZ)hyb gene that couples beta-galactosidase and Lac permease synthesis to the F plasmid traY promoter. Wild-type transformants maintained high levels of beta-galactosidase over a broad range of culture densities. Primer extension analysis of tra mRNA from F'lac and phi(traY'-'lacZ)hyb strains indicated very similar, though not identical, transcription initiation sites. Moreover, phi(traY'-'lacZ)hyb gene expression required both TraJ and SfrA, as does tra gene expression in F+ strains. beta-Galactosidase activity was reduced approximately 30-fold in the absence of TraJ, which could be supplied in cis or in trans. In a two-plasmid system in which TraJ was supplied in trans by a lac-traJ operon fusion, phi(traY'-'lacZ)hyb expression was a linear, saturable function of traJ expression. Enzyme activity was reduced approximately tenfold in sfrA mutants. That reduction could not be attributed to an effect on the TraJ level. Several other cellular or environmental variables had only a modest effect on phi(traY'-'lacZ)hyb expression. Hyperexpression was observed at high cell density (twofold) and in anaerobic cultures (1.2- to 1.5-fold). In contrast, expression was reduced twofold in integration host factor mutants.
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PMID:Regulation of the F plasmid traY promoter in Escherichia coli by host and plasmid factors. 200 97

A system for rapid colorimetric detection of specific genome DNA fragments amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is described that has been designed to allow direct solid-phase sequencing of positive samples. The amplified material is immobilized on magnetic beads by using the biotin streptavidin system. An Escherichia coli lac operator DNA sequence is incorporated in the amplified material during the second step of a nested primer procedure. This 21-base-pair sequence is used for a general colorimetric detection with a fusion protein consisting of the E. coli Lac repressor and beta-galactosidase. Positive samples can be treated subsequently with alkali to obtain a single-stranded DNA template suitable for direct genomic sequencing. This method to detect immobilized amplified nucleic acids (DIANA) is well adapted for automated or semiautomated clinical assays. Here, we show that it can be used to detect and sequence Chlamydia trachomatis genomic DNA in clinical samples.
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PMID:General colorimetric method for DNA diagnostics allowing direct solid-phase genomic sequencing of the positive samples. 211 52

In Shigella flexneri, the ompB locus (containing the ompR and envZ genes) was found to modulate expression of the vir genes, which are responsible for invasion of epithelial cells. vir gene expression was markedly enhanced under conditions of high osmolarity (300 mosM), similar to that encountered in tissues both extra- and intracellularly. Two ompB mutants were constructed and tested for virulence and for osmotic regulation of vir genes. An envZ::Tn10 mutant remained invasive, although its virulence was significantly decreased as a result of its inability to survive intracellularly. By using a vir::lac operon fusion, this mutation was shown to decrease beta-galactosidase expression both in low- and high-osmolarity conditions but did not affect vir expression in response to changes in osmolarity. A delta ompB deletion mutant was also constructed via allelic exchange with an in vitro-mutagenized ompB locus of Escherichia coli. This mutation severely impaired virulence and abolished expression of the vir::lac fusion in both low- and high-osmolarity conditions. Therefore, a two-component regulatory system modulates virulence according to environmental conditions. In addition, the mutation affecting a spontaneous avirulent variant of S. flexneri serotype 5, M90T, has been mapped at the ompB locus and was complemented by the cloned E. coli ompB locus. Introduction of the vir::lac fusion into this mutant did not result in the expression of beta-galactosidase (Lac-).
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PMID:The two-component regulatory system ompR-envZ controls the virulence of Shigella flexneri. 212 9


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