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)

The kinetics of amyloid fibril formation by beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta) are typical of a nucleation-dependent polymerization mechanism. This type of mechanism suggests that the study of the interaction of Abeta with itself can provide some valuable insights into Alzheimer disease amyloidosis. Interaction of Abeta with itself was explored with the yeast two-hybrid system. Fusion proteins were created by linking the Abeta fragment to a LexA DNA-binding domain (bait) and also to a B42 transactivation domain (prey). Protein-protein interactions were measured by expression of these fusion proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae harboring lacZ (beta-galactosidase) and LEU2 (leucine utilization) genes under the control of LexA-dependent operators. This approach suggests that the Abeta molecule is capable of interacting with itself in vivo in the yeast cell nucleus. LexA protein fused to the Drosophila protein bicoid (LexA-bicoid) failed to interact with the B42 fragment fused to Abeta, indicating that the observed Abeta-Abeta interaction was specific. Specificity was further shown by the finding that no significant interaction was observed in yeast expressing LexA-Abeta bait when the B42 transactivation domain was fused to an Abeta fragment with Phe-Phe at residues 19 and 20 replaced by Thr-Thr (AbetaTT), a finding that is consistent with in vitro observations made by others. Moreover, when a peptide fragment bearing this substitution was mixed with native Abeta-(1-40), it inhibited formation of fibrils in vitro as examined by electron microscopy. The findings presented in this paper suggest that the two-hybrid system can be used to study the interaction of Abeta monomers and to define the peptide sequences that may be important in nucleation-dependent aggregation.
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PMID:Two-hybrid system as a model to study the interaction of beta-amyloid peptide monomers. 870 Aug 86

Raf-1 is a serine/threonine specific kinase that integrates signaling by a large number of mitogens to elicit a transcriptional response in the nucleus. Activated Raf-1 phosphorylates and activates MAPK/ERK kinase Mek), thus initiating the Mek--> MAP kinase cascade, which ultimately results in the phosphorylation and activation of transcription factors by MAP kinase. Here we have characterized the mechanism by which monoclonal antibody URP26K, which binds to an epitope in the Raf-1 kinase domain, inhibits intracellular signal transduction. This antibody preferentially immunoprecipitated the underphosphorylated, non-activated form of Raf-1 from quiescent cells. Baculovirus-expressed Raf-1 immunoprecipitated with URP26K was largely refractory to phosphorylation and activation mediated by protein kinase C (PKC)alpha or the tyrosine kinase Lck. In addition, URP26K reduced the binding of Raf-1 to its substrate Mek in vitro, but did not disturb the association of Raf-1 with Ras. Microinjection of URP26K into Rat-1 cells blocked DNA synthesis initiated by serum, insulin and various purified growth factors, but it did not block DNA synthesis initiated by v-ras. Microinjected URP26K also impaired the expression of stably transfected beta-galactosidase reporter genes regulated by minimal promoter elements. These results demonstrate, (i) that the URP26K monoclonal antibody inhibits Raf-1 by preventing activating Raf-1 phosphorylation and/or association with its substrate Mek, (ii) that inhibition of Raf-1 by URP26K does not interfere with Ras-induced DNA synthesis. In contrast to dominant negative Raf-1 mutants, which also block Ras signaling by binding to the Ras effector domain, antibody mediated Raf-1 inhibition thus reveals a branchpoint of mitogenic signaling at the level of Ras.
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PMID:Inhibition of Raf-1 signaling by a monoclonal antibody, which interferes with Raf-1 activation and with Mek substrate binding. 880 5

We have developed a genetic screen for temperature-sensitive mutations in the very late transcription apparatus of the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus. This method starts with the BacPAKS virus, which has the Escherichia coli lacZ gene under the control of the very late polyhedrin promoter. The desired mutants are temperature-sensitive for beta-galactosidase production and can be complemented by wild-type virus, which lacks the lacZ gene. Two mutants created by nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis and identified by this screen, and one mutant identified by another screen, have been mapped by marker rescue to the viral protein kinase 1 gene (pk-1). The protein kinase genes of these three mutant viruses have been sequenced, revealing the same point mutation in two of them and a different point mutation in the other. In each case, a single amino acid is changed: In two mutants, XF4 and XF5, Asp 92 is changed to Asn; in the other mutant, KT800, Thr 204 is changed to lle. Northern blotting of RNA made in cells infected by these three mutant viruses has shown that the accumulation of very late transcripts (lacZ and p10) is temperature-sensitive, but that accumulation of at least one late transcript (vp39) is not temperature-sensitive. Nuclear run-on transcription assays with two of the mutants indicate that very late transcription is somewhat temperature-sensitive, although this defect is not as pronounced as the temperature-sensitivity detected by Northern blotting. Transcription of at least one late gene (vp39) is not temperature-sensitive in cells infected by these two mutants. Thus, it appears that the viral protein kinase-1 is involved in very late gene expression. Some of this effect is at the transcription level, but some may also be exerted at the posttranscription level.
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PMID:Temperature-sensitive mutations in the protein kinase-1 (pk-1) gene of the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus that block very late gene expression. 886 93

The primary and atomic structures of the porin protein from Rhodobacter (Rb.) capsulatus strain 37b4 were determined several years ago by peptide sequencing and X-ray crystallography. In this work the gene encoding this porin (named porCa) was cloned and sequenced. The porin open reading frame encodes 320 amino acids-a mature protein of 300 residues (molecular mass 31 552 kDa) and a presequence of 20 amino acids. Our deduced amino-acid sequence was directly confirmed by purifying the porin protein from the same bacterial strain and sequencing the amino terminus as well as several peptides derived from trypsin digestion. However, comparison of this deduced amino-acid sequence with the published primary structure of this porin, nominally from the same strain (but cultivated for ca. 30 years in a different laboratory) reveals seven differences in the amino-acid sequence at the following positions in the mature protein (published/present): 59 (Gly/Ala), 123 (Tyr/Asn), 135 Ser/Thr), 189 (Ile/Val), 196 (Asn/His), 231 (Ala/Thr) and 238 (Ser/deleted). Surprisingly, analysis of the positioning of these mutations revealed that they are located exclusively on transmembrane strands, with two of them deeply buried within the structure. These mutations may in fact have only marginal influence on porin structure and function. Northern blot analysis revealed that porCa encodes an RNA transcript of 1070 nucleotides. No differential response in the abundance or size of this mRNA was seen upon growth under phototrophic/anaerobic vs. chemotrophic/aerobic conditions, under high or low osmotic pressure. Primer extension experiments revealed a transcription start site 73 bases upstream from the ATG translation start, juxtaposed to the identified putative promoter region. Fusion of lacZ with this putative promoter region (using a 288-bp upstream region) revealed similar promoter activity in beta-galactosidase assays under both physiological conditions tested, again suggesting that this gene is constitutively expressed. The molecular genetic characterization described in this work opens the way for structure-function studies by site-directed mutagenesis.
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PMID:Molecular characterization and organization of porin from Rhodobacter capsulatus strain 37B4. 899 88

Metabolic labelling of Plasmodium falciparum parasites with [3H]GlcN, [3H]Man, [3H]Gal and [3H]ethanolamine, and subsequent purification by SDS-PAGE of the labelled material provided effective labelling of the MSP-1, 195 kDa, and MSP-2, 42-53 kDa, glycoproteins. Reductive beta-elimination of the MSP-2 released from the gel consisted of glycopeptides containing labelled sugars. Processing of the eliminated components and identification of the sugar residues demonstrated the presence of N-acetylglucosaminitol and N-acetylgalactosaminitol amongst other labelled sugars. Reductive beta-elimination with sodium hydroxide-sodium borotritide-borohydride showed the presence of glucosaminitol and alanine in the hydrolysis products. The MSP-2 was retained on solid phase wheat-germ agglutinin and was released from the lectin by treatment with GlcNAc. Upon treatment with O-glycanase the MSP-2 glycoprotein released labelled amino sugar, and derived oligosaccharides on treatment with exoglycosidases released labelled components corresponding to the metabolically incorporated sugars. Labelled Gal was incorporated into the MSP-2 glycoprotein using [3H]UDP-Gal and galactosyltransferase. The galactosylated glycoprotein released labelled Gal upon treatment with beta-galactosidase. The results of the present study suggest that the carbohydrate chains of the MSP-2 glycoprotein are attached to the protein backbone via GlcNAc- and GalNAc-serine/threonine in O-glycosyl linkage and the glycoprotein has terminal GlcNAc and Gal residues. The carbohydrate moieties of MSP-2, glycoprotein consist mainly of short chains linked to the protein core.
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PMID:Carbohydrate moiety of Plasmodium falciparum glycoproteins: the nature of the carbohydrate-peptide linkage in the MSP-2 glycoprotein. 935 84

A 3135 bp DNA segment downstream of the spl gene on the Bacillus subtilis chromosome was cloned and its nucleotide sequence determined. An open reading frame capable of encoding a putative protein of 654 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 72.1 kDa was identified. The deduced amino acid sequence was similar to the McpA and McpB proteins of B. subtilis. McpA and McpB encode different methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). A mutant strain containing an antibiotic resistance DNA cassette inserted into the region containing the MCP-like reading frame suffered a complete loss of taxis to the amino acids cysteine, proline, threonine, glycine, serine, lysine, valine and arginine. The open reading frame was designated mcpC. The wild-type and an mcpC mutant strain were analysed for their content of methylated proteins and it was found that mcpC encodes a methylated membrane protein that has previously been designated H3. These results show that mcpC encodes a third MCP in B. subtilis. The transcription start site upstream of the mcpC gene was determined by primer extension analysis and it was found to be preceded by a potential promoter sequence that is recognized by the sigma D form of RNA polymerase. The level of beta-galactosidase expressed from a transcriptional mcpC-lacZ fusion was increased threefold when cells entered the stationary phase. No beta-galactosidase could be detected in a sigD genetic background.
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PMID:Functional and genetic characterization of mcpC, which encodes a third methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein in Bacillus subtilis. 935 24

The VP60 capsid protein of rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus (60 kDa) has been fused to the C-terminus of beta-galactosidase and produced in E. coli from two related expression vectors. One of these vectors, carries a 429 bp DNA segment encoding the N-terminus peptide of VP60, and directs the synthesis of a larger fusion that contains the entire viral protein. Both fusion proteins are efficiently cleaved at a presumed trypsin-like target site within the carboxy moiety of beta-galactosidase (Arg 611-Thr 612), which is activated by the presence of the viral partner. In the larger fusion, VP60 is released by a cleavage within the linker region that affects about 10% of the chimeric proteins. In this situation, the resulting beta-galactosidase-like fragment recovers its natural proteolytic stability. These results prove that cryptic cleavage sites in beta-galactosidase can be efficiently activated in a fusion protein and suggest that this activation is based on reversible steric constraints generated by the fusion partner.
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PMID:Reversible activation of a cryptic cleavage site within E. coli beta-galactosidase in beta-galactosidase fusion proteins. 943 12

In the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa during conditions of sulfur limitation, CYS3, a major positive-acting regulatory protein, turns on the expression of an entire set of genes which encode permeases and enzymes involved in the acquisition of sulfur from environmental sources. CYS3 functions as a homodimeric protein and possesses a b-Zip domain that confers sequence-specific DNA binding. Expression of various hybrid GAL4-CYS3 fusion proteins in yeast was used to detect regions involved in gene activation. An amino-terminal serine/threonine-rich domain of CYS3 alone strongly activated expression of beta-galactosidase, the yeast reporter. Moreover, mutant CYS3 proteins with amino-acid substitutions in this region that showed increased expression in Neurospora also displayed an enhanced activation potential in yeast. The cys-3 gene of the exotic N. crassa Mauriceville strain and of N. intermedia were cloned and demonstrated to be functional for gene activation and for sulfur-mediated regulation by complementation of a loss-of-function cys-3 mutation. The amino-terminal serine/threonine-rich region is highly conserved in these two CYS3 proteins, in agreement with the possibility that it serves as the activation domain. Surprisingly, an extended promoter region of the cys-3 gene in the Mauriceville strain and in N. intermedia was very well conserved with that of the standard N. crassa gene, including the presence of three CYS3-binding sites possibly involved in autogenous control. Results are presented which indicate that synthesis of the CYS3 regulatory protein is highly regulated and can be detected in the nucleus of cells subjected to sulfur de-repression, but is not found in the nucleus or the cytoplasm of S-repressed cells. The amino-acid substitutions of the CYS3 protein present in a temperature-sensitive cys-3 mutant and in a second-site revertant of a cys-3 null mutation are presented and are shown to affect their DNA-binding activities.
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PMID:Functional analysis of different regions of the positive-acting CYS3 regulatory protein of Neurospora crassa. 964 2

A recessive mutation, aarG1, has been identified that resulted in an 18-fold increase in the expression of beta-galactosidase from an aac(2')-lacZ fusion. Transcriptional fusions and Northern blot analysis demonstrated that the aarG1 allele also resulted in a large increase in the expression of aarP, a gene encoding a transcriptional activator of aac(2')-Ia. The effects of aarG1 on aac(2')-Ia expression were mediated by aarP-dependent and -independent mechanisms. The aarG1 allele also resulted in a multiple antibiotic resistance (Mar) phenotype, which included increased chloramphenicol, tetracycline and fluoroquinolone resistance. This Mar phenotype also resulted from aarP-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Sequence analysis of the aarG locus revealed the presence of two open reading frames, designated aarR and aarG, organized in tandem. The putative AarR protein displayed 75% amino acid identity to the response regulator PhoP, and the AarG protein displayed 57% amino acid identity to the sensor kinase PhoQ. The aarG1 mutation, a C to T substitution, resulted in a threonine to isoleucine substitution at position 279 (T279I) in the putative sensor kinase. The AarG product was functionally similar to PhoQ, as it was able to restore wild-type levels of maganin resistance to a Salmonella typhimurium phoQ mutant. However, expression of the aarP and aac(2')-Ia genes was not significantly affected by the levels of Mg2+ or Ca2+, suggesting that aarG senses a signal other than divalent cations.
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PMID:A regulatory cascade involving AarG, a putative sensor kinase, controls the expression of the 2'-N-acetyltransferase and an intrinsic multiple antibiotic resistance (Mar) response in Providencia stuartii. 968 Feb 22

The activity of the medaka beta-actin promoter as a ubiquitous expression vector in transgenic medaka was examined using complementary DNA of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Plasmid pOBA-GFP contained both the medaka beta-actin promoter and cDNA of the wild-type GFP, while pOBA-hGFP contained the medaka beta-actin promoter and cDNA of the mutant GFP in which serine was substituted for threonine at position 65 and codon usage was humanized to promote translation in vertebrate cells. The ApaI-SmaI fragment of both plasmids was microinjected into the nuclei of oocytes or the cytoplasm of embryos at the one-cell stage. The gene expression was detected, using a fluorescent stereomicroscope, from early stages of development to 1 week after hatching. The expression of the wild-type GFP was detected in early embryos, in the yolk sac and in small portions of the muscle and epidermis. This expression pattern was similar to that of the Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase reporter gene (lacZ), driven by the medaka beta-actin promoter, which was examined in our previous studies. The mutant GFP was expressed in early embryos and in many tissues such as the epidermis, blood vessels, muscle, notochord, fin ray, gut, eyes, and yolk sac, and the fluorescence was much stronger than that of the wild-type GFP. Thus, the usefulness of the medaka beta-actin promoter as a ubiquitous expression vector was confirmed using the mutant GFP as a reporter gene.
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PMID:Usefulness of the medaka beta-actin promoter investigated using a mutant GFP reporter gene in transgenic medaka (Oryzias latipes). 970 11


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