Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.31 (beta-glucuronidase)
7,680 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Promoter and terminator sequences from a range of species were tested for activity in the oomycetes, a group of lower fungi that bear an uncertain taxonomic affinity to other organisms and in which little is known of the sequences required for transcription. Transient assays, using the reporter gene beta-glucuronidase (GUS), were used to examine the function of these promoters and terminators in the plant pathogens Phytophthora infestans and P. megasperma f. sp. glycinea, and in the saprophytic water mold, Achlya ambisexualis. Oomycete promoters, isolated from the ham34 and hsp70 genes of Bremia lactucae and the actin gene of P. megasperma f. sp. glycinea, resulted in high levels of GUS accumulation in each of the three oomycetes. In contrast, little or no activity was detected when promoters from higher fungi (four ascomycetes and one basidiomycete), plants, and animals were tested. The terminator from the ham34 gene resulted in much higher levels of GUS accumulation than did others, although an oomycete terminator was not absolutely required for expression. Transcript mapping of RNA from stable transformants confirmed accurate initiation from the B. lactucae hsp70 promoter and termination within 3' ham34 sequences in P. infestans. Our results indicate that the transcriptional machinery of the oomycetes differs significantly from that of the higher fungi, but that enough conservation exists within the class to allow vectors developed from one oomycete species to be used for others.
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PMID:Regulatory sequences for expressing genes in oomycete fungi. 149 76

A rapid and efficient electroporation procedure has been developed for transformation of germinating conidia of filamentous fungi. Pretreatment of conidial preparations with a cell wall weakening agent, such as beta-glucuronidase, was found to be essential for successful transformation. Using the qa-2+ gene of Neurospora crassa, encoding the catabolic dehydroquinase, as a selectable marker with a double-mutant host strain, auxotrophic for aromatic amino acids, integration of the plasmid was observed to be predominantly at ectopic chromosomal sites. Cotransformation with the qa-2+ gene and a plasmid containing a heat shock gene sequence (hsp70 of N. crassa) suggested integration site preference. High efficiencies of transformation to hygromycin resistance were achieved employing the bacterial hygromycin B phosphotransferase gene with N. crassa, the patulin-producer Penicillium urticae, and the causal agent of blackleg disease of crucifers, Leptosphaeria maculans. The economically important species Aspergillus oryzae was similarly transformed to benomyl resistance with the benomyl-resistant beta-tubulin gene of N. crassa as a dominant selectable marker.
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PMID:An electroporation-based system for high-efficiency transformation of germinated conidia of filamentous fungi. 183 30

Procedures were identified for manipulating the expression of genes in the oomycete fungus, Phytophthora infestans. The activities of five putative promoter sequences, derived from the 5' regions of oomycete genes, were measured in transient assays performed in protoplasts and in stable transformants. The sequences tested were from the ham34 and hsp70 genes of Bremia lactucae, the actin-encoding genes of P. infestans and P. megasperma, and a polyubiquitin-encoding gene of P. infestans. Experiments using the GUS reporter gene (encoding beta-glucuronidase) demonstrated that each 5' fragment had promoter activity, but that their activities varied over a greater than tenfold range. Major variation was revealed in the level of transgene expression in individual transformants containing the same promoter::GUS or promoter::lacZ fusion. The level of expression was not simply related to the number of genes present, suggesting that position effects were also influencing expression. Fusions between the ham34 promoter, and full-length and partial GUS genes in the antisense orientation blocked the expression of GUS in protoplasts and in stable transformants.
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PMID:Expression and antisense inhibition of transgenes in Phytophthora infestans is modulated by choice of promoter and position effects. 822 95

The 5'-untranslated leader of maize (Zea mays) heat-shock protein (hsp) 70 mRNA is required for translational competence during heat shock in protoplasts. When the beta-glucuronidase gene was used as a reporter mRNA, expression at elevated temperatures increased more than 10-fold when the hsp70 leader constituted the 5'-untranslated region. The hsp70 leader did not affect the physical half-life of the mRNA and, therefore, does not function at the level of transcript stability. The maize hsp70 leader was required to escape thermal repression in both maize and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) but was less effective in carrot. In addition, mRNAs containing the tobacco mosaic virus untranslated leader (omega) were also efficiently translated during heat shock, data suggesting that the presence of the omega sequence enables the transcript to escape the translational repression that occurs during thermal stress.
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PMID:Role of the Leader Sequence during Thermal Repression of Translation in Maize, Tobacco, and Carrot Protoplasts. 1665 4