Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.64 (
proteinase K
)
4,071
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recovery, preservation and analysis of body fluid stains is an important aspect of forensic science. PCR-based typing of DNA extracted from recovered stains is often a crucial method to identify a perpetrator or exclude an innocent suspect. This paper reports an improved method of extracting genomic DNA from saliva stains deposited on human skin in simulated bite mark situations. Results of organic (phenol-chloroform) extraction and Chelex extraction were compared to a modified Chelex method developed by the authors. Modifications include pre-extraction preparation with
proteinase K
and incubations at 56 degrees C and 100 degrees C plus microconcentration of the solution. Quantification results using the classical Chelex extraction method showed that 31.9 +/- 4.22% of the deposited DNA was recovered, but using the modified Chelex extraction method DNA recovery was increased to 47.7 +/- 6.90%. The quantity and quality of extracted DNA was shown to be adequate for PCR-based typing at two
STR
loci.
...
PMID:Increasing DNA extraction yield from saliva stains with a modified Chelex method. 903 51
In the present study the analytical potential of HPLC-MS/MS was utilized for the structural characterization of a post-translational modification of
statherin
. Human salivary
statherin
(M(av)5380.0 +/- 0.3 Da) is transformed by the action of transglutaminase 2 into a cyclic derivative with an average molecular mass of 5363.0 +/- 0.3 Da. The intra-molecular bridge is generated by the loss of an ammonia molecule between the unique Ione-pair donating nucleophile Lys-6 and one acceptor among the seven glutamine residues of
statherin
. Digestion of the cyclic derivative with chymotrypsin,
proteinase K
, and carboxypeptidase Y, monitored by HPLC-electrospray ionization-ion trap-mass spectrometric analysis, demonstrated that cyclization involved almost specifically Gln-37 (> 95%), with the percentage of Gln-39 implicated in the cross-linkiing being less than 5%. The main derivative was named cyclostatherin Q37. Guineapig transglutaminase 2 showed high affinity for
statherin
in vitro (Km = 0.65 +/- 0.06 microM). Cyclo-
statherin
was detected in vivo by HPLC-electrospray ionization ion trap-mass spectrometry analysis of whole human saliva and it accounted for about 1% of total
statherin
. Detection of cyclo-
statherin
in whole saliva is suggestive of a putative role of this molecule in the formation of the "oral protein pellicle".
...
PMID:HPLC-MS characterization of cyclo-statherin Q-37, a specific cyclization product of human salivary statherin generated by transglutaminase 2. 1731
To investigate the feasibility of DNA analysis from free margin of the nail, genomic DNA was extracted from the free margin of nail clipping of 10 volunteers using the
proteinase K
/SDS -based organic method, the Chelex-100 method, or a combined method. Target DNA was simultaneously amplified using a fluorescent multiplex AmpFlSTR Identifier kit. The PCR products were analyzed on the ABI PRISM 3130 Genetic Analyzer. The results showed that, compared with profiles achieved by genotyping of blood samples from each volunteer as reference, 100% concordance was achieved using the combined method. The
STR
genotype profiles obtained through the organic method were acceptable, despite preferential amplification at some loci. In contrast, no readable profiles could be determined when DNA was extracted by the Chelex-100 method, and there were a large number of alleles missing. Our data suggest that free margin of nail can be used for nuclear DNA analysis, but the type of DNA isolation method used is critical. The traditional organic extraction method works reasonably well for free margin nail DNA isolation, and combination of organic extraction and the Chelex-100 method works best.
...
PMID:[Extraction and analysis of nuclear DNA from free margin of nail material]. 1798 48