Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.23 (MMP)
4,246 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report the identification and cloning of a nuclear matrix protein termed matrin cyclophilin or matrin CYP. The derived sequence of matrin cyp encodes a protein of 752 amino acids with a predicted mass of 88 kDa. A 172-residue stretch at the amino terminus shows high identity with the ubiquitous family of cyclophilins. Clustered throughout the carboxyl half of the protein are a series of serine-arginine (SR) repeats that are a characteristic feature of many RNA splicing factors. Antibodies raised against matrin CYP recognize a 106-kDa antigen that is detected in isolated nuclei and quantitatively subfractionates in the nuclear matrix. Laser scanning confocal microscopy localizes most of the anti-matrin CYP-specific antigen within the nucleus in a pattern of large bright speckles that co-localize with splicing factors and diffuse nucleoplasmic staining. A strikingly similar pattern of staining is observed in cells extracted for in situ nuclear matrices. A fusion protein containing the cyclophilin domain of matrin CYP exhibits cyclosporin A (CsA)-sensitive, peptidylprolyl cis-trans-isomerase activity that is characteristic of native cyclophilins. Although total rat liver nuclei contains predominantly CsA-resistant PPIase activity, the corresponding activity in the nuclear matrix is largely CsA-sensitive.
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PMID:Matrin CYP, an SR-rich cyclophilin that associates with the nuclear matrix and splicing factors. 952 23

Differential mRNA display was used to comprehensively screen the murine thymic transcriptome for genes modulated in vivo by dietary zinc. A moderate feeding protocol rendered young adult, outbred mice zinc-deficient and zinc-supplemented without alterations in feeding behavior or growth. However, these levels of deficiency and supplementation altered specific mRNA abundances in a manner detectable by differential display. In total, 240 primer-pair combinations were used to generate >48,000 interpretable cDNA bands derived from thymic total RNA, of which only 265 or 0.55% were identified as zinc-modulated under these moderate dietary conditions. The most strongly zinc-modulated cDNAs identified by display were reamplified and sequenced. No cDNAs encoding zinc-metalloenzymes or zinc-finger transcription factors were identified as zinc-modulated in this global screening. Those zinc-regulated genes independently confirmed by quantitative PCR included: heat shock proteins 40 and 60; heat shock cognate 70; histocompatibility 2, class II antigen A, alpha; and the T cell cytokine receptor. In addition, a variety of transcription- and translation-related factors (such as ribosomal proteins L3, L5, and L28; nuclear matrix protein 84; matrin cyclophilin; the H3 histone family 3A protein; beta(2) microglobulin; and a cleavage and polyadenylation factor) were identified as zinc-modulated. These profiling data show that differential expression of genes in the thymus in response to the dietary zinc supply precedes many of the phenotypic effects on thymic function associated with severe zinc restriction or supplementation. Several genes involved in T cell development were identified as regulated by zinc and will be targets to evaluate the effects of zinc on immune function.
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PMID:Dietary zinc modulates gene expression in murine thymus: results from a comprehensive differential display screening. 1264 9