Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Development of preneoplastic lesions in the rat liver under the influence of various modifiers was investigated with particular attention to changes in simultaneous expression of altered enzyme phenotype within the lesions (conformity) and proliferation potential. Degree of conformity of marker enzymes such as glutathione S-transferase placental form (GST-P), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), glucose-6-phosphatase, adenosine triphosphatase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase was compared with levels of 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine labeling. After initiation with diethylnitrosamine, rats were administered the hepatopromoter sodium phenobarbital (PB, 0.05%), the antioxidant ethoxyquin (EQ, 0.5%), or a peroxisome proliferator, clofibrate (CF, 1.0%) or di(2-ethylhexyl)-phthalate (0.3%) and killed at week 16 or 32. The PB promoting regimen was clearly associated with increase in the numbers of high conformity class lesions simultaneously expressing three to five enzymes, and elevated proliferation potential. The inhibitor, EQ, in contrast, brought about a time-dependent decrease in conformity so that only 1 or 2 alterations were most commonly observed at week 32. Lesion populations in the peroxisome proliferator- and especially CF-treated cases were characterized by obvious dissociation between degree of conformity and proliferative status. Such treatment-dependent differences were not always correlated with the size of the lesion. The results thus suggested that the conformity and proliferation potential of preneoplastic lesions are dependent on modification treatment. Overall, GST-P was found to be the most reliable marker, although G6PD was less influenced in the peroxisome proliferator cases.
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PMID:Effects of modifying agents on conformity of enzyme phenotype and proliferative potential in focal preneoplastic and neoplastic liver cell lesions in rats. 133 90

The effects of varying the interval of time between initiation with diethylnitrosamine (DEN) and promotion by phenobarbital (PB) on the development of altered hepatic foci (AHF) and hepatomas in female Fischer 344 rats was investigated. The intervals between DEN initiation after a 70% partial hepatectomy and a subsequent 6 month period of promotion by feeding of PB were 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, 2 months, 6 months and 11 months. The number and volume percentage occupied by AHF were determined by quantitative stereologic methods on serial frozen sections stained for the markers gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT), canalicular adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) and the placental form of glutathione S-transferase (GST-pi). The number of AHF was greatest when the initiation-promotion interval was only 1 day, and there was a tendency for the number of AHF to decrease as the interval between initiation with DEN and the start of PB promotion was extended. An 11 month delay between initiation and promotion resulted in only 20% fewer AHF than when promotion was begun 1 day after initiation. On the other hand, the volume percentage fraction of AHF did not change when the initiation-promotion interval was increased from 1 day to 2 months. An interval of 6 months roughly doubled the volume percentage fraction, but an interval of 11 months led to a 7- to 8-fold increase in the volume percentage of AHF over that from a 1 day interval. The phenotypic distribution of AHF was significantly lower in relation to certain markers, especially GGT and GST-pi, in those animals only initiated with DEN compared with those initiated with DEN and promoted with PB. When no exogenous promotion was given, there was still a nearly linear increase in both the number and volume percentage occupied by AHF in the liver of rats initiated with DEN. On the other hand, rats subjected to a 1 week interval between DEN initiation and PB promotion exhibited the greatest number of hepatocellular carcinomas 14 months after initiation, compared with other groups. These studies demonstrated a gradually decreasing effectiveness of PB as a promoting agent to stimulate the growth of all AHF initiated by DEN as the interval between initiation and promotion was extended.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Quantitative stereologic study of the effects of varying the time between initiation and promotion on four histochemical markers in rat liver during hepatocarcinogenesis. 196 85

The effect of a single administration of lead nitrate on the activity of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamma-GT), adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), the placental form of glutathione S-transferase (GST-P) and adenylate cyclase (AC), four enzymes widely used as phenotypic markers for preneoplasia, was investigated in the liver of male Wistar rats. The results of the histochemical enzymatic staining indicated that an acute treatment with lead nitrate induces the activity of gamma-GT, mainly in the hepatocytes located around zone I of the liver acinus, with a maximum seen between 72-96 hours. On the other hand, the activity of ATPase was found to be severely inhibited at 2-3 days after treatment, as shown by a strong decrease in the staining of the bile canaliculi of zones II and III. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that lead nitrate administration also resulted in the appearance in most of the hepatocytes of GST-P, an enzyme whose activity is almost undetectable in normal rat liver, but is elevated in preneoplastic liver lesions. Finally, lead nitrate treatment resulted in an inhibition of AC activity which was maximal after 24 hours.
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PMID:Modulation of the activity of hepatic gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, adenosine triphosphatase, placental glutathione S-transferase and adenylate cyclase by acute administration of lead nitrate. 290 38

Among the proto-oncogenes examined by northern blot analysis, c-myc, c-Ha-ras, c-fos, and c-raf-1 have been reported to be activated in rat liver cell carcinomas. However, there are relatively few reports on protooncogene expression in altered hepatic foci (AHF) early during hepatocarcinogenesis in the rat. In this study, diethylnitrosamine (DEN) at doses ranging from 10 to 200 mg/kg was used to initiate and phenobarbital (0.05%) to promote AHF in rats. AHF were detected by the presence of the marker enzymes glutathione s-transferase, placental form (GST-P); gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT); glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase); and canalicular adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase). Proto-oncogene expression in individual AHF was investigated by in situ hybridization (ISH). ISH for the mRNAs of c-Ha-ras, c-fos, and c-raf-1 revealed little or no expression in AHF. However, the levels of c-myc mRNA were increased in about 10% of the AHF initiated by the highest dose of DEN (200 mg/kg). Thus, altered expression of proto-oncogenes was not seen in AHF initiated by nonnecrogenic doses of DEN and promoted by phenobarbital. However, at the necrogenic dose of 200 mg/kg DEN, c-myc expression was found mostly in AHF in which abnormal expression of GST-P, GGT, G6Pase, and ATPase was also present, indicating that c-myc expression is correlated with phenotypically greater complexity of the AHF, a characteristic of malignant hepatic neoplasms in the rat.
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PMID:Expression of c-myc in altered hepatic foci induced in rats by various single doses of diethylnitrosamine and promotion by 0.05% phenobarbital. 757 7

The cells derived from the human embryo liver tissue were transfected with a plasmid pSV3neo containing both the large and small T-antigen gene of the early region of simian virus 40 (SV40), and two cell strains, OUMS-21 and -22, were obtained. OUMS-22 cells, to date, have reached over 100 population doublings through a culture crisis and are considered to have become an immortal cell line. However, OUMS-21 cells failed to become an immortal cell line. Both OUMS-21 and -22 cells were SV40 T-antigen-positive, epithelial-like, and immunoreactive against an anti-keratin 18 monoclonal antibody but against neither an anti-vimentin nor an anti-von Willebrandt factor VIII monoclonal antibody. The staining pattern of cytokeratin in these cells was similar to that in the differentiated human hepatoblastoma and hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines but not to that in the human cholangiocellular carcinoma cell lines. OUMS-21 and -22 cells expressed neither alpha-fetoprotein nor albumin mRNAs. These cells showed no tyrosine aminotransferase activity. However, both OUMS-21 and -22 cells were sensitive to cytotoxicity of aflatoxin B1, 3-amino-1,4-dimethyl-5H-pyrido[4,3-b]indole, and benzo[a]pyrene, whereas human embryo lung fibroblasts were insensitive to the cytotoxicity of these carcinogens. These findings suggest that OUMS-21 and -22 cells may arise from undifferentiated liver stem cells or from hepatocytes that lost their ability to express the liver-specific functions prior to immortalization. Both OUMS-21 and -22 cells expressed glutathione S-transferase pi (GST-pi) mRNA. The expression of GST-pi mRNA highly increased in OUMS-22 cells with their immortalization. Karyotypic analysis showed that numerical and structural aberrations of the chromosomes were profound, but neither specific events nor marker chromosomes were found in OUMS-21 and -22 cells. Both OUMS-21 and -22 cells could grow in soft agar, but they were not tumorigenic when transplanted into nude mice.
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PMID:Immortalization of epithelial-like cells from human liver tissue with SV40 T-antigen gene. 768 77

Cytoplasmic dynein and ncd, a kinesin-related protein from Drosophila, are motor proteins that move toward the minus ends of microtubules, while kinesin moves to the microtubule plus end. In previous work, we examined the nucleotide dependence of motility and enzymatic activity by kinesin [Shimizu, T., Furusawa, K., Ohashi, S., Toyoshima, Y. Y., Okuno, M., Malik, F., & Vale, R. D., (1991) J. Cell Biol. 112, 1189-1197]. In this study, we examined these activities of the cytoplasmic dynein from bovine brain and ncd in order to explore what enzymatic features might be shared by these two minus-end-directed motors. Both ncd and cytoplasmic dynein demonstrated an activation of ATPase activity upon the addition of microtubules (30-fold and 6-fold, respectively). A significant difference between ncd and cytoplasmic dynein was their relative sensitivity to vanadate and to aluminum fluoride. In contrast to cytoplasmic dynein, ncd polypeptide was not cleaved by UV-vanadate treatment, and its ATPase and motility were unaffected by vanadate (up to 0.1 mM). When the nucleotide requirement for movement as examined using a battery of 20 nucleotides and nucleotide analogues, cytoplasmic dynein was found to exhibit a specificity very similar to that of axonemal dyneins from Tetrahymena. Surprisingly, however, the nucleotide specificities of in vitro motility produced by ncd or its construct, GST/MC1 (a fusion protein of glutathione S-transferase and 210-700 of the predicted ncd amino acid sequence), were quite distinct from that of kinesin. Thus, the nucleotide specificity profiles of members of the kinesin motor superfamily do not appear to be identical.
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PMID:Comparison of the motile and enzymatic properties of two microtubule minus-end-directed motors, ncd and cytoplasmic dynein. 784 16

The haemolysin exporter HlyB and its homologues are central to the unconventional signal-peptide-independent secretion of toxins, proteases and nodulation proteins by bacteria. HlyB is a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) or traffic ATPase superfamily, and resembles closely in structure and function mammalian exporters such as the multidrug-resistance P-glycoprotein, combining both integral membrane and cytosolic domains. Overproduction of the HlyB cytoplasmic domain as a C-terminal peptide fused to glutathione S-transferase allowed the direct affinity purification and concentration of 30-50 mg ml-1 of soluble protein (GST-Bctp) in an apparently dimeric form possessing both transferase and ATPase activity. GST-Bctp bound to ADP-agarose and was eluted specifically by ATP and ADP, affinity behaviour which was confirmed in both the full-length HlyB and the unfused HlyB cytoplasmic domain synthesized in vitro. The stoichiometry of binding to MgATP and MgADP was close to equimolar and both ligands induced substantial conformational change in the protein. Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase activity of GST-Bctp (Vmax 1 mumol min-1 mg-1, Km 0.2 mM) was comparable with the activity of the bacterial importer MalK and human P-glycoprotein reconstituted into proteoliposomes, and over an order of magnitude higher than in vitro measurements of disaggregated MalK purified from inclusion bodies. Activity was unaffected by inhibitors of F- and V-type ATPases, non-hydrolysable ATP analogues, or translocation substrate, but was severely inhibited by inhibitors of E1E2 (P-type) ATPases, and the acidic phospholipid phosphatidyl glycerol.
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PMID:ATPase activity and ATP/ADP-induced conformational change in the soluble domain of the bacterial protein translocator HlyB. 836 61

The two major hydrophilic domains from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase fused to glutathione S-transferase have been expressed in Escherichia coli. The GST-L peptide contained the hydrophilic region from Ala340 to Ser660. The GST-SL peptide contained in addition the hydrophilic region Glu162 to Val276. After solubilization of the inclusion bodies with urea, renaturation, and affinity chromatography, 3 mg of highly purified peptides were recovered per liter of E. coli culture. The purified peptides interacted with 2'(3')-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-adenosine-5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP), the fluorescence of which was enhanced identically upon binding of either GST-L or GST-SL. ATP competitively displaced the TNP-ATP binding. The observed dissociation constants for TNP-ATP (6.5 microM) and ATP (3 mM) are close to those found for the complete native H(+)-ATPase protein. The fluorescence of TNP-ATP was sensitive to Mg2+ indicating the existence of a Mg(2+)-binding site on the peptide. Apparent affinity for this Mg2+ site was found to vary from 50 microM at pH 7.5 to 400 microM at pH 5.5.
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PMID:Overexpression in Escherichia coli and purification of an ATP-binding peptide from the yeast plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. 840 44

Non-claret disjunctional (Ncd) is a kinesin-related microtubule motor protein in Drosophila that functions in meiotic spindle assembly in oocytes and spindle pole maintenance in early embryos. The partial loss-of-function mutant ncdD retains mitotic, but not meiotic, function. The predicted NcdD mutant protein contains a V556-->F mutation in the putative microtubule binding region of the Ncd motor domain. Here we report an analysis of the properties of recombinant Ncd and NcdD proteins. A GST-NcdD fusion protein translocated microtubules approximately 10-fold more slowly than the corresponding wild-type protein in gliding assays. The maximum microtubule-stimulated ATPase activity of an NcdD motor domain protein was reduced approximately 3-fold and an approximately 3-fold greater concentration of microtubules was required for half-maximal stimulation of ATPase activity, compared with the corresponding wild-type protein. The Km for ATP and basal rate of ATP turnover were, in contrast, similar for the NcdD mutant and wild-type Ncd motor domain proteins. Pelleting assays demonstrated that the binding of the mutant NcdD motor protein to microtubules was reduced in the absence of nucleotide, relative to wild-type. The reduced velocity of NcdD translocation on microtubules is therefore correlated with reductions in microtubule-stimulated ATPase activity and affinity of the mutant motor for microtubules. The characteristics of the NcdD motor explain its meiotic loss of function, and are consistent with partial motor activity of Ncd being sufficient for its mitotic, but not its meiotic, role.
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PMID:A point mutation in the microtubule binding region of the Ncd motor protein reduces motor velocity. 867 Aug 31

Homologues of the chaperonins Cpn60 and Cpn10 have been purified from the Gram-positive cellulolytic thermophile Clostridium thermocellum. The Cpn60 protein was purified by ATP-affinity chromatography and the Cpn10 protein was purified by gel-filtration, ion-exchange and hydrophobic interaction chromatographies. The identities of the proteins were confirmed by N-terminal sequence analysis and antigenic cross-reactivity. The Cpn60 homologue is a weak, thermostable ATPase (t1/2 at 70 decrees C more than 90 min) with optimum activity (Kcat 0.07 S-1) between 60 degrees C and 70 degrees C. The ATPase activity of the authentic Cpn60 was inhibited by Escherichia coli GroES. The catalytic properties of a recombinant C. thermocellum Cpn60 purified from a GST-Cpn60 fusion protein expressed in E. coli [Ciruela (1995) Ph.D. Thesis, University of Kent] were identical with those of the authentic C. thermocellum Cpn60. Gel-filtration studies show that at room temperature the Cpn60 migrates mainly as a heptamer. Electron microscopy confirms the presence of complexes showing 7-fold rotational symmetry and also reveals a small number of particles that seem to be tetradecamers with a similar structure to E. coli GroEL complexes.
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PMID:Thermostable chaperonin from Clostridium thermocellum. 868 8


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