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:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The synthesis of 17 alpha-acetoxy-3 beta-[(beta-D-glucopyranosyl)oxy]- 6 alpha-methylpregn-4-en-20-one, the glucoside of medroxyprogesterone acetate (
MPA
-glu), is described.
MPA
-glu and 14-amino-20 beta-hydroxy-3 beta-[(alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl)oxy]-5 beta, 14 beta-pregnane (LND 623), pregnane glycosides that bind to the digitalis receptor, and digoxin, a cardiac glycoside, were infused intravenously into the anesthetized guinea pig. Each of the three steroids significantly enhanced urinary volume and sodium excretion without affecting blood pressure and creatinine clearance. Potassium excretion was markedly enhanced by digoxin but unaffected by
MPA
-glu or LND 623. These observations conform to previous work that demonstrated, in the rat, potassium-sparing diuresis by the glucoside of 14 beta-hydroxyprogesterone, a cardiotonic pregnane. There is a dissociation between potency to inhibit [3H]ouabain binding and the extra
ATPase
actions of the digitaloid pregnanes.
...
PMID:Digitaloid pregnanes promote potassium-sparing diuresis in the guinea pig. 142 16
Ciliary or flagellar movement is the model of microtubule-dependent motility, the best studied at the molecular level. It is based on the relative sliding of outer doublets of microtubules that are linked at their proximal end to the basal structure and interconnected by associated proteins, among which dynein ATPase is at the origin of the movement. It is regulated from inside and outside media by various diffusible factors such as Ca2+, cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), polypeptides and so on (see other conferences presented during this meeting). Other motility processes are based on microtubules: vesicle and organelle transport through the cytoplasm (axonal flow in neurons, pigment granule movements in fish chromatophores, movements of particles along heliozoan axopods, etc.) could be mediated by microtubule motors such as kinesin or
MAP
1C. Kinesin and
MAP
1C, like dynein, are proteins that bind to microtubules and show an
ATPase
activity associated with force production. They differ from each other by their structure, and biochemical and pharmacological properties. The movements of chromosomes during mitosis and meiosis have long been studied, but are still poorly understood at the molecular level; this topic will be discussed in the light of recent data. Other constituents of the cytoskeleton are certainly involved in cellular motility: actin microfilaments and their motor myosin, intermediate filaments, non-actin filaments, all organized around the Microtubule Organizing Center (MTOC). As more information becomes available, it seems increasingly obvious that these various networks are closely interconnected and that each component probably modulates, resists, or favors properties of its partners, contributing to cellular and intracellular motility.
...
PMID:From cilia and flagella to intracellular motility and back again: a review of a few aspects of microtubule-based motility. 246 57
Fast axonal transport is manifested at the sub-cellular level as the anterograde or retrograde movement of membrane-bounded organelles along microtubules. Earlier work implicated the protein kinesin as the motor for anterograde axonal transport. More recent work indicates that a brain microtubule-associated protein,
MAP
1C, is responsible for retrograde transport. Of additional interest,
MAP
1C has been found to be a cytoplasmic form of the ciliary and flagellar
ATPase
dynein, indicating a much more general functional role for this enzyme in cells than had been suspected.
...
PMID:The role of dynein in retrograde axonal transport. 246 13
The microtubule-dynein complex consisting of 22S dynein from Tetrahymena cilia and
MAP
-free microtubules was subjected to treatment with various concentrations of 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)-propyl]carbodiimide (EDC), a zero-length cross-linker, at 28 degrees C for 1 h. Following cross-linking of the microtubule-dynein complex, nearly all of the
ATPase
activity cosedimented with the microtubules in the presence of ATP. Electron microscopic observation by negative staining revealed that, following treatment with 1 mM EDC, the complex did not dissociate in the presence of ATP, although the dynein decoration pattern was disordered. The complex treated with 3 mM EDC exhibited normal microtubule-dynein patterns even after the addition of ATP. The
ATPase
activity of the microtubule-dynein complex was enhanced about 30-fold by the treatment with 1-3 mM EDC. These results indicate that the
ATPase
activation was caused by the close proximity of the dynein ATPase sites to the microtubules and provide further support for the functional interaction of all three dynein heads with the microtubule. The maximal specific activity was 12 mumol min-1 (mg of dynein)-1, corresponding to a turnover rate of 150 s-1, which may be the rate-limiting step at infinite microtubule concentration and may represent the maximum rate of force production in the axoneme.
...
PMID:Activation of the dynein adenosinetriphosphatase by cross-linking to microtubules. 253 Oct 6
Kinesin from porcine brain was prepared by a procedure based on the strong binding of the protein to microtubules in the presence of sodium fluoride and ATP. The protocol reduces the requirement for taxol and AMP-PNP. The kinesin is active in terms of its ability to move microtubules on glass slides and its
ATPase
. The
ATPase
of this kinesin is about 8 nmol/min/mg; it is activated to 19 nmol/min/mg in the presence of microtubules. The relationship between gliding velocity and ATP concentration follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Using the motility assay, the maximal velocity is 0.78 micron/sec, and the Km value is 150 microM for ATP. For GTP the corresponding values are 0.38 micron/sec and 1.7 mM. ADP is a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.29 mM). Crude preparations of kinesin do not support motility on glass slides, whereas gel-filtered kinesin does. A search for potential inhibitory factors showed that one of them is MAP2; however, its inhibitory effect becomes visible only in certain conditions. MAP2 bound to microtubules does not inhibit kinesin-induced motility. However, when MAP2 and kinesin are preadsorbed to the glass surface independently of microtubules, MAP2 prevents the interaction of kinesin with microtubules, as if it formed a "lawn" that acted as a spacer and thus repelled the
MAP
-free microtubules or crosslinked the
MAP
-containing ones. The repelling effect of MAP2 domains (projection or assembly fragments obtained by chymotryptic cleavage) added separately is less pronounced and can be overcome by kinesin. These results reinforce the view of MAP2 as a spacer molecule.
...
PMID:Interaction between kinesin, microtubules, and microtubule-associated protein 2. 253 84
A reconstituted system for examining directed organelle movements along purified microtubules has been developed. Axoplasm from the squid giant axon was separated into soluble supernatant and organelle-enriched fractions. Movement of axoplasmic organelles along
MAP
-free microtubules occurred consistently only after addition of axoplasmic supernatant and ATP. The velocity of such organelle movement (1.6 micron/sec) was the same as in dissociated axoplasm. The axoplasmic supernatant also supported movement of microtubules along a glass surface and movement of carboxylated latex beads along microtubules at 0.5 micron/sec. The direction of microtubule movement on glass was opposite to that of organelle and bead movement on microtubules. The factors supporting movements of microtubules, beads, and organelles were sensitive to heat, trypsin, AMP-PNP and 100 microM vanadate. All of these movements may be driven by a single, soluble
ATPase
that binds reversibly to organelles, beads, or glass and generates a translocating force on a microtubule.
...
PMID:Organelle, bead, and microtubule translocations promoted by soluble factors from the squid giant axon. 257 87
The effect of a single dose of 5 mg/kg body weight of aflatoxin B1 on rat liver mitochondrial enzymes, succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and Mg++
adenosine triphosphatase
(Mg++-
ATPase
) and on certain lipids were studies at various intervals of time from 3 to 24 hours. A significant decrease in the specific activity of SDH was observed after 6, 12, 18 and 24 hr treatment. The Mg++-
ATPase
activity remained unaffected up to 12 hr but appreciably decreased after, 18 and 24 hr of the treatment. The level of phospholipids and cholesterol were not altered after 3, 6 and 12 hr treatment, thereafter (18 and 24 hr) an increase was observed in both the lipids following the aflatoxin treatment.
Medroxyprogesterone acetate
(MPA) did not cause any alteration in the specific activities of these enzymes as well as levels of cholesterol and phospholipids. The treatment with MPA caused significant increase in contents of cytochromes P-450, b5 and activities of Arylhydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), UDP-glucuronyl transferase (UDP-GT) and NADPH-cytochrome C-reductase of hepatic microsomes. It was observed that pretreatment with medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) could significantly minimuze the depression caused in mitochondrial SDH and Mg++-
ATPase
activities by aflatoxin B1.
...
PMID:Modification of aflatoxin B1-induced changes in certain mitochondrial enzymes and lipids by medroxyprogesterone acetate. 294 74
We recently found that the brain cytosolic microtubule-associated protein 1C (
MAP
1C) is a microtubule-activated
ATPase
, capable of translocating microtubules in vitro in the direction corresponding to retrograde transport. (Paschal, B. M., H. S. Shpetner, and R. B. Vallee. 1987b. J. Cell Biol. 105:1273-1282; Paschal, B. M., and R. B. Vallee. 1987. Nature [Lond.]. 330:181-183.). Biochemical analysis of this protein (op. cit.) as well as scanning transmission electron microscopy revealed that
MAP
1C is a brain cytoplasmic form of the ciliary and flagellar
ATPase
dynein (Vallee, R. B., J. S. Wall, B. M. Paschal, and H. S. Shpetner. 1988. Nature [Lond.]. 332:561-563). We have now characterized the
ATPase
activity of the brain enzyme in detail. We found that microtubule activation required polymeric tubulin and saturated with increasing tubulin concentration. The maximum activity at saturating tubulin (Vmax) varied from 186 to 239 nmol/min per mg. At low ionic strength, the Km for microtubules was 0.16 mg/ml tubulin, substantially lower than that previously reported for axonemal dynein. The microtubule-stimulated activity was extremely sensitive to changes in ionic strength and sulfhydryl oxidation state, both of which primarily affected the microtubule concentrations required for half-maximal activation. In a number of respects the brain dynein was enzymatically similar to both axonemal and egg dyneins. Thus, the
ATPase
required divalent cations, calcium stimulating activity less effectively than magnesium. The MgATPase was inhibited by metavandate (Ki = 5-10 microM for the microtubule-stimulated activity), 1 mM NEM, and 1 mM EHNA. In contrast to other dyneins, the brain enzyme hydrolyzed CTP, TTP, and GTP at higher rates than ATP. Thus, the enzymological properties of the brain cytoplasmic dynein are clearly related to those of other dyneins, though the brain enzyme is unique in its substrate specificity and in its high sensitivity to stimulation by microtubules.
...
PMID:Characterization of the microtubule-activated ATPase of brain cytoplasmic dynein (MAP 1C). 297 Oct 69
Microtubules are involved in several forms of intracellular motility, including mitosis and organelle movement. Fast axonal transport is a highly ordered form of organelle motility that operates in both the anterograde (outwards from the cell body) and retrograde (from the periphery towards the cell body) direction. Similar microtubule-associated movement is observed in non-neuronal cells, and might be involved in secretion, endocytosis and the positioning of organelles within the cell. Kinesin is a mechanochemical protein that produces force along microtubules in an anterograde direction. We recently found that the brain microtubule-associated protein
MAP
1C (ref. 7) is a microtubule-activated
ATPase
and, like kinesin, can translocate microtubules in an in vitro assay for microtubule-associated motility.
MAP
1C seemed to be related to the ciliary and flagellar
ATPase
, dynein, which is thought to produce force in a direction opposite to that observed for kinesin. Here we report that
MAP
1C, in fact, acts in a direction opposite to kinesin, and has the properties of a retrograde translocator.
...
PMID:Retrograde transport by the microtubule-associated protein MAP 1C. 367 Apr 2
Yeast cells can respond and adapt to osmotic stress. In our attempt to clarify the molecular mechanisms of cellular responses to osmotic stress, we cloned seven cDNAs for hyperosmolarity-responsive (HOR) genes from Saccharomyces cerevisiae by a differential screening method. Structural analysis of the clones revealed that those designated HOR1, HOR3, HOR4, HOR5 and HOR6 encoded glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Gpd1p), glucokinase (Glk1p), hexose transporter (Hxt1p), heat-shock protein 12 (Hsp12p) and Na+, K+, Li(+)-
ATPase
(Ena1p), respectively. HOR2 and HOR7 corresponded to novel genes. Gpd1p is a key enzyme in the synthesis of glycerol, which is a major osmoprotectant in S. cerevisiae. Cloning of HOR1/GPD1 as a HOR gene indicates that the accumulation of glycerol in yeast cells under hyperosmotic stress is, at least in part, caused by an increase in the level of GPDH protein. We performed a series of Northern blot analyses using HOR cDNAs as probes and RNAs prepared from cells grown under various conditions and from various mutant cells. The results suggested that all the HOR genes are regulated by common signal transduction pathways. However, the fact that they exhibited certain distinct responses indicated that they might also be regulated by specific pathways in addition to the common pathways. Ca2+ seemed to be involved in the signaling systems. In addition, Hog1p, one of the
MAP
kinases in yeast, appeared to be involved in the regulation of expression of HOR genes, although its function seemed to be insufficient for the overall regulation of expression of these genes.
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of seven cDNAs for hyperosmolarity-responsive (HOR) genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 750 Sep 33
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>