Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.3.2.3 (glutathione synthetase)
678 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thiol groups are important components of proteins and their oxidation can lead to a substantial loss of protein function. Patients with two apparently unrelated inborn errors of metabolism, tyrosinaemia type 1 and glutathione synthetase deficiency, have been reported to show reduced cell glutathione concentrations. We have found that not only glutathione but also protein thiol concentrations are reduced in the liver in tyrosinaemia type 1 patients. We also report a case of glutathione synthetase deficiency with a substantial deficiency of liver 4-fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase and provide evidence that glutathione, or some small-molecular-weight thiol, is essential for maintaining stability of this enzyme in vitro. Our results suggest that the availability of thiol groups may modify the phenotype of tyrosinaemia type 1 and that liver 4-fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase deficiency may be a secondary complicating factor in some forms of glutathione synthetase deficiency.
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PMID:Tyrosinaemia type 1 and glutathione synthetase deficiency: two disorders with reduced hepatic thiol group concentrations and a liver 4-fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase deficiency. 762 42

The repeated failures reported in cultivating some microbial lineages are a major challenge in microbial ecology and probably linked, in the case of Frankia microsymbionts to atypical patterns of auxotrophy. Comparative genomics of the so far uncultured cluster-2 Candidatus Frankia datiscae Dg1, with cultivated Frankiae has revealed genome reduction, but no obvious physiological impairments. A direct physiological assay on nodule tissues from Coriaria myrtifolia infected with a closely-related strain permitted the identification of a requirement for alkaline conditions. A high pH growth medium permitted the recovery of a slow-growing actinobacterium. The strain obtained, called BMG5.1, has short hyphae, produced diazovesicles in nitrogen-free media, and fulfilled Koch's postulates by inducing effective nodules on axenically grown Coriaria spp. and Datisca glomerata. Analysis of the draft genome confirmed its close proximity to the Candidatus Frankia datiscae Dg1 genome with the absence of 38 genes (trehalose synthase, fumarylacetoacetase, etc) in BMG5.1 and the presence of 77 other genes (CRISPR, lanthionine synthase, glutathione synthetase, catalase, Na+/H+ antiporter, etc) not found in Dg1. A multi-gene phylogeny placed the two cluster-2 strains together at the root of the Frankia radiation.
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PMID:Cultivating the uncultured: growing the recalcitrant cluster-2 Frankia strains. 2628 81