Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0009443 (cold)
92,137 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A gene, encoding a protein homologous to an essential Escherichia coli protein, FtsH, was identified adjacent to the hpt gene and the trnA operon in the Gram-positive bacterium Lactococcus lactis. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene product showed full-length similarity to FtsH of E. coli, Yme1p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and a conserved region found in a new family of putative ATPases. In-frame fusions of L. lactis ftsH and phoA1 in E. coli, and immunodetection of the L. lactis FtsH protein in cell fractions using anti-E. coli FtsH serum showed that L. lactis ftsH was expressed and encodes a membrane protein. When contained on a high copy number plasmid, the L. lactis ftsH gene complemented the lethality of a delta ftsH3::kan mutation in E. coli at 37 degrees C and below, indicating that the L. lactis ftsH gene can functionally replace the E. coli ftsH gene to some extent. The resulting E. coli strain showed temperature sensitivity and salt sensitivity. A L. lactis mutant with an insertion into ftsH was salt-, heat- and cold-sensitive. These results suggest that FtsH is somehow involved in stress responses. Southern hybridization analysis indicated that genes homologous to ftsH of L. lactis were also present in Bacillus subtilis, and several Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc species, suggesting high conservation of ftsH in bacterial species.
...
PMID:A Lactococcus lactis gene encodes a membrane protein with putative ATPase activity that is homologous to the essential Escherichia coli ftsH gene product. 800 May 29

The yeast nuclear gene YME1 was one of six genes recently identified in a screen for mutations that elevate the rate at which DNA escapes from mitochondria and migrates to the nucleus. yme1 mutations, including a deletion, cause four known recessive phenotypes: an elevation in the rate at which copies of TRP1 and ARS1, integrated into the mitochondrial genome, escape to the nucleus; a heat-sensitive respiratory-growth defect; a cold-sensitive growth defect on rich glucose medium; and synthetic lethality in rho- (cytoplasmic petite) cells. The cloned YME1 gene complements all of these phenotypes. The gene product, Yme1p, is immunologically detectable as an 82-kDa protein present in mitochondria. Yme1p is a member of a family of homologous putative ATPases, including Sec18p, Pas1p, Cdc48p, TBP-1, and the FtsH protein. Yme1p is most similar to the Escherichia coli FtsH protein, an essential protein involved in septum formation during cell division. This observation suggests the hypothesis that Yme1p may play a role in mitochondrial fusion and/or division.
...
PMID:Inactivation of YME1, a member of the ftsH-SEC18-PAS1-CDC48 family of putative ATPase-encoding genes, causes increased escape of DNA from mitochondria in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 835 90