Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (mole)
21,279 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The occurrence of glutathione transferase in human malignant melanoma cell lines and solid tumor material has been analyzed and compared with the enzyme composition in fibroblasts and naevus samples. All cells and tissues investigated contained essentially only the acidic class Pi glutathione transferase as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. The enzyme was purified from tumor material and characterized. Its intracellular concentration was significantly higher in all the melanoma cell preparations analyzed than in the non-malignant cells, supporting the view that the class Pi glutathione transferase may contribute to the drug resistance that is characteristic of malignant melanoma.
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PMID:Expression of class Pi glutathione transferase in human malignant melanoma cells. 311 48

The inhibition mechanism of the dimeric human placenta glutathione transferase (GST P1-1) by the antibiotic p-carboxyphenylazoxycyanide (calvatic acid) has been investigated at pH 7.0 and 30.0 degrees C. Experiments performed at different calvatic acid/GST P1-1 molar ratios indicate that one mole of calvatic acid inactivates one mole of the homodimeric enzyme molecule, containing two catalytically equivalent active sites. The apparent second order rate constant for GST P1-1 inactivation is 2.4 +/- 0.3 M-1 s-1. The recovery of all the 5,5'-dithio-bis(2-nitro-benzoic acid)-titratable thiol groups as well as the original catalytic activity of GST P1-1 after treatment of the inhibited enzyme with dithiothreitol indicates that two disulfide bridges per dimer, likely between Cys47 and Cys101, have been formed during the reaction with calvatic acid. To the best of the authors knowledge, calvatic acid represents a unique case of enzyme inhibitor acting also throughout its reaction product(s).
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PMID:Inhibition of human placenta glutathione transferase P1-1 by calvatic acid. 806 31

The expression vector pGEX-2T under the control of the IPTG-inducible tac promotor is effective for the production of a fusion protein of glutathione transferase (GST, 26 kDa) and promatrilysin (28 kDa) separated from the C-terminus of GST by a thrombin cleavage site. Zwittergen (palmityl sulfobetaine), 2%, solubilizes the fusion protein that is found associated with inclusion bodies. The solubilized fusion protein is purified by affinity chromatography on GSH agarose. Promatrilysin is obtained by thrombin cleavage either on the column or after GSH elution of the fusion protein. Mono S chromatography of the recovered protein yields homogeneous promatrilysin. The zinc content of promatrilysin and its activated enzyme product is slightly greater than 2 mol of zinc per mole of protein. The results indicate that the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) contain two metal-binding sites at which zinc is firmly bound and possibly a third site at which it is weakly bound. Primary sequence alignments for all the MMPs have a sequence homologous to the zinc-binding site of astacin, HExxHxxGxxH, suggesting one of the zinc sites is a catalytic one, in agreement with the known inhibition of these enzymes by chelators. However, the other zinc-binding site(s) likely reflect the different ways that astacin and the MMP subfamilies are stabilized, i.e., disulfides in astacin and metal ions in the MMPs.
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PMID:Matrilysin: expression, purification, and characterization. 856 47

GDP-D-mannose dehydratase (GMD) catalyzes the first step of the pathway that converts GDP-D-mannose to GDP-L-fucose in bacteria, plants and mammals. Recently, the gene coding for GMD has been identified and sequenced in E. coli. Based on this sequence, we have expressed and purified GMD in E. coli as a glutathione transferase (GST) fusion protein. The fused GST-GMD protein and the thrombin-cleaved GMD were then characterized. The catalytically active form of both enzyme species seems to be a hexamer of 410 and 250 kDa, respectively. The GST-GMD fusion protein has a Km of 0.22 +/- 0.04 mM and a specific activity of 2.3 +/- 0.2 micromol/h/mg. Ca2+ and Mg2+ activate GMD, while GDP-L-beta-fucose, the end-product of the pathway, inhibits it specifically. The GST-GMD fusion protein contains one mole of tightly bound NADP+ per mole of hexamer. Apparently, this NADP+ is involved in the catalytic mechanism of GMD.
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PMID:Expression, purification and characterization of GDP-D-mannose 4,6-dehydratase from Escherichia coli. 925 4

The binding interactions between dimeric glutathione transferase from Schistosoma japonicum (Sj26GST) and bromosulfophthalein (BS) or 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS) were characterised by fluorescence spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Both ligands inhibit the enzymatic activity of Sj26GST in a non-competitive form. A stoichiometry of 1 molecule of ligand per mole of dimeric enzyme was obtained for the binding of these ligands. The affinity of BS is higher (K(d)=3.2 microM) than that for ANS (K(d)=195 microM). The thermodynamic parameters obtained by calorimetric titrations are pH-independent in the range of 5.5 to 7.5. The interaction process is enthalpically driven at all the studied temperatures. This enthalpic contribution is larger for the ANS anion than for BS. The strongly favourable enthalpic contribution for the binding of ANS to Sj26GST is compensated by a negative entropy change, due to enthalpy-entropy compensation. DeltaG degrees remains almost invariant over the temperature range studied. The free energy change for the binding of BS to Sj26GST is also favoured by entropic contributions at temperatures below 32 degrees C, thus indicating a strong hydrophobic interaction. Heat capacity change obtained for BS (DeltaC(p) degrees =(-580.3+/-54.2) cal x K(-1) mol(-1)) is twofold larger (in absolute value) than for ANS (DeltaC(p) degrees =(-294.8+/-15.8) cal x K(-1) mol(-1)). Taking together the thermodynamic parameters obtained for these inhibitors, it can be argued that the possible hydrophobic interactions in the binding of these inhibitors to L-site must be accompanied by other interactions whose contribution is enthalpic. Therefore, the non-substrate binding site (designed as ligandin) on Sj26GST may not be fully hydrophobic.
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PMID:Implications of the ligandin binding site on the binding of non-substrate ligands to Schistosoma japonicum-glutathione transferase. 1513 56