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: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
)
21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The UDP-apiose/UDP-
xylose
synthase from cell suspension cultures of parsley has been purified 1400-fold by an improved method. The ratio of apiose to
xylose
formed from UDP-D-glucuronic acid (UDP-GlcUA) remained constant throughout the purification procedure. Dodecylsulfate-gel electrophoresis and sedimentation equilibrium measurements showed that this enzyme preparation is composed of two proteins with molecular weights of 65000 and 86000. The two proteins which are present in a molar ratio of about 1:0.7 to 1:0.9 could not be separated by ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose at different pH-values, and on omega-aminoalkyl-Sepharose, and by gel filtration on Acrylex P-100. Each protein is composed of two apparently identical subunits. The presence of only two different subunits was confirmed by end group analysis in which glycine was found as N-terminal amino acid for the larger and lysine for the smaller protein. Crosslinking with dimethylsuberimidate gave dimers of the identical subunits but no hybrids. Separation of the two proteins was achieved on DEAE-cellulose in the presence of urea. After dialysis only the 86000-Mr protein showed enzyme activity with no significant change in the apiose/
xylose
ratio. However, in the absence of the 65000-Mr protein enzyme stability was decreased drastically. By equilibrium dialysis it was found that 0.5 mol UDP-GlcUA are bound per
mole
of 86000-Mr protein. NAD+ alone was not bound, but in the presence of UDP it was also bound in a ratio of 0.5 mol/mol catalytic protein. Experiments in which sodium borohydride was added to the enzyme incubation gave no indication that the 4-keto intermediate is bound as a Schiff base to the enzyme. Also no evidence for epimerization at C-3 of the 4-ulose intermediate prior to ring contraction to apiose was found.
...
PMID:UDP-apiose/UDP-xylose synthase. Subunit composition and binding studies. 19 51
1. A method of measuring the permeability of the pancreas by determining the apparent reflexion coefficient (sigmaA) is described, in the isolated pancreas secreting maximally under the influence of secretin. The principle is to add a non-electrolyte to the perfusate which will create an osmotic gradient (RTsigmadeltaC) counter to that of active transport and reduce the secretion rate. This is compared with the effect of an equal concentration (0.1 M) of sucrose (RTdeltaC; sigma = 1). The apparent reflection coefficient is obtained by dividing the percentage reduction in the secretion rate due to the test molecule with that due to sucrose. 2. Sucrose when added to the perfusate inhibits pancreatic secretion. For every 10 mM increase in sucrose concentration, the secretion rate was inhibited by 7.1%. It has been estimated that an osmotic gradient of 131 m-osmole/kg water will cause zero flow rate. This is a measure of the pressure required to counteract the local osmotic gradient set up by active transport, it is equivalent to about 3.4 atm. 3. Non-electrolytes with molecular volumes greater than about 85 cm3
mole
-1 are relatively impermeable, below this value they enter the pancreatic juice with increasing ease as the molecular volume decreases. 4. SigmaA for a number of compounds has been measured: urea 0.17; ethanediol 0.27; thiourea 0.51; glycerol 0.69; creatinine 0.81; erythritol 0.91;
arabinose
0.96;
xylose
0.98; sorbitol 0.98. 5. The addition of non-electrolytes to the perfusate had effects on pancreatic secretion which were a function of sigmaA. For molecules with sigmaA lying between 0.81 and 1.0 an osmotic load of 0.1 M increased both the concentration of sodium plus potassium and the concentration of chloride plus bicarbonate by about 50 m-
mole
/l. Whereas the cation change is almost exclusively one of sodium that of the anions was preferentially an increase in chloride. For compounds with sigmaA lying between 0 and 0.81 the concentration of sodium plus potassium was proportional to sigmaA. 6. A number of compounds have been described which inhibit pancreatic secretion, other than by an osmotic effect. These include acetaldehyde, thioglycerol, nicotinamide, ribose, dihydroxyacetone, and glyceraldehyde. 7. It is concluded that the pancreas is more permeable than the gall-bladder of rabbit, fish and bullfrog, the proximal tubule of the kidney of rat and the small intestine of bullfrog, but is probably similar to that of small intestine of guinea-pig and man.
...
PMID:The permeability of the secretin stimulated exocrine pancreas to non-electrolytes. 65 May 9
A combined gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric technique is described for the quantification of virazole in serum and urine. Proteins are removed by molecular filtration, lipids by extraction with dichloromethane and interfering endogenous constituents by acidic and basic ion-exchange resins. Virazole is quantified by monitoring the protonated molecular ions of the fully silylated derivatives of virazole (m/e 533) and the
arabinose
analog (internal standard) obtained by methane chemical ionization. The detection limit is 150 pg (0.6.10(-12)
mole
) of virazole injected. In serum 10 ng/ml (4.10(-8)
mole
) can be detected, 25 ng/ml quantified. In urine 0.5 microgram/ml can be quantified without preconcentration. Virazole was detected in serum for at least 96 h at the 70-ng/ml level.
...
PMID:Determination of 1-beta-D-ribofuranosyl-1,2,4-triazole-3-carboxamide (virazole) in blood and urine by chemical ionization-mass fragmentography. 73 Jul 88
A new species of Candida podzolica is described. This species is widely distributed in podzolic and soddy-podzolic soils of the forest zone and in krasnozem. The yeast belongs to the nitrate-negative species of the genus Candida Berkhout, which do not ferment sugars, and is similar to the species C. humicola and C. curvata inhabiting soil. C. podzolica has a peculiar shape of the cells and does not produce films in liquid media. Extracellular polysaccharides contain glucose, mannose, galactose, and
xylose
; G+C in DNA is 62
mole
percent.
...
PMID:[New species of yeast from soil--Candida podzolica sp. n]. 122 47
Modification of glucose/xylose isomerase from Streptomyces sp. NCIM 2730 by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC) or its photo-oxidation in presence of rose bengal or methylene blue caused rapid loss in its activity. The inactivation of the enzyme was accompanied by an increase in the absorbance at 240 nm and was reversed by hydroxylamine. Glucose and
xylose
but not Mg++ and Co++ afforded significant protection to the enzyme from inactivation by DEPC. Inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and modification of a single histidine residue per
mole
of enzyme was indicated.
...
PMID:Evidence for the essential histidine residue at the active site of glucose/xylose isomerase from Streptomyces. 341 83
Eggs of Urechis caupo are surrounded by a congruent to 0.9 micrometer thick egg envelope and, attached to that, a peripheral jelly layer about 3 micrometers thick. Before fertilization, the sperm undergoes the acrosome reaction and binds to the egg envelope. As part of a study of the induction of the acrosome reaction and sperm binding in Urechis, we have developed a method to prepare an egg envelope fraction by differential centrifugation. The isolation procedure removes much of the jelly layer, but does not alter the fine structure of the envelope. When a sperm contacts an isolated envelope, it undergoes a normal acrosome reaction and binds to the envelope's outer face. Electrophoresis of the envelope fraction on sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)/polyacrylamide gels revealed six major components stained by Coomassie Blue, of which four are stained by the periodic acid-Schiff reagents (PAS). To measure the degree of enrichment of the envelope fraction, envelopes were isolated from eggs that had been externally radio-iodinated; the specific activity of the envelope fraction was 17 +/- 3 times greater than that of intact eggs. The amino acid composition of the envelope fraction is dominated by Gly (19
mole
%), Asx (11%), Thr (11%), Ser (8%), Ala (8%) and Glx (8%). The sugars fucose,
xylose
, mannose, galactose, glucose, N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylgalactosamine were detected by gas-liquid chromatography. We also investigated whether the egg envelope changes at fertilization. No change was detected in the electrophoretic 125I pattern of externally radio-iodinated eggs, and the envelope fractions prepared from unfertilized and fertilized eggs produced the same Coomassie Blue pattern on SDS/polyacrylamide gels.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of Urechis caupo egg envelopes. 404 Sep 20
1. The fractional permeation of heart cell water by
L-arabinose
and
D-xylose
after a standard period of perfusion is less the higher the extracellular pentose concentration.2. At any given pentose concentration the kinetics of permeation are consistent with passive diffusion through the cytoplasm or with transport across the cell membrane by a saturable carrier.3. The concentration dependence of permeation is inconsistent with passive diffusion.4. The kinetics of
L-arabinose
permeation are consistent with a carrier having V(max) = 2.2 m-
mole
/l. extracellular water per min and a half-saturation concentration [K] of 0.5 x 10(-4)M. The corresponding figures for
D-xylose
are V(max) = 1.4, [K] = 1.6 x 10(-4)M.
...
PMID:Kinetics of pentose permeation in the perfused rat heart. 550 Dec 62
1. The cell-wall composition of Aspergillus niger has been investigated. Analysis shows the presence of six sugars, glucose, galactose, mannose,
arabinose
, glucosamine and galactosamine, all in the d-configuration, except that a small amount of l-galactose may be present. Sixteen common amino acids are also present. 2. The wall consists chiefly of neutral carbohydrate (73-83%) and hexosamine (9-13%), with smaller amounts of lipid (2-7%), protein (0.5-2.5%) and phosphorus (less than 0.1%). The acetyl content (3.0-3.4%) corresponds to 1.0mole/
mole
of hexosamine nitrogen. 3. A fractionation of the cell-wall complex was achieved, with or without a preliminary phenol extraction, by using n-sodium hydroxide. Though this caused some degradation, 30-60% of the wall could be solubilized (depending on the preparation). Analyses on several fractions suggest that fractionation procedures bring about some separation of components although not in a clear-cut fashion. 4. Cell-wall preparations were shown to yield a fraction having [alpha](D) approx. +240 degrees (in n-sodium hydroxide) and consisting largely of glucose. This was separated into two subfractions, one of which had [alpha](D)+281 degrees (in n-sodium hydroxide) and had properties resembling the polysaccharide nigeran; the other had [alpha](D) +231 degrees (in n-sodium hydroxide). It is suggested that nigeran is a cell-wall component.
...
PMID:The composition of the cell wall of Aspergillus niger. 586 4
An immunochemical procedure involving the reaction of liver aldolase antibody and rat liver enzyme preparation shows that conversion of ribose 5-P to hexose 6-P by reactions of the non-oxidative pentose pathway fails to occur in the absence of aldolase activity. Radioautography of pentose pathway products formed by liver enzyme catalysis of [U-14C]
arabinose
5-P and unlabelled ribose 5-P illustrates the incorporation of 14C into ketopentose, sedoheptulose, fructose and glucose phosphates. There is approximate congruity of the
mole
specific radioactivity of the pentose and hexose phosphates. These findings are consistent with the proposal that L-pentose pathway reactions constitute the non-oxidative segment of the pathway in liver.
...
PMID:Evidence that aldolase and D-arabinose 5-phosphate are components of pentose pathway reactions in liver in vitro. 654 Oct 43
Two polygalacturonase isoenzymes, PG I and PG II, were extracted from Murrieta tomato and purified by gel exclusion and ion-exchange chromatography. The kinetic constants and activation energies of the purified isoenzymes have been determined. Polygalacturonase I has two polypeptide chains (Mr = 47 500 and 41 400) whereas polygalacturonase II is a single polypeptide (Mr = 47 500) as shown by electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate. Both isoenzymes are glycoproteins. Through gas liquid chromatography, polygalacturonase II was shown to contain 4.6% neutral hexoses and 1.5% amino sugars. There are eight D-mannose, two L-fucose, two
D-xylose
and three N-acetylglucosamine residues per
mole
of PG II. The carbohydrate portion of PG II was shown to be attached to the protein part through an N-acetylglucosaminylasparaginyl bond.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate composition and electrophoretic properties of tomato polygalacturonase isoenzymes. 661 47
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>