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)
Casein kinase II and ornithine decarboxylase were purified from a virally-transformed macrophage-like cell line, RAW264. The addition of casein kinase II to a reaction mixture containing [tau-32P]GTP, Mg++, and ornithine decarboxylase led to the phosphorylation of a 55,000 dalton protein band in the purified preparation of ornithine decarboxylase. Stoichiometric estimates indicated that casein kinase II incorporated 0.15
mole
of phosphate per
mole
of ornithine decarboxylase, which was increased to 0.3
mole
/per
mole
in the presence of spermine. The apparent Km and Vmax values for the casein kinase II-mediated phosphorylation of ornithine decarboxylase were 0.36 microM and 62.5 nmol/min./mg kinase. The addition of spermine to the reaction did not alter the Km but increased the Vmax to 100 nmol/min./mg kinase. The phosphorylation of ornithine decarboxylase by casein kinase II affected neither the rate of maximal ornithine decarboxylase activity nor the affinity of the enzyme for
ornithine
.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of ornithine decarboxylase by casein kinase II from RAW264 cells. 222 53
Methylated arginine residues are found at only one site (position 107) of the polypeptide chain of the A1 protein, as shown by analysis of tryptic and peptic peptides; these analyses show 0.2
mole
of N(G)-dimethylarginine and 0.4-0.8
mole
of N(G)-monomethylarginine per
mole
of A1 protein. The methylated arginine residues appeared to be relatively resistant to tryptic attack. Both methylated derivatives were isolated from an enzymatic digest of the A1 protein; they were identified by chromatography, electrophoresis, and degradation to citrulline, methylamine, and
ornithine
on alkaline hydrolysis. The phylogenetic importance of the methylated derivatives was shown by their presence in the human, monkey, bovine, rabbit, guinea pig, rat, chicken, and turtle A1 proteins at the analogous position to that of the bovine sequence: [Formula: see text] We postulate that the methylated arginine residues may serve an important role in the myelin membrane in situ by stabilization of a double-chain structure for the A1 protein; such a double-chain conformation is induced by a (proline)(3) sequence located nearby.
...
PMID:Localization of methylated arginine in the A1 protein from myelin. 499 64
Morphology, physiology, and DNA nucleotide composition of Lyme disease spirochetes, Borrelia, Treponema, and Leptospira were compared. Morphologically, Lyme disease spirochetes resemble Borrelia. They lack cytoplasmic tubules present in Treponema, and have more than one periplasmic flagellum per cell end and lack the tight coiling which are characteristic of Leptospira. Lyme disease spirochetes are also similar to Borrelia in being microaerophilic, catalase-negative bacteria. They utilize carbohydrates such as glucose as their major carbon and energy sources and produce lactic acid. Long-chain fatty acids are not degraded but are incorporated unaltered into cellular lipids. The diamino amino acid present in the peptidoglycan is
ornithine
. The
mole
% guanine plus cytosine values for Lyme disease spirochete DNA were 27.3-30.5 percent. These values are similar to the 28.0-30.5 percent for the Borrelia but differed from the values of 35.3-53 percent for Treponema and Leptospira. DNA reannealing studies demonstrated that Lyme disease spirochetes represent a new species of Borrelia, exhibiting a 31-59 percent DNA homology with the three species of North American borreliae. In addition, these studies showed that the three Lyme disease spirochetes comprise a single species with DNA homologies ranging from 76-100 percent. The three North American borreliae also constitute a single species, displaying DNA homologies of 75-95 percent. Lyme disease spirochetes and Borrelia exhibited little or no DNA homology (0-2 percent) with the Treponema or Leptospira. Plasmids were present in the three Lyme disease spirochetes and the three North American borreliae.
...
PMID:Taxonomy of the Lyme disease spirochetes. 639 5
A protein that binds spermine specifically was separated from normal rabbit serum by affinity chromatography. Immunoelectrophoresis, the Ouchterlony immunodiffusion test, and gradient gel electrophoresis indicated that this protein has immunoglobulin characteristics and consists of several populations of antibodies to spermine. These were sequentially released from Sepharose-spermine gel by step-wise elution with solutions ranging in pH from 4 to 1. The binding constants varied from 5.0 x 10(8) to 11.1 x 10(8) liters per
mole
. These globulins did not react with monoacetylputrescine, L-
ornithine
, L-lysine, and histamine. Negligible cross-reactivity was detected with spermidine, putrescine, N8-monoacetylspermidine, cadaverine, and diaminopropane. Since perturbations in polyamine metabolism have been identified in several diseases, the study of extracellular polyamine homeostasis may reveal an important regulatory function for this protein.
...
PMID:Antibody to spermine: a natural biological constituent. 737 29
The behavioral reactions of tadpoles of four anuran species, inhabiting Moscow Region (Rana temporaria L., R. lessonae Cam., Bufo bufo, and Pelobates fuscus Laur.), on solutions of natural L-amino-acids of different concentrations. It was shown that none of the tadpoles respond to solutions of most amino-acids with concentrations less than 10(-2)
mole
/l. Sequences of relative efficiency of amino-acids as chemical stimuli, inducing feeding behaviour. The sequences display interspecific differences, however, positively correlate in different amino-acid content during pairwise comparison of species. For tadpoles of later developmental stages asparagine, glutamine, and lysine are good feeding behavior stimuli; proline is little or not effective. A reaction of avoidance of arginine, more pronounced in earlier developmental stages was observed in Bufo bufo tadpoles. The sensitivity of different age tadpoles to alanine, valine, glutamine, lysine,
ornithine
, and proline was studied by registering behavioral responses at different developmental stages. At earlier stages sensitivity is rather high (up to 10(-4)
mole
/l in R. temporaria tadpoles), and subsequently decreases in ontogenesis to an average level of 10(-4)
mole
/l. Tadpoles of different species, but similar developmental stages were found to differ in their sensitivity to amino-acids. Experiments with olfactory deprivation of P. fuscus tadpoles showed amino-acid sensitivity to be connected with olfaction, whereas behavioral responses to amino-acid solutions with concentrations 10(-2)
mole
/l may be connected with any exterochemoreception system.
...
PMID:[Natural amino acids as effective stimuli evoking chemoreceptor-directed behavior in anuran tadpoles]. 763 25
Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTCase) has been purified from porcine liver by a simple four-step procedure that included chromatography on an affinity column to which the transition-state analogue, delta-N-phosphonacetyl-L-
ornithine
(PALO), was covalently bound. The procedures employed yielded an enzyme which was purified some 260-fold and was judged to be homogeneous by nondenaturing- and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Apparent homogeneity of the enzyme was confirmed by N-terminal sequence analysis. The molecular weight of the porcine enzyme was determined by Sephadex gel exclusion chromatography and sedimentation equilibrium. An approximate molecular weight of 107,000 was calculated by both procedures. The single band obtained by SDS-PAGE indicated a subunit molecular weight of 36,800 +/- 700; hence, the enzyme is a trimer of identical subunits. The sedimentation coefficient of the native enzyme was determined to be 6.47. At pH 8.0, the Km values for the substrates are 0.41 and 1.3 mM for
ornithine
and carbamyl phosphate, respectively. PALO is a competitive inhibitor and has a Ki of 0.13 microM, which suggests that it binds with about 10,000 times greater affinity than carbamyl phosphate. Amino acid analysis performed on acid hydrolyzed enzyme yielded 323 amino acids per monomer. Performic acid oxidation of the enzyme, followed by acid hydrolysis and amino acid analysis, showed three cysteine residues per subunit. A partial specific volume of 0.725 cc/g was calculated from the amino acid composition. Reaction of purified porcine OTCase with phenylglyoxal, an arginine-specific reagent, results in complete loss of catalytic activity. The decrease in enzymatic activity correlates with the modification of 1 mol of arginine per
mole
of OTCase monomer. In the presence of 20 mM carbamyl phosphate, 93% of the activity is retained during a 1-h reaction time. Other substrates and substrate combinations offer less protection.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of porcine liver ornithine transcarbamylase. 813 41
N(G)-Amino-l-arginine, N(5)-(1-iminoethyl)-l-
ornithine
, N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)-l-lysine, and aminoguanidine were studied for the mechanisms by which they produce suicidal inactivation of the neuronal nitric oxide synthase isoform (nNOS). All of the inactivators that were amino acid structural analogs targeted the heme residue at the nNOS active site and led to its destruction as evidenced by the time- and concentration-dependent loss of the nNOS heme fluorescence, which reflects the disruption of the protoporphyrin-conjugated structure. The loss of heme was exclusively associated with the dimeric population of the nNOS. This inactivator-mediated loss of the nNOS heme never reached more than 60%, suggesting that only half of the dimeric heme is involved in catalytic activation of mechanism-based inactivators studied. Aminoguanidine-induced nNOS inactivation produced covalent modification of the nNOS protein chain with a stoichiometry of 0.8 mol of aminoguanidine per
mole
of the nNOS monomer. Specific covalent modification by aminoguanidine was exclusively associated with the oxygenase domain of the nNOS. The mechanisms by which N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)-l-lysine and aminoguanidine inactivate the nNOS and iNOS do not differ between the isoforms. The selectivity of these inactivators toward the iNOS isoform is a reflection of their much lower partition ratios, which were determined to be 0.16 +/- 0. 1 for N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)-l-lysine and 12 +/- 1.5 for aminoguanidine in case of the iNOS isoform while the same inactivators produced the partition ratios of 17 +/- 2 and 206 +/- 4, respectively, for the nNOS isoform.
...
PMID:Studies of neuronal nitric oxide synthase inactivation by diverse suicide inhibitors. 1048 43
The synthesis of putrescine was accomplished by decarboxylation of L-
ornithine
when this amino acid was heated in aqueous solution and in the absence of oxygen. Chromatographic, radioisotopic, and enzymatic techniques were used to demonstrate that one
mole
of non-radioactive putrescine and one
mole
of 14CO2 was formed during the heating of L-(l-14C)-
ornithine
. This work indicates that the synthesis of putrescine can occur starting with
ornithine
and in conditions that are presumed could have existed on the primitive Earth. The possible significance of these results in the prebiotic molecular evolution is briefly discussed.
...
PMID:Synthesis of putrescine under possible primitive Earth conditions. 1153 91
The composition of the amino acid and amine derivatives obtained with the o-phthaldialdehyde (OPA)/3-mercaptopropionic acid (MPA) and with the OPA/N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) reagents was investigated by on-line HPLC-electrospray ionization MS. The initially formed derivatives proved to be, as expected, the corresponding isoindoles while their transformed species contained one additional OPA molecule. Based on the MS spectra of all transformed OPA derivatives a reaction pathway is suggested. This reaction mechanism was supported both by the molecular ions of the endproducts and by the presence of several selective fragment ions that served as an explanation to the structure of the believed to be less stable OPA derivatives. It has been shown that more than one OPA derivative forms in all those cases when the compound to be derivatized does contain the NH2-CH2-R moiety. Thus, amino acids like e.g. glycine, histidine, beta-alanine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, epsilon-aminocaproic acid,
ornithine
, and also several aliphatic mono- and diamines provide more than one OPA derivative. Analytical consequences of this experience were utilized by altering the reagent's composition. Reagents containing
mole
ratios of [OPA]/[MPA] or [OPA]/[NAC]=1/50 resulted in two benefits, simultaneously: (i) in a decrease of the transformation rate of the initially formed derivative, and, (ii) in an increase of the overall stability of the total of derivatives.
...
PMID:Advances in the evaluation of the stability and characteristics of the amino acid and amine derivatives obtained with the o-phthaldialdehyde/3-mercaptopropionic acid and o-phthaldialdehyde/N-acetyl-L-cysteine reagents. High-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry study. 1199 63
Eleven of 150 Streptococcus cremoris strains examined produced the bacteriocin diplococcin. The diplococcin activity spectrum was restricted to S. cremoris and Streptococcus lactis strains, and none of a wide range of other gram-positive or gram-negative strains were inhibited. The diplococcin produced by S. cremoris 346 was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and column chromatography. Purified diplococcin was very unstable at room temperature and lost 75% of its activity after heating at 100 degrees C for 1 min. The proteolytic enzymes trypsin, pronase, and alpha-chymotrypsin completely inactivated diplococcin. The amino acid composition showed a high content of acidic and neutral acids and a correspondingly low content of basic amino acids, including one residue of
ornithine
per
mole
. From the amino acid analysis a molecular weight of 5,300 was estimated. Diplococcin was readily distinguished from the S. lactis bacteriocin nisin by its restricted activity spectrum, its biological properties, and by cross-reaction experiments.
...
PMID:Purification and Some Properties of Diplococcin from Streptococcus cremoris 346. 1634 4
1
2
Next >>