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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new
ribonuclease
called
RNase
N was isolated from Escherichia coli. It is a nonspecific endoribonuclease that can cleave rRNA, poly(U), and poly(C) to small oligonucleotides and 5'-mononucleotides. It requires monovalent cations and is inhibited by divalent cations. It is suggested that this enzyme plays a role in the decay of rRNA,under various
starvation
conditions and perhaps in the decay of mRNA.
...
PMID:A new endoribonuclease from Escherichia coli. Ribonuclease N. 1 74
The acid-soluble ribonucleic acid degradation products formed by Escherichia coli cells starved for a carbon source have been identified. They comprise oligonucleotides, nucleoside diphosphates, 5'- and 3'-nucleoside monophosphates, nucleosides, and free bases. The majority of these products are excreted phates, nucleosides, and free bases. The majority of these products are excreted into the medium, and only small and constant amounts are kept in the pool. During carbon
starvation
at elevated temperatures, mutants deficient in ribonuclease I do not form oligonucleotides and 3'-nucleoside monophosphates, and mutants that contain a modified form of polynucleotide phosphorylase do not accumulate nucleoside diphosphates. 5'-Nucleoside monophosphates do accumulate, however, in a mutant containing thermoabile
ribonuclease II
, under conditions where more than 95% of all enzyme activity had been destroyed. The data presented confirm the participation of ribonuclease I and polynucleotide phosphorylase in the final steps of ribonucleic acid degradation and indicate that an exonuclease forming 5'-nucleoside monophosphates is also involved.
...
PMID:Accumulation of nucleotides by starved Escherichia coli cells as a probe for the involvement of ribonucleases in ribonucleic acid degradation. 32 Jan 88
Studies using isogenic transductant strains mlpA+ and mlpA as well as reversion analysis suggested that the physiological consequences of a structural gene mutation in murein lipoprotein include (i) increased sensitivity toward chelating agents ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid and ethyleneglycol-bis (beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N-tetraacetic acid, (ii) leakage of periplasmic enzyme
ribonuclease
, (iii) weakened association between the outer membrane and the rigid layer accentuated by Mg2+
starvation
, resulting in the formation of outer membrane blebs, and (iv) decreased growth rate in media of low ionic strength or low osmolarity. It is suggested that the bound form of lipoprotein plays an important role in the maintenance of the structural integrity of the outer membrane of the Escherichia coli cell envelope. Other outer membrane components may also contribute to the anchorage of outer membrane to the rigid layer, probably through ionic interactions with divalent cations. Using the phenotype of
ribonuclease
leakage as an unselected marker in a three-factor cross with P1 transduction, we were able to establish the gene order of man mlpA aroD pps on the E. coli chromosome.
...
PMID:Physiological characterization of an Escherichia coli mutant altered in the structure of murein lipoprotein. 41 67
In previous studies, brains but not hearts of intact early chick embryos were found to be sensitive to protein
starvation
. In this study, the in vitro protein synthetic activity of polysomes isolated from brains was found to be greater than those isolated from hearts.
Starvation
reduced the protein synthetic activity of polysomes in vitro but the extent of the reduction was approximately the same for both brains and hearts. A reduction in the amount of ribosomes as polysomes may have contributed to the lower synthetic activity of polysomes from tissues of starved embryos but not to the differences in synthetic activities between brains and hearts. In addition, neither the stability of isolated polysomes nor ribosome-associated
ribonuclease
activity appeared responsible for the differences observed in polysome synthetic activities. In direct relationship to the differential sensitivity of brains and hearts to
starvation
observed in the intact embryo, ribosomes isolated from brains of both growing and starved embryos were more readily degraded during in vitro incubation than those from hearts.
...
PMID:Polysome activity in relation to growth and protein starvation in brains and hearts of cultured early chick embryos. 56 60
Two criteria are suggested for assessing the relevance of biochemical events occurring early in sporulation. The first is thymidine
starvation
, a condition known to inhibit sporulation. This also inhibits the production of metalloprotease, serine protease, and
ribonuclease
; alpha-amylase production, however, is unaffected. The second is the effect of a regulator mutation which increases the production of the proteases. In the mutant,
ribonuclease
is produced in correspondingly large quantities whereas alpha-amylase production is unaffected. We conclude that, whereas the serine protease is part of the main sequence of events leading to formation of the spore, the metalloprotease is a side effect, i.e., connected with the main sequence but not part of it. Ribonuclease could, on present evidence, be either in the main sequence or a side effect associated with it. Amylase, however, seems to be separately regulated and neither directly nor indirectly connected with the sporulation sequence.
...
PMID:Criteria for categorizing early biochemical events occurring during sporulation of Bacillus subtilis. 80 78
The disappearance of ribosomes in Escherichia coli cells starved for a carbon source was studied. We used a series of mutants, some of them lacking in ribonuclease I(RNase I, EC 2.7.7.17), and other containing various combinations of modified polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase, EC 2.7.7.8) and modified
ribonuclease II
(
RNase II
, EC 3.1.4.1). RNA was prepared from the starved mutant cells and separated on polyacrylamide gels. The results obtained indicate that 23 S RNA degradation is similar in all strains that lack RNase I, and is slightly increased in the strain that contains this enzyme. The extent of 16 S RNA degradation is identical in all strains tested. RNA species in the size of 4 S and smaller accumulate in mutants containing modified forms of PNPase and
RNase II
. The appearance of an RNA species 10% smaller than 16 S RNA (d16 S RNA) was observed in all strains that contain unmodified
RNase II
. Analysis of ribosomes and polysomes and their RNA content indicated that polysomes are converted to monosomes and these, in turn, to ribosomal subunits. No RNA degradation products were found in polysomes, 70 S, OR 50 C particle; 30 S subunits contained 16 S RNA as well as the d16 S RNA species. Subunits are degraded to a similar extent in all strains lacking RNase I, and at a slightly faster rate in the strain that contains RNase I. The RNA to protein ratio in subunits prepared from starved cells is similar to that of unstarved cultures. Very little degradation of ribosomal proteins occurs in these mutants during carbon
starvation
. The proteins released from degraded ribosomes are found in the fast sedimenting (20,000 times g) pellet. Cell viability studies indicated a direct correlation between the capacity of the mutants to recovery from
starvation
and their capacity to degrade RNA. Thus a biological necessity for degradation of ribosomes during
starvation
is implied. Based on these data we propose that the endonucleolytic degradation of ribosomal RNA is the primary event in
starvation
degradation. It takes place in ribosomal subunits, which fall apart after the endonucleoltic attack. The RNA pieces produced by this cleavage are degraded to nucleotide by
RNase II
and PNPase. The ribosomal proteins attach to the cell membrane.
...
PMID:The fate of ribosomes in Escherichia coli cells starved for a carbon source. 108 66
Decay of pre-existing ribonucleic acid was studied in Escherichia coli cells subjected to high temperature or to
starvation
for nitrogen, phosphate, amino acids, or a carbon source. In these studies a series of mutants affected in ribonucleic I(RNase I, EC 3.1.4.22) polynucleotide phosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.8) or
ribonuclease II
(
RNase II
, EC 3.1.4.23) were used. Degradation of total RNA and the disappearance of 23 S and 16 S rRNA were followed. The results obtained indicated that, by and large, decay of 23 S and 16 S RNA parallels that of total RNA. Decay of RNA depended on the nuclease content of the cells as well as on the treatment of applied. It was most pronounced during carbon
starvation
and least in cells deprived of phosphate ions. It was most effective in strains containing all three nucleases and least in the strain defective in all three. The exonucleases polynucleotide phosphorylase and
RNase II
did not seem to affect the extent of 23 S and 16 S RNA disappearance. Strains with modified exonucleases did accumulate low molecular weight RNA species during treatments which induced considerable degradation of 23 S and 16 S RNA. Based on the above date and previous observations, we suggest that during various starvations a similar mechanism is operative. The 23 S and 16 S RNAs are degraded endonucleolytically, and this is the rate-limiting step during
starvation
. The exonucleases polynucleotide phosphorylase and
RNase II
seem to participate primarily in the decay of the low molecular weight RNA species formed by the endonuclease(s), not as yet identified.
...
PMID:Decay of ribosomal ribonucleic acid in Escherichia coli cells starved for various nutrients. 109 48
Effect of different concentration of non-ionic detergents (Triton X-100, Triton X-305, BRIJ-35 and Triton WR-1339) on total and non-sedimentable activity of 8 rat liver lysosome enzymes (acid phosphatase, acid DNase,
acid RNase
, arylsulphatases A and B, beta-glucuronidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase and beta-acetylglucosaminidase) was studied. Only Triton X-100 at the concentration of 0.1% (and higher) was found to release completely lysosome enzymes. Low concentrations of Triton X-100 (0.025-0.05%) were used to characterize the strength of enzyme binding: the level of releasing acid DNase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase and acid phsophatase being considerably higher than that of other lysosome enzymes studied. On the basis of the data obtained a method is worked out, which is suitable for series studies of the stability of lysosome membranes under different physiological and pathological conditions. The essence of the method is the treatment of membrane particles with increasing concentrations of Triton X-100 (0.025; 0.05 AND 0.1%) AND THE SUCCESSIVE ESTIMATION OF NON-Sedimentable activity of marker enzymes. The method detected troubles in the stability of rat liver lysosome membranes under
starvation
, protein deficiency and aging.
...
PMID:[Determination of lysosome membrane stability]. 120 72
Cytochrome c, a "mobile electron carrier" of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, also occurs in detectable amounts in the cytosol, and can receive electrons from cytochromes present in endoplasmic reticulum and plasma membranes as well as from superoxide and ascorbate. The pigment was found to dissociate from mitochondrial membranes in liver and kidney when rats were subjected to heat exposure and
starvation
, respectively. Treating cytochrome c with hydroxylamine gives a partially deaminated product with altered redox properties; decreased stimulation of respiration by deficient mitochondria, increased reduction by superoxide, and complete loss of reducibility by plasma membranes. Mitochondria isolated from brown adipose tissue of cold-exposed rats are found to be sub-saturated with cytochrome c. The ability of cytochrome c to reactivate reduced
ribonuclease
is now reinterpreted as a molecular chaperone role for the hemoprotein.
...
PMID:Functions of cytochrome c in regulation of electron transfer and protein folding. 132 35
To determine the essentiality and role of
RNase
T in RNA metabolism, we constructed an Escherichia coli chromosomal rnt::kan mutation by using gene replacement with a disrupted, plasmid-borne copy of the rnt gene. Cell extracts of a strain with mutations in RNases BN, D, II, and I and an interuppted rnt gene were devoid of
RNase
T activity, although they retained a low level (less than 10%) of exonucleolytic activity on tRNA-C-C-[14C]A due to two other unidentified RNases. A mutant lacking tRNA nucleotidyltransferase in addition to the aforementioned RNases accumulated only about 5% as much defective tRNA as did
RNase
T-positive cells, indicating that this
RNase
is responsible for essentially all tRNA end turnover in E. coli. tRNA from rnt::kan strains displayed a slightly reduced capacity to be aminoacylated, raising the possibility that
RNase
T may also participate in tRNA processing. Strains devoid of
RNase
T displayed slower growth rates than did the wild type, and this phenotype was accentuated by the absence of the other exoribonucleases. A strain lacking
RNase
T and other RNases displayed a normal response to UV irradiation and to the growth of bacteriophages but was severely affected in its ability to recover from a
starvation
regimen. The data demonstrate that the absence of
RNase
T affects the normal functioning of E. coli, but it can be compensated for to some degree by the presence of other RNases. Possible roles of
RNase
T in RNA metabolism are discussed.
...
PMID:RNase T affects Escherichia coli growth and recovery from metabolic stress. 170 82
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