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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Studies were undertaken to determine if mitochondrial rRNA synthesis in yeast is regulated by general cellular stringent control mechanism. Those variables affecting the relaxation of a cycloheximide-induced stringent response as a result of medium-shift-down or tyrosine limitation include: 1) the stage of cell growth, 2) carbon source, 3) strain differences and, 4) integrity of the cell wall. The extent of phenotypic relaxation decreased or was eliminated entirely in a strain dependent manner as cells entered stationary phase of growth or by growth of cells on galactose or in osmotically stabilized spheroplast cultures. Cytoplasmic and mitochondrial RNA species were extracted from regrowing spheroplast cultures subjected to different experimental regimens and analyzed by electrophoresis on 2.5% polyacrylamide gels. Relative rates of synthesis were determined in pulse experiments and normalized by double-label procedures to longterm label material. Tyrosine
starvation
was found to inhibit synthesis of the large and small rRNA species of both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial rRNAs to about 5-20% of the control values.
Chloramphenicol
inhibits mitochondrial and cytoplasmic rRNA synthesis to 60-80% of control; however, chloramphenicol addition does not relax the stringent inhibition of either class of rRNAs. Cycloheximide addition results in 70-80% inhibition of synthesis of both cellular speceis of rRNAs. As noted above, cycloheximide does not relax the stringent response of cytoplasmic rRNA synthesis in spheroplasts, and also does not relax the stringent inhibition of mitochondrial rRNA synthesis. From these studies, we conclude that both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial rRNA synthesis share common control mechanisms related to regulation of protein synthesis by shift-down or amino acid limitation.
...
PMID:Regulation of mitochondrial ribosomal RNA synthesis in yeast. I. In search of a relaxation of stringency. 38 47
Bdellovibrio peptidoglycan is of typical gram-negative composition. The molar ratios of alanine:glutamic acid:diaminopimelic acid:muramic acid:glucosamine were about 2:1:1:1:1. Nascent, nongrowing Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus 109J were converted from highly motile vibrios to highly motile spheres when shaken in dilute buffer plus penicillin, cephalothin, bacitracin, or D-cycloserine. The spherical forms contained essentially no sedimentable peptidoglycan; i.e., they were spheroplasts. Spheroplasts induced by penicillin, D-cycloserine, and lysozyme were stable in dilute buffer and did not lyse when subjected to osmotic shock. Normal Bdellovibrio suspended in buffer turned over their peptidoglycan at a rate of approximately 30% h during the initial 120 min of
starvation
.
Chloramphenicol
and sodium azide strongly inhibited Bdellovibrio peptidoglycan turnover and the induction of spheroplasts by penicillin. The data indicate that nongrowing B. bacteriovorus are sensitive to penicillin and other antibiotics affecting cell walls because of their high rate of peptidoglycan turnover. It is also concluded that an intact peptidoglycan layer is required for maintaining cell shape, but is not required for osmotic stability of B. bacteriovorus.
...
PMID:Penicillin-induced formation of osmotically stable spheroplasts in nongrowing Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus. 64 Oct 13
The mode of action of a synthetic cytostatic quinone was studied in Escherichia coli. 1. At concentrations of 1.5-6 mug/ml, 5,8-dioxo-6-amino-7-chloroquinoline rapidly inhibits growth and protein synthesis in E. coli. The synthesis of RNA is immediately affected in E. coli rel+ whereas in E. coli rel- the accumulation of RNA can proceed on addition of the quinone. This indicates that the inhibition of RNA synthesis in the stringent strain is a consequence of the regulatory phenomenon governed by the rel gene. 2.
Chloramphenicol
, known to abolish the stringent control mechanism, added simultaneously with the quinone allows the accumulation of RNA to proceed in the stringent strain. 3. Guanosine tetraphosphate accumulates in quinone-treated E. coli rel+ but not in the relaxed mutant strain. 4. Addition of amino acids reverses all inhibitory effects observed in quinone treated stringent and relaxed cells. 5. It is concluded that the bacteriostatic effect of 5,8-dioxo-6-amino-7-chloroquinoline on E. coli is caused by an apparent intracellular amino acid
starvation
.
...
PMID:Quinone induced stringent control. Accumulation of ppGpp and inhibition of RNA synthesis in stringent Escherichia coli by 5,8-dioxo-6-amino-7-chloroquinoline. 109 72
Continuously growing cultures of E. coli B/r were irradiated with a fluence of broad-band near-ultraviolet radiation (315-405 nm) sufficient to cause extensive growth delay and complete cessation of net RNA synthesis.
Chloramphenicol
treatment was found to stimulate resumption of RNA synthesis, similar to that observed with chloramphenicol treatment after amino-acid
starvation
. E. coli strains in which amino-acid
starvation
does not result in cessation of RNA synthesis ("relaxed" or rel- strains) show no cessation of growth and only a slight effect on the rate of growth or of RNA synthesis. These findings show that such near-UV fluences do not inactivate the RNA synthetic machinery but affect the regulation of RNA synthesis, in a manner similat to that produced by amino-acid
starvation
. Such regulation is believed to be mediated through alterations in concentration of guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp), and our estimations of ppGpp after near-UV irradiation are consistent with such an interpretation. These data, combined with earlier published data, strongly suggest that the mechanism of near-UV-induced growth delay in E. coli involves partial inactivation of certain tRNA species, which is interpreted by the cell in a manner similar to that of amino-acid
starvation
, causing a rise in ppGpp levels, a shut-off of net RNA synthesis, and the induction of a growth delay.
...
PMID:Mechanism of growth delay induced in Escherichia coli by near ultraviolet radiation. 110 19
We investigated the degradation of radioisotopically labeled intracellular protein in starved, intact cells of Pseudomonas putida P2 (ATCC 25571) and the regulation of this process. Intracellular protein isotopically labeled with L-[4,5-3H]leucine during log-phase growth at 30 C is degraded at rates of 1 to 2%/h in log-phase cells and 7 to 9%/h in starved cells. Rifampin, chloramphenicol, and tosyllysine chloromethylketone lower the rate of protein degradation by starved cells. Addition to starved cells of a nutrient upon which the culture is induced for growth rapidly lowers the rate of protein degradation from 7 to 9%/h to less than 1.5%/h. A nutrient that is oxidized but that cannot immediately support growth also lowers the rate of
starvation
-induced protein degradation. Proteolytic activity of cell extracts requires a divalent metal ion and may be inhibited up to 60% by tosyllysine chloromethylketone or p-toluenesulfonyl fluoride. Rifampin and chloramphenicol have no effect. In contrast to intact cells, extracts of growing or starving cells degrade protein at equivalent rates. We also investigated the stabilities of the inducible transport system and of four inducible intracellular enzymes of L-arginine catabolism. These include: the membrane-associated, L-arginine-specific transport system; L-arginine oxidase (oxidase); alpha-ketoarginine decarboxylase (decarboxylase); gamma-guanidinobutyraldehyde dehydrogenase ( dehydrogenase); and gamma-guanidinobutyrate amidinohydrolase (hydrolase). In starved cells, the rates of loss of activities were: transport and dehydrogenase activities, stable; oxidase and decarboxylase activities, 20 to 30%/h; hydrolase activity, 5 to 8%/h.
Chloramphenicol
decreases the rate of loss of oxidase, decarboxylase, and hydrolase activity, whereas p-toluenesulfonyl fluoride lowers the rate of loss of decarboxylase but not of oxidase or hydrolase activity. Addition to starved cells of a nutrient for which they are already induced for growth (e.g., malate, a noninducer of arginine catabolic enzymes) decreases the rate of loss of oxidase and decarboxylase activity but not that of the hydrolase.
...
PMID:Physiological consequences of starvation in Pseudomonas putida: degradation of intracellular protein and loss of activity of the inducible enzymes of L-arginine catabolism. 119 37
Chloramphenicol
completely inhibited the activity of existing denitrification enzymes in acetylene-block incubations with (i) sediments from a nitrate-contaminated aquifer and (ii) a continuous culture of denitrifying groundwater bacteria. Control flasks with no antibiotic produced significant amounts of nitrous oxide in the same time period. Amendment with chloramphenicol after nitrous oxide production had begun resulted in a significant decrease in the rate of nitrous oxide production.
Chloramphenicol
also decreased (greater than 50%) the activity of existing denitrification enzymes in pure cultures of Pseudomonas denitrificans that were harvested during log-phase growth and maintained for 2 weeks in a
starvation
medium lacking electron donor. Short-term time courses of nitrate consumption and nitrous oxide production in the presence of acetylene with P. denitrificans undergoing carbon
starvation
were performed under optimal conditions designed to mimic denitrification enzyme activity assays used with soils. Time courses were linear for both chloramphenicol and control flasks, and rate estimates for the two treatments were significantly different at the 95% confidence level. Complete or partial inhibition of existing enzyme activity is not consistent with the current understanding of the mode of action of chloramphenicol or current practice, in which the compound is frequently employed to inhibit de novo protein synthesis during the course of microbial activity assays. The results of this study demonstrate that chloramphenicol amendment can inhibit the activity of existing denitrification enzymes and suggest that caution is needed in the design and interpretation of denitrification activity assays in which chloramphenicol is used to prevent new protein synthesis.
...
PMID:Inhibition of existing denitrification enzyme activity by chloramphenicol. 162 47
The NAC (nitrogen assimilation control) protein from Klebsiella aerogenes is a LysR-like regulator for transcription of several operons involved in nitrogen metabolism, and couples the transcription of these sigma 70-dependent operons to regulation by the sigma 54-dependent NTR system. NAC activates expression of operons (e.g. histidine utilization, hut), allowing use of poor nitrogen sources, and represses expression of operons (e.g. glutamate dehydrogenase, gdh) allowing assimilation of the preferred nitrogen source, ammonium. NAC is both necessary and sufficient to activate transcription, but the expression of the nac gene is totally dependent on the central nitrogen regulatory system (NTR) and RNA polymerase carrying the sigma 54 sigma factor (RNAP sigma 54). Nitrogen
starvation
signals the NTR system to transcribe nac, and NAC activates the transcription of hut, put (proline utilization), and urease. NAC does not affect the transcription of RNAP sigma 54-dependent operons like ginA or nifLA, which respond directly to the NTR system, but activates transcription of RNAP sigma 70-dependent operons. Thus NAC acts as a bridge between RNAP sigma 70-dependent operons like hut and the RNAP sigma 54-dependent NTR system. The activation of operons like hut by NAC in response to nitrogen
starvation
is at least superficially similar to their activation by
CAP
-cAMP in response to carbon and energy
starvation
.
...
PMID:The role of the NAC protein in the nitrogen regulation of Klebsiella aerogenes. 166 20
Adenylyl cyclase from S. cerevisiae contains at least two subunits, a 200 kd catalytic subunit and a subunit with an apparent molecular size of 70 kd, which we now call
CAP
(cyclase-associated protein). We cloned a cDNA encoding
CAP
by screening a yeast cDNA expression library in E. coli with antisera raised against the purified protein. The cDNA contained an open reading frame capable of encoding a 526 amino acid protein that is not homologous to any sequences in the current data bases. Adenylyl cyclase activity in membranes from cells that lacked
CAP
was not stimulated by RAS2 proteins in vitro. These results suggest that
CAP
is required for at least some aspects of the RAS-responsive signaling system. Mutants lacking
CAP
had four additional phenotypes that appear to be unrelated to effects of the RAS/adenylyl cyclase pathway: the inability to grow on rich medium (YPD), temperature sensitivity on minimal medium, sensitivity to nitrogen
starvation
, and a swollen cell morphology.
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of CAP, the S. cerevisiae gene encoding the 70 kd adenylyl cyclase-associated protein. 218 42
A decline in colony-forming ability is observed in actively growing cultures of a tryptophan arginine auxotroph of Bacillus subtilis after removal of tryptophan (tryptophanless death). This phenomenon can be prevented by simultaneous
starvation
of the other required amino acid or by chloramphenicol administered in bacteriostatic concentration but not by actinomycin. Addition of tryptophan analogues not only prevents the death but also allows recovery of the cells that have lost the ability to form colonies on solid media. The term tryptophanless death is therefore inappropriate.
Chloramphenicol
but not actinomycin inhibits the recovery brought about by tryptophan analogues.
...
PMID:Tryptophanless death in Bacillus subtilis. 418 6
The incorporation of labeled precursors into the deoxyribonucleic acid, ribonucleic acid (RNA), proteins, and phospholipids of Escherichia coli cultured in the presence of phenethyl alcohol (PEA) was determined. PEA inhibited the uptake of labeled uracil to the same extent in cells exhibiting relaxed and stringent control of RNA synthesis. This indicates that PEA does not primarily affect amino acid synthesis or activation. Uptake of labeled acetate into the phospholipid fraction was more sensitive to inhibition by low concentrations of PEA than was the uptake of labeled precursors into the macromolecules. Thymine
starvation
or the addition of nalidixic acid (10 mug/ml) had no effect on acetate incorporation.
Chloramphenicol
(25 mug/ml) was a much less effective inhibitor of acetate incorporation than was PEA. The distribution of labeled acetate incorporated into phospholipids was markedly affected by the presence of PEA. The uptake of acetate into phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol was inhibited, whereas the uptake of acetate into the cardiolipin fraction was unaffected. Since acetate incorporation into phospholipid was quite sensitive to PEA, we suggest that the PEA-sensitive component required for the initiation of replication may be a phospholipid(s).
...
PMID:Effects of phenethyl alcohol on phospholipid metabolism in Escherichia coli. 455 Jun 58
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