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:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Trichloroethylene (TCE)-transforming aquifer methanotrophs were evaluated for the influence of TCE oxidation toxicity and the effect of reductant availability on TCE transformation rates during
methane
starvation
. TCE oxidation at relatively low (6 mg liter-1) TCE concentrations significantly reduced subsequent
methane
utilization in mixed and pure cultures tested and reduced the number of viable cells in the pure culture Methylomonas sp. strain MM2 by an order of magnitude. Perchloroethylene, tested at the same concentration, had no effect on the cultures. Neither the TCE itself nor the aqueous intermediates were responsible for the toxic effect, and it is suggested that TCE oxidation toxicity may have resulted from reactive intermediates that attacked cellular macromolecules. During
starvation
, all methanotrophs tested exhibited a decline in TCE transformation rates, and this decline followed exponential decay. Formate, provided as an exogenous electron donor, increased TCE transformation rates in Methylomonas sp. strain MM2, but not in mixed culture MM1 or unidentified isolate, CSC-1. Mixed culture MM2 did not transform TCE after 15 h of
starvation
, but mixed cultures MM1 and MM3 did. The methanotrophs in mixed cultures MM1 and MM3, and the unidentified isolate CSC-1 that was isolated from mixed culture MM1 contained lipid inclusions, whereas the methanotrophs of mixed culture MM2 and Methylomonas sp. strain MM2 did not. It is proposed that lipid storage granules serve as an endogenous source of electrons for TCE oxidation during
methane
starvation
.
...
PMID:Influence of endogenous and exogenous electron donors and trichloroethylene oxidation toxicity on trichloroethylene oxidation by methanotrophic cultures from a groundwater aquifer. 203 10
Guanine auxotrophs of Escherichia coli K-12 were isolated after mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, ethyl
methane
sulfonate, or the acridine mustard ICR 372. guaA (xanthosine 5'-monophosphate [XMP] aminase-less) mutants were distinguished from guaB (inosine 5'-monophosphate [IMP] dehydrogenase-less) mutants by their growth response to xanthine and by enzyme assay. Mutations were classified as base substitutions or frameshift on the basis of mutagen-induced reversion patterns. All guaA strains, including three frameshift mutants, produced derepressed levels of IMP dehydrogenase when cultured with a growth-limiting concentration of guanine. The guaB strains were of two types: (i) those producing derepressed levels of XMP aminase, and (ii) those producing basal levels of XMP aminase when grown under conditions of guanine
starvation
. In the guaB strains of the second type, the expression of the adjacent guaA gene is reduced. It is proposed that this pleiotropic effect of some guaB mutations is a result of polarity. The orientation of polarity suggests the gene order "operator"-guaB-guaA. Gel diffusion studies with IMP dehydrogenase antiserum showed that strains carrying polar guaB mutations do not produce cross-reacting material (CRM). The remaining guaB mutants were either CRM(+) or CRM(-). Mapping the mutations by three-factor crosses showed that polar and nonpolar guaB sites are clustered in a small genetic region cotransducible with guaA. The relative positions of the guaB mutational sites established that the polar mutations lie within the structural gene for IMP dehydrogenase.
...
PMID:The gua operon of Escherichia coli K-12: evidence for polarity from guaB to guaA. 435 75
A heat shock-resistant mutant of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was isolated at the mutation frequency of 10(-7) from a culture treated with ethyl
methane
sulfonate. Cells of the mutant are approximately 1,000-fold more resistant to lethal heat shock than those of the parental strain. Tetrad analysis indicates that phenotypes revealed by this mutant segregated together in the ratio 2+:2- from heterozygotes constructed with the wild-type strain of the opposite mating type, and are, therefore, attributed to a single nuclear mutation. The mutated gene in the mutant was herein designated hsr1 (heat shock response). The hsr1 allele is recessive to the HSR1+ allele of the wild-type strain. Exponentially growing cells of hsr1 mutant were found to constitutively synthesize six proteins that are not synthesized or are synthesized at reduced rates in HSR1+ cells unless appropriately induced. These proteins include one hsp/G0-protein (hsp48A), one hsp (hsp48B), and two G0-proteins (p73, p56). Heterozygous diploid (hsr1/HSR1+) cells do not synthesize the proteins constitutively induced in hsr1 cells, which suggests that the product of the HSR1 gene might negatively regulate the synthesis of these proteins. The hsr1 mutation also led to altered growth of the mutant cells. The mutation elongated the duration of G1 period in the cell cycle and affected both growth arrest by sulfur
starvation
and growth recovery from it. We discuss the problem of which protein(s) among those constitutively expressed in growing cells of the hsr1 mutant is responsible for heat shock resistance and alterations in the growth control.
...
PMID:A heat shock-resistant mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows constitutive synthesis of two heat shock proteins and altered growth. 638 38
We have developed a method for the isolation of transport mutants with increases in velocity of transport through the A and ASC systems and through a newly discovered P system utilizing the amino acid antagonism between A system amino acids and proline in CHO-K1 pro- cells. Mutants alar2 and alar3, isolated in a single-step procedure, resistant to 25 mM alanine in MEM-10 plus 0.05 mM proline are pro-, stable, cross resistant to alpha-(methylamino)isobutyric acid (MeAIB) and show an approximately twofold increase in the initial velocity of proline uptake. Ethyl
methane
sulfonate (EMS) increases the frequency of pro- alar clones in the population by at least 50 times the spontaneous frequency. The increased velocity of proline transport by alar2 and alar3 can be attributable to the 1.5 to 3 times increase in velocity of transport of proline through systems A, ASC, and P. The Vmax for proline transport through the A system has increased two times for alar2 while the Km and Vmax for alar3 has increased by 1.4 and 2.3 times that of CHO-K1. There is a corresponding increase in Vmax of proline transport by alar2 through the P system. The P system is defined operationally as that portion of the Na+-dependent velocity that remains when the A, ASC, and glutamine-inhibitable fraction are eliminated. The system is concentrative. Proline appears to be the preferred substrate. Li+ cannot be substituted for Na+. The system is moderately dependent upon pH. It obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics and is not derepressible by
starvation
. There is no evidence for an N system in CHO-K1.
...
PMID:Alanine-resistant mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells, CHO-K1, producing increases in velocity of proline transport through the A, ASC, and P systems. 640 92
Toluene and o-xylene were completely mineralized to stoichiometric amounts of carbon dioxide,
methane
, and biomass by aquifer-derived microorganisms under strictly anaerobic conditions. The source of the inoculum was creosote-contaminated sediment from Pensacola, Fla. The adaptation periods before the onset of degradation were long (100 to 120 days for toluene degradation and 200 to 255 days for o-xylene). Successive transfers of the toluene- and o-xylene-degrading cultures remained active. Cell density in the cultures progressively increased over 2 to 3 years to stabilize at approximately 10(9) cells per ml. Degradation of toluene and o-xylene in stable mixed methanogenic cultures followed Monod kinetics, with inhibition noted at substrate concentrations above about 700 microM for o-xylene and 1,800 microM for toluene. The cultures degraded toluene or o-xylene but did not degrade m-xylene, p-xylene, benzene, ethylbenzene, or naphthalene. The degradative activity was retained after pasteurization or after
starvation
for 1 year. Degradation of toluene and o-xylene was inhibited by the alternate electron acceptors oxygen, nitrate, and sulfate. Degradation was also inhibited by the addition of preferred substrates such as acetate, H2, propionate, methanol, acetone, glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, peptone, and yeast extract. These data suggest that the presence of natural organic substrates or contaminants may inhibit anaerobic degradation of pollutants such as toluene and o-xylene at contaminated sites.
...
PMID:Anaerobic degradation of toluene and o-xylene by a methanogenic consortium. 811 84
This study focused on the use the thermophilic anaerobic granulae in the start-up of 70 degrees C acetate-fed upflow anaerobic sludge-blanket (UASB) reactors and the kinetics of granulae grown at 70 degrees C. In the UASB reactors, chemical oxygen demand removal commenced within 48 h of the start-up. The maximum reduction in chemical oxygen demand was 84% with the feed containing yeast and 71% without a yeast supplement. In the bioassays, the yeast-grown sludge converted 98% of the acetate consumed to
methane
as compared to 92% for the sludge grown without yeast. The highest initial specific
methane
production rate (mu-
CH4
) of the UASB sludges grown at 70 degrees C was 0.088 h(-1) at an acetate concentration of 4.6mM. The higher initial acetate concentration was found to prolong the lag-phase in
methane
production significantly and to decrease mu-
CH4
. The half-saturation constant (Ks), the inhibition constant (Ki), the inhibition response coefficient (n) and the mu-
CH4
-max, calculated according to a modified Haldane equation, were 1.5 mM, 2.8 mM, 0.8 and 0.28 h(-1), respectively. The prolonged
starvation
of the 70 degrees C sludge (15 days) decreased the mu-
CH4
from about 0.022 h(-1) to 0.011 h(-1) and increased the lag phase in
methane
production from 6 h to 24 h as compared with non-starved sludge.
...
PMID:Acetate treatment in 70 degrees C upflow anaerobic sludge-blanket (UASB) reactors: start-up with thermophilic inocula and the kinetics of the UASB sludges. 859 Jun 50
It was found that methyl phosphonic acid (Pn) was degraded by different Escherichia coli strains, which utilized it as the sole phosphorus source with resulting
methane
formation. This ability was influenced by mutations in the regulatory genes of the pho regulon. Thus, Pn was not degraded by an E. coli mutant defective in the regulatory phoB gene, responsible for the induction of pho-regulon proteins during phosphorus
starvation
. The intensity of Pn degradation depended on the age and concentration of the inoculum. Preincubation of bacteria in the presence of Pn accelerated subsequent degradation of both methyl phosphonic acid and its esters. Cultures developing from a small amount of inoculum degraded Pn more efficiently than heavily inoculated cultures that underwent only one cell division. However, cultures heavily inoculated with adapted cells degraded Pn as efficiently as cultures developing from a small amount of inoculum. Aeration was an important factor regulating Pn degradation: Pn was degraded more efficiently under anaerobic conditions regardless of the amount of inoculum.
...
PMID:[Catabolism of methylphosphonic acid and its physiological regulation in Escherichia coli]. 899 46
When mixed ruminal bacteria were starved in vitro for 24 h, cellular ATP decreased, but there was little change in cell protein. Starved ruminal bacteria derived most of their ATP from cellular polysaccharide. Because polysaccharide declined at a first-order rate of 23%/h, it was possible to estimate the endogenous polysaccharide utilization rate at various stages of
starvation
by multiplying the amount of utilizable polysaccharide remaining at each time point by 0.23. The bacteria initially had a rate of soluble carbohydrate fermentation that was > 717 micrograms of hexose equivalent/mg of protein per h.
Starvation
had little impact on the rate of soluble carbohydrate fermentation until 8 to 12 h, and the endogenous polysaccharide utilization rate was < 10 micrograms of hexose/mg of protein per h. The bacteria digested ball-milled cellulose at a rate of 24 micrograms of hexose/mg of protein per h for 8 to 12 h. Even bacteria that had been starved for 24 h fermented cellulose at a rate of 16 micrograms of hexose/mg of protein per h. The rate of
methane
production was initially 70 nmol of
methane
/mg of protein per min. Short periods of
starvation
(< 12 h) had little impact on
methane
production, but longer times caused an almost complete inhibition of methanogenesis. The rate of amino acid deamination was initially 31 nmol of ammonia/mg of protein per min, and the critical phase of
starvation
was again 8 to 12 h. Ruminal bacteria that were harvested at 24 h after feeding had 10-fold less polysaccharide than did bacteria that were harvested at 2 h after feeding, but this polysaccharide supported high rates of soluble carbohydrate and cellulose fermentation, deamination, and
methane
production.
...
PMID:The endogenous polysaccharide utilization rate of mixed ruminal bacteria and the effect of energy starvation on ruminal fermentation rates. 936 Dec 16
On the basis of mutational analysis, the genes for phosphonate uptake and degradation in Escherichia coli were shown to be organized in a 10.9-kb operon of 14 genes (named phnC to phnP) and induced by phosphate (P(i))
starvation
[Metcalf and Wanner (1993) J Bacteriol 175: 3430-3442]. The repression of phosphonate utilization by P(i) has hindered both the biochemical characterization of the carbon-phosphorus (C-P) lyase activity and the development of improved methods for phosphonate biodegradation in biotechnology. We have cloned the genes phnG to phnP (associated with C-P lyase activity) with the lac promoter to provide expression of C-P lyase in the presence of P(i). A number of strains lacking portions of the phn operon have been constructed. In vivo complementation of the strains, in which phnC to phnP (including both Pn transport and catalysis genes) or phnH to phnP (including only catalysis genes) was deleted, with plasmids carrying various fragments of the phn operon revealed that the expression of phnC-phnP gene products is essential to restore growth on minimal medium with phosphonate as the sole phosphorus source, while phnG-phnM gene products are required for C-P lyase activity as assessed by in vivo
methane
production from methylphosphonic acid. The minimum size of the DNA required for the whole-cell C-P lyase activity has been determined to be a 5.8-kb fragment, encompassing the phnG to phnM genes. Therefore, there is no requirement for the phn CDE-encoded phosphate transport system, suggesting that cleavage of the C-P bond may occur on the outer surface of the inner membrane of E. coli cells, releasing the carbon moiety into the periplasm. These data are in agreement with the observation that phosphonates cannot serve as the carbon source for E. coli growth.
...
PMID:Phosphate-independent expression of the carbon-phosphorus lyase activity of Escherichia coli. 965 Feb 56
A 41-kDa protein of Nitrosomonas eutropha was purified, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was found to be nearly identical with the sequence of AmoB, a subunit of ammonia monooxygenase. This protein was used to develop polyclonal antibodies, which were highly specific for the detection of the four genera of ammonia oxidizers of the beta-subclass of Proteobacteria (Nitrosomonas, including Nitrosococcus mobilis, which belongs phylogenetically to Nitrosomonas; Nitrosospira; Nitrosolobus; and Nitrosovibrio). In contrast, the antibodies did not react with ammonia oxidizers affiliated with the gamma-subclass of Proteobacteria (Nitrosococcus oceani and Nitrosococcus halophilus). Moreover,
methane
oxidizers (Methylococcus capsulatus, Methylocystis parvus, and Methylomonas methanica) containing the related particulate methane monooxygenase were not detected. Quantitative immunoblot analysis revealed that total cell protein of N. eutropha consisted of approximately 6% AmoB, when cells were grown using standard conditions (mineral medium containing 10 mM ammonium). This AmoB amount was shown to depend on the ammonium concentration in the medium. About 14% AmoB of total protein was found when N. eutropha was grown with 1 mM ammonium, whereas 4% AmoB was detected when 100 mM ammonium were used. In addition, the cellular amount of AmoB was influenced by the absence of the substrate. Cells starved for more than 2 months contained nearly twice as much AmoB as actively growing cells, although these cells possessed low ammonia-oxidizing activity. AmoB was always present and could even be detected in cells of Nitrosomonas after 1 year of ammonia
starvation
.
...
PMID:Polyclonal antibodies recognizing the AmoB protein of ammonia oxidizers of the beta-subclass of the class Proteobacteria. 1113 35
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>