Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two DNA polymerases were detected in Tetrahymena pyriformis, strain GL. One (enzyme I) was sensitive to N-ethylmaleimide, while the other (enzyme II) was insensitive. The molecular weight of the enzymes, as determined by glycerol gradient centrifugation analysis, were approximately 130,000 and 70,000, respectively. Optimal concentration of MgCl2 was 10mM for enzyme I and 18mM for enzyme II. KCl inhibited enzyme I but stimulated enzyme II. Poly (dA-dT) served effectively as a template for enzyme I, while poly(dA).(dT)12-18 was an effective template for enzyme II. Enzyme I activity increased with cell growth and sharply declined after the cells reached the stationary phase. On the other hand, enzyme II activity appeared only at the end of log phase. In cells synchronized by starvation-refeeding technique enzyme I was markedly stimulated in correspondence to the rate of DNA synthesis, whereas the level of enzyme II activity changed to lesser extent. By ethidium bromide treatment, only enzyme I activity was induced.
...
PMID:Presence of two DNA polymerases in Tetrahymena pyriformis. 11 38

When growing cultures of S. cerevisiae are treated with high concentrations of ethidium bromide (greater than 50 mug/ml), three phases of petite induction may be observed: I. the majority of cells are rapidly converted to petite, II. subsequently a large proportion of cells recover the ability to form respiratory competent clones, and III. slow, irreversible conversion of all cells to petite. The extent of recovery of respiratory competence observed is dependent on the strain of S. cerevisiae employed and the temperature and the carbon source used in the growth medium. The effects of 100 mug/ml ethidium bromide are also produced by 10 mug/ml ethidium bromide in the presence of the detergent, sodium dodecyl sulphate, and recovery is also observed when cells are treated with 10 mug/ml ethidium bromide under starvation conditions. Genetic analysis of strain differences indicates that a number of nuclear genes influence petite induction by ethidium bromide. In one strain, S288C, petite induction by 100 mug/ml ethidium bromide is extremely slow under certain conditions. Mitochondria isolated from from S288C lack the ethidium bromide stimulated nuclease activity found in D243-4A, a strain which shows triphasic kinetics of petite formation. This enzyme may, therefore, be responsible for the initial phase of rapid petite formation.
...
PMID:Factors affecting petite induction and the recovery of respiratory competence in yeast cells exposed to ethidium bromide. 77 97

In female rats, pretreatment with dexamethasone acetate or triamcinolone reduced the toxicity and plasma concentrations of tetraethylammonium bromide while increasing its level in urine. Pretreatment with corticosterone acetate or pregnenolone-16alpha-carbonitrile shared none of these effects. Although starvation or restraint neither diminished the tetraethylammonium bromide concentrations in plasma nor accelerated its urinary excretion, its toxicity was diminished by the stress induced with spinal cord lesions, heat, cold, hydrocortisone, or reserpine as well as starvation or restraint. The protection offered against the toxicant by stress and by the potent glucocorticoids seemed to be mediated, at least partly, via different mechanisms. Stress-induced resistance to tetraethylammonium bromide could not be attributed to elevated plasma corticosterone levels, whereas glucocorticoid-induced resistance could be partially ascribed to increased urinary excretion of the toxicant.
...
PMID:Influence of steroids and stress on toxicity and disposition of tetraethylammonium bromide. 103 75

The elution profiles of Asp-tRNA from unstarved and starved cultures of a relaxed-control (Rel-) strain of Escherichia coli were compared by reversed-phase chromatography. Methionine starvation results in the appearance of several additional species of Asp-tRNA which are not observed with starvation for leucine or histidine. By the criterion of cyanogen bromide-effected shifts in chromatographic elution position, a large portion of the tRNAAsp synthesized in methionine-starved cells lacks the normal Q nucleoside. By the same criterion, virtually all of the tRNAAsp from unstarved, leucine-starved, and histidine-starved cells contain Q. We conclude that methionine starvation prevents the formation of the norma Q nucleoside in Rel- E. coli.
...
PMID:Inhibition of nucleoside Q formation in transfer ribonucleic acid during methionine starvation of relaxed-control Escherichia coli. 110 5

Maternal starvation inhibits fetal brain development during late gestation in the rat. To determine whether intrinsic or extrinsic factors might be the principal contributor to altered growth, brain cells from 20 day fetuses were cultured in a 96 well plate with MEM and 10% adult rat serum. Tissue growth was monitored by spectrophotometric measurement of the mitochondrial reduction of a chromagen 3-(4,5 dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5 diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT). After 1, 4 or 6 days incubation, MTT activity in non confluent cultures was shown to be directly related to tissue mass. When fetal brain cell cultures were incubated with 1% and 10% concentrations of adult rat serum, an 11-fold increase in MTT activity paralleled a 15-fold increase in tritiated thymidine incorporation. The impact of maternal starvation on fetal brain cell growth was examined by measuring MTT activity in fetal brain cells from fed and starved mothers. When cultures were incubated for 6 days with graded concentrations of fed adult serum (1.25-10%), the MTT response was slightly but consistently lower in cells from starved when compared with cells from fed mothers. By contrast, a marked difference in MTT activity which was paralleled by a lower DNA content became apparent when fetal rat brain cells were incubated with starved adult serum. Fetal serum and adult male serum were found to support growth equally well, while incubation of fetal brain cells with maternal sera resulted in lower MTT values than with the corresponding fetal sera. When cells were incubated with fetal sera pooled from starved mothers, MTT activity was decreased by 42 to 45%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Retardation of fetal brain cell growth during maternal starvation: circulating factors versus altered cellular response. 160 59

It has been shown previously that starvation of a mid-logarithmic-phase culture of Escherichia coli B/r for an essential nutrient results in the methylation of a membrane-associated protein (P-43) (C. C. Young and R. W. Bernlohr, J. Bacteriol. 172:5147-5153, 1990). In this communication, the purification of P-43 and sequence analysis of cyanogen bromide-generated peptide fragments identified P-43 as elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). This was confirmed by the ability of anti-EF-Tu antibody to precipitate P-43. We propose that the nutrient-dependent methylation of EF-Tu may be involved in the regulation of growth, possibly as a principal component of an unidentified signal transduction pathway in bacteria.
...
PMID:Elongation factor Tu is methylated in response to nutrient deprivation in Escherichia coli. 202 14

SV-40 transformed human foreskin keratinocytes (line SV-K14) develop under conditions of serum starvation the competence to form cornified envelopes that are characteristic of terminally differentiating epidermal cells. In this cell line, the final assembly of the envelope does not occur spontaneously but must be induced using a calcium ionophore. Five potential precursor proteins with molecular weights of 140K, 90K, 61K, 53K, and 36K, respectively, could be detected in the extracts of envelope competent and noncompetent cells. The 61 kD and the 36 kD precursors were specifically decorated in immunoblots when using an antiserum directed against the purified cornified envelope of SV-K14 cells. The 140 kD protein was identified as involucrin by means of a commercial anti-involucrin antibody. Part of the 61 kD protein was found to be inserted into the plasma membrane after the cells gained envelope competence. The set of precursor proteins used by SV-K14 cells differed markedly from those described in the literature for epidermal cells in vivo and for normal human keratinocytes in vitro. Furthermore, cyanogen bromide cleavage of purified envelopes from transformed and normal keratinocytes revealed a completely different peptide pattern. This indicates that the exact molecular composition of the cornified envelope may not be strictly determined and may vary according to the availability of potential substrate proteins at the very moment when the cross-linking enzyme, the plasma membrane associated transglutaminase, becomes functional.
...
PMID:Identification and subcellular distribution of cornified envelope precursor proteins in the transformed human keratinocyte line SV-K14. 243 76

We show that the nuclear genes for the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) of Neurospora crassa are distinct in their encoded proteins, codon usage, mRNA levels, and regulation. The 4.2-kilobase-pair region representing the structural gene for cytoplasmic LeuRS and flanking regions has been sequenced. The positions of the 5' and 3' ends of mRNA and of a single 62-base-pair intron have been mapped. The methionine-initiated open reading frame encoded a protein of 1,123 amino acids and displayed a strong codon bias. Although cytoplasmic LeuRS shares with mitochondrial LeuRS some general features common to most aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, there is little amino acid sequence similarity between them, mRNA levels for cytoplasmic LeuRS were much higher than those for mitochondrial LeuRS. This observation and the strong codon bias in the cytoplasmic LeuRS gene may contribute to a greater abundance of cytoplasmic LeuRS than mitochondrial LeuRS. The genes for cytoplasmic and mitochondrial LeuRS are regulated independently. The cytoplasmic LeuRS gene is regulated by the cross-pathway control system in N. crassa, which is analogous to general amino acid control in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The cytoplasmic LeuRS mRNA levels are induced by amino acid starvation resulting from the addition of aminotriazole. Part of this increase is due to utilization of new transcription start sites. In contrast, the mitochondrial LeuRS gene is not induced by amino acid limitation. However, the mitochondrial LeuRS mRNA levels did increase dramatically upon inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis by chloramphenicol or ethidium bromide or in the temperature-sensitive strain leu-5 carrying a mutation in the mitochondrial LeuRS structural gene.
...
PMID:Regulation of the nuclear genes encoding the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetases of Neurospora crassa. 253

The state of adenylylation, n, of glutamine synthetase (GS) in Pseudomonas fluorescens has been determined as a function of growth conditions. Compared to the behavior of Escherichia coli, atypical responses to either carbon or nitrogen starvation were observed when P. fluorescens was grown with either succinate, malate, or fumarate as the sole source of carbon and energy. Under conditions of carbon starvation (high NH4+, low dicarboxylic acid substrate), the value of n falls rapidly from 10 to 1.0 during prolonged incubation in the stationary phase, whereas the value of n is unexpectedly high (ca. 10) in extracts of nitrogen-starved cells. These abnormal responses are attributable to particular permeability properties of P. fluorescens cells compared to E. coli. The unusual changes in nitrogen-starved cells are related to the release of alpha-ketoglutarate by such cells during incubation or washing procedures. These changes can be prevented by the addition of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) to the cultures 5 min prior to harvesting the cells, or by freezing the cell pellets just after centrifugation and sonication within 3 min of suspension in buffer, or by suspending freshly harvested cells in buffer containing alpha-ketoglutarate and orthophosphate (i.e., effectors that favor deadenylylation of glutamine synthetase). The abnormal changes which occur during carbon starvation in the presence of excess NH4+ can be prevented by addition of ATP and glutamine to the buffer in which the freshly harvested cells are suspended prior to sonication. The results suggest that during the stationary phase of growth on succinate, fumarate, or malate (but not on glucose), the cellular membrane becomes permeable to small molecules that regulate the adenylylation cascade, and indeed, it was observed that such whole cells expressed, without any chemical or physical treatment, more than 50% of the glutamine synthetase activity they contained. Such cells may be useful in studies to examine the effects of multiple metabolites on the regulation of glutamine synthetase adenylylation in situ.
...
PMID:Adenylylation state of glutamine synthetase and permeability properties of Pseudomonas fluorescens. 287 12

In order to clone the Escherichia coli gene for the stringent starvation protein (SSP), we determined its N-terminal sequence as well as the sequence of two peptide fragments obtained by cyanogen bromide cleavage of the protein. We then chemically synthesized four sets of oligodeoxyribonucleotide mixtures that represented possible codon combinations for parts of these amino acid sequences. The synthetic oligonucleotides were labelled with 32P at their 5'-termini and used as hybridization probes to detect DNA fragments containing the complementary sequences. Genomic Southern hybridization of E. coli chromosomal DNA gave up to ten DNA fragments hybridizing with each probe but only a few hybridized with two or more of the probes. The latter fragments were cloned in pBR322. By determining partial base sequences with a rapid method and examining proteins encoded by the DNA fragments, we were able to show that we had isolated a clone containing the complete SSP structural gene.
...
PMID:Cloning of the Escherichia coli gene for the stringent starvation protein. 300 20


1 2 3 4 Next >>