Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (
stomatitis
)
8,852
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autoradiography of colony replicas immobilized on filter paper was used to isolate a Chinese hamster ovary cell line deficient in incorporation of radiolabeled fucose into a trichloroacetic acid-insoluble fraction. This cell line, called 62.1, has the same growth rate at 37 degrees C as wild-type cells, but incorporates five times less fucose into acid-insoluble radioactivity. Chemical analysis of fucose bound to macromolecules also showed a fivefold reduction in the mutant. The fucoproteins of the mutant cell line differ qualitatively from those of wild-type cells as visualized by SDS gel electrophoresis fluorography; no differences were detected between total proteins as visualized by coomassie blue staining. The macromolecular sialic acid content of the mutant was somewhat higher than the wild type (20%). Studies of the synthesis of the glycoprotein of vesicular
stomatitis
virus in mutant and wild-type cells showed that the mutant is unable to synthesize complex-type N-linked oligosaccharides. Enzyme assays show that ths defect in the mutant is due to reduction in
UDP-N-acetylglucosamine
-glycoprotein N-acetyl-glucosaminyltransferase, a key enzyme in the assembly of complex glycopeptides. Hybridization studies have shown that mutant 62.1 has common mutations belonging to the same complementation group as mutant PhaR1-1. This latter mutant was previously isolated using lectin resistance by Stanley et al. (1975) and was also deficient in the above N-acetyl-glucosaminyltransferase.
...
PMID:Autoradiographic detection and characterization of a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant deficient in fucoproteins. 628 69
Mixed monolayers containing vesicular
stomatitis
virus-infected Chinese hamster ovary clone 15B cells (lacking
UDP-N-acetylglucosamine
transferase I, a Golgi enzyme) and uninfected wild-type Chinese hamster ovary cells were formed. Extensive cell fusion occurs after the monolayer is exposed to a pH of 5.0. The vesicular
stomatitis
virus encoded membrane glycoprotein (G protein) resident in the rough endoplasmic reticulum (labeled with [35S]methionine) or Golgi complex (labeled with [3H]palmitate) of 15B cells at the time of fusion can reach Golgi complexes from wild-type cells after fusion; G protein present in the plasma membrane cannot. Transfer to wild-type Golgi complexes is monitored by the conversion of G protein to an endoglycosidase H-resistant form upon arrival, and also demonstrated by immunofluorescence microscopy. G protein in the Golgi complex of the 15B cells at the time of fusion exhibits properties vis a vis its transfer to an exogenous Golgi population identical to those found earlier in a cell-free system (Fries, E., and J. E. Rothman. 1981. J. Cell Biol., 90: 697-704). Specifically, pulse-chase experiments using the in vivo fusion and in vitro assays reveal the same two populations of G protein in the Golgi complex. The first population, consisting of G protein molecules that have just received their fatty acid, can transfer to a second Golgi population in vivo and in vitro. The second population, entered by G protein approximately 5 min after its acylation, is unavailable for this transfer, in vivo and in vitro. Presumably, this second population consists of those G-protein molecules that had already been transferred between compartments within the 15B Golgi population, in an equivalent process before cell fusion or homogenization for in vitro assays. Evidently, the same compartment boundary in the Golgi complex is detected by these two measurements. The surprisingly facile process of glycoprotein transit between Golgi stacks that occurs in vivo may therefore be retained in vitro, providing a basis for the cell-free system.
...
PMID:Transport of protein between cytoplasmic membranes of fused cells: correspondence to processes reconstituted in a cell-free system. 642 57