Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (abdominal aortic aneurysm)
8,664 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

pBR322 contains the amp gene encoding beta-lactamase. When Escherichia coli carrying this plasmid is exposed to heat shock, beta-lactamase synthesis is repressed transiently at the translational level. To identify the DNA element responsible for this translational repression, DNA segments containing the translation start region of the amp gene were excised from pAT153 and fused in frame with the lacZ reading frame in the open reading frame vector pORF1. These constructs were introduced into E. coli, and the effect of heat shock of the cells on the synthesis of beta-galactosidase starting from the amp start codon was examined. As is the case for pBR322-encoded synthesis of beta-lactamase, the synthesis of beta-galactosidase encoded by the fused genes also ceased transiently upon heat shock. It is concluded that the heat shock-induced repression of the amp gene occurs at the initiation step of translation. As far as the present study is concerned, the minimum DNA segment responsible for the repression is AT TGA AAA AGG AAG AGT ATG AG, which includes the Shine-Dalgarno sequence (AAGGA) and the initiation codon (ATG).
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PMID:The translation start signal region of TEM beta-lactamase mRNA is responsible for heat shock-induced repression of amp gene expression in Escherichia coli. 250 25

Expression of the bacteriophage lambda two-codon, AUG AUA, barI minigene (bar+) leads to the arrest of protein synthesis in cells defective in peptidyl-tRNA hydrolase (Pth). It has been hypothesized that translation of the bar+ transcript provokes premature release and accumulation of peptidyl-tRNA (p-tRNA). Inhibition of protein synthesis would then result from either starvation of sequestered tRNA or from toxicity of accumulated p-tRNA. To test this hypothesis and to investigate the cause of arrest, we used a coupled in vitro transcription-translation system primed with DNA containing bar+ and the beta-lactamase-encoding gene of the vector as a reporter. The results show that expression of bar+ minigene severely inhibits beta-lactamase polypeptide synthesis by Pth-defective extracts and partially inhibits synthesis by wild-type extracts. Fractions enriched for Pth, or a homogeneous preparation of Pth, prevented and reversed bar+-mediated inhibition. A mutant minigene, barA702, which changes the second codon AUA (Ile) to AAA (Lys), was also toxic for Pth-defective cells. Expression of barA702 inhibited in vitro polypeptide synthesis by Pth-defective extracts and, as with bar+, exogenous Pth prevented inhibition. Addition of pure tRNALys prevented inhibition by barA702 but not by bar+. Expression of bar+ and barA702 led to release and accumulation of p-tRNAIle and p-tRNALys respectively but bar+ also induced accumulation of p-tRNALys. Finally, bar+ stimulated association of methionine with ribosomes probably as fMet-tRNAfMet and the accumulation of methionine and isoleucine in solution as peptidyl-tRNA (p-tRNA). These results indicate that minigene-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis involves premature release of p-tRNA, misincorporation of amino acyl-tRNA, accumulation of p-tRNAs and possibly sequestration of tRNAs.
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PMID:lambda bar minigene-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis involves accumulation of peptidyl-tRNA and starvation for tRNA. 964 45

Members of the AAA family of ATPases have been implicated in chaperone-like activities. We used the archaeal Cdc48/p97 homologue VAT as a model system to investigate the effect of an AAA protein on the folding and unfolding of two well-studied, heterologous substrates, cyclophilin and penicillinase. We found that, depending on the Mg2+ concentration, VAT assumes two states with maximum rates of ATP hydrolysis that differ by an order of magnitude. In the low-activity state, VAT accelerated the refolding of penicillinase, whereas in the high-activity state, it accelerated its unfolding. Both reactions were ATP-dependent. In its interaction with cyclophilin, VAT was ATP-independent and only promoted refolding. The N-terminal domain of VAT, which lacks ATPase activity, also accelerated the refolding of cyclophilin but showed no effect on penicillinase. VAT appears to be structurally equivalent over its entire length to Sec18/NSF, suggesting that these results apply more broadly to group II AAA proteins.
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PMID:The Janus face of the archaeal Cdc48/p97 homologue VAT: protein folding versus unfolding. 1054 42

TolAI--II--beta-lactamase, a fusion protein consisting of the inner membrane and transperiplasmic domains of TolA followed by TEM--beta-lactamase associated with the inner membrane but remained confined to the cytoplasm when expressed at high level in Escherichia coli. Although the fusion protein was resistant to proteolysis in vivo, it was hydrolyzed during preparative SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis and when insoluble cellular fractions unfolded with 5 M urea were subjected to microdialysis. Inhibitor profiling studies revealed that both a metallo- and serine protease were involved in TolAI--II--beta-lactamase degradation under denaturing conditions. The in vitro degradation rates of the fusion protein were not affected when insoluble fractions were harvested from a strain lacking protease IV, but were significantly reduced when microdialysis experiments were conducted with material isolated from an isogenic ftsH1 mutant. Adenine nucleotides were not required for degradation, and ATP supplementation did not accelerate the apparent rate of TolAI--II--beta-lactamase hydrolysis under denaturing conditions. Our results indicate that the metalloprotease active site of FtsH remains functional in the presence of 3--5 M urea and suggest that the ATPase and proteolytic activities of FtsH can be uncoupled if the substrate is sufficiently unstructured. Thus, a key role of the FtsH AAA module appears to be the net unfolding of bound substrates so that they can be efficiently engaged by the protease active site.
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PMID:Escherichia coli FtsH (HflB) degrades a membrane-associated TolAI-II-beta-lactamase fusion protein under highly denaturing conditions. 1123 95