Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0276640 (TEM)
20,729 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An ampicillin transposon Tn901 was used as a "mutagen" to isolate insertion mutants of the bacteriocinogenic plasmid Clo DF13. By combining the obtained heteroduplex and restriction maps of the Clo DF13::Tn901 plasmids (van Emboden et al., 1977b) with their polypeptide pattern in minicells, we were able to map five genes on the Clo DF13 genome. These five genes designated A (cloacin gene), B, C, D, and G cover 55% of the coding capacity of Clo DF13 DNA. Since integration of Tn901 within these five genes did not result in a loss of the Clo DF13::Tn901 plasmids involved, it is suggested that these genes do not play an essential role in the maintenance of these plasmid insertion mutants. In addition, the described methods allowed us to indicate the initiation site of cloacin synthesis and to propose the counter-clockwise direction of transcription of the cloacin gene. The Tn901 DNA directed the synthesis of at least three polypeptides one of which is shown to be a TEM-1 beta-lactamase.
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PMID:Genetic map of the bacteriocinogenic plasmid CLO DF13 derived by insertion of the transposon Tn901. 34 43

The ability of collagen adsorbed on apatitic surfaces to promote adhesion of A. viscosus was studied. Treatment of hydroxyapatite (HA) with human type I or type III collagen strongly promoted adhesion of A. viscosus LY7. TEM observations revealed that A. viscosus also attached to fibrils prepared from human type I collagen. The alpha(2) polypeptide derived from type I collagen exhibited moderate activity in promoting binding. Mutans of A. viscosus which possess type I fimbriae, but not type 2 fimbriae or no fimbriae, also bound to collagen-treated HA. This suggests that the adhesin responsible was associated with type I fimbriae, strains of A. israelii and A. odontolyticus also exhibited strong binding to collagen-treated HA. The avidity of Actinomyces species for collagen would seem to be partially responsible for the high proportions of these organisms found on root surfaces.
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PMID:[Binding of Actinomyces viscosus to collagen]. 130 30

A fragment of Tn1331 including tnpR, aac, aadA, and a bla gene which encodes lower levels of resistance to ampicillin and carbenicillin as compared to those mediated by the TEM beta-lactamase was sequenced. The polypeptide encoded by the bla gene has homology with the OXA-1, PSE-2, and OXA-2 proteins. Genes aac and bla are upstream and downstream respectively of aadA, and are both flanked by recombinational hot spots. Tn1331 has 520-bp direct repeats which include parts of the tnpR and TEM bla genes. Evolutionary models for the genesis of Tn1331 are proposed.
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PMID:Sequencing and expression of aadA, bla, and tnpR from the multiresistance transposon Tn1331. 196 48

High level expression of TEM beta-lactamase results in the accumulation of precursor and mature protein in the insoluble fraction of Escherichia coli. The mature polypeptide is sequestered in protein aggregates (inclusion bodies) located within the periplasmic space whereas the insoluble precursor is present in the cytoplasm. With the native beta-lactamase, aggregation is observed when the rate of expression exceeds 2.5% of the total protein synthesis rate. Substitution of the native signal sequence with the outer membrane protein A (OmpA) leader peptide results in extensive aggregation of only the mature protein. Furthermore, for OmpA-beta-lactamase, the accumulation of mature insoluble protein is independent of the rate of protein synthesis. These observations cannot be accounted by the kinetics of export of the OmpA-beta-lactamase and the native precursor, therefore suggesting that the signal sequence affects the conformation of the newly secreted mature polypeptide and in turn, the folding pathway. Previously, we have shown that the aggregation of the mature protein secreted using its own signal sequence can be inhibited by growing the cells in the presence of non-metabolizable sugars such as sucrose (Bowden, G., and Georgiou, G. (1988) Biotechnol. Prog. 4, 97-101). We show here that this phenomenon is not related to osmotic effects, changes in beta-lactamase translation or precursor processing. It follows that the addition of sugars exerts a direct effect on the in vivo pathway of aggregation and folding, in analogy with the well characterized effect of sugars in vitro.
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PMID:Folding and aggregation of beta-lactamase in the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli. 221 91

Molecular cloning of DNA fragments permitted the isolation of structural genes coding for SHV-1, SHV-2, OHIO-1, and OXA-6 beta-lactamases. DNA probes were constructed for SHV-1, and under conditions of high stringency, hybridization was observed only between SHV-1 and SHV-2. Oligonucleotide typing with a 15-mer SHV-1 probe was capable of discriminating between SHV-1 and SHV-2 but not OHIO-1. The nucleotide sequence of the SHV-1 beta-lactamase gene from plasmid R974 has been determined. The structural gene encodes a polypeptide product which differs by 9 residues from the p453 (SHV-1) PIT-2 enzyme determined by peptide sequencing. The significance of each mutation was assessed by alignment of amino acid sequences and comparisons with the Staphylococcus aureus PC1 penicillinase crystal structure. Structural similarities between SHV-1 and class A beta-lactamases are extensive, with amino acid identities of 88.9% between SHV-1 and LEN-1, 91.8% between SHV-1 and OHIO-1, and 63.7% between SHV-1 and TEM-1.
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PMID:Cloning of SHV-2, OHIO-1, and OXA-6 beta-lactamases and cloning and sequencing of SHV-1 beta-lactamase. 222 67

We determined the nucleotide sequence of the blaSHV-2(pBP60-1) gene from Klebsiella ozaenae which confers resistance to broad-spectrum cephalosporins. The structural gene encodes a polypeptide product of 286 amino acids, and the estimated molecular weight of the mature protein is 28,900. Amino acid sequence comparison of the SHV-2pBP60-1 enzyme with all known class A beta-lactamases and homology studies showed that the residues were highly conserved. Furthermore, SHV-2pBP60-1 was clearly related to SHV-1, LEN-1, and OHIO-1. The SHV-2pBP60-1 enzyme differed from SHV-1 isolated from Klebsiella pneumoniae by seven amino acid substitutions. One of these substitutions, the Gly----Ser substitution at position 234, is probably a key region for the novel activity of cefotaxime hydrolysis. A phylogenetic tree was constructed by using all class A beta-lactamases of known sequences by a progressive alignment method. The data suggested that the beta-lactamases of gram-positive Streptomyces, Staphylococcus, and Bacillus species appeared early in evolution, followed by the PSE and CARB enzymes of Pseudomonas species and, more recently, by the SHV-type and TEM-type enzymes found in enteric bacteria. Larger evolutionary distances separated clusters of the gram-positive beta-lactamases than separated clusters of the gram-negative enzymes. Results of this phylogenetic study suggested that extended-spectrum enzymes are recent derivatives that are selected by the use of new cephalosporins.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence and phylogeny of SHV-2 beta-lactamase. 228 85

The coding region for the mature form of TEM beta-lactamase was fused to random positions within the coding region of the penicillin-binding protein 1B (PBP 1B) gene and the nucleotide sequences across the fusion junctions of 100 in-frame fusions were determined. All fusion proteins that contained at least the NH2-terminal 94 residues of PBP 1B provided individual cells of E. coli with substantial levels of ampicillin resistance, suggesting that the beta-lactamase moiety had been translocated to the periplasm. Fusion proteins that contained less than or equal to 63 residues of PBP 1B possessed beta-lactamase activity, but could not protect single cells of E. coli from ampicillin, indicating that the beta-lactamase moiety of these fusion proteins remained in the cytoplasm. The beta-lactamase fusion approach suggested a model for the organization of PBP 1B in which the protein is embedded in the cytoplasmic membrane by a single hydrophobic transmembrane segment (residues 64-87), with a short NH2-terminal domain (residues 1-63), and the remainder of the polypeptide (residues 88-844) exposed on the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane. The proposed model for the organization of PBP 1B was supported by experiments which showed that the protein was completely digested by proteinase K added from the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane but was only slightly reduced in size by protease attack from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane.
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PMID:Use of a beta-lactamase fusion vector to investigate the organization of penicillin-binding protein 1B in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli. 333 Jul 53

Linker insertions in the pullulanase structural gene (pulA) were examined for their effects on pullulanase activity and cell surface localization in Escherichia coli carrying the cognate secretion genes from Klebsiella oxytoca. Of the 23 insertions, 11 abolished pullulanase activity but none were found to prevent secretion. To see whether more drastic changes affected secretion, we fused up to five reporter proteins (E. coli periplasmic alkaline phosphatase, E. coli periplasmic maltose-binding protein, periplasmic TEM beta-lactamase, Erwinia chrysanthemi extracellular endoglucanase Z, and Bacillus subtilis extracellular levansucrase) to three different positions in the pullulanase polypeptide: close to the N terminus of the mature protein, at the C terminus of the protein, or at the C terminus of a truncated pullulanase variant lacking the last 256 amino acids. Only 3 of the 13 different hybrids were efficiently secreted: 2 in which beta-lactamase was fused to the C terminus of full-length or truncated pullulanase and 1 in which maltose-binding protein was fused close to the N terminus of pullulanase. Affinity-purified endoglucanase-pullulanase and pullulanase-endoglucanase hybrids exhibited apparently normal levels of pullulanase activity, indicating that the conformation of the pullulanase segment of the hybrid had not been dramatically altered by the presence of the reporter. However, pullulanase-endoglucanase hybrids were secreted efficiently if the endoglucanase component comprised only the 60-amino-acid, C-terminal cellulose-binding domain, suggesting that at least one factor limiting hybrid protein secretion might be the size of the reporter.
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PMID:Extracellular secretion of pullulanase is unaffected by minor sequence changes but is usually prevented by adding reporter proteins to its N- or C-terminal end. 766 12

Serratia marcescens S6 produces a pI 9.7 carbapenem-hydrolyzing beta-lactamase that is probably encoded by the chromosome (Y. Yang, P. Wu, and D. M. Livermore, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 34:755-758, 1990). A total of 11.3 kb of genomic DNA from this strain was cloned into plasmid pACYC184 in Escherichia coli. After further subclonings, the carbapenem-hydrolyzing beta-lactamase gene (blaSme-1) was sequenced (EMBL accession number Z28968). The gene corresponded to an 882-bp open reading frame which encoded a 294-amino-acid polypeptide. This open reading frame was preceded by a -10 and a -35 region consistent with a putative promoter sequence of members of the family Enterobacteriaceae. This promoter was active in E. coli and S. marcescens, as demonstrated by primer extension analysis. N-terminal sequencing showed that the Sme-1 enzyme had a 27-amino-acid leader peptide and enabled calculation of the molecular mass of the mature protein (29.3 kDa). Sequence alignment revealed that Sme-1 is a class A serine beta-lactamase and not a class B metalloenzyme. The earlier view that the enzyme was zinc dependent was discounted. Among class A beta-lactamases, Sme-1 had the greatest amino acid identity (70%) with the pI 6.9 carbapenem-hydrolyzing beta-lactamase, NMC-A, from Enterobacter cloacae NOR-1. Comparison of these two protein sequences suggested a role for specific residues in carbapenem hydrolysis. The relatedness of Sme-1 to other class A beta-lactamases such as the TEM and SHV types was remote. This work details the sequence of the second carbapenem-hydrolyzing class A beta-lactamase from an enterobacterial species and the first in the genus Serratia.
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PMID:Cloning and sequence analysis of the gene for a carbapenem-hydrolyzing class A beta-lactamase, Sme-1, from Serratia marcescens S6. 809 24

We have determined the nucleotide sequence (EMBL accession number, Z 21957) of the cloned chromosomal PER-1 extended-spectrum beta-lactamase gene from a Pseudomonas aeruginosa RNL-1 clinical isolate, blaPER-1 corresponds to a 924-bp open reading frame which encodes a polypeptide of 308 amino acids. This open reading frame is preceded by a -10 and a -35 region consistent with a putative P. aeruginosa promoter. Primer extension analysis of the PER-1 mRNA start revealed that this promoter was active in P. aeruginosa but not in Escherichia coli, in which PER-1 expression was driven by vector promoter sequences. N-terminal sequencing identified the PER-1 26-amino-acid leader peptide and enabled us to calculate the molecular mass (30.8 kDa) of the PER-1 mature form. Analysis of the percent GC content of blaPER-1 and of its 5' upstream sequences, as well as the codon usage for blaPER-1, indicated that blaPER-1 may have been inserted into P. aeruginosa genomic DNA from a nonpseudomonad bacterium. The PER-1 gene showed very low homology with other beta-lactamase genes at the DNA level. By using computer methods, assessment of the extent of identity between PER-1 and 10 beta-lactamase amino acid sequences indicated that PER-1 is a class A beta-lactamase. PER-1 shares around 27% amino acid identity with the sequenced extended-spectrum beta-lactamases of the TEM-SHV series and MEN-1 from Enterobacteriaceae species. The use of parsimony methods showed that PER-1 is not more closely related to gram-negative than to gram-positive bacterial class A beta-lactamases. Surprisingly, among class A beta-lactamases, PER-1 was most closely related to the recently reported CFXA from Bacteroides vulgatus, with which it shared 40% amino acid identity. This work indicates that non-Enterobacteriaceae species such as P. aeruginosa may possess class A extended-spectrum beta-lactamase genes possibly resulting from intergeneric DNA transfer.
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PMID:Sequence analysis of PER-1 extended-spectrum beta-lactamase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and comparison with class A beta-lactamases. 814 62


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