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Query: UMLS:C0694563 (eds)
1,062 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have characterized a mutation that affects the tRNAAsp coded by yeast mitochondrial DNA. Comparison of the DNA sequences of the tRNAAsp gene from a wild type strain and the mutant demonstrates that the mutant differs by a C to U base change in position 72 of the tRNA. This mutation abolishes mitochondrial protein synthesis, presumably because the tRNAAsp made from this gene cannot be charged with aspartic acid (FAye, G., Bolotin-Fukuhara, M., and Fukuhara, H. (1976) in The Genetics and Biogenesis of Chloroplasts and Mitochondria (Bucher, C. T., Neupert, W., Sebalt, W., and Werner, S., eds) pp. 547-555, North Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam). It also reduces the amount of tRNAAsp transcripts in the mutant as compared to the wild type.
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PMID:A mutation in the tRNAAsp gene from yeast mitochondria. Effects on RNA and protein synthesis. 702 70

Nacre organic matrix has been conventionally classified as both 'water-soluble' and 'water-insoluble', based on its solubility in aqueous solutions after decalcification with acid or EDTA. Some characteristics (aspartic acid-rich, silk-fibroin-like content) were specifically attributed to either one or the other. The comparative study on the technique of extraction (extraction with water alone vs. demineralization with EDTA) presented here, seems to reveal that this generally accepted classification may need to be reconsidered. Actually, the nondecalcified soluble organic matrix, extracted in ultra-pure water, displays many of the characteristics of what until now has been called 'insoluble matrix'. We present the results obtained on this extract and on a conventional EDTA-soluble matrix, with various characterization methods: fractionation by size-exclusion and anion-exchange HPLC, amino acid analysis, glycosaminoglycan and calcium quantification, SDS/PAGE and FTIR spectroscopy. We propose that the model for the interlamellar matrix sheets of nacre given by Nakahara [In: Biomineralization and Biological Metal Accumulation, Westbroek, P. & deJong, E.W., eds, (1983) pp. 225-230. Reidel, Dordrecht, Holland] and Weiner and Traub [Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B (1984) 304, 425-434] may no longer be valid. The most recent model, proposed by Levi-Kalisman et al. [J. Struct. Biol. (2001) 135, 8-17], seemed to be more in accordance with our findings.
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PMID:Soluble silk-like organic matrix in the nacreous layer of the bivalve Pinctada maxima. 1238 58