Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01034 (cystatin C)
3,397 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The presence of ubiquitin in ciliates was first demonstrated in Tetrahymena pyriformis. One clone--pTU2--presents two incomplete open reading frames and the putative polyubiquitin genes have been shown to be highly similar to those of other organisms. To further analyze the organization of this multigene family, several fragments of macronuclear DNA were cloned. We report here the isolation and characterization of one genomic clone (pTU20) that encodes a polyubiquitin gene (TU20) with five tandem repeats and presenting only one extra triplet CAA (Gln) upstream from the TGA. The promoter region of TU20 also presents a consensus heat shock element. The specific detection of RNA species with a synthetic oligonucleotide probe reveals that it corresponds to the 1.8 kb mRNA species whose expression is increased by temperature stress.
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PMID:The macronuclear polyubiquitin gene of the ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis. 166 85

Point mutations in factor IX genes of four unrelated Chinese patients with hemophilia B have been identified by direct sequencing of amplified genomic DNA fragments. These four mutations occur in exon 8 of the factor IX gene. A C to T transition at nucleotide 30,863 changes codon 248 from Arg (CGA) to a new Stop codon (TGA), described in a previous family as factor IXMalmo3 (Green P M et al., EMBO J 1989; 8: 1067). A G to A transition at nucleotide 31,051 changes codon 310 from Trp (TGG) to a nonsense or Stop codon (TGA; factor IXChongquing2). A G to A transition at nucleotide 31,119 changes codon 333 which is for Arg (CGA) in normal factor IX, to one for Gln (CAA) in the variant previously described as factor IXLondon2 (Tsang T C et al., EMBO J 1988; 7: 3009) in a patient with moderately severe hemophilia B. The fourth patient has a novel C to A transversion at nucleotide 31,290, which corresponds to replacement of codon 390 which is for Ala (GCA) in normal factor IX, to one for Glu (GAA) in a patient with moderately severe hemophilia B (factor IXChongquing3). DNA sequences of amplified fragments from mothers of three showed both their son's variant and a normal nucleotide at the appropriate position, indicating that they are carriers. The fourth patient's (factor IXMalmo3) mother, whose DNA was not evaluable, was most probably a carrier because of her low plasma factor IX levels.
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PMID:Point mutations in four hemophilia B patients from China. 227 May 38

The gene-sized macronuclear DNA of the hypotrichous ciliate Stylonychia lemnae contains one size class of DNA molecules of 1.85 kb (1 kb = 10(3) base-pairs) coding for beta-tubulin. These DNA molecules consist of two different beta-tubulin genes, beta 1 and beta 2, which are amplified to about 150,000 (beta 1) and 30,000 (beta 2) copies per macronucleus. Both genes were cloned and sequenced entirely. The coding sequences of the two molecules (1329 base-pairs including TGA) predict identical amino acid sequences for the proteins and show a nucleotide homology of 97.2%. The nucleotide as well as the encoded amino acid sequences are highly conserved, when compared to beta-tubulin genes from vertebrates. The ciliate-specific codon TAA specifying glutamine is present only in the beta 2-tubulin gene, whereas glutamine is encoded soley by CAA in the beta 1-tubulin gene. The 5' and 3'-non-coding regions of both beta-tubulin genes are similar in length, but differ extremely in nucleotide sequence. Both beta-tubulin genes are transcriptionally active in S. lemnae, although not all putative transcription-regulatory sequences known from higher eukaryotes can be detected within the non-coding regions. The two transcription products localized by S1-mapping experiments show a similar length of about 1.40 kb and transcription seems to be regulated differently for beta 1 and beta 2.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence and expression of two beta-tubulin genes in Stylonychia lemnae. 312 2

Only three tRNA genes are present within a sequenced 12.35 kbp region of the 15.8 kbp mtDNA of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a unicellular green alga. The corresponding tRNAs, whose anticodons are specific for TGG (Trp), CAA/G (Gln) and ATG (Met) codons, all display conventional secondary structures. The tRNA(Met) gene encodes an elongator rather than initiator species. The standard genetic code is used in C. reinhardtii mitochondria, but codon distribution is highly biased: in a collection of six identified protein coding genes, nine codons (including TGA) are not used at all, while four other sense codons occur very infrequently. In spite of the absence of certain codons, a minimum of 23 tRNAs (assuming separate initiator and elongator tRNAs(Met) are used) is needed to translate the C. reinhardtii mitochondrial genetic code. It appears unlikely that this minimal tRNA set is encoded by C. reinhardtii mtDNA.
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PMID:Transfer RNA genes and the genetic code in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mitochondria. 324 66

We have screened 110 unrelated Alport syndrome kindreds for mutations in the exon 48 region of the COL4A5 collagen gene. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of the PCR-amplified region of exon 48 revealed sequence variants in DNA from affected males and carriers of three unrelated kindreds. All three kindreds have classical Alport syndrome of the juvenile type. DNA-sequencing analyses demonstrated two different single base changes in the codon for arginine-1563 located in exon 48. In Utah kindred 2103, there was a substitution of C by T resulting in the change of the CGA codon for arginine to the translation stop codon TGA. In Utah kindred 2123 and in the Danish kindred A13, there was a C-->T mutation in the noncoding strand changing the same codon to CAA for glutamine. Both mutations were confirmed by allele-specific hybridization on PCR-amplified DNA from other family members.
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PMID:Mutations in the codon for a conserved arginine-1563 in the COL4A5 collagen gene in Alport syndrome. 845 72

We cloned and sequenced a portion of chloroplast DNA from the hornwort Anthoceros formosae. A nucleotide sequence of 7556 bp contained structures similar to those of ndhK, ndhC, trnV, trnM, atpE, atpB, rbcL, trnR and accD. The arrangement of these was the same as that of other chloroplast DNA. However, two nonsense codons were located within the putative coding region of rbcL, although they were used as putative termination codons of the genes. RNA was extensively edited in the transcripts of rbcL when cDNA sequences were analyzed. The unusual nonsense codons of TGA and TAA became CGA and CAA respectively. These are examples of U to C type RNA editing, which was never been found before in chloroplast mRNA. In general, 13 Cs of genomic DNA were found as Ts in the cDNA sequence and seven Ts were found as Cs. This is the first finding of RNA editing on the transcripts of rbcL and also in bryophytes. This event had been thought to arise in land plants after the split of bryophytes. The origin of RNA editing is discussed in relation to the landing of green plants.
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PMID:Extensive RNA editing of U to C in addition to C to U substitution in the rbcL transcripts of hornwort chloroplasts and the origin of RNA editing in green plants. 860 30

Little is known about the presence of common medical pathogens in the human oral cavity. Using a 16S rRNA-based PCR identification method, this study determined the occurrence of Porphyromonas asaccharolytica, Bacteroides fragilis and Chlamydia pneumoniae in subgingival plaque from 50 adults with advanced periodontitis. Each patient contributed samples from 3 deep periodontal pockets collected by paper points. The PCR primers were for P. asaccharolytica 5'-CTC TAG CTA GAG TGT ACT GG-3' and 5'-ATA GGG TTT ATA GAT TAG CTC TCT-3', for B. fragilis 5'-AAT GAT TCC GCA TGG TTT CAT TA-3' and 5'-GCG GTG ATT GCT CAC TGA CA-3', and for C. pneumoniae 5'- TGA CAA CTG TAG AAA TAC AGC-3' and 5'-CGC CTC TCT CCT ATA AAT-3'. The primers yielded a single amplicon with the respective reference strains and produced no amplicon with colonies of 25 groups of oral organisms. None of the three test species were detected in any of the 50 pooled subgingival samples tested. P. asaccharyolytica, B. fragilis and C. pneumoniae do not seem to be part of the periodontopathic microbiota in humans.
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PMID:Absence of Porphyromonas asaccharolytica, Bacteroides fragilis and Chlamydia pneumoniae in human subgingival plaque. 957 14

Lowe syndrome (OCRL) is an X-linked disorder involving the eyes, kidney, and nervous system that is caused by loss of function in the OCRL1 gene. OCRL1 contains 24 exons (23 of which are coding) and encodes a 105-kDa enzyme with phosphatidylinositol 4,5 bisphosphate (PtdIns[4,5]P2) 5-phosphatase activity. We published previously (1,2) 13 different mutations in 10 families. Four are missense other 8 mutations in 10 families. Four are missense mutations in highly conserved PtdIns (4,5)P2 5-phosphatase caused by nonsense mutations, and three others are premature terminations caused by frameshift mutations. One frameshift, a GT deletion in exon 21, has been observed previously in two unrelated Lowe syndrome patients, suggesting that it may be a relative "hotspot" for mutation in a disorder marked otherwise by allelic heterogeneity. We have also seen two other recurrent mutations. One is a nonsense mutation CGA > TGA in exon 2 observed in two patients and the second is a missense mutation CGA > CAA in exon 15 present in two unrelated patients. These 21 distinct mutations we have found in 25 Lowe syndrome patients occur in only 9 of the 24 exons: 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 21, and 22. Interestingly, missense mutations have occurred only in exons 12 through 15 in highly conserved residues among the phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphatases. These observations suggest useful strategies for mutation screening in OCRL.
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PMID:Mutations are not uniformly distributed throughout the OCRL1 gene in Lowe syndrome patients. 968 19

Among 13,525 haemoglobin analyses performed in our laboratory we detected 21 cases of haemoglobin D (Hb D) disease. Investigation of a family affected with this abnormal haemoglobin revealed two cases of Hb D/beta-(0) thalassaemia for the first time among Saudi Arabs. The two patients were diagnosed as having chronic haemolytic anaemia of moderate severity on the basis of the haemoglobin level, haematocrit, mean corpuscular haemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, reticulocyte count, red blood cell count microscopy, elevated serum conjugated and non-conjugated bilirubin, increased serum lactic dehydrogenase, and the occasional need for blood transfusions. Genetic analysis enabled the detection of compound heterozygosity for the missense E121Q (codon 121 GAA-->CAA) and stop W15X (codon 15 TGG-->TGA) mutations as causative of the clinical phenotype of Hb D-LosAngeles (Punjab)/beta-(0) thalassaemia. The disease manifested as domination of Hb D and moderate haemolytic anaemia. The co-inheritance of beta-(0) thalassaemia seems to be responsible for conferring the deleterious effect on the presentation of Hb D disease in these patients. The present result emphasizes the significance of molecular testing in resolving certain diagnostic ambiguities in haematology as in cases of heterozygous Hb D in association with beta-(0) thalassaemia which, by haemoglobin electrophoresis, may be misdiagnosed as Hb D homozygosity.
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PMID:The beta-globin genotype E121Q/W15X (cd121GAA-->CAA/cd15TGG-->TGA) underlines Hb d/beta-(0) thalassaemia marked by domination of haemoglobin D. 1175 20

Large-insert bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries, plant-transformation-competent binary BAC (BIBAC) libraries, and simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers are essential for many aspects of genomics research. We constructed a BAC library and a BIBAC library from the nuclear DNA of chickpea, Cicer arietinum L., cv. Hadas, partially digested with HindIII and BamHI, respectively. The BAC library has 14,976 clones, with an average insert size of 121 kb, and the BIBAC library consists of 23,040 clones, with an average insert size of 145 kb. The combined libraries collectively cover ca. 7.0 x genomes of chickpea. We screened the BAC library with eight synthetic SSR oligos, (GA)10, (GAA)7, (AT)10, (TAA)7, (TGA)7, (CA)10, (CAA)7, and (CCA)7. Positive BACs were selected, subcloned, and sequenced for SSR marker development. Two hundred and thirty-three new chickpea SSR markers were developed and characterized by PCR, using chickpea DNA as template. These results have demonstrated that BACs are an excellent source for SSR marker development in chickpea. We also estimated the distribution of the SSR loci in the chickpea genome. The SSR motifs (TAA)n and (GA)n were much more abundant than the others, and the distribution of the SSR loci appeared non-random. The BAC and BIBAC libraries and new SSR markers will provide valuable resources for chickpea genomics research and breeding (the libraries and their filters are available to the public at http://hbz.tamu.edu).
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PMID:Construction of BAC and BIBAC libraries and their applications for generation of SSR markers for genome analysis of chickpea, Cicer arietinum L. 1571 10


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