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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A phospholipase A2 was isolated from the venom of the mexican beaded lizard (Heloderma horridum horridum) by phenyl-Sepharose chromatography followed by Sephadex G-75 gel filtration and two additional steps on ion exchange resins (DE-32 cellulose). The affinity chromatographic method (PC-Sepharose 4B) reported for the isolation of other phospholipases [
Rock
, Ch. O., & Snyder, F. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 2564-2566; King, T. P., Alagon, A. C., Kwan, J., Sobotka, A. K., & Lichteinstein, L. M. (1983)
Mol
. Immunol. 20, 297-308; King, T. P., Kochoumian, L., & Joslyn, A. (1984) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 230, 1-12] was uneffective for the separation of this enzyme. The monomeric form of the Heloderma phospholipase has an apparent Mr of 18 000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and 19 060 as calculated from amino acid analysis. It also contains on the order of 7% carbohydrates per mole of enzyme. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was shown to be very different from that of phospholipases isolated from mammalian pancreas and crotalids and elapids snake venoms. The first 39 amino acid residues at the N-terminal region have 56% homology with bee venom phospholipase but differ from the bee phospholipase in that its isoelectric point is acidic (pI = 4.5), instead of basic, and it has approximately 50 amino acid residues more in the molecule. The specificity of the enzyme is mainly A2 type with possible residual B-type activity. The enzymatic activity is Ca2+-dependent. Half-cystine alignment of the Heloderma phospholipase sequence with those of other known phospholipases shows the lack of an octadecapeptide at the N-terminal region, the existence of an extra hexapeptide at positions 42-47, and an exact correspondence of Heloderma Gly-12, Gly-14, His-36, and Asp-37 with Gly-30, Gly-32, His-48, and Asp-49 from other phospholipases shown to be important for Ca2+ binding (( Dijkstra, B. W., Drenth, J., Kalk, K. H., & Vandermaalen, P. J. (1978) J.
Mol
. Biol. 124, 53-60 )).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of the phospholipase A2 purified from the venom of the Mexican beaded lizard (Heloderma horridum horridum Wiegmann). 308 12
The use of derivatives of alpha-thrombin obtained by limited proteolysis, that have only a single peptide bond cleaved, allowed the unequivocal correlation between the change in covalent structure and alteration of the enzymatic properties. beta T-Thrombin contains a single cleavage in the surface loop corresponding to residues 65-83 of alpha-chymotrypsin [Birktoft, J. J., &
Blow
, D. M. (1972) J.
Mol
. Biol. 68, 187-240]. Compared with alpha-thrombin, this modification had a minor effect on the following: (1) The Michaelis constant (Km) for two tripeptidyl p-nitroanilide substrates increased 2-3 fold, whereas the catalytic constant (k cat) remained unaltered. (2) A 2-3 fold increase in the binding constant (KI) of a tripeptidyl chloromethane inhibitor was observed, but the inactivation rate constant (k i) was the same, which indicated that the nucleophilicity of the active-site histidyl residue had not changed. (3) The second-order rate constant for the inhibition by antithrombin III decreased 2-fold. Heparin accelerated the inactivation, and the degree of acceleration was similar to that obtained with alpha-thrombin. Pronounced effects of the cleavage of this loop were found. (1) The cleavage of fibrinogen was approximately 80-fold slower than that with alpha-thrombin. This was mainly due to a 40-fold decrease in k cat. In contrast, only a 1.9-fold increase in the Michaelis constant was observed. (2) The affinity for thrombomodulin had decreased 39-fold compared to alpha-thrombin. epsilon-Thrombin contains a single cleaved peptide bond in the loop corresponding to residues 146-150 in alpha-chymotrypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Enzymatic properties of proteolytic derivatives of human alpha-thrombin. 337 50
Transgenic petunia plants containing an altered (Leu22----Arg22) mouse dihydrofolate reductase gene fused to the cauliflower mosiac virus 35S (CaMV 35S) promoter and nopaline synthase (nos) polyadenylation site were obtained by transforming petunia leaf disks with an Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain carrying the chimeric gene. Transformants were directly selected for and rooted on medium containing 1 microM methotrexate (MTX). The chimeric gene was present in the regenerated plants at one to three copies and produced the expected 950-nucleotide-long transcript based on Southern and Northern hybridization analyses, respectively.
Leaf
pieces from the regenerated transgenic plants were able to form callus when cultured on medium containing 1 microM MTX and were able to incorporate 32P into high-molecular-weight DNA in the presence of greater than 100 microM MTX, thus demonstrating that the chimeric mouse dhfr gene was fully functional and useful as a selectable marker in plant transformation experiments. To date, this is the first report of successful expression of a vertebrate gene in transformed plant cells.
Somat Cell
Mol
Genet 1987 Jan
PMID:Expression of mouse dihydrofolate reductase gene confers methotrexate resistance in transgenic petunia plants. 346 34
The gap junctions of frog myocardium present, in freeze-fracture, an atypical organisation of their junctional particles.
Freeze
-fracture cytochemistry with the cholesterol probes filipin and digitonin has been used to investigate whether the particular arrangement of the particles involves a lipid segregation in the plane of the membrane. Both probes labeled uniformly the non-junctional membrane, but no deformations were ever found inside the smooth membrane area circumscribed by the circle of junctional particles. At the level of junction formation zones almost no sterol probe complexes were found in the intramembranous particle free area which surrounded small clusters of junctional particles. These results suggest a regional variation in cholesterol related to the necessity of membrane fluidity during junction morphogenesis.
J
Mol
Cell Cardiol 1987 Nov
PMID:Filipin and digitonin studies of membrane cholesterol in frog atrial fibers with unusual gap junction configurations. 350 9
The contributions of various regions of human alpha-thrombin to the formation of the tight complex with hirudin have been assessed by using derivatives of thrombin. alpha-Thrombin in which the active-site serine was modified with diisopropyl fluorophosphate was able to bind hirudin, but its affinity for hirudin was decreased by 10(3)-fold compared to unmodified alpha-thrombin. Modification of the active-site histidine with D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl resulted in a form of thrombin with a 10(6)-fold reduced affinity for hirudin. gamma-Thrombin is produced by proteolytic cleavage of alpha-thrombin in two surface loops corresponding to residues 65-83 and 146-150 in alpha-chymotrypsin [Berliner, L. J. (1984)
Mol
. Cell. Biochem. 61, 159-172; Birktoft, J. J., &
Blow
, D. M. (1972) J.
Mol
. Biol. 68, 187-240]. The gamma-thrombin-hirudin complex had a dissociation constant that was 10(6)-fold higher than that of alpha-thrombin. Treatment of alpha-thrombin with pancreatic elastase resulted in a form of thrombin only cleaved in the loop corresponding to residues 146-150 in alpha-chymotrypsin, and this form of thrombin had only a slightly reduced affinity for hirudin. By using limited proteolysis with trypsin, it was possible to isolate beta-thrombin which contained a single cleavage in the loop corresponding to residues 65-83 in alpha-chymotrypsin. This form of thrombin had a 100-fold decrease in affinity for hirudin. Kinetic analysis of the binding of hirudin to beta-thrombin indicated that the 100-fold decrease in affinity was predominantly due to a decrease in the rate of association of the two molecules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Identification of regions of alpha-thrombin involved in its interaction with hirudin. 366 13
Freeze
-fracture methods were used to study the sarcoplasmic reticulum and surface membranes in muscles from rats after chronic administration of triiodothyronine (150 micrograms/kg daily, for 1 to 20 days). The major effect of the hormone on the sarcoplasmic reticulum was to increase the numbers of indentations in the terminal cisternae in parallel with an increase in the speed of the isometric twitch. The indentations increased from 7.3 +/- 0.2 to 10.6 +/- 0.1 (mean +/- 1 SEM)/micron of terminal cisternae in the fast-twitch extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and from 0.9 +/- 0.1 to 4.4 +/- 0.1/micron in slow-twitch soleus fibers. The increase in indentation density in both types of muscle occurred within 10 days of the commencement of hormone injection. During the same period there was a small reduction in the density of intramembrane particles in the plasmalemma and a significant increase in the number of caveolae, from 14.6 +/- 0.25 to 20.4 +/- 0.3/micron2 in EDL fibers, and from 22.9 +/- 0.3 to 28.6 +/- 0.3/micron2 in soleus. The increase in caveolae density was coincident with an increase in the area of T-tubule membrane. The results provide further evidence that the indentations in the terminal cisternae play a functional role in muscle activation and that the caveolae are the surface openings of transverse tubules.
J Ultrastruct
Mol
Struct Res 1986 Feb
PMID:A freeze-fracture study of extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscle fibers from thyrotoxic rats. 378 25
The tryptophan environments in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin were investigated by fluorescence. The heterogeneous emission from this multitryptophan enzyme was resolved by time-correlated fluorescence spectroscopy. The fluorescence decays at 296-nm laser excitation and various emission wavelengths could be characterized by a triple-exponential function with decay times tau 1 = 150 +/- 50 ps, tau 2 = 1.45 +/- 0.25 ns, and tau 3 = 4.2 +/- 0.4 ns. The corresponding decay-associated emission spectra of the three components had maxima at about 325, 332, and 343 nm. The three decay components in this enzyme can be correlated with X-ray crystallographic data [Birktoft, J.J., &
Blow
, D.M. (1972) J.
Mol
. Biol. 68, 187-240]. Inter- and intramolecular tryptophan-tryptophan energy-transfer efficiencies in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin were computed from the accurately known positions and orientations of all tryptophan residues. These calculations indicate that the three fluorescence decay components in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin can be assigned to three distinct classes of tryptophyl residues. Because of the different proximity of tryptophan residues to neighboring internal quenching groups, the decay times of the three classes are different. Decay tau 1 can be assigned to Trp-172 and Trp-215 and tau 2 to Trp-51 and Trp-237, while the tryptophyl residues 27, 29, 141, and 207 all have decay time tau 3.
...
PMID:Study of the time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence of crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin. 381 86
The determination of the three dimensional structure of chymosin at 3 A resolution by molecular replacement method is described. The rotation functions for various aspartic proteases were calculated and combined results were used for the refinement of orientational parameters of chymosin molecules in the unit cell. The interpretation of Crowther-
Blow
translation function map with packing consideration enable to place correctly the molecules in the chymosin unit cell. Several difference Fourier syntheses for chymosin were calculated and differences between pepsin and chymosin structures were detected.
Mol
Biol (Mosk)
PMID:[X-ray study of chymosin. I. Molecular replacement at a 3 angstroms resolution]. 392 28
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been used extensively in the manufacturing of white pigment and has generally been regarded as a nuisance dust in animals and man. After inhalation exposure, little is known about transmigration routes and potential toxic effects of translocated particles in other organs. In order to answer these questions, rats were exposed to TiO2 by inhalation exposure at concentrations of 0, 10, 50, and 250 mg/m3 for 2 years. A few free particles were retained in the nasal and tracheobronchial epithelium without any cellular damage, but aggregates of dust-laden macrophages (dust cells) were found in the lymphoid tissue of the submucosa. Inhaled particles were mostly engulfed by alveolar macrophages and confined sharply to the alveolar duct region at 10 and 50 mg/m3, while dust cells were scattered throughout alveoli at 250 mg/m3. A fraction of the inhaled particles was retained in the membranous pneumocytes and interstitial macrophages. A dense accumulation of dust cells was found in the perivascular and peribronchial lymphoid tissue. Some dust cells entered peribronchial lymphatics or pulmonary blood vessels and the general circulation.
Dust
cells in the hyperplastic peribronchial lymphoid tissue were exposed directly in the luminal surface of the airways and were subsequently eliminated via airways. Massive dust deposition was observed in the tracheobronchial lymph nodes.
Dust
transmigration was markedly reduced in the cervical lymph nodes, and only a trace amount of dust particles was found in the mesenteric lymph nodes. Some dust cells entered either blood or lymphatic vessels in the lymph nodes and then migrated into the general circulation. The incidence of extrapulmonary dust deposition in the liver or spleen was increased in a dose-related fashion similar to the lung dust burden. Since there was no tissue response to translocated particles in the lymph nodes, spleen, or liver, potential adverse health effects appear to be negligible.
Exp
Mol
Pathol 1985 Jun
PMID:Transmigration of titanium dioxide (TiO2) particles in rats after inhalation exposure. 399 54
A multilayered complex forms when a solution of myelin basic protein is added to single-bilayer vesicles formed by sonicating myelin lipids. Vesicles and multilayers have been studied by electron microscopy, biochemical analysis, and X-ray diffraction.
Freeze
-fracture electron microscopy shows well-separated vesicles before myelin basic protein is added, but afterward there are aggregated, possibly multilayered, vesicles and extensive planar multilayers. The vesicles aggregate and fuse within seconds after the protein is added, and the multilayers form within minutes. No intra-bilayer particles are seen, with or without the protein. Some myelin basic protein, but no lipid, remains in the supernatant after the protein is added and the complex sedimented for X-ray diffraction. A rather variable proportion of the protein is bound. X-ray diffraction patterns show that the vesicles are stable in the absence of myelin basic protein, even under high g-forces. After the protein is added, however, lipid/myelin basic protein multilayers predominate over single-bilayer vesicles. The protein is in every space between lipid bilayers. Thus the vesicles are torn open by strong interaction with myelin basic protein. The inter-bilayer spaces in the multilayers are comparable to the cytoplasmic spaces in central nervous system myelins . The diffraction indicates the same lipid bilayer thickness in vesicles and multilayers, to within 1 A. By comparing electron-density profiles of vesicles and multilayers, most of the myelin basic protein is located in the inter-bilayer space while up to one-third may be inserted between lipid headgroups. When cytochrome c is added in place of myelin basic protein, multilayers also form. In this case the protein is located entirely outside the unchanged bilayer. Comparison of the various profiles emphasizes the close and extensive apposition of myelin basic protein to the lipid bilayer. Numerous bonds may form between myelin basic protein and lipids. Cholesterol may enhance binding by opening gaps between diacyl-lipid headgroups.
J
Mol
Biol 1984 Apr 05
PMID:Lipid/myelin basic protein multilayers. A model for the cytoplasmic space in central nervous system myelin. 620 18
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