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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The chromosome VIII translocation breakpoint of the areB-404 translocation, selected for its ability to activate the cryptic nitrogen metabolism regulatory gene areB, and the mutation glcD-100 both lead to loss of mitochondrial
FAD-dependent sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
in Aspergillus nidulans. These two lesions therefore define glcD, a second gene (in addition to glcB) where mutation can result in loss of this enzyme. The glcD gene has been localised to a centromere-proximal region of the right arm of chromosome VIII. Although all six known areB-activating mutations involve chromosomal rearrangements and presumably therefore gene fusions, areB-404 is the first such rearrangement where the gene involved in an areB fusion has been identified.
Mol
Gen Genet 1990 Aug
PMID:A translocation activating the cryptic nitrogen regulation gene areB inactivates a previously unidentified gene involved in glycerol utilisation in Aspergillus nidulans. 225 35
Cloned segments of the mouse
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(GPDH) gene, Gdc-1, were used to screen a human library. Human clones obtained spanned 25 kilobases of genomic DNA containing the human GPDH gene, GPD1. The 4 kb of sequence obtained from the 5'-flanking region and first exon of GPD1 was compared with the corresponding mouse sequence. Both sequences share a HindIII site located in what has proven to be the highly conserved 3' untranslated region of an upstream gene of unknown function, D15Kzl. The 3.6-kilobase segment of mouse DNA located between D15Kzl and Gdc-1 was provisionally termed the GPDH promoter. Alignment of the mouse promoter with the corresponding human sequence revealed two conserved domains. An upstream distal promoter region is approximately 900 base pairs in length. A downstream or proximal promoter region consists of approximately 300 base pairs immediately upstream of a TATA-like box and contains the fat-specific elements 1 and 2. Analysis of the chromatin structure of the Gdc-1 promoter revealed four DNase I-hypersensitive sites. They were present in DNA of liver and brown fat, in which GPDH expression is high, but were absent in DNA of spleen, in which GPDH expression is low. Methylation studies of the promoter showed it to be heavily methylated in sperm. However, the DNA from each adult somatic tissue had a unique distribution of nonmethylated sites and could easily be identified by its methylation pattern. These data suggest a structural model of the promoter that explains how Gdc-1 expression is differentially regulated in many types of cells.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Oct
PMID:Sequence conservation and structural organization of the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase promoter in mice and humans. 239 90
The entire glycerol utilization (gylABX) operon of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) was cloned and its transcriptional organization and regulation was analyzed by Northern blotting, S1 nuclease mapping and transcriptional fusions. Transcription of the operon is glycerol-inducible and glucose-repressible; glyA (presumptively encoding glycerol kinase), gylB (encoding
sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
) and gylX (a non-essential 1.1 kb sequence) are transcribed consecutively to give a 5.4 kb mRNA. Two alternative transcription termination or gyl mRNA processing sites are located within the operon; one (a discrete site) lies between gylB and gylX and the other (a heterogeneous site) positioned 3 kb into the operon, may correspond to the gylA-gylB intercistronic region. A 0.9 kb glycerol-inducible transcription unit is located immediately upstream of gylABX. Transcriptional fusion studies employing an attP site-deleted phage vector provided complementary evidence for the organization of the operon.
Mol
Gen Genet 1988 Jan
PMID:Cloning and transcription analysis of the entire glycerol utilization (gylABX) operon of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) and identification of a closely associated transcription unit. 244 98
Compensatory hypertrophy of the rat plantaris muscle (PLT) was induced by ipsilateral gastrocnemius muscle ablation. Following 8 weeks (wks) of hypertrophy, hindlimbs were cast immobilized (HI) for 4 weeks after which weight bearing was unrestricted for 8 wks (recovery). Compensatory hypertrophy increased PLT wet weight/body weight ratio (83%), muscle fiber cross-sectional areas (1.5 to 2 fold), and the percent of slow oxidative (%SO) fibers (2 fold) in the experimental compared to the contralateral sham control muscle. PLT protein content and maximal activities of phosphofructokinase (PFK), mitochondrial
glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase
, and succinate dehydrogenase were unaltered with muscle hypertrophy. HI produced significant decreases in PFK activity (50%) and muscle fiber cross-sectional areas (50%) but did not significantly change the histochemical myofibrillar ATPase profile. Following remobilization, muscle weight/body weight ratio and maximal enzyme activities recovered to that of aged matched controls. Muscle fiber areas returned to pre-immobilization sizes but were approximately 25% smaller than aged matched control hypertrophy muscles. The %SO fibers in the hypertrophied muscle remained higher than controls but did not return to pre-immobilization values. These results indicate that biochemical and histochemical characteristics of hypertrophied rat PLT recover from HI during 8 wks of normal weight bearing similar to that of normal control muscle. However, the recovery time period was insufficient to allow complete compensation of fiber size to that of the age-matched control animals.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1989 Oct 05
PMID:Effect of hindlimb immobilization and recovery on compensatory hypertrophied rat plantaris muscle. 253 7
We examined the effects of RU38486, a potent glucocorticoid and progestin antagonist, upon several aspects of 3T3-F442A adipocyte differentiation. RU38486 accelerated the onset of differentiation, as monitored by cell morphological changes, accumulation of lipid droplets and widespread increases in the rate of expression of several enzyme adipose markers and specific mRNAs. RU38486, at a maximal concentration of 1 microM, dramatically hastened the emergence of both fatty-acid synthetase (FAS) and
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(G3PDH) enzyme activities (550% and 450% above control values 4 days after confluence, respectively). RU38486 induction of G3PDH-specific activity ran parallel to an increase in G3PDH mRNA content (2.4-fold the control content 4 days after confluence). Moreover, RU38486-treated cells exhibited enhancement of adenylate cyclase sensitivity to both isoproterenol and ACTH (160% and 350% above control activities 8 days after confluence, respectively). While the level of expression of lipogenic markers reached similar values at the mature stage, RU38486 enabled cells to acquire hypersensitivity in terms of ACTH-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. Similarly, adipsin gene expression was highly potentiated by the drug at day 15 post-confluence (5-fold the control value). RU38486 responsiveness observed in differentiating 3T3-F442A cells is dependent upon their prior developmental activation; none of the studied markers could be induced by the drug in the undifferentiating 3T3-C2 cell subclone. Finally, this antiglucocorticoid appears to be a useful tool for studies on adipose conversion in vitro; it could permit a re-evaluation of the role of glucocorticoids in the understanding of adipocyte development.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1989 Nov
PMID:The antiglucocorticoid RU38486 is a potent accelerator of adipose conversion of 3T3-F442A cells. 255 29
Acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) carboxylase activity, amount, and mRNA levels increase during the differentiation of 30A-5 preadipocytes to adipocytes. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) completely prevents this differentiation, with concomitant inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNA accumulation. To investigate the mechanisms by which TNF prevents acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNA accumulation, we determined the effect of TNF on the transcription rate of the carboxylase gene and the half-life of carboxylase mRNA. Nuclear runoff transcription assays revealed no differences in the number of RNA polymerase molecules actively engaged in transcription of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase gene in preadipocytes, adipocytes, TNF-treated preadipocytes, or at any time during the course of differentiation. However, changes in adipsin,
glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
, and actin mRNAs, whose levels are also differentiation dependent, can be accounted for in part by changes in the number of polymerase complexes on their respective genes. To determine whether TNF caused a decrease in the stability of carboxylase RNA transcripts, we measured the rate of decay of prelabeled acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNA. Control and TNF-treated cells showed no difference between the apparent half-lives of acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNAs (9 h). However, the rate of acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNA synthesis in vivo was decreased three- to fourfold in the presence of TNF. These data demonstrate that TNF prevents accumulation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase mRNA during preadipocyte differentiation by decreasing the rate of acetyl-CoA carboxylase gene transcription. However, transcriptional control is not due to a change in the number of RNA polymerase complexes actively engaged in carboxylase transcript elongation which could be measured by a number runoff assay. Instead, transcriptional control may be related to the rate at which RNA polymerase traverses the acetyl-CoA carboxylase gene.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Mar
PMID:Transcriptional regulation of acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase gene expression by tumor necrosis factor in 30A-5 preadipocytes. 256 9
Insulin is known to play the role of a positive effector both in vitro on the adipose conversion process and in vivo on the fatty acid synthesis and esterification processes in adipose tissue. The effects of insulin on the expression of two genes activated during adipose conversion,
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(GPDH) and adipsin genes, have been investigated in 3T3 F442A adipose cells. Within a physiological range of concentrations, insulin exerts opposite effects on the levels of GPDH (EC50 approximately 0.2 nM) and adipsin (EC50 approximately 1 nM) mRNAs. Its negative effect on the abundance of adipsin mRNA involves primarily a rapid inhibition of the transcriptional rate (less than 2 h). Its positive effect on the abundance of GPDH mRNA is due to a stimulation of the transcriptional rate accompanied by a delayed stabilization of GPDH mRNA. In addition, insulin exerts a specific effect on the length of the poly(A) tract of the adipsin mRNA. These results show that a single mechanism for the regulation of adipose-related genes by insulin can be excluded but rather suggest a complex phenomenon in which various levels of regulation take place.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1989 May
PMID:Regulation of gene expression by insulin in adipose cells: opposite effects on adipsin and glycerophosphate dehydrogenase genes. 266 98
Wild-type simian virus 40 large T antigen is very effective at blocking adipocyte differentiation in 3T3-F442A cells as assayed by triglyceride accumulation, induction of
glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
activity, and expression of mRNAs for
glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
, the adipocyte serine protease adipsin, and the putative lipid-binding protein adipocyte P2. Point mutants defective for either origin-specific DNA binding or transformation blocked differentiation as completely as wild type.
Mol
Cell Biol 1988 Mar
PMID:Separation of simian virus 40 large-T-antigen-transforming and origin-binding functions from the ability to block differentiation. 283 74
A subcellular fraction enriched 12 times in glycosomes (NAD+-linked
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
) and devoid of detectable contamination from other subcellular components, was prepared from bloodstream Trypanosoma rhodesiense. Using a method employing exposure to toluene as a means of studying normally latent glycosomal enzymes, and phospholipase A2 as a membrane probe, the association of adenylate kinase and
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
with the glycosome was studied. The normally latent
glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(NAD+ linked), it is proposed, is an intraglycosomal enzyme having no membrane association, but bound to the core by weak ionic linkages. As such it is possible to release the enzyme from permeable (toluene treated) glycosomes using Cl-, with a resulting 4-fold increase in the Km for dihydroxyacetone phosphate. The presence of Cl- also stimulates an increase in specific activity, but this is observed before any release of enzyme. In contrast adenylate kinase, a non-latent glycosomal enzyme, is clearly membrane associated, the use of phospholipase A2 revealing an absolute dependence on phospholipid for activity. Restoration of activity appears to specifically require phosphatidyl choline and to be co-operative in nature (nH = 1.56). It is proposed that adenylate kinase is an integral glycosomal membrane enzyme, probably affecting the control of intra-glycosomal ADP/ATP levels.
Mol
Biochem Parasitol 1985 Feb
PMID:The presence of alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (NAD+-linked) and adenylate kinase as core and integral membrane enzymes respectively in the glycosomes of Trypanosoma rhodesiense. 298 83
Addition of Ca2+ (0.01-1 mM) to a standard Trypanosoma rhodesiense Mg2+-ATPase assay failed to elicit any increase in activity. However, in the absence of externally added Mg2+ and using calcium-EGTA or calcium-CDTA to precisely maintain free metal ion concentration, it was possible to measure a specific Ca2+-ATPase. Cell fractionation studies revealed this ATPase to be predominantly associated with subcellular particles having an equilibrium density of 1.22 g cm-3 and identified as surface membrane. Using a discontinuous sucrose gradient, a surface membrane enriched (SME) fraction, only slightly contaminated with mitochondria as judged by dichlorophenolindophenol-linked
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
activity, was prepared. The SME fraction exhibited Ca2+-ATPase activity, using 200 nM free Ca2+, of 90 and 21 mU mg-1 protein, respectively, using CDTA and EGTA as buffering ligands. This latter result was most unexpected and indicated that the Ca2+-ATPase, in addition to having no Mg2+ requirement, was inhibited by submicromolar levels of Mg2+. The Ca2+-ATPase was found to have a K0.5 = 128 +/- 22 nM free Ca2+, the response to increasing Ca2+ concentration displaying an extremely high degree of co-operativity (Hill number (nH) = 4.9). The enzyme was found to be highly substrate-specific for ATP with K0.5 = 6.2 +/- 0.61 microM ATP. A Hill plot of the reaction velocity as a function of ATP concentration indicated two substrate binding sites (nH = 1.55). A range of potential modulators of ATPase activity were investigated, with only vanadate (V2O3-8) having any effect: 47% inhibition at 5.0 microM. The Ca2+-ATPase was unaffected by the calmodulin antagonists chlorpromazine (50 microM) and trifluoperazine (50 microM), whilst addition of calmodulin failed to produce any stimulation of activity. It is concluded that the kinetic properties of this ATPase are compatible with a potential role in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ in bloodstream T. rhodesiense.
Mol
Biochem Parasitol 1985 May
PMID:A high affinity Ca2+-dependent ATPase in the surface membrane of the bloodstream stage of Trypanosoma rhodesiense. 315 62
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