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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have used circular permutation analysis to determine whether binding of purified Xenopus laevis estrogen receptor DNA-binding domain (DBD) to a DNA fragment containing an estrogen response element (ERE) causes the DNA to bend. Gel mobility shift assays showed that DBD-DNA complexes formed with fragments containing more centrally located EREs migrated more slowly than complexes formed with fragments containing EREs near the ends of the DNA. DNA bending standards were used to determine that the degree of bending induced by binding of the DBD to an ERE was approximately 34 degrees.
A 1
.55-fold increase in the degree of bending was observed when two EREs were present in the DNA fragment. These in vitro studies suggest that interaction of nuclear receptors with their hormone response elements in vivo may result in an altered DNA conformation.
Mol
Cell Biol 1992 May
PMID:Binding of the estrogen receptor DNA-binding domain to the estrogen response element induces DNA bending. 156 39
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is a key component of the fatty acid biosynthetic machinery in plants.
A 1
.4 kb 5' flanking region of a Brassica napus ACP gene (ACP05) was transcriptionally fused to the reporter gene beta-glucuronidase (GUS), and expression of the chimeric gene monitored in transgenic tobacco. GUS activity was found to increase through seed development reaching a maximum value, coincident with the most active phase of storage lipid synthesis that was, on average, 100-fold higher than that observed in leaf. In control plants transformed with CaMV 35S-GUS constructs, GUS activity was similar in leaf and all stages of seed development. Based on average values, the level of GUS expression obtained via the ACP promoter was comparable to that obtained from the CaMV 35S promoter. We therefore conclude that the isolated 5' ACP flanking sequence represents a strong promoter element involved in the developmental regulation of storage lipid synthesis in B. napus seed tissue. Putative regulatory elements in the 5' upstream region of ACP05 were identified by dot matrix analysis and by sequence comparison with the upstream regions from a second seed-expressed rape ACP gene and from an Arabidopsis ACP gene.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1992 Apr
PMID:The isolation and functional characterisation of a B. napus acyl carrier protein 5' flanking region involved in the regulation of seed storage lipid synthesis. 160 Jan 50
The RAD51 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is required both for recombination and for the repair of DNA damage caused by X rays. Here we report the sequence and transcriptional regulation of this gene. The RAD51 protein shares significant homology (approximately 50%) over a 70-amino-acid with the RAD57 protein (J.A. Kans and R.K. Mortimer, Gene 105:139-140, 1991), the product of another yeast recombinational repair gene, and also moderate (approximately 27%), but potentially significant, homology with the bacterial RecA protein. The homologies cover a region that encodes a putative nucleotide binding site of the RAD51 protein. Sequences upstream of the coding region for RAD51 protein share homology with the damage response sequence element of RAD54, an upstream activating sequence required for damage regulation of the RAD54 transcript, and also contain two sites for restriction enzyme MluI; the presence of MluI restriction sites has been associated with cell cycle regulation.
A 1
.6-kb transcript corresponding to RAD51 was observed, and levels of this transcript increased rapidly after exposure to relatively low doses of X-rays. Additionally, RAD51 transcript levels were found to that of a group of genes involved primarily in DNA synthesis and replication which are thought to be coordinately cell cycle regulated. Cells arrested in early G1 were still capable of increasing levels of RAD51 transcript after irradiation, indicating that increased RAD51 transcript levels after X-ray exposure are not solely due to an X-ray-induced cessation of the cell cycle at a period when the level of RAD51 expression is normally high.
Mol
Cell Biol 1992 Jul
PMID:Nucleotide sequence and transcriptional regulation of the yeast recombinational repair gene RAD51. 162 Jan 28
A composite mouse androgen receptor DNA sequence was obtained by amplifying genomic DNA or cDNA using the polymerase chain reaction. The open reading frame was 2,697 basepairs, encoding a polypeptide of 899 amino acids (98,204 mol wt). Amino acid sequence comparisons indicated that the mouse androgen receptor (AR) is 97% homologous with rat AR and 83% with human AR. The amino acid sequences of the three receptors are identical within the DNA- and steroid-binding domains. Northern blot analysis revealed the predominant mouse AR mRNA to be 10 kilobases (kb).
A 1
.7-kb mRNA species was detected in mouse kidney using a cDNA probe containing only 5' untranslated AR sequence. Lack of hybridization with AR-coding sequence probes suggested that the 1.7-kb mRNA was not a truncated form of AR mRNA. Sequencing of genomic DNA isolated from testicular feminized (Tfm) mice revealed a single base deletion in the N-terminal domain, resulting in a frameshift mutation. Cycloheximide treatment caused a dramatic increase in AR mRNA in kidneys of Tfm mice, but not wild-type mice, suggesting that the Tfm mutation results in an unstable AR mRNA.
Mol
Endocrinol 1991 Apr
PMID:A frameshift mutation destabilizes androgen receptor messenger RNA in the Tfm mouse. 168 26
A 7.2 kb Bg/II restriction fragment, which increases the production of several extracellular enzymes, including alkaline phosphatase, amylase, protease, lipase and beta-galactosidase, was cloned in Streptomyces lividans from the DNA of S. griseus ATCC 10137. This gene (named saf) showed a positive gene dosage effect on production of extracellular enzymes. When the saf gene was introduced into cells in high copy numbers it delayed the formation of pigments and spores in S. lividans and also retarded actinorhodin production in Streptomyces coelicolor. The saf gene hybridized with specific bands in the DNA of several Streptomyces strains tested.
A 1
kb fragment containing the saf gene was sequenced and contains an open reading frame (ORF) of 306 nucleotides which encodes a polypeptide of Mr 10,500. This ORF is contained within a fragment of 432 bp which retained activity in Streptomyces. A fragment with promoter activity is present upstream of the saf reading frame. The predicted Saf polypeptide has a strong positive charge, and does not show a typical amino acid composition for a membrane protein, and contains a DNA-binding domain similar to those found in several regulatory proteins.
Mol
Gen Genet 1990 Jul
PMID:Cloning and characterization of a gene of Streptomyces griseus that increases production of extracellular enzymes in several species of Streptomyces. 170 69
The screening of an oligo(dT)-primed prostate cDNA library with a human glandular kallikrein-1 (hGK-1) genomic DNA fragment resulted in the isolation of two different hGK-1 cDNAs.
A 1
.2 kb cDNA (pGK-1) contains an open reading frame of 510 bp, encoding the major part of the previously predicted hGK-1 protein (Schedlich et al. (1987) DNA 6, 429-437). This cDNA contains a 3'-untranslated region of 677 nucleotides and terminates in a poly(A) stretch, preceded by the canonical AATAAA polyadenylation signal. A second cDNA (pGK-10A), with a size of 1.5 kb, contains an open reading frame of 669 nucleotides preceded by 16 nucleotides of the 5'-untranslated region. pGK-10A differs from pGK-1 by the presence of an additional 37 bp fragment, interrupting the protein coding region of hGK-1, which results from the use of an alternative splice donor site of intron IV of the hGK-1 gene. The mature protein (excluding presumed pre- and propeptides) as deduced from the pGK-10A cDNA sequence, has a size of 199 amino acids and differs at the COOH-terminus from the 237 amino acid hGK-1 protein. The alternatively spliced mRNA comprises approximately 20% of the hGK-1 transcripts, as deduced from analysis of mRNA from prostate cells by PCR amplification of specific fragments. The regulation of hGK-1 mRNA expression was studied in different human prostate tumors and cell lines by Northern blotting, using a hGK-1-specific oligonucleotide probe. A high level of hGK-1 expression was found in the androgen-dependent tumors PC 82 and PC EW. hGK-1 mRNA was also present in the androgen-sensitive LNCaP cell line, but undetectable in the androgen-insensitive prostate tumors PC 133, PC 135 and the PC 3 cell line. In LNCaP cells, the expression of hGK-1 mRNA was strongly induced by androgens. Regulation of expression of the closely related prostate-specific antigen (PA) gene showed a similar pattern.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1991 Apr
PMID:Identification and androgen-regulated expression of two major human glandular kallikrein-1 (hGK-1) mRNA species. 172 90
A 1
.5 kb cryptic plasmid was isolated from Helicobacter pylori. Low-stringency hybridization analysis using this plasmid as a DNA probe revealed base sequence homology with other plasmids in this species. Nucleotide sequence analysis identified an open reading frame encoding a putative polypeptide of 25 kDa. This protein showed marked amino acid sequence similarity to replication-initiation proteins commonly found in small plasmids endogenous to Gram-positive bacteria which replicate by the 'rolling-circle' mechanism. Sequence motifs corresponding to the origins-of-replication consensus sequences were found on this cryptic plasmid. DNA and oligonucleotide probes to these plasmid replication sequences were used in hybridization analysis to identify similar sequences in other H. pylori plasmids. We believe this is the first plasmid isolated from a Gram-negative bacterium to show replication determinants characteristic of the 'rolling-circle' group of plasmids from Gram-positive bacteria. The cloned plasmid will be used to develop a shuttle-vector for H. pylori.
Mol
Microbiol 1991 Oct
PMID:Characterization of a plasmid from Helicobacter pylori encoding a replication protein common to plasmids in gram-positive bacteria. 179 53
A 1
,820 bp full-length clone encoding for a new human protein was isolated from a lambda gt11 placental cDNA library using anti-human hexokinase antibodies. The cDNA complete sequence includes a 12 bp 5' non-coding region, a single open reading frame encoding a protein of 55 KDa (HP-10) and a 177 bp non-coding with two putative polyadenylation signals upstream of 3' poly(A)tail. The deduced amino acid sequence reveals a sequence of 492 amino acids that contains a stretch of 7 glutamic acid from position 169 and one potential glycosylation site at position 274. Although antibodies against hexokinase recognize the fusion protein and antibodies against the fusion protein recognize hexokinase, HP-10 is not human hexokinase, by a number of criteria including the alignment of determined amino acid sequences. In searching for a possible functional role of HP-10 its cDNA was inserted into a procaryotic vector which allows the expression of the non-fused protein. Bacteria expressing the HP-10 encoded protein were isolated and found to have a dramatic increase in endogenous phosphorylated proteins. Since HP-10 does not have a protein kinase activity per se it should be considered a new regulatory phosphorylation protein which is active in E. coli.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1991 Oct 16
PMID:Cloning and expression of a new human polypeptide which regulates protein phosphorylation in Escherichia coli. 179 27
Strains of Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria that were avirulent in tomato leaves but virulent in pepper leaves were identified. A cloned gene, avrBsP, from one of the strains, Xv 87-7, converted a virulent strain in tomato to avirulent in tomato.
A 1
.7-kb subclone containing the avirulence gene cross-hybridized with the avirulence gene, which determines race 1 within the pepper group of strains (avrBs3). However, the two avirulence genes differ in their biological activity. The base sequences of the two avirulence genes were almost identical through the 1.7-kb segment of avrBsP, with significant differences only in some bases in the repeat region.
Mol
Plant Microbe Interact
PMID:A gene from Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria that determines avirulence in tomato is related to avrBs3. 180 5
BLAST-1 (CD48) (previously referred to as BCM-1 by the Human Gene Nomenclature Committee) is an early-activation-associated membrane glycoprotein expressed on the surface of human leukocytes and induced to a high level following infection of B cells by the Epstein-Barr virus. It is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily, mediates cell adhesion, and has significant sequence homology to two other adhesion molecules, CD2 and LFA3. Here we report the isolation and characterization of the BLAST-1 gene. The gene is at least 28.6 kb in length, is split into 4 exons, and contains a restriction fragment-length polymorphism. The overall genomic organization is consistent with other members of the immunoglobulin superfamily, in which extracellular immunoglobulinlike domains are encoded by discrete exons. Transcription is initiated at a series of major and minor sites in both normal and tumor-derived lymphoid cells. Appropriately located TATA and CCAAT box sequences were not detected. These characteristics have also been demonstrated for the recently described B-cell-specific genes B29 and CD20. The expression of these genes in B cells may involve the use of multiple promoters and novel transcription initiator-binding proteins.
A 1
.58-kb genomic DNA fragment, consisting of the 5'-flanking region located immediately upstream of the ATG initiation codon, was able to drive the expression of a reporter gene in an orientation-dependent and tissue-restricted manner.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 Mar
PMID:Characterization of the Epstein-Barr virus-inducible gene encoding the human leukocyte adhesion and activation antigen BLAST-1 (CD48). 184 2
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