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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Crystals for Fab fragments from a monoclonal antibody to HPr of the phosphoenopyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system of Escherichia coli have been obtained from 14% polyethylene glycol 6000, 5 mM-Tris X
HCl
, 50 mM-sodium phosphate and 0.2 M-sodium chloride at pH 8.0. The space group is P2(1) with a = 110.85 A, b = 66.18 A, c = 67.21 A, beta = 113.0 degrees and Z = 4. The crystals exhibit the forms [100], [011] and [011] and the solvent content is 47%.
J
Mol
Biol 1984 Aug 05
PMID:Preliminary crystallographic data for a monoclonal Fab fragment specific for HPr of the phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system of Escherichia coli. 637 99
Gangliosides are neuraminic acid-containing glycolipids preferently localized in nervous membranes and showing physicochemical peculiarities, e.g., drastically changing amphiphilic properties by Ca2+ binding. On account of this they are favorite compounds to act as modulators of membraneous organization and functions during synaptic transmission. Lipid monolayers are suitable experimental systems for the study of the surface behavior of amphipatic molecules and therefore are useful to interpret membraneous organization. The surface pressure/area isotherms of monolayers of different individual gangliosides (GM1, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b) of an artificial reconstituted and a natural ganglioside mixture from bovine brain and of ganglioside mixtures from different brain parts of summer- and winter-adapted dsungarian hamsters were compared at three temperatures (11, 20, and 37 degrees C) with egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylserine (PS) monolayers. The monolayers were formed in a Teflon trough on a triethanolamine/
HCl
-buffered (pH 7.4) subphase, in some cases containing different amounts of CaCl2. The surface pressure/area isotherms of ganglioside monolayers, in contrast to phospholipids, generally showed slowly rising slopes, with transitions from the liquid-expanded to the liquid-condensed state at a surface pressure of 20-30 mN/m. Ganglioside monolayers, in particular from GD1a or GT1b versus GD1b or from mixtures from summer- versus winter-adapted hamster brain, were differently affected by temperature and/or by Ca2+. PS monolayers were slightly condensed only by Ca2+. PC monolayers, however, were influenced neither by temperature nor by Ca2+. In mixed monolayers of the unpolar natural lipid cholesterol (Ch) and the disialoganglioside GD1a, intermolecular interactions were indicated. Ganglioside monolayers, in contrast to phospholipids, were shown to be easily modulated by temperature and/or Ca2+ ions, thus enabling gangliosides to act as possible membrane modulators, e.g., during synaptic transmission. In particular, the differences concerning the influences of temperature and/or Ca2+ on the surface behavior of ganglioside mixtures from the brain of summer- compared with winter-adapted hamsters are correlated with other physiologically relevant data.
Cell
Mol
Neurobiol 1984 Jun
PMID:Modulatory effects of different temperatures and Ca2+ concentrations on gangliosides and phospholipids in monolayers at air/water interfaces and their possible functional role. 648 44
Crystals of hen eggwhite riboflavin-binding protein have been grown by equilibrium dialysis in solutions buffered with 0.05 M-Tris X
HCl
(pH 8.5) using ammonium sulphate as the precipitant. The crystals belong to the space group P3121 (or enantiomorph) with a = b = 112.5 A and c = 72.0 A, and diffract to a resolution of 2.8 A.
J
Mol
Biol 1984 Dec 25
PMID:Crystallization of hen eggwhite riboflavin-binding protein. 652 87
Enzymatic activity was investigated in metal-binding proteins from rat epidermal cells. Tris-
HCl
buffer soluble and KSCN solubilized proteins were extracted stepwise from granular and cornified cells of 2-day old rat epidermis. Each extract was separately applied to a Cu2+ or Zn2+ chelate Sepharose 6B column and the proteins were eluted with buffers of different pHs and finally with EDTA solution. Metal chelate-binding proteins were found in both soluble and solubilized proteins but there was a larger amount in the latter. Affinity of the proteins to bind with Cu2+ chelate was greater than that with Zn2+ chelate. In Tris-
HCl
buffer extract, histidase activity was detected in Cu2+ chelate-binding proteins, but not in Zn2+ chelate-binding proteins. Acid phosphatase, cysteine proteinase, dipeptidase, cathepsin D, beta-galactosidase, gelatin hydrolase, and superoxide dismutase did not bind to metal chelates although these enzymes, except acid phosphatase, were inhibited by Cu2+, but not by Zn2+. In contrast, KSCN solubilized metal chelate-binding proteins showed plasminogen activator, acid phosphatase, and gelatin and casein hydrolases while histone hydrolase did not bind to either chelate column. Since metal-binding proteins in rat epidermal cells have been shown previously to be histidine- and cysteine-rich proteins concentrated in keratohyalin granules, interaction of metals and the structural proteins with certain enzymes may be involved in the regulation of epidermal cell functions.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1984
PMID:Enzymatic activity of metal-binding proteins in epidermal cells. 653 44
Human term placenta RNA and polyadenylated mRNA were prepared using guanidine
HCl
and oligo (dT)-cellulose affinity chromatography. Both fractions translated in a wheat germ cell-free system showed, under optimal condition of K+ and Mg++ ions and spermidine, about 9 times activity for RNA and 15-25 times for poly(A+) mRNA greater than the control. Homogenization of the tissue at high speed compared to that at low speed improved 4-fold activity. Analysis of tritiated products by SDS-Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and detected by fluorography showed more than ten different intensity bands ranging between 12 and 66 kD. According to the results obtained, guanidine
HCl
is an advantageous procedure for the extraction of RNA from this nuclease-rich tissue compared with that obtained with phenol extraction, in both activity and in larger translation products.
Mol
Biol Rep 1983 Aug
PMID:Translation in a cell-free system of mRNA from term placenta extracted by guanidine hydrochloride. 663 22
C-Reactive protein (CRP) is a trace component of normal human serum which has a mol. wt of 105,000 and is composed of five apparently identical subunits arranged in cyclic symmetry. The serum concentration of this protein is known to increase dramatically in response to acute inflammatory or necrotic processes. We report here that in the presence of high concentrations of urea significant antigenic, electrophoretic and binding site modifications of CRP occur selectively in the absence of calcium. CRP treated in this way (designated F-CRP) had a pI of 5.4 and alpha-electrophoretic mobility in contrast to the native molecule which had a pI of 6.4 and gamma-mobility. F-CRP retained a partial antigenic identity to native CRP, displayed decreased intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, and expressed a new antigenic reactivity. A similar neoantigen was expressed by heating CRP selectively in the absence if calcium (63 degrees C, 5 min). Treatment with guanidinium-
HCl
or deliberate carbamylation did not produce F-CRP or the expression of the F-antigen. The formation of F-CRP in urea or by heat was prevented by the presence of 0.7 mM or more calcium. CRP treated in this way retained identical characteristics to native CRP. F-CRP chromatographed through Sephadex G-150 in the presence or absence of 6M urea as a protein of apparent mol. wt 75, 000 with no evidence for free CRP subunits. The formation of F-CRP from native CRP resulted in a loss of capacity for calcium-dependent binding to the C-polysaccharide despite the persistence of calcium-independent binding reactivity for polycations. These data suggest that in the presence of sufficient calcium CRP can resist urea- or heat-induced structural denaturation, maintaining antigenic, electrophoretic and binding identity to the native molecule. In the absence of calcium, exposure to urea led to increased electrophoretic mobility and exposure of a new antigenic reactivity, and to alterations in the phosphocholine- but not the polycation-binding sites of the native CRP molecule; this new antigenic reactivity may be of value in further studies on the CRP molecule.
Mol
Immunol 1983 Nov
PMID:Antigenic, electrophoretic and binding alterations of human C-reactive protein modified selectively in the absence of calcium. 665 68
Ruthenium red and toluidine blue O precipitates were described associated with lathyritic elastic fibers in aortas of chickens treated with beta-aminopropionitrile fumarate (I. Pasquali-Ronchetti, C. Fornieri, I. Castellani, G. M. Bressan, and D. Volpin (1981). Alterations of the connective tissue components induced by beta-aminopropionitrile. Exp.
Mol
. Pathol. 35, 42-56). In this report evidence is given that these precipitates reveal the presence of proteoglycans, as they are completely removed by 5 M guanidine-
HCl
incubation and by specific enzymatic digestions. In particular, proteoglycans associated with the poorly cross-linked lathyritic elastin can be removed by testicular hyaluronidase, chondroitinase ABC, heparitinase, and nitrous acid treatments, whereas they are rather resistant to streptococcal hyaluronidase and chondroitinase AC. On the contrary, proteoglycans of the matrix or associated with collagen fibers are particularly sensitive to these latter enzymatic treatments. The conclusion is reached that glycosaminoglycans associated with beta-aminopropionitrile-induced lathyritic elastin (i) are different from those of the matrix or associated with collagen, and (ii) include mainly dermatan and heparan sulfates.
Exp
Mol
Pathol 1984 Apr
PMID:Elastin fiber-associated glycosaminoglycans in beta-aminopropionitrile-induced lathyrism. 670 93
Glutamic dehydrogenase extracted with tris buffer from fresh freeze-thawed rat heart mitochondria was purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation, affinity chromatography on GTP agarose, hydroxyapatite chromatography and concentration using a molecular sieve. The final specific activity is 80 units/mg protein. Thin gel SDS electrophoresis of the purified enzyme preparation after reduction with dithiothreitol shows a major band with a molecular weight of 38 000 Daltons. Two minor bands are also present. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation reveals a molecular weight of 230 000 Daltons for unreduced mitochondrial GDH activity. By gel filtration rat heart mitochondrial glutamic dehydrogenase has a major peak at 230 000 Daltons, a minor peak at 300 000 Daltons and some larger molecular weight species. Rat liver mitochondrial glutamic dehydrogenase has a minor peak at 230 000, a major peak at 300 000 and some larger molecular weight species. The rat liver mitochondrial glutamic dehydrogenase predominance at 300 000 is unchanged by incubation, extraction and purification with rat heart mitochondria. The purified GDH is stable frozen at -10 degrees C in tris-
HCl
buffer with EDTA. It loses activity at 4 degrees C especially when stored in 0.2 M phosphate buffer. It also loses activity when dialyzed for 24 h. This loss of activity is not completely prevented by adding nucleotides to the buffer (AMP or ADP) but is decreased by their presence.
J
Mol
Cell Cardiol 1984 Apr
PMID:Glutamic dehydrogenase from rat heart mitochondria. I. Purification and physical properties including molecular weight determination. 672 19
Antibodies to the RNase-sensitive RNP and to the RNase-resistant Sm nuclear antigens were used to affinity purify these antigens from a saline extract of rabbit thymus acetone powder. Determination of the protein subunits recovered by either glycine-
HCl
, pH 2.8, or 2.5 M MgCl2 elution on gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis containing mercaptoethanol revealed that RNP was composed of five proteins with mol. wts from 10,000 to 15,000 whereas Sm contained the same or similar five chains plus six additional subunits with mol. wts from 21,000 to 42,000. RNase treatment of the thymus extract increased the recovery in Sm of the same bands compared to untreated extract. Thus, RNP and Sm appear to have different numbers of protein components and RNP may be a subset of Sm. Sucrose gradient centrifugation of the 125I-labeled, pH 2.8 eluted antigens gave peaks of 3 and 6S for RNP and Sm, respectively. Sucrose gradient centrifugation of the crude untreated thymus extract followed by quantitative single radial immunodiffusion analysis of each fraction produced a broad peak from 16S to the top of the gradient while pretreatment of the extract with RNase resulted in a discrete 6S peak. These results indicate that in rabbit thymus acetone powder native RNP and Sm exist as larger polydisperse complexes with additional material including RNA and that after acid elution or RNase treatment the antigens are found in a smaller monodisperse form.
Mol
Immunol 1982 Jun
PMID:Characterization of RNP and Sm ribonucleoprotein nuclear antigens. 681 Jan 1
A high molecular weight basic allergen (HMBA) was isolated from the mixture of non-dialysable components of the aqueous extract of defatted rye grass pollen by a combination of gel filtration and isoelectrofocusing, HMBA, a glycoprotein of mol. wt 56,800 (17% carbohydrate) contained all naturally occurring amino acids. A hyperimmune rabbit anti-HMBA serum gave only a single precipitin band with the crude extract of the rye grass pollen in crossed immunoelectrophoresis. Thus, it was concluded that HMBA was a unique and highly purified antigen. The allergenicity of HMBA was revealed by its ability to elicit immediate skin reactions in grass allergic patients. Moreover, all patients' sera tested had IgE antibodies to HMBA detectable by direct RAST with HMBA allergosorbent discs. These observations indicated that HMBA was a major allergenic constituent of rye grass pollen. Treatment of HMBA by 6 M guanidine
HCl
led to a significant reduction in its ability to combine with human IgE antibodies. The treatment also resulted in the complete loss of allergenicity (i.e. inability to elicit PCA reactions with a murine reaginic antiserum to HMBA) and antigenicity (inability to form precipitins with rabbit anti-HMBA); hence, it would appear that the allergenic and antigenic determinants of HMBA are 'conformational'.
Mol
Immunol 1983 Apr
PMID:Immunochemical characterization of a high molecular weight basic allergen (HMBA) of rye grass (Lolium perenne) pollen. 686 58
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