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Disease
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Treatment of growing cultures of Mycobacterium smegmatis with alkylating agents (methyl methanesulphonate, ethyl methanesulphonate,
nitrogen
mustard, or mitomycin C) or with ultraviolet light resulted in enhanced specific activities of a DNA polymerase and of an ATP-dependent deoxyribonuclease. Similar results had previously been obtained with hydroxyurea and with iron limitation. The three of these treatments which were tested (methyl methanesulphonate, mitomycin C and hydroxyurea) produced strand breaks or alkali-labile regions in the DNA of this organism. The increased enzyme activities could be prevented by simultaneous treatment with inhibitors of protein synthesis. In contrast, treatment of the cultures with intercalating agents (ethidium bromide, acridine orange, or proflavine), 5-fluorouracil, caffeine, or nalidixic acid, inhibited DNA synthesis without increasing the enzyme activities. These treatments did not produce strand breaks in the DNA of this organism. The results support the hypothesis that, in M. smegmatis, damage to DNA induces increased synthesis of enzymes associated with DNA repair.
Mol
Gen Genet 1977 Feb 15
PMID:Increased DNA polymerase and ATP-dependent deoxyribonuclease activities following DNA damages in mycobacterium smegmatis. 84 85
1. Aspects of
nitrogen
metabolism in the human neonate were assessed in one full-term infant and six premature infants by means of
nitrogen
-balance measurements, estimates of obligatory
nitrogen
losses and determinations of whole-body
nitrogen
turnover. 2. Our data indicate that the mean protein requirement for maintenance is 1-1 g of protein day-1 kg-1 and that 3-8 g of protein day-1 kg-1 should be sufficient for adequate growth in healthy premature babies. 3. The mean obligatory urinary, faecal and total
nitrogen
losses were estimated to be 24, 106, 145 mg day-1 kg-1 respectively. These figures are compared with published values for older infants, and the possible metabolic basis for changes in
nitrogen
losses during growth and development is discussed. 4. Mean values for whole-body protein synthesis and breakdown were 26-3 +/- 7-0 and 23-8 +/- 7-4 g of protein day-1 kg-1 respectively. Dietary
nitrogen
intake accounted for 6--18% of the
nitrogen
flux through the metabolic pool; urea excretion accounted for 2% of the
nitrogen
flux. 5. The net protein gain, estimated from
nitrogen
-balanced data, accounted for 9-6% of total daily protein synthesis. 6. These results are discussed in relation to published estimates of whole-body protein synthesis and breakdown at various ages. Their possible significance in the assessment of a "maintenance" requirement for protein and amino acids during the period of rapid growth and development is also considered.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 May
PMID:Protein metabolism in human neonates: nitrogen-balance studies, estimated obligatory losses of nitrogen and whole-body turnover of nitrogen. 86 42
1. Urinary excretion of 3-methylhistidine, an index of the rate of muscle breakdown, has been measured during the first 7 days in patients after elective surgery or accidental injury. 2. There was no major difference between the mean daily excretion after skin grafting or total hip replacement, or in injured patients who were hyperketonaemic for the first 24 h after admission. 3. The group of injured patients who did not develop hyperketonaemia had a mean urinary 3-methylhistidine excretion which was twice that of the other groups. 4. It is concluded that increased breakdown of muscle protein makes a major contribution to the greater urinary
nitrogen
excretion in the normoketonaemic group of injured patients.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 May
PMID:Muscle-protein catabolism after injury in man, as measured by urinary excretion of 3-methylhistidine. 86 46
1. Administration of dexamethasone, 8 mg/day (0-02 mmol/day), for 5 days to normal subjects produced negative
nitrogen
balance, due to early and sustained increases in urinary urea
nitrogen
excretion 2. In eight subjects ingesting 0-9--1-6 g of protein day-1 kg-1 body weight the cumulative increment in urea
nitrogen
excretion averaged + 12-5 g (SEM 2-8, P less than 0-01) over the 5 days of glucocorticoid administration. 3. Increases in urinary urea
nitrogen
excretion could be related to both plasma alanine and blood glutamine changes by using a multiple regression equation. 4. These results suggest that corticosteroids induce increased release of alanine and glutamine by peripheral tissues, which may augment urea formation and negative
nitrogen
balance. 5. The correlation between increments in urea
nitrogen
excretion and increases in plasma arginine remains unexplained.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Sep
PMID:The role of alanine and glutamine in steroid-induced nitrogen wasting in man. 91 44
1. Sixteen patients with chronic bronchitis and airways obstruction were given radioactive
nitrogen
(13N) by intravenous injection and by inhalation, while breathing air and after 10-20 min breathing 30% oxygen. The clearance of 13N from four zones of each patient's whole lung field was monitored. 2. The 13N clearance of each region in these patients with chronic bronchitis was much slower than in normal subjects. Oxygen breathing produced a significant delay in the clearance of intravenously administered 13N in 23 zones in 10 patients but no systematic change in clearance after inhaled 13N. 3. With inhalation of 30% oxygen there was no no significant change in the mean minute ventilation, tidal volume or arterial PCO2. 4. The results suggest that local hypoxic vasoconstriction is present in some patients on breathing air and that this is relieved by 30% oxygen, resulting in a diversion of local blood flow from well-ventilated to more poorly ventilated areas. The fall in VA/Q on 30% oxygen is insufficient to increase arterial PCO2.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Oct
PMID:Effect of 30% oxygen on local matching of perfusion and ventilation in chronic airways obstruction. 91 64
1. Acute hypoxaemia had been reported to stimulate vasopressin release in animals. 2. Hypoxaemia induced by breathing 9-3% oxygen for 15-20 min failed to produce a rise in plasma arginine vasopressin concentration in six out of eight healthy human subjects. The two subjects who developed an increase in plasma arginine vasopressin concentration had a significant rise in serum cortisol. 3. Breathing 100%
nitrogen
until impairment of consciousness caused no rise in plasma arginine vasopressin concentration.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Oct
PMID:Effect of acute hypoxaemia on plasma arginine vasopressin in conscious man. 91 65
1. A method of measuring changes in the total body content of calcium, phosphorus,
nitrogen
and sodium in rats by activation analysis in vivo is described. 2. The change in the body content of the elements has been measured in rats on a calcium-deficient diet and in control animals, the body
nitrogen
being used to represent lean body mass for normalization. 3. There were siginificant differences in Ca/N and P/N but not in Ca/P ratios between the animals on a deficient diet and control animals at the end of the dietary period.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1976 Oct
PMID:A study of changes in whole-body calcium, phosphorus, sodium and nitrogen by neutron activation analysis in vivo in rats on a calcium-deficient diet. 97 80
The treatment of denatured T4 phage DNA with antiserum for the DNA of this phage, containing antibodies against glucosylated 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, decreases the ability of DNA for renaturation. The greatest inhibiting activity is possessed by antiserum for T4 phage DNA irradiated with UV light, which contains antibodies not only against glucosylated 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, but also against the usual
nitrogen
bases. Antiserum against E. coli DNA, containing antibodies to the usual
nitrogen
bases, in equal dilutions with the antisera indicated above, shows less inhibitory activity on the renaturation of T4 phage DNA.
Mol
Biol (Mosk)
PMID:Influence of antibodies against DNA on the renaturation of DNA. 102 48
The conformation of the denatured DNA molecule of different molecular weights in the solutions of various ionic composition was studied by the methods of viscometry, light scattering and flow birefringence. Formaldehyde purified from metallic ions with the help of ionites was used for fixation of the denatured state of the DNA molecule. It has been shown that theories developed for flexible macromolecules are in a sufficient accordance with hydrodynamical and optical data. The unperturbed dimensions, equilibrium rigidity of the macromolecule in solutions of different ionic strengths, mu, were determined. In the range of mu greater than or equal to 0.005 the length of Kuhn's segment (A) is equal to approximately 40 A and its value increases with an increase of mu. At mu 0.001 A approximately 60 A and mu 0.0005 A approximately 85 divided by 100 A. A relation between intrinsic viscosity and molecular weight of the denatured DNA molecule was established. Data on the flow birefringence in the solutions of the denatured DNA have shown that the sigh of optical anisotrophy of the macromolecule depends on the ionic strength. The observed dependency may be explained only by assuming that ionic strength influences the equilibrium orientation of
nitrogen
base planes with respect to the main chain of the macromolecule.
Mol
Biol (Mosk)
PMID:[Conformation of the denatured DNA molecule in solutions of different ionic strengths]. 105 69
1. The effects of oral hydrochloric acid, ammonium chloride, sodium bicarbonate and ammonium bicarbonate on urea and ammonium excretion in rats on a constant diet were studied. 2. Hydrochloric acid acidosis significantly reduced urea excretion in the rat, with an equimolar increase in NH+4 excretion and no change in their sum. In ammonium chloride acidosis, most of the additional
nitrogen
intake is excreted as NH+4 and a small percentage as urea. The converse holds true after administration of ammonium bicarbonate. The physiological significance of this is discussed. 3. The shift in
nitrogen
excretion from urea to NH+4 in acidosis is interpreted on the basis of bicarbonate production and utilization. Urea formation utilizes HCO-3. For amino acid sources, this utilization is offset by the metabolism of the carbon skeleton, which gives rise to HCO-3. When waste
nitrogen
is excreted as NH+4, no bicarbonate is utilized and the new HCO-3, generated by the carbon skeleton, hels to maintain hydrogen ion homeostasis.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med Suppl 1975 Jun
PMID:Adaptations in urea ammonium excretion in metabolic acidosis in the rat: a reinterpretation. 105 82
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