Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sequence complexity of nuclear RNA from mouse liver, mouse spleen and highly malignant P815 mastocytoma was measured by nRNA driven hybridization to unique DNA sequences of P815 cells. The unique DNA sequences represent 63% of the total nuclear DNA of P815 cells and their availibility in hybridization experiments was found to be 76%. Of these sequences 7.8% formed hybrids with nuclear RNA of this cell, about 11.5% with mouse spleen and about 14.5% with mouse liver nuclear RNA. Assuming an asymmetrical transcription, the complexities of these transcripts are 2.8 X 10(8) nucleotides for mouse P815 mastocytomas, 4.3 X 10(8) for mouse spleen and about 5.3 X 10(8) nucleotides for mouse liver. Cellular specifity of the transcribed information was analyzed in additivity experiments, in which unique DNA sequences, not complementary to the nuclear RNA of one cell were annealed to the nuclear RNAs of the two other tissues/cells. In these experiments most of the nuclear RNA sequences of P815 cells were found to be also present in the nucleus of mouse liver and spleen. Only a small portion of the unique DNA sequences of P815 mastocytoma (about 1.2% corresponding to 4.4 X 10(7) nucleotides) was found to be complementary only to P815 mastocytoma nuclear RNA.
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PMID:[Sequence complexity of transcribed unique DNA sequences in genome of mouse P815 mastocytoma cells (author's transl)]. 15 3

An experienced marathon runner died suddenly during a competitive race. At necropsy, ventricular hypertrophy but no asymmetrical septal hypertrophy was found. Histological studies showed features of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The coronary arteries were normal. We propose that the runner died from myocardial ischaemia, precipitated by marathon running on a background of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Excess cardiac work, induced by marathon running in the presence of mild congenital cardiac defects, could have contributed to the development of the cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy associated with sudden death during marathon racing. 15 46

On the grounds of clinical, electro- and echo-cardiographic examination of 39 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy from 3 to 15 years of age three types of this pathological condition are distinguished: asymmetrical septal hypertrophy, idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis and symmetrical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The value of signs of hypertrophic myopathy obtained on clinical and instrumental examination is discussed. The high diagnostic value of echocardiography in the examination of patients is emphasized.
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PMID:[Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in children (clinico-echocardiographic study)]. 15 5

The orthopaedic surgeon is often the first consultant to whom a patient with syringomyelia is referred. The disease is not as rare as he may suppose, but its early presenting features are very variable; if he relies solely on such familiar features as pes cavus and scoliosis, he may well miss the diagnosis. The commonest presenting symptom is pain in the head, neck, trunk or limbs; headache or neckache made worse by straining is particularly significant. A history of birth injury also may suggest the possibility of syringomyelia, especially if any spasticity subsequently worsens. Neurological features which may be diagnostic include nystagmus, dissociated sensory loss, muscle wasting, spasticity of the lower limbs or Charcot's joints. Radiographic features include erosion of the bodies of cervical vertebrae and widening of the spinal canal; if, at C5, the size of the canal exceeds that of the body by 6 millimetres in the adult, pathological dilatation is present. The presence of basilar invagination or other abnormalities of the foramen magnum, of spina bifida occulta and of scoliosis are further pointers. Thermography is a useful way of showing asymmetrical sympathetic involvement in early cases. A greater awareness of the prevalence of syringomyelia may lead to earlier diagnosis and to early operation, which appears to hold out the best hope of arresting what is all too commonly a severely disabling and progressive condition.
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PMID:Orthopaedic features in the presentation of syringomyelia. 15 24

Seventy-five children were examined in tasks involving matching figures in order to establish whether there exists a specific attraction to symmetrical or Gestalt type "good form" displays in mentally handicapped children and particularly in Down's Syndrome or if the tendency was towards image reversal. Twenty-five children with Down's Syndrome were matched on M.A. with twenty-five non-Down's Syndrome subnormals and twenty-five normal children. Symmetrical and asymmetrical displays were presented to the groups for reproduction and reproduction from memory. The results supported the hypothesis that mentally handicapped children have a significant attraction to symmetrical arrangements and that Down's Syndrome children are more significantly attracted than other handicapped children. Evidence is presented to show that what often is mistaken for a tendency to image reversal is in fact an attraction to "monotonicity" and is more related to "good form" than to reversal.
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PMID:Attraction to "good form" in Down's syndrome. 16 24

In order to assess the liability of proprioceptive information, an experiment on kinaesthetic after-effects was carried out. Matched groups of severely subnormal and Down's syndrome subjects were compared with normal children of either the same chronological or the same mental age. No difference was found between the normal and the severely subnormal children, but the magnitude of the after-effect measures in Down's syndrome children suggests that asymmetrical pointing produced kinaesthetic after-effects which disrupted these subjects' total frame of spatial reference.
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PMID:Kinaesthetic movement after-effects in children with Down's syndrome. 16 27

Phase diagrams representing lateral phase separations in the plane of lipid bilayer membranes have been determined for binary mixtures containing dielaidoylphosphatidylcholine together with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, distearoylphosphatidylcholine, dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine. The phase diagrams were deduced from observations of the temperature dependence of the paramagnetic resonance spectra of low concentrations of spin-labels incorporated in these bilayer membranes. In one case, the binary mixture of dipalmitoylphosphatidylethamine and dielaidoylphosphatidylcholine, evidence has been obtained for fluid-fluid immiscibility, in specified temperature and compoistion ranges. This immiscibility could give a lateral phase separation into fluid domains in the plane of the membrane, and/or a transverse phase separation into an asymmetrical bilayer membrane, and/or possibly disco ntinuous bilayer membranes of different composition. An asymmetrical bilayer membrane can be expected on theoretical grounds to form a nonplanar membrane.
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PMID:Phase separations in phospholipd membranes. 16 46

H1 protein, a heat-stable low-molecular-weight DNA-binding factor previously described by Cukier-Kahn et al. [Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci USA (1972) 69, 3643-3647] markedly stimulates in vitro synthesis of lac-specific RNA directed by bacteriophage lambdah80 dlac or phi80 dlac DNA templates in the presence of purified E. coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme. The extent of stimulation obtained by addition of H1 alone is usually greater than that observed with the cAMP receptor protein-cAMP combination. H1 effect varies quite appreciably (from 4- to 16-fold) with the functional state of the promoter, being much larger with lambdah80 dlac p-s, a transducing DNA carrying a superpromoter mutation, than with lambdah80 dlac p+. H1 and cAMP receptor protein effects are nearly additive, although interpretation of the data obtained at high H1 concentration is complicated by the appearance of some inhibitory property. While the cAMP-receptor-protein-mediated synthesis is asymmetrical ("I" strand almost exclusively copied), the degree of asymmetry observed with H1 is less pronounced, suggesting asymmetrical copying from the lac promoter and symmetric transcription from other regions of the DNA. Synthesis of lac-specific RNA from lambdah80 dtrp/lac or phi80 dlac p-r uv5 templates, in which lac promoters are insensitive to cAMP receptor protein, either as a result of lac fusion to the trp operon or mutation in the lac promoter, is totally H1-insensitive. Glycerol (10-15% w/w) can fully substitute for H1 in stimulating lac RNA synthesis in a fashion analogous to that reported for the cAMP receptor protein-cAMP system. The possibility that H1 acts by causing conformational modifications at the promoter level in a way that increases its functional state, and that this effect is more pronounced with operons sensitive to cAMP receptor protein, is discussed.
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PMID:Effect of a low-molecular-weight DNA binding protein, H1 factor, on the in vitro transcription of the lactose operon in Escherichia coli. 16 21

5-Acetyl-4-methyl-1-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)-imidazole-5'-phosphate reacts with diphenylphospho chloridate forming the asymmetrical pyrophosphate ester. This in turn reacts with tri-n-butyl-ammonium phosphate yielding 5-acetyl-4-methyl-imidazole-riboside-5'-diphosphate and with tri-n-butylammonium pyrophosphate to give the nucleotide triphosphate. 5-Acetyl-4-methyl-imidazole-riboside-5'-pyrophosphate shows in the test with pyruvate kinase a reaction rate three times slower than that of ADP; but the same Km as that of ADP. The ATP analogue is only about 10% as effective as ATP itself in the test with hexokinase, 3-phosphoglycerate kinase and gloconate kinase. Adenylate kinase and NAD" kinase show no activity when ATP is replaced by the nucleotide-triphosphate-analogue. In presence of ATP the analogue strongly inhibits the reaction of adenylate kinase.
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PMID:[Synthesis and properties of 5-acetyl-4-methyl-1-(beta-d-ribofuranosyl)-imidazole-5' di-and-triphosphate]. 16 88

A basic cytochrome was isolated from the phytomastigophorean protozoan Euglena gracilis and a similar protein from the zoomastigophorean protozoan Crithidia oncopelti. In both cases chromatography on CM-cellulose in first the reduced and then the oxidized form proved to be an efficient means of purification. The two cytochromes can be classed in the cytochrome c family but they have certain atypical features. The alpha peak of the absorption spectrum is shifted towards the red and is asymmetrical. The pyridine ferrohaemochrome has an alpha-peak maximum intermediate between that of c-type cytochromes and proteins containing protohaem IX. The test for free vinyl groups was positive. The amino acid sequences of the two cytochromes were determined. Attention is drawn in the text to those parts of the evidence that are less satisfactory. Both sequences are homologous with the family of cytochrome c, but are unusual in having only one cysteine residue so that the haem is attached through only one thioether bond. Detailed evidence for the amino acid dequences of the two proteins has been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50042 (70 pages) at the British Library (Lending Division) (formerly the National Lending Library for Science and Technology), Boston Spa, Wetherby, Yorks. LS23 7BQ, U.K., from whom copies can be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1975) 145, 5.
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PMID:Purification, properties and amino acid sequence of atypical cytochrome c from two protozoa, Euglena gracilis and Crithidia oncopelti. 17 Sep 10


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