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  • 1985-1989  (750)
  • 1975-1979
  • 1988  (750)
  • Biochemistry and Biotechnology  (680)
  • Ultrastructure
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Nuclear crystalloid inclusions ; Olea europaea ; Cytochemistry ; Ultrastructure ; Glycoprotein
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The nuclei of mesophyll cells of olive trees contain numerous sizeable crystalloid inclusions. Cytochemical examination using epoxy resin-embedded, semithin-sectioned tissue indicated the presence of proteins and oligoor polysaccharides in these inclusions. Their electron microscopical analysis revealed a crystalline substructure consisting of intersected subunits of high order. The spacing of the lattice fibrils and the angles of intersection were determined and used to establish a model of the unit cell of crystallization. It is suggested that the nuclear crystalloids of olive trees consist of glycoprotein molecules. They differ from the intranuclear crystalloids observed in other species predominantly in the high density of their subunit arrangement.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Collagenous colitis ; Myofibroblasts ; Myoid cells ; Immunohistochemistry ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We examined 129 colonic biopsies from 21 patients with collagenous colitis, most of whom presented with diarrhoea. Morphometric measurements gave a mean thickness of the subepithelial collagen deposit of 19.5 µ ± 5.1. The trapped fusiform and/or stellate cells within the deposits were identified immunohistochemically as myoid cells, being positive with antibody against smooth muscle cell alpha-actin. Ultrastructurally, these cells have all the characteristic features of myofibroblasts. Similar cells are also present along the crypts, where they were formerly referred to as pericryptal fibroblasts. Although there is still much debate as to the pathogenesis of this condition, we would like to suggest that collagenous colitis is a disease of pericryptal myofibroblasts. During their migration and maturation into the subepithelial region they may synthesize an excess of collagen, under some yet unknown or undefined stimulus/stimuli.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Sexual plant reproduction 1 (1988), S. 208-216 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Megagametophyte ; Synergids ; Brassica campestris ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In Brassica campestris, both synergids of the ovule degenerate before the arrival of the pollen tube. Synergid degeneration does not depend on pollination. At the non-degenerated stage, the synergids are completely filled with a complexly organized cytoplasm containing numerous mitochondria with many cristae, a large number of dictyosomes with many associated vesicles, and a very extensive rough endoplasmic reticulum. The degenerative changes that occur in the cytoplasm of the synergids are characterized by a loss of visibility of the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum and the simultaneous formation of dense deposits on the surrounding membranes of the mitochondria. Locally, the plasma membranes of the synergids disappear, and some ground plasma of the synergids penetrates into the space between the plasma membranes of the egg cell and the central cell.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Isolated cardiac myocytes ; Electrical activity ; Contraction ; Fatty acids ; Ultrastructure ; Diabetes mellitus, experimental ; Streptozotocin ; Electrophysiology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of chronic experimental diabetes on electrophysiological properties, contractile behavior,45Ca2+ transport, fatty acid profiles and ultrastructural characteristics were studied in enzymatically dissociated ventricular myocytes. Diabetes was induced in rats by streptozotocin administration and animals were killed 8–10 weeks later. Myocytes from diabetic rats exhibited electrical behavior similar to that of myocytes from control rats, but their contractile properties were altered. Their sensitivity of the twitch contractions to various positive and negative inotropic agents (isoproterenol, norepinephrine, phenylephrine, acetylcholine, ouabain and veratridine) was greatly diminished. However, a part of the contractile response (the tonic, sustained contractions) were increased in the diabetic myocytes, indicating that the changes are not caused by a decreased sensitivity of myofilaments. Furthermore, the diabetic myocytes exhibited also significant decrease in total Ca2+ content. The fatty acid profile in the diabetic group was changed mainly in that there were slightly elevated levels of docosahexaenoic acid and diminished levels of palmitic acid. The ultrastructure of the diabetic myocytes was affected only slightly. These investigations offer for the first time a comprehensive picture of changes related to diabetic cardiomyopathy as they occur at the level of cardiomyocytes.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Insulin ; Insulinomas ; Ultrastructure ; Immunogold technique
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Localisation of insulin-like immunoreactivity has been studied using the immunogold staining procedure on thin sections of 6 human insulinomas, conventionally processed for electron microscopy. The labelling was restricted to the secretory granules. Depending on their morphology, these either resembled B-cell granules of human adult pancreas or belonged to the atypical (non-diagnostic) group. Within the former group, those with a crystalloid core or an amorphous dense or moderately dense core were strongly immunoreactive, whereas others, filled with a pale material, were poorly labelled. Most granules of this type were stored together within the heavily granulated cells of 3 insulinomas, presenting the classical features of clinical and biological behaviour and a typical light microscopic staining pattern. In contrast, the non-diagnostic granules, characterized by their smaller size, a very dense core and a thin halo, were mainly found within the poorly granulated cells making up the other tumours, and showed a very uneven labelling. Strongly labelled granules were found in one insulinoma that also belonged to the classical type; these were stored together with a few diagnostic granules within the same cells. Only poorly labelled atypical granules were present in two cases revealing a number of unusual features; these included moderate elevation of insulinaemia, uncertain tumour histology, as well as weak immunostaining for insulin/proinsulin and variable argyrophilia of the tumour in paraffin sections. These findings suggest that human insulinomas differ not only in storage capacity but also in their degree of granule maturation. This may involve some deficiency of either the prohormone conversion or the subsequent processing of the cleavage products.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Virchows Archiv 412 (1988), S. 563-572 
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Cat scratch disease ; Epidemiology ; Ultrastructure ; Bacterial morphology ; Warthin-Starry stain
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The aetiological agent of cat scratch disease (CSD) has been unknown for more than 30 years. Recently, a micro-organism clearly shown with Warthin-Starry silver (W-S) stain was found and thought to be a possible cause of the disease. In this study, 32 cases of regional lymphadenopathy histologically compatible with CSD and 20 contrasting cases of lymphadenopathy were examined retrospectively with W-S stain. W-S positive pleomorphic organisms were clearly demonstrated in 20 of the 32 suspected cases of CSD, but in none of the other cases. The onset of disease in these 20 cases with W-S positive organisms occurred between July and January. This seasonal variation in the onset of disease was highly significant (P〈0.005) and was not due to a single epidemic. Moreover, some characteristic morphological features of the organism were found by electron microscopic observations. Ultrastructurally, the organism was a bacterium showing a chain-like arrangement, septal formation, branching and clubbed ends.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Lipid rich carcinoma ; Breast ; Immunohistochemistry ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Five cases of lipid-rich carcinomas of the breast were investigated ultrastructurally and immunohistochemically for alpha-lactalbumin (ALA), lactoferrin (Lfr) and human milk fat globule membrane antigen (HMFG-2). Staining for ALA and Lfr showed intensive reaction on nearly all of the tumour cells whereas immunoreaction for HMFG-2 revealed positivity in single cells. All tumours were negative for steroid receptor content. Ultrastructurally the tumour cells showed numerous intracytoplasmic non-membrane bound lipid droplets which were often found within autophagocytic vacuoles. Neither rough endoplasmic reticulum nor Golgi complexes showed any sign of lipid synthesis. Extrusion of lipid droplets and extracellular lipid deposition was not observed. In conclusion, our findings do not justify the consideration of lipid-rich carcinoma of the breast as a clearly defined group of tumours with specific secretory activity. Therefore, the term lipid-rich carcinoma should be used in preference to lipid-secreting, unless there is evidence of active lipid secretion.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ; Chromatolysis ; Ultrastructure ; Motor neuron disease ; Hyaline intraneuronal inclusions
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Ultrastructural features of chromatolytic neurons observed in a sporadic case with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are reported. A 70-year-old woman died of weakness and atrophy of the four limbs, bulbar and facial muscles, and hyperreflexia, of 3 1/2 years' duration. Neuronal loss was marked in the anterior horn of the spinal cord, with degeneration of the pyramidal tracts. Most of the remaining neurons showed chromatolysis. Some of the chromatolytic neurons contained faintly eosinophilic inclusions with a halo. Few spheroids were observed. Hypoglossal nuclei, nucleus ambiguus, motor nuclei of N. VII and N.V were well populated, but contained several chromatolytic neurons. Ultrastructurally, the chromatolytic neurons contained aggregates of fibrils thicker than the 10-nm neurofilaments. These fibrils were arranged randomly, and were closely associated with granular materials as well as rough endoplasmic reticulum. Neurofilamentous accumulations reported to be common in sporadic ALS were rare in this case. No Bunina body was observed.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 76 (1988), S. 11-16 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Choroid plexus ; Cytoplasmic inclusion ; Histochemistry ; Ultrastructure ; Frequency
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We described a new type of cytoplasmic inclusion in the choroidal epithelial cells of humans. The inclusions usually appeared as brown, round or elongated bodies with or without an inner core, ranging in size from 1.3 to 7.0 μm. Histochemically, they contained polysaccharides, proteins and compound lipids. Ultrastructurally, they were composed of finely granular and filamentous materials, which are densely packed in the inner core and less dense in the outer zone. The frequency study of the inclusions in 197 autopsied patients revealed that their occurrence had no correlation with the age or the disease category. It is concluded that the inclusions are a nonspecific, but peculiar, change of the choroidal epithelial cells, probably representing the morphological expression of a physiological or pathological alteration of the cellular metabolism at the single-cell level.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease ; Slow virus ; Pathology ; Ultrastructure ; Intranuclear vacuolar inclusion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In a 53-year-old man with a progressive mental deterioration and myoclonic jerks, brain biopsy failed to show any significant light microscopical findings. Electron microscopy revealed membranebound vacuolar inclusions in many neuronal nuclei as the only prominent finding. Hamsters intracerebrally inoculated with the biopsy material demonstrated typical spongiform changes in the gray structures of the brain when sacrificed on the 309th and 332nd days post inoculation, characteristic of experimental Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). These intranuclear vacuolar inclusions, originally reported in experimental Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in this laboratory, may be a valuable electron microscopic feature in some CJD cases and may play an important role in supporting the diagnosis of CJD.
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  • 11
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 178 (1988), S. 47-52 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Ultrastructure ; In vitro fertilization ; Bovine ; Ova ; Cortical granules
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cumulus-oocyte complexes collected from cows at an abattoir by aspiration from small (1–6 mm) antral follicles were matured and inseminated in vitro. At different time intervals after insemination the ova were processed for transmission electron microscopy. Up to and including 6 h after insemination all ova were unfertilized, and their cortical granules were more or less clustered. At 6 h acrosome reaction of spermatozoa was observed on the surface of the zona pellucida. At 8 h the first fertilized ovum appeared and the first fully developed spherical pronucleus was observed, at 20 h the first apposition of pronuclei was seen, and at 40 h divisions were ongoing or completed. More than one third of the fertilized ova showed polyspermic penetration of the zona pellucida, and in most of these ova different developmental stages of supernumerary pronucleus formation were observed in the ooplasm. Abnormal cortical granule release was seen in approximately half of the fertilized ova, and it was more frequent in ova with polyspermic as opposed to monospermic penetration of the zona pellucida.
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  • 12
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 178 (1988), S. 41-46 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: In vitro fertilization ; Bovine ; Ultrastructure ; Ova ; Spermatozoa
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cumulus-oocyte complexes were collected from cows at an abattoir by aspiration from small (1–6 mm) follicles. The complexes were matured in vitro for 28 h. Subsequently, the cumulus cells and the zona pellucida were removed by enzyme treatment in a proportion of the complexes (zona-free ova). Both cumulus-enclosed and zonafree ova were inseminated in vitro and processed for scanning electron microscopy after different periods of culture. In the cumulus-enclosed ova the number of spermatozoa attached to and penetrating into the cumulus investment increased with increasing culture time. Practically all spermatozoa displayed intact acrosomes. In the zona-free ova clusters of spermatozoa attached to the ovum surface, and at 5 h a proportion of the spermatozoa had undergone the acrosome reaction, and their internalization into the ooplasma was initiated. The acrosome reaction was characterized by an increasing fenestration of the membrane coverings of the acrosomal region of the sperm head. During the sperm head internalization, where the ovum microvilli appeared to contact especially the equatorial segment and the postacrosomal region, the sperm head gradually disappeared from the ovum surface, and the microvilli at the site of internalization became more bulbous. Simultaneous abstriction of the second polar body was seen in some ova.
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  • 13
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of dermatological research 280 (1988), S. 308-318 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Pili annulati ; Ultrastructure ; DACM staining ; Hair cortex ; Protein metabolism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Plucked scalp hairs and hair roots of pili annulati were examined to understand their pathogenesis. Stereoscopic examinations of hairs in transmitted light and/or reflected light and light microscopic surveys of the cross-sections of hairs confirmed that the cortical empty spaces appeared to be responsible to the unique dotted shiny appearance of the hairs seen by the unaided eyes under a refracted light. By transmission electron microscope, small vacuoles and dense bodies were observed in the cytoplasm of the differentiating cortical cells; subsequently, with increasing number of tonofilaments, an uneven distribution of free ribosomes occurred and abnormal spaces containing fine granular substances were formed in the cytoplasm of the cortical cells. Occasionally, extremely large cortical trichohyaline granules were found. In the keratinized hair, irregular empty spaces were present in the cortex of the abnormal hair segments. Histochemically, the keratinized cortex of the affected hairs always had more residual SH groups than the controls. Pili annulati may be a disorder of protein metabolism involving a partial dysfunction of cytoplasmic ribosomes, resulting in a lack of cortical keratin formation.
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  • 14
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 76 (1988), S. 522-527 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Esthesioneuroblastoma ; Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) ; Immunohistochemistry ; Ultrastructure ; Catecholamine-producing tumor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary An esthesioneuroblastoma in a 16-year-old male was studied ultrastructurally and immunohistochemically, using antiserum against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), a rate-limiting enzyme in the catecholamine-synthesizing pathway. Tumor cells were fairly uniform in appearance, showing scantly cosinophilic cytoplasm and round to oval hyperchromatic nuclei, and were arranged in nests and cords of various sizes. Ultrastructurally, individual tumor cells had well-developed cell organelles including polyribosomes, microtubules, intermediate filaments, centrioles, Golgi apparatus and mitochondria. Secretory-like granules were occasionally found, predominantly in the cell processes. Immunohistochemically, many tumor cells were shown to be immunoreactive for TH. This finding strongly suggested that the present tumor was capable of producing catecholamines and that it might be derived from certain sympathetic neuronal cell nests in the superior nasal cavity.
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  • 15
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 75 (1988), S. 577-582 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Cytoplasmic bodies ; Emetine ; Myopathy ; Sarcomeric lesions ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Progressive myopathy developed in two women who consumed ipecac syrup containing emetine hydrochloride to induce vomiting as part of their anorexia nervosa. Muscle biopsy specimens were characterized by severe disruption of the sarcomeres. The ultrastructural spectrum extended from “Z-band streaming” to the formation of cytoplasmic bodies and also comprised abnormalities of the sarcotubular system, thus suggesting that muscle weakness may be related to both sarcomeric and sarcotubular lesions in this self-inflicted myopathy. It is tempting to suggest that muscle weakness may be correlated with or based on the pathology in sarcomeres and the sarcotubular system. As the myopathy is clinically reversible upon discontinuation of ipecac consumption the morphological findings should also be potentially reversible. Experimentally induced emetine myopathy may, thus, serve as a useful model to study morphological dynamics of sarcomeric lesions, which may be observed separately or simultaneously in a variety of spontaneously occurring human neuromuscular disorders.
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  • 16
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 76 (1988), S. 101-106 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: AIDS ; Confronting cylindrical cisterns ; Cytomembranous inclusions ; Tubuloreticular inclusions ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Ultrastructural studies of cells and tissues in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have revealed two distinct cytomembranous inclusions referred to as “tubuloreticular inclusions” (TRI) and “confronting cylindrical cisterns” (CCC). TRI are found most often in leukocytes and endothelial cells in conditions with elevated levels of alpha-interferon, such as viral infections, autoimmune diseases and certain neoplasms. On the other hand, CCC are detected almost exclusively in mononuclear inflammatory cells and are limited to a few conditions, of which AIDS is the most common. CCC have been proposed as an ultrastructural marker for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We describe CCC in mononuclear inflammatory cells in the brain of a patient with AIDS. Finding CCC in brain tissue with no other specific feature such as multinucleated giant cells, nevertheless, should alert the neuropathologist to the possibility that the patient might have AIDS.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Hyperoxia ; Hypoxia ; Teratogenesis ; Rat embryo ; Whole-embryo culture ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary By using a whole-embryo culture technique (New 1978), the effects of oxygen concentration (5%, 20% and 95% oxygen) on embryonic development in the rat were investigated by light and electron microscopy. The best embryonic development occurred when the 9.5-day-old embryos were cultured for 24 h with 5% oxygen, and the 10.5-day-old embryos with 20% oxygen (optimum oxygen concentration). When the 9.5- and 10.5-day-old embryos were cultured for 24 h with too little or too much oxygen, retardation of the embryonic growth and abnormal development was observed. Using light microscopy, numerous degenerating cells, exhibiting granular deposits in the cytoplasm, were seen, but the distribution of the degenerating cells was quite different between the two groups. With electron microscopy, the most striking feature of the degenerating cells in the embryos cultured with too little oxygen, was the extreme swelling of the mitochondria without any morphological alterations of the nucleus or the other cell organelles. On the other hand, the characteristic feature of the degenerating cells in the embryos exposed to too much oxygen, was the formation of phagolysosomes in the cytoplasm. Morphological alterations of the nucleus or mitochondria were not evident. In the present study, the possible teratogenic mechanism of too much or too little oxygen in the whole-embryo culture of the rat embryo is discussed.
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  • 18
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 177 (1988), S. 403-408 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Marsupial ; Newborn ; Ultrastructure ; Merkel cells ; Mechanoreceptor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructure of the epidermal cells surrounding the mouth of three newborn marsupial species, the Northern native cat Dasyurus hallucatus, the brush tail possum Trichosurus vulpecula and the Northern brown bandicoot Isoodon macrourus were examined. The presence of Merkel cells, highly sensitive touch receptors, would suggest that the sense of touch aids the relatively underdeveloped newborn marsupial to move from the urinogenital sinus to the pouch and to locate the teat.
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  • 19
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 179 (1988), S. 191-203 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Sertoli cell ; Spermatogenic cycle ; Ultrastructure ; Stereology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructure of Sertoli cells from selected stages of the spermatogenic cycle was assessed by morphometric analysis which showed significant changes in the morphological features of Sertoli cell cytoplasm at the commencement of the cycle (stage II) compared to the middle (stages VII-VIII) and the completion of the cycle (stages IX-XIV). Total volume and surface area of organelles (rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER), lysosomes, mitochondria and Golgi) exhibited stage-dependent and cyclic variations as did the total surface area of Sertoli cell plasma membrane. Polarization of cytoplasmic organelles to basal or columnar regions of the Sertoli cell, exhibited particularly by the Golgi, rough ER and lysosomes also showed marked cyclic fluctuations during the spermatogenic cycle. Rough and smooth ER exhibited the most dramatic stage-dependent changes in total volume and surface area the former being respectively largest and smallest in stages VII-VIII and XIII-XIV, the latter organelle presenting the reverse pattern in these two groups of stages. Similar stage-dependent alterations of lysosome volume and surface area were also noted, being maximal during stages XIII-XIV-II and reaching a nadir at stage VIII. Although the functional role of most Sertoli cell organelles and inclusions remain largely unknown, the present study suggests that the cyclic and stage-dependent variations in ultrastructure probably reflect major changes in Sertoli cell function necessary for the regulation of the spermatogenic cycle.
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1432-1076
    Keywords: Infantile Refsum disease ; Phytanic acid ; Dietary treatment ; Peroxisomes ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Two patients with infantile phytanic acid storage disease (infantile Refsum disease), one of whom showed the presence of morphologically normal peroxisomes in a liver biopsy, were treated with a low phytanic acid diet for more than 2 years and the effects of treatment on certain clinical, biochemical and ultrastructural parameters were examined. Both patients showed evidence of either an improvement or stabilisation in their clinical condition. Plasma phytanic acid levels decreased to near normal values in approximately 6 weeks after the introduction of the diet; plasma pipecolic acid also declined markedly but the decrease was not so rapid and its level remained abnormal. C26∶C22 fatty acid ratios decreased very slowly and even after 2 years the values remained grossly abnormal. Despite the marked reduction of phytanic acid in the liver, there was an increase in the C26∶C22 fatty acid ratios and this appeared to be paralleled by an increase in inclusion bodies. Our data suggest that some patients with the infantile form of Refsum disease may show some clinical benefit from dietary management and this is reflected biochemically by decreases in the plasma levels of phytanic acid and pipecolic acid.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Cadmium ; Ultrastructure ; In vitro ; Nucleus ; Cytoplasm ; Muntjac
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A detailed electron microscopy study of cadmium sensitive and resistant muntjac fibroblast cell lines has identified a wide range of intracellular damage following exposure to cadmium. Damaged organelles included cell membrane, mitochondria, Golgi cisternae and tubular network, chromatin, nucleoli, microfilaments and ribosomes. Although cell membrane damage was generally the earliest indication of adverse cadmium action, particularly with continuous cadmium exposures, cells could tolerate extensive membrane loss. Mitochondrial distortion and some damage to Golgi was also tolerated. The turning point at which cadmium became lethal was generally marked by a cascade of events which included damage to both nuclear and cytoplasmic components. These results for fibroblasts are discussed and compared with damage reported in other types of cells.
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  • 22
    Electronic Resource
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    Archives of dermatological research 280 (1988), S. 338-345 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Port wine stain ; Endothelium ; Basement membrane ; Collagen ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The cause for the progressive vascular dilatation in port wine stains remains unclear. We compared the histology and ultrastructure of lesional and adjacent normal skin in paired biopsy specimens of 12 and 8 patients, respectively (age range, 6 to 53 years). In semithin sections, the lesions of all patients showed ectatic vessels and a fine-fibrous or hyaline thickening of the walls of postcapillary venules, as well as in some instances a loosening of the surrounding connective tissue. Ultrastructurally, the wall material consisted predominantly of peripheral deposits of amorphous material interspersed with collagen fibrils (diameter, 35±4 nm); occasionally the number of basal laminae in the inner part was also increased. Cross-banded filamentous aggregates with a periodicity of 95 nm were observed in and around the walls. The endothelium of many patients displayed fenestrations and/or small gaps. Various kinds of alterations of the intervascular connective tissue were found. We conclude that structural alterations of the vascular and later also of the intervascular connective tissue are related to the dilatation of the vessels. These findings are in agreement with the immunopathologically demonstrated increase of basement membrane components in the same biopsy specimens, but are interpreted as secondary phenomena. Endothelial stability and permeability may also be affected.
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  • 23
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    Archives of dermatological research 280 (1988), S. 319-322 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Elastosis perforans serpiginosa ; Collagen fibrils ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 24
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    Electronic Resource
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    Experimental brain research 69 (1988), S. 662-666 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Serotonin ; Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Monkeys ; Ultrastructure ; Immunocytochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Serotonin-immunoreactivity in the monkey lateral geniculate nucleus appears as a plexus of fine, beaded fibers decreasing in density from magnocellular to parvocellular laminae. Ultrastructurally, these fibers show strictures and dilations, and are filled with dense round particles as well as granular material attached to outer mitochondrial membranes and microtubules. Most of the profiles followed in serial sections lack morphologically defined synapses. The few synapses observed are asymmetric, some with subjunctional dense bodies. This appearance suggests a possible excitatory effect mainly on interneurons which in turn would inhibit principal cells. Serotonin released non-synaptically may block the delivery of transmitters from retinal terminals and/or the receptors for such transmitters, thereby exerting a modulatory depressing action on principal cells.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cholinergic toxin ; Retina ; Optic tectum ; ChAT ; Ultrastructure ; Goldfish
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary AF64A, a presumed selective cholinergic neurotoxin has been used to study the effect on cholinergic systems of the goldfish retina and optic tectum. Toxin injection in the vitreum and in the optic tectum caused a selective decrease of choline acetyltransferase activity in both areas, while no significant decrease of glutamate decarboxylase and D-3H aspartate uptake were observed at different times after the injections. The effect was particularly dramatic in the retina of long term-injected animals, where choline acetyltransferase dropped to practically zero level. The ultrastructural analysis showed selective degeneration of some neurons in the amacrine and ganglion cell layer of the retina as well as of synaptic terminals and neuronal cell bodies in the optic tectum. The results favour a selective cholinotoxicity of AF64A in fish nerve tissue at doses substantially higher than those found to have additional unselective effects in mammals.
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  • 26
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    Experimental brain research 72 (1988), S. 473-480 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Serotonin ; Tyrosine hydroxylase ; Zona incerta ; Regeneration ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cellular relationships between serotonin (5-HT) axons and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-containing neurons were examined by combined (3H)5-HT uptake radioautography and TH immunocytochemistry in the medial zona incerta (ZI) of adult rats, 7 and 50 days after an intracerebral injection of 5,7-Dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT). Seven days post-lesion, only rare, scattered (3H)5-HT-labeled axon terminals were apparent in the zone of the medial ZI accessible to intraventricularly injected (3H)5-HT. In contrast, in sham-injected animals (3H)5-HT-labeled varicosities were numerous and often observed adjacent to TH-immunoreactive perikarya and dendrites. Fifty days post 5,7-DHT injection, the density of (3H)5-HT-labeled terminals approximated that seen in sham-treated animals. At the ultrastructural level, these regenerated 5-HT axons were similar in size, shape and content to those observed in sham-operated rats. Also, as in sham, some of the (3H)5-HT-labeled axons were directly apposed to TH-immunopositive labeled profiles. The latter included large dendritic shafts and dendritic spines, but only rare perikarya. In both sham- and 5,7-DHT-treated animals a few of the contacts between (3H)5-HT-labeled and TH-immunoreactive profiles exhibited an asymmetric synaptic differentiation. These results indicate that 5-HT fibers in the medial ZI, following regeneration, can reestablish normal relationships and even synapses with a given population of chemically identified cells.
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  • 27
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    Experimental brain research 69 (1988), S. 522-530 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Estrogen ; Synapse ; Ultrastructure ; Midbrain central gray ; Lordosis behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Axons of ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) neurons have been previously shown to terminate in the midbrain central gray (MCG) (Chung et al. 1984, 1986). Since VMH synapses in this region may be involved in the mediation of estrogen-induced lordosis behavior, we examined the effect of estrogen on the morphology of synapses in the MCG. Ovariectomized adult female rats were given daily subcutaneous injections of estradiol benzoate (10 μg) or the vehicle control and after 20 days of injection, only the estrogen-treated rats showed the lordosis response. A quantitative analysis of MCG tissue from these animals demonstrates morphological changes in various synaptic parameters with estrogen treatment including: 1) an increase in the mean number of dense-cored vesicles and an increase in the number of terminals containing densecored vesicles, 2) an increase in the length of postsynaptic densities (PSDs), 3) an increase in the number of PSDs showing perforations, 4) an increase in the number of synapses, and 5) an increase in the number of synapses with positive synaptic curvature. No alterations in the number of subjunctional bodies were observed. The dense-cored vesicles may contain an estrogen-induced trophic factor which may function in maintaining the integrity of postsynaptic processes and cells in the MCG with which VMN endings contact (Chung et al. submitted) and/or which induces morphological changes in postsynaptic structures which facilitate the effects of estrogen on lordosis behavior.
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  • 28
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    Rheumatology international 8 (1988), S. 171-176 
    ISSN: 1437-160X
    Keywords: Ultrastructure ; Synovium ; Macrophages ; Immunoelectron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructural localisation of class II and macrophage antigens has been sought in the intimal layer of the human synovium. The cells described as type A in early morphological studies are shown to express both class II antigens and two markers of the macrophage/monocyte lineage of cells, OKM1 and MAB 24. The morphological type B cells were found to express none of these antigens. The findings are consistent with the idea that the synovial lining comprises two cell types, bone-marrow derived macrophages and mesenchymal fibroblasts.
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  • 29
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    European archives of oto-rhino-laryngology and head & neck 245 (1988), S. 266-272 
    ISSN: 1434-4726
    Keywords: Murine endolymphatic sac ; Basement membrane ; Fluid transport ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructure of the basement membrane of the murine endolymphatic sac was studied under various experimental conditions in labyrinthectomized and ethacrynic acid-treated animals and was compared with normal anatomy. The basement membrane was clearly visualized after staining with ruthenium red or dialyzed iron. The basement membrane of the murine sac consists of two different layers: the lamina rara and the lamina densa. It demarcates the border between the epithelial cells and the subepithelial connective tissue. Our findings suggest that the basement membrane acts as a physical support to the epithelium in the endolymphatic sac. The basement membrane also shows a dynamic capacity to form a new basement membrane, with the result that the lateral intercellular space between contiguous epithelial cells may be integrated with the subepithelial space. This system is believed to act as a macromolecular and bulk water transport system. In the subepithelial space, collagen, reticular and elastic fibrils are found having a close relationship to the basement membrane. The elastic fibres are presumed to play a role in the pressure-regulating mechanism in the endolymphatic sac.
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  • 30
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    Environmental biology of fishes 22 (1988), S. 69-77 
    ISSN: 1573-5133
    Keywords: Acid ; Metals ; Ultrastructure ; Olfaction ; Electrical response ; Pollution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Synopsis The effects of acid ((H2SO4) and aluminum AIKSO4 in acidified water on rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri, olfactory organ were examined using scanning electron microscopy and electrophysiology. Exposure to pH 4.7 resulted in an increase in the number of mucus droplets over parts of the olfactory epithelium, primarily along the ridges of the secondary folds. The addition of aluminum (5.0, 9.5, 20.0 µmol · 1−1) at pH 4.7 resulted in loss of receptor cell cilia, irregularly shaped olfactory knobs, clumped microvilli and swellings on microridge cells. Electrical responses recorded from the olfactory nerve in response to the amino acid L-serine were similar to controls in fish exposed to acidified water. When fish were exposed to acidified water and aluminum the response was depressed. These morphological and electrophysiological changes could be used to indicate metal-induced stress in fish from natural ecosystems.
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  • 31
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    Research in experimental medicine 188 (1988), S. 411-423 
    ISSN: 1433-8580
    Keywords: Human fetal lung cell cultures ; Lamellar bodies ; Pneumocytes type II ; Intralipid ; Hydrocortisone ; Ultrastructure ; Morphometric analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Organotypic cell culture systems of human fetal lungs of 15, 18, and 26 weeks' gestational age were treated with Intralipid, a phosphatidylcholine-containing lipid mixture, and with hydrocortisone of varying concentrations. The lamellar bodies found in the pneumocytes type II were ultrastructurally identified. Their amount was quantitated by point-counting, a morphometrical method. Intralipid had a stimulating effect upon the surfactant production depending on the concentration admitted. This effect was quantitatively compared to the known effect of hydrocortisone. Intralipid at a concentration of 10−2% produced a significant increase of the relative volume of lamellar bodies (P = 0.05) at a gestational age of 18 weeks. This effect is comparable to hydrocortisone treatment at a concentration of 10−1% (P = 0.05) and 10−3% (P = 0.01). At a gestational age of 26 weeks, Intralipid at a concentration of 10−1% (P = 0.01) stimulated lamellar body production. Hydrocortisone had a similar effect at a concentration of 10−1% (P = 0.01). Intralipid does not pass the placenta-barrier and is locally applied by amniocentesis. Therefore, complications to the maternal organism and probably to the fetuses are negligible. The application of Intralipid represents an alternative method to accelerate antenatal surfactant production and to improve the rate of survival of preterm infants.
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  • 32
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Heat shock ; Soybean root ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Soybean seedlings (Glycine max) were incubated in narrow temperature regimes to study the effects of heat shock on cell structures. The incubation temperatures used were as follows: 1. 28 °C (2h); 2. 40 °C (2h); 3. 45 °C (2h); 4. 40 °C (2h)→45 °C (2h); 5. 47. 5 °C (10 min); 6. 40 °C (2h)→47. 5 °C (10 min). Both optical and electron micrographs were taken of the different tissues of root meristems as they responded to heat shock. Cells of roots heated to 45 °C (2h) or 47.5 °C (10 min) with lethal treatment showed drastic heat injuries:e.g., membrane damage, coagulated plasmolysis, protoplasmic contraction, and leakage of cell content. Nucleolar segregation occurred in cells treated at both lethal and supraoptimal temperatures. Seedlings preincubated at 40 °C (2 h) became thermo-tolerant to lethal temperature treatment of 45 °C (2 h) or 47.5 °C (10 min), by protecting the plasmalemma, mitochondria, plastids and nuclei from heat damage. Without preincubation, however, these structures were destroyed.
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  • 33
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    Protoplasma 147 (1988), S. 55-63 
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Generative cell ; Sperm cell ; Treetomato ; Ultrastructure ; Vegetative nucleus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The structure of the generative cell and its association with the vegetative nucleus in the pollen tube ofCyphomandra betacea Sendt. were observed with the electron microscope. The generative cell, bounded by its own plasma membrane and the inner plasma membrane of the vegetative cell, possesses the cytoplasmic extension which lies within the embayments of a vegetative nucleus. The generative cell contains the normal complement of organelles and, especially, microtubules which cluster into several groups adjacent to the plasma membrane, oriented along the longitudinal axis of the cell. In the pollen tube reaching the lower end of the style aftersemivivo pollination, both of the sperm cells are elongated and polyribosomes and microtubules are the outstanding feature in the cytoplasm. The two sperm cells are connected by a common transverse cell wall, while cytoplasmic channels exist in both the periplasm of the two sperm cells and the transverse wall. The leading sperm cell (Svn) is closely associated with the vegetative nucleus. Thus the present study demonstrates the existence of the male germ unit in the pollen tube ofC. betacea. The possible cytoplasmic continuity between the sperm cells and between the gametes and vegetative cell is considered.
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  • 34
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 1-17 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: computer modeling ; trifluoperazine ; conformational change ; calcium binding proteins ; hydrophobic binding interactions ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Among the known regulatory proteins that are conformationally sensitive to the binding of calcium ions, calmodulin and troponin-C have the greatest primary sequence homology. This observation has led to the conclusion that the most accurate predicted molecular model of calmodulin would be based on the X-ray crystallographic coordinates of the highly refined structure of turkey skeletal troponin-C. This paper describes the structure of calmodulin built from such a premise. The resulting molecular model was subjected to conjugate gradient energy minimization to remove unacceptable intramolecular non-bonded contacts. In the analysis of the resulting structure, many features of calmodulin, including the detailed conformation of the Ca2+-binding loops, the amino- and carboxy-terminal hydrophobic patches of the Ca2+-bound form, and the several clusters of acidic residues can be reconciled with much of the previously published solution data. Calmodulin in missing the N-terminal helix characteristic of troponin-C. The deletion of three residues from the central helical linker (denoted D/E in troponin-D) shortens the molecule and changes the orientation of the two domains of calmodulin by 60° relative to those in troponin-C. The molecular model has been used to derive two possible binding sites for the antipsychotic drug trifluoperazine, a potent competitive inhibitor of calmodulin activity.
    Additional Material: 11 Ill.
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  • 35
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: distance-restrained molecular dynamics ; 2D NOE-spectroscopy ; tertiary structure ; solution conformations ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The technique of two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D-NMR) has recently assumed an active role in obtaining information on structures of polypeptides, small proteins, sugars, and DNA fragments in solution. In order to generate spatial structures from the atom-atom distance information obtained by the NMR method, different procedures have been developed. Here we introduce a combined procedure of distance geometry (DG) and molecular dynamics (MD) calculations for generating 3D structures that are consistent with the NMR data set and have reasonable internal energies. We report the application of the combined procedure on the lac repressor DNA binding domain (headpiece) using a set of 169 NOE and 17 “hydrogen bond” distance constraints. Eight of ten structures generated by the distance geometry algorithm were refined within 10 ps MD simulation time to structures with low internal energies that satisfied the distance constraints.Although the combination of DG and MD was designed to combine the good sampling properties of the DG algorithm with an efficient method of lowering the internal energy of the molecule, we found that the MD algorithm contributes significantly to the sampling as well.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 36
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: proton transport ; energy transduction ; purple membrane ; proton wire ; Schiff base counter-ion ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The techniques of FTIR difference spectroscopy and site-directed mutagenesis have been combined to investigate the role of individual tyrosine side chains in the proton-pumping mechanism of bacteriorhodopsin (bR). For each of the 11 possible bR mutants containing a single Tyr→Phe substitution, difference spectra have been obtained for the bR→K and bR→M photoreactions. Only the Tyr-185→Phe mutation results in the disappearance of a set of bands that were previously shown to be due to protonation of a tryosinate during the br→K photoreaction [Rothschild et al.: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United states of America 83:347, (1986)]. The Tyr-185→Phe mutation also eliminates a set of bands in the bR→M difference spectrum associated with deprotonation of a Tyr; most of these bands (e.g., positive 1272-cm-1 peak) are completely unaffected by the other ten Tyr→Phe mutations. Thus, tyrosinate-185 gains a proton during the bR→K reaction and loses it again when M is formed. Our FTIR spectra also provide evidence that Tyr-185 interacts with the protonated Schiff base linkage of the retinal chromophore, since the negative C=NH+ stretch band shifts from 1640 cm-1 in the wild type to 1636 cm-1 in the Tyr-185→Phe mutant. A model that is consistent with these results is that Tyr-185 is normally ionized and serves as a counter-ion to the protonated Schiff base. The primary photoisomerization of the chromophore translocates the Schiff base away from Tyr-185, which raises the pKa of the latter group and results in its protonation.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
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  • 37
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 243-251 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein evolution ; structural homology ; ribosome structure ; x-ray crystallography ; common motif ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The structure of two prokaryotic ribosomal proteins, the carboxyterminal half of L7/L12 from Escherichia coli (L12CTF) and 1.30 from Bacilus Stearothermophilus display a remarkably similar fold in which alpaha-helices pack onto one side of an antiparallel, three-stranded, beta-pleated sheet. A detailed comparison of the structures by least-squares methods reveals that more than two-thirds of the alpha carbons can be superimposed with a root mean square distance of 2.33 Å. The principal difference is an extra alpha-helix in L12 CTF. The sequences of the proteins display a distinct conservation in regions which are crucial to the common fold, in particular the hydrophobic core. It is proposed that the similarity is a result of divergent evolution.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
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  • 38
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 230-242 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: melittin ; spin-labelling ; EPR spectroscopy ; membrane-protein interaction ; protein-protein interaction ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Spin-labeled derivatives of the bee venom protein, melittin, were obtained by reacting on the average one of the four amino groups of the protein with succinimidyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-pyrroline-1-oxyl-3-carboxylate All 16 statistically possible reaction products with 0, 1, 2, 3 or 4 spin labels per protein were then separated in a single pass with reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography. With the help of trypsin digestion and diode array detection it was possible to assign the primary structure of all 16 eluting fractions. All fractions with only one spin label per protein were purified for electron paramagnetic resonance measurement. The labeling sites cover different regions of the protein: one is at the N-terminus, one at lysine-7, and two are near the C-terminus at lysine-21 and lysine-23, respectively. This set of specifically labeled melittins was used to study the structure and dynamics of melittin in aqueous solutions and when bound to neutral or negatively charged membranes. In aqueous solution a reduction in rotational correlation time and appearance of spin-spin interaction was observed during salt-induced transition from a random coil monomer to a mostly α-helical retramer. Membrane binding to phospholipid bilayers in low or high ionic strength was reflected only in a further decrease in mobility. The absence of any spin interaction in the membrane-bound state suggests that melittin is monomeric under these conditions. All derivatives were able to detect these structural changes, but melittin labeled at the N-terminal amino group was especially valuable. Because of postulated intramolecular hydrogen bonding, this label reflects directly the motion of the entire protein or tetramer. Broadening experiments with chromium oxalate show that all labeled sites are at least partially exposed to the aqueous phase when melittin is bound to membranes. This suggests that an α-helical melittin monomer binds to membranes with its axis parallel to the membrane surface.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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  • 39
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 252-255 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: streptomyces malayensis ; antitumor antibiotic ; holoprotein antibiotic ; crystallization of mitomalcin ; amino acid composition ; partial amino acid sequence ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The antitumor antibiotic protein mitomalcin, from the microorganism Streptomyces malayensis, has been purified to apparent homogenity and crystallized. The crystals belong to space group P212121 and have the following cell parameters : a=27.2 Å, b=34.1 Å, c=101.7 Å, and alpha;=β=γ=90°. These crystal properties are extremely similar to crystals of the antitumor protein neocarzinostatin (11.7 kilodaltons [kDa]) from Streptomyces carzinostaticus in spite of differing pH conditions for crystallizing the two proteins and an apparent difference in molecular weight is similar to that of neocarzinostatin. An amino acid composition analysis of mitomalcin indicates that some differences may exist between the two molecules, but a preliminary amino acid sequence analysis of the first 37 residues found no difference in the N-terminal region of the molecule.
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  • 40
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 256-261 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: zymogen activation ; protein engineering ; autoproteolytic processing ; protein structure/function ; renaturation ; rDNA expression ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Site-specific mutagenesis of the gene encoding bovine prochymosin was used to produce a mutated zymogen in which seven contiguous amino acids of the N-terminal propeptide had been deleted and an eighth residue had been substituted. This altered region spans the normal site of autocatalytic proteolysis that occurs at the same time as (enzymatic) activation of prochymosin at acidic pH. Activation of the mutated zymogen at pH 4.5 was extremely slow, and cleavage occurred at an unusual Ser-Lys bond in the prochymosin incubated at pH 2 generated the usual pseudochymosin by cleavage of the normal Phe-Leu bond, but at a rate severalfold slower than the authentic zymogen. These results indicate that even after deletion of seven of 42 amino acids of the propeptide the mutant protein could still assume a prochymosin (zymogen) structure, although these changes did result in striking differences in acid-catalyzed activation and processing reactions at one but not the other of the two processing sites of prochymosin.
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  • 41
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 262-273 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: hierarchical assignment ; cereal grain ; mistletoe ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Methods that analyze protein circular dichroism (CD) spectra for fractions of secondary structure are evaluated for the plant protein crambin, which has a known high-resolution crystal structure. In addition, a two-step secondary structure prediction scheme is presented and used for the toxins homologous to crambin, shown by others to have secondary structures similar to crambin.The test of CD spectral analysis methods with the protein crambin employed two computer programs and several CD basis sets. Crambin's crystal structure, known to 0.945 Å resolution (Hendrickson, W.A., Teeter, M.M. Nature 290:107-113, 1981), allows accurate evaluation of results. Analysis with the protein spectra basis sets (Provencher, S. W., Glöckner, J. Biochemistry 20:33-37, 1981) as modified (Manavalan, P., Johnson, W. C., Jr. Anal. Biochem. 167:76-85, 1987) agreed most closely with crambin's crystal structure. This method was then applied to the CD spectra of the membrane-active toxins homologous to crambin (α1- and β-purothionin, phoratoxin A and B, an viscotoxin A3 and B).The new program SEQ (pronounced “seek”) was developed to assign the secondary structure along the protein chain in a hierarchical fashion and applied to the plant toxins. The method constrained the secondary structure fractions to those from CD analysis and combined standard statistical methods with amphipathic helix location.Both CD-arrived secondary structure percentages and sequence assignment indicate that the viscotoxins are structurally most similar to crambin. Purothionin's secondary structure was predicted to be fundamentally similar to crambin's with a difference at the start of the first helix. This assignment agreed with Raman and NMR analyses of Purothionin and lends validity to the method presented here. Differences from the NMR in the CD secondary structure fraction analysis for phoratoxin suggest interference in the CD from tryptophan residues.
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  • 42
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 274-282 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: crystallography ; refinement ; structure ; carbonic anhydrase ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The structure of human erythrocytic carbonic anhydrase II has been refined by constrained and restrained structure-factor least-squares refinement at 2.0 Å resolution. The conventional crystallographic R value is 17.3%. Of 167 solvent molecules associated with the protein, four are buried and stabilize secondary structure elements. The zinc ion is ligated to three histidyl residues and one water molecule in a nearly tetrahedral geometry. In addition to the zinc-bound water, seven more water molecules are identified in the active site. Assuming that Glu-106 is deprotonated at pH 8.5, some of the hydrogen bond donor-acceptor relations in the active site can be assigned and are described here in detail. The Oγ1 atom of Thr-199 donates its proton to the Oε1 atom of Glu-106 and can function as a hydrogen bond acceptor only in additional hydrogen bonds.
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  • 43
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 294-295 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 44
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 102-112 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: bacterial chemotaxis ; sensory adaptation ; protein modification ; membrane protein ; receptor protein ; transmembrane signalling ; Escherichia coli ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The Trg protein is one of a family of transducer proteins that mediate chemotactic response in Escherichia coli. Transducers are methylaccepting proteins that gain or lose methyl esters on specific glutamyl residues during sensory adaptation. In this study, the significance of multiple sites of methylation on transducer proteins was addressed by using oligonucleotide-directed, site-specific mutagenesis to substitute an alanyl residue at each of the five methyl-accepting sites in Trg. The resulting collection of five mutations, each inactivating a single site, was analyzed for effects on covalent modification at the remaining sites on Trg and for the ability of the altered proteins to mediate sensory adaptation. Most of the alanyl substitutions had substantial biochemical effects, enhancing or reducing methyl-accepting activity of other sites, including one case of activation of a site not methylated in wild-type protein. Analysis of the altered proteins provided explanations for many features of the complex pattern of electrophoretic forms exhibited by Trg. The mutant proteins were less efficient than normal Trg in mediating adaptation. Correlation of biochemical and behavioral data indicated that reduction in the number of methyl-accepting sites on the transducer lengthened the time required to reach an adapted state.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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  • 45
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: NMR spectroscopy ; protein dynamics ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Solid-state and solution 15N nuclear magnetic resonance experiments on uniformly and specifically 15N labeled coat protein in phospholipid bilayers and in detergent micelles are used to describe the dynamics of the membrane-bound form of the protein. The residues in the N- and C-terminal portions of the coat protein in both phospholipid bilayers and in detergent micelles are mobile, while those in the hydrophobic midsection are immobile. There is evidence for a gradient of mobility in the C-terminal region of the coat protein in micelles; at 25°C only the last two residues are mobile on the 109-Hz timescale, while the last six to eight residues appear to be mobile on slower timescales and highly mobile at higher temperatures. Since all of the C-terminal residues are immobile in the virus particles, the mobility of these residues in the membrane-bound form of the protein may be important for the formation of protein-DNA interactions in the assembly process.
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  • 46
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: 2H NMR ; selective deuteration ; tryptophan internal motion ; SSI-subtilisin complex ; protein conformational equilibrium ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Deuterium NMR spectroscopy was used to study internal motions of a deuterium-labeled single tryptophan (Trp) residue (per subunit) of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) in solution. The free inhibitor with the five ring protons of the Trp replaced with deuterons showed a narrow resonance component (56 Hz) of about one-quarter of the total intensity, in addition to the broad resonance component (about 600 Hz) at 25°C, showing that it exits in an equilibrium mixture of two conformers, in one of which the typtophan side chain is highly mobile. In analogy to the two structures of SSI found in the crystal, these two conformers were attributed to the one in which the contact between the α-lobe and the beta;-lobe of the subunit is tight and the other in which the same contact is loose. When SSI forms a complex with subtilisin BPN′, the broad component becomes invisibly broad, but the narrow component increases with even further narrowing, suggesting that the binding to the enzyme favors the “loose” conformer over the “tight” conformer.
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  • 47
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 137-147 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: eye lens proteins ; protein association ; crystal packing ; surface area ; homologous proteins ; point mutations ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A comparative study of intermolecular interactions in crystals of two homologous low molecular weight proteins, γ-II and γ-IIIb crystallins, from calf eye lens was carried out. Crystal packings for these proteins are very different: intermolecular contact areas compose about 33% of the total accessible surface area of γ-II as compared with 13% in γ-III. Two key residues seem to be mainly responsible for the differences in protein association in the crystal medium. These are Ser 103 and Leu 155 in γ-II, which are replaced by Met 103 and His 155 in γ-IIIb. A similar substitution of these residues is observed in different gene products of γ-crystallins from a number of vertebrates. This is consistent with the existence of a genetically controlled mechanism for determining intermolecular association of γ-crystallins in the native medium of the lens.
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  • 48
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 148-156 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Protein structure ; empirical energy ; energy minimization ; molecular dynamics ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A method for the prediction of hydrogen positions in proteins is presented. The method is based on the knowledge of the heavy atom positions obtained, for instance, from X-ray crystallography. It employs an energy minimization limited to the environment of the hydrogen atoms bound to a common heavy atom or to a single water molecule. The method is not restricted to proteins and can be applied without modification to nonpolar hydrogens and to nucleic acids. The method has been applied to the neutron diffraction structures of trypsin ribonuclease A, and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. A comparison of the constructed and the observed hydrogen positions shows few deviations except in situations in which several energetically similar conformations are possible. Analysis of the potential energy of rotation of Lys amino and Ser, Thr, Tyr hydroxyl groups reveals that the conformations of lowest intrinsic torsion energies are statistically favored in both the crystal and the constructed structures.
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  • 49
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 50
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 157-164 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: synthetic inhibitors ; serine proteinase crystallography ; active site geometry ; computer graphics ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Proteinase K, the extracellular serine endopeptidase (E.C. 3.4.21.14) from the fungus Tritirachium album limber, is homologous to the bacterial subtilisin proteases. The binding geometry of the synthetic inhibitor carbobenzoxy-Ala-Phechloromethyl Ketone to the active site of proteinase K was the first determined from a Fourier synthesis based on synchrotron X-ray diffraction data between 1.8 Å and 5.0 Å resolution. The protein inhibitor complexes was refined by restrained least-squares minimization with the data between 10.0 and 1.8 Å. The final R factor was 19.1% and the model contained 2,018 protein atoms, 28 inhibitors atoms, 125 water molecules, and two Ca2+ ions. The peptides portion of the inhibitor is bound to the active center of proteinase K by means of a three-stranded antiparallel pleated sheet, with the side chain of the phenylalanine located in the P1 site. Model building studies, with lysine replacing phenylalanine in the inhibitor, explain the relatively unspecific catalytic activity of the enzyme.
    Additional Material: 5 Ill.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: crystallography ; structure ; refinement ; sulfonamide ; thiocyanate ; mercury ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The binding of four inhibitors - mercuric ion, 3-acetoxymercuri-4-aminobenzenesulfonamide (AMS), acetazolamide (Diamox), and thiocyanate ion - to human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) has been studied with X-ray crystallography.The binding of mercury to HCA II at pH 7.0 has been investigated at 3.1 Å resolution. Mercuric ions are observed at both nitrogens in the His-64 ring. One of these sites is pointing toward the zinc ion. The only other binding site for mercury is at Cys-206.The binding of the two sulfonamide inhibitors AMS and Diamox, has been reinvestigated at 2.0 and 3.0 Å, respectively. Only the nitrogen of the sulfonamide group binds to the zinc ion replacing the hydroxyl ion. The sulfonamide oxygen closet to the zinc ion is 3.1 Å away. Thus the tetrahedral geometry of the zinc is retained, refuting earlier models of a pentacoordinated zinc.The structure of the thiocyanate complex has been investigated at pH 8.5 and the structure has been refined at 1.9 Å resolution using the least-squares refinement program PROLSQ. The crystallographic R factor is 17.6%. The zinc ion is pentacoordinated with the anion as well as a water molecule bound in addition to the three histidine residues. The nitrogen atom of the SCN- ion is 1.9 Å from the zinc ion but shifted 1.3 Å with respect to the hydroxyl ion in the native structure and at van der Waals' distance from the Oγl atom of Thr-199. This is due to the inability of the Oγl atom of Thr-199 to serve as a hydrogen bond donor, thus repelling the nonprotonated nitrogen. The SCN- molecule reaches into the deep end of the active site cavity where the sulfur atom has displaced the so-called “deep” water molecule of the native enzyme. The zinc-bound water molecule is 2.2 Å from the zinc ion and 2.4 Å from the SCN- nitrogen. In addition, this water is hydrogen bonded to the Oγl atom of Thr-199 and to another water molecule.We have observed that solvent and inhibitor molecules have three possible binding sites on the zinc ion and their significance for the catalysis and inhibition of HCA II will be discussed. All available crystallographic data are consistent with a proposed catalytic mechanism in which both the OH moiety and one oxygen of the substrate HCO3- ion are ligated to the zinc ion.
    Additional Material: 9 Ill.
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  • 52
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 251-261 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein folding kinetics ; disulfide bonds ; thiol-disulfide exchange ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Two very different mechanisms of folding have been proposed from experimental studies of disulfide formation in reduced ribonuclease A. (1) A pathway in which the rate-limiting step separates fully folded protein from all other disulfide intermediates and occurs solely in three-disulfide intermediates. (2) A multiple pathway mechanism with different rate-limiting steps for each pathway. The various rate-limiting steps involve disulfide breakage, formation, and rearrangement in intermediates with one, two, three, and four protein disulfides. To distinguish between these two mechanisms, we have carried out further studies of both unfolding and refolding.Refolding of reduced ribonuclease A requires three-disulfide intermediates to accumulate; negligible refolding occurs when only the nearly random one- and two-disulfide intermediate species are populated. Therefore, no rate-limiting steps of the type postulated in mechanism (2) occur in intermediates with one and two protein disulfides. Unfolding and disulfide reduction is an all-or-none process; no disulfide intermediates accumulate to detectable to detectable levels or precede the rate-limiting step. Mechanism (2) requires that such intermediates precede the rate-limiting step and accumulate to substantial levels.The different proposal were shown not to result from the use of different solution conditions or disulfide reagents; the two sets of data are not inconsistent. Instead, the inappropriate mechanism (2) resulted from an incorrect kinetic analysis and misinterpretation of the kinetics of disulfide formation are breakage.
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  • 53
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 54
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 55
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 60-69 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: coiled-coli ; alpha-helix ; antiphagocytic ; heptad ; antigenic variation ; sequence repeats ; cell wall protein ; intermediate filaments ; myosin ; tropomyosin ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: M protein is considered a virulence determinant on the streptococcal cell wall by virtue of its ability to allow the organism to resist attack by human neutrophils. The complete DNA sequence of the M6 gene from streptococcal strain D471 has allowed, for the first time, the study of the structural characteristics of the amino acid sequence of an entire M protein molecule. Predictive secondary structural analysis revealed that the majority of this fibrillar molecule exhibits strong alpha-helical potential and that, except for the ends, nonpolar residues in the central region of the molecule exhibit the 7-residue periodicity typical for coiled-coil proteins. Differences in this heptad pattern of nonpolar residues allow this central rod region to be divided into three subdomains which correlate essentially with the repeat regions A, B, and C/D in the M6 protein sequence. Alignment of the N-terminal half of the M6 sequence with PepM5, the N-terminal half of the M5 protein, revealed that 42% of the amino acids were identical. The majority of the identities were “core” nonpolar residues of the heptad periodicity which are necessary for the maintenance of the coiled coil. Thus, conservation of structure in a sequence-variable region of these molecules may be biologically significant. Results suggest that serologically different M proteins may be built according to a basic scheme: an extended central coiled-coil rod domain (which may vary in size among strains) flanked by functional end domains.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Cα coordinates ; distance matrix ; difference distance matrix ; helix axes, strand axes ; interaxial angles ; turns ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A computer program is described that produces a description of the secondary structure and supersecondary structure of a polypeptide chain using the list of alpha carbon coordinates as input. Restricting the term “secondary structure” to the conformation of contiguous segments of the chain, the program determines the initial and final residues in helices, extended strands, sharp turns, and omega loops. This is accomplished through the use of difference distance matrices. The distances in idealized models of the segments are compared with the actual structure, and the differences are evaluated for agreement within preset limits. The program assigns 90-95% of the residues in most proteins to at least one type of secondary elementIn a second step the now-defined helices and strands are idealized as straight line segments, and the axial directions and locations are compiled from the input Cα coordinate list. These data are used to check for moderate curvature in strands and helices, and the secondary structure list is corrected where necessary. The geometric relations between these line segments are then calculated and output as the first level of supersecondary structure. A maximum of six parameters are required for a complete description of the relations between each pair. Frequently a less complete description will suffice, for example just the interaxial separation and angle. Both the secondary structure and one aspect of the supersecondary structure can be displayed in a character matrix analogous to the distance matrix format. This allows a quite accurate two-dimensional display of the three-dimensional structure, and several examples are presentedA procedure for searching for arbitrary substructures in proteins using distance matrices is also described. A search for the DNA binding helix-turnhelix motif in the Protein Data Bank serves as an exampleA further abstraction of the above data can be made in the form of a metamatrix where each diagonal element represents an entire secondary segment rather than a single atom, and the off-diagonal elements contain all the parameters describing their interrelations. Such matrices can be used in a straightforward search for higher levels of supersecondary structure or used in toto as a representation of the entire tertiary structure of the polypeptide chain.
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  • 57
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 113-120 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: evolution ; proximal histidine ; distal histidine ; heme enzyme ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Human myeloperoxidase and human thyroid peroxidase nucleotide and amino acid sequences were compared. The global similarities of the nucleotide and amino acid sequences are 46% and 44%, respectively. These similarities are most evident within the coding sequence, especially that encoding the myeloperoxidase functional subunits. These results clearly indicate that myeloperoxidase and thyroid peroxidase are members of the same gene family and diverged from a common ancestral gene. The residues at 416 in myeloperoxidase and 407 in thyroid peroxidase were estimated as possible candidates for the proximal histidine residues that link to the iron centers of the enzymes. The primary structures around these histidine residues were compared with those of other known peroxidases. The similarity in this region between the two animal peroxidases (amino acid 396-418 in thyroid peroxidase and 405-427 in myeloperoxidase) is 74%; however, those between the animal peroxidases and other yeast and plant peroxidases are not significantly high, although several conserved features have been observed. The possible location of the distal histidine residues in myeloperoxidase and thyroid peroxidase amino acid sequences are also discussed.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
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  • 58
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 130-137 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: peptide synthesis ; chymotrypsin specificity ; polyethylene glycol ; nonaqueous solvents ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Chymotrypsin modified with polyethylene glycol was successfully used for peptide synthesis in organic solvents. The benzene-soluble modified enzyme readily catalyzed both aminolysis of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine p-nitroanilide and synthesis of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine butylamide in the presence of trace amounts of water. A quantitative reaction was obtained when either hydrophobic or bulky amides of L- as well as D-amino acids were used as acceptor nucleophiles, while almost no reaction occurred with free amino acids or ester derivativesThe acceptor nucleophile specificity of modified chymotrypsin as a catalyst in the formation of both amide and peptide bonds in organic solvents was quite comparable to that in aqueous solution as well as to that of the leaving group in hydrolysis reactions. By contrast, the substrate specificity of modified chymotrypsin in organic solvents was different from that in water since arginine and lysine esters were found to be as effective as aromatic amino acids to form the acyl-enzyme with subsequent synthesis of a peptide bond.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
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  • 59
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: bioactivity ; SK-hep-1 hepatoma ; interleukin-1 ; recombinant protein ; crystals ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The gene for human interleukin-1β was cloned from SK-hep-1 hepatoma cellular RNA and expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli both as the naturally processed form (rIL-1β) and as a variant with an additional sequence of three amino acids on the N-terminus (rIL-1β+). Expressed protein was purified to homogeneity by a sequence of steps, which included low pH incubation, adsorption and desorption from Procion Red Sepharose, sizing on a Superose 12 fast-performance liquid chromatography (FPLC) column, and anion exchange chromatography on QAE Sepharose. The final step provided a biologically active protein that migrates on twodimensional (2-D) gels as a single spot with a pI of 6.7 ± 0.2 and a molecular mass of 17,500 daltons. Concentrated solutions of rIL-1β have produced crystals by ammonium sulfate precipitation. The crystals are tetragonal, show the symmetry of space group P41 or its enantiomer, have lattice constants of a = 58.46 (1) and c = 77.02 (3) A, and scatter to at least 2 Å resolution. A structure determination based on these crystals is under way.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
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  • 60
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 61
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 139-145 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Protein structure ; complement ; anaphylatoxins ; two-dimensional NMR ; computer modeling ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The model structure previously proposed for human C5a, based upon the crystal structure of the homologous protein human C3a, is compared to the solution structure of human C5a recently determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods in our laboratory. The general folding and helix topography of the C5a protein were modeled very well. The N-terminus, which is disordered in teh C3a crystal, was correctly predicted in the C5a model both as to its being a helix and as to its docking site on the rest of the molecule. On the other hand, the NMR data show that the biologically important C-terminal residues are disordered in solution, unlike the model and the C3a crystal structure where this region was helical.
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  • 62
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 146-154 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Pseudomonas toxin ; x-ray crystallography ; ADP-ribosyl transferase ; sequence homology ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A is representative of a class of enzymes, the monoADP-ribosyl, which catalyze the covalent transfer of an ADP-ribose moiety of NAD+ to a target substrate. Availability of the three-dimensional structure of exotoxin A provides the opportunity for mapping substrate binding sites and suggesting which amino acid residues may be involved in catalysis. Data from several sources have been combined to develop a proposal for the NAD+ binding site of exotoxin A: the binding of NAD+ fragments adenosine, AMP, and ADP have been delineated crystallographically to 6.0, 6.0, and 2.7 Å, respectively; significant sequence homology spanning 60 residues has been found between exotoxin A and diphtheria toxin, which has the identical enzymatic activity; iodination of exotoxin A, under conditions in which only tyrosine 481 is iodinated in the enzymatic domain, abolishes ADP-ribosyl transferase activity.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 63
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: monoclonal antibodies ; high-affinity combining sites ; MPD ; Effects of fluorescein binding ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: An antigen-binding fragment (Fab) from a murine monoclonal antibody (4-4-20) with high affinity for fluorescein was cocrystallized with ligand in polyethylene glycol (PEG) and 2-methl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD) in forms suitable for X-ray analyses. In MPD the affinity of the intact antibody for fluorescein was 300 times lower than the value (3.4 × 1010 M-1) obtained in aqueous buffers. This decreased affinity was manifested by the partial release of bound fluorescein when MPD was added to solutions of liganded Feb during crystallization trials, In PEG, the ligand remained firmly bound to the protein. The liganded Feb crystallized in the monoclinic space group P21 in PEG, with a = 58.6, b = 97.2, c = 44.5 Å and β = 95.2°. In MPD the space group was triclinic P1, with a = 58.3, b = 43.4, c = 42.3 Å, α = 83.9°, β = 87.6°, and γ = 84.5°. X-ray diffraction data were collected for both forms to 2.5-Å resolution. Surprisingly, the triclinic form of the liganed antifluorescyl Feb had the same space group, closely similar cell dimensions, and practically the same orientation in the unit cell as an unliganded Fab (BV04-01) with activity against single-stranded DNA.
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  • 64
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: hemocyanin ; correspondence analysis ; monoclonal antibodies ; electron microscopy ; images analysis ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Three epitopes have been localized by immunoelectron microscopy on subunits Aa6 of the 4 × 6-meric hemocyanin of the scorpion Androctonus australis. Soluble immunocomplexes composed of monoclonal antibodies and of native hemocyanin were purified, negatively stained with uranyle acetate by the single-layer technique, and examined under the electron microscope (EM). The molecule images were digitized, aligned, and submitted to correspondence analysis according to the method of Van Heel and Frank (Ultramicroscopy 6: 187-194, 1981). A high-precision localization of the attachment point of the Fab arm to the antigen was achieved through a careful analysis of the average images. This method easily allowed the discrimination of epitopes located in different domains (Mr 20 kDa) of the same subunit. Nonoverlapping epitopes located in the same structural domain of subunit Aa6 could be distinguished by the stain exclusion patterns of their Fab arms. The method is general and may be used for epitope mapping in any antigen producing definite EM views.
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  • 65
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 184-186 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: new Fe-protein ; rubredoxin ; hemerythrin ; crystals ; X-ray diffraction ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A newly discovered iron-containing protein, isolated from the bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough, NCIB 8303), has been crystallized. The molecule appears to be a dimer of mass 44kDa. This protein has iron centers with spectroscopic similarities to those in rubredoxins and in hemerythrins.The X-ray diffraction shows symmetry consistent with space group I222 or I212121. Cell parameters are a = 49.2 Å, b = 81.3 Å, c= 100.1 Å, and α, β, γ = 90°. X-ray diffraction data have been collected to 3.0 Å, and a search for useful heavy atom derivatives is in progress for the analysis of the crystal structure of this Fe-protein.
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  • 66
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 187-198 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: amphipathic peptide ; liposomes ; peptide ; serum apolipoproteins ; synthetic ; LCAT ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The amphipathic helical theory of Segrest and colleagues (FEBS Lett.: 38: 247-253, 1974) proposes that the lipid-binding segments of serum apolipoproteins are in an alpha helical conformation. Furthermore the helices have a hydrophobic face and a hydrophilic face with a specific distribution of positively and negatively charged residues. The importance of the pattern of the charged residues in the lipid binding and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activation by the segments is still debated. We designed a 30-residue peptide, GALA, which in the alpha helical conformation hs a hydrophilic face composed of glutamic acid residues (Sabbarao et al.: Biochemistry 26: 2964-2972, 1987). GALA behaves like the serum apolipoproteins in its interaction with dimyristoylphospatidylcholine (DMPC) at neutral pH; the amino terminal tryptophan of GALA undergoes a blue shift in its fluorescence emission spectrum, and the circular dichroism (CD) spectrum indicates that GALA acquires alpha helical structure in the presence of DMPC. A DMPC-GALA:19/1 (molar ratio) complex can be isolated by gel-permeation chromatography. This complex has a discoidal structure with the approximate dimensions of 44-Å diameter. GALA edge thickness and a 170- to 350-Å diameter. GALA activates LCAT with DMPC but not with unsaturated phospholipids as the substrate. The apparent partition coefficient of GALA into DMPC vesicles is 100-fold larger than into egg phosphatidlylcholine vesicles. The interaction of GALA with unsaturated lipids at neutral pH is so weak that no detectable change in the spectroscopic properties of GALA or the structure of the liposomes can be detected under the conditions used here. The sequence of GALA differs from previously studied model Apo A1 peptides by the absence of positively charged residues on the hydrophilic face. This indicates that positive charges in Apo A1-like peptides are not required in order to form discoidal structures with saturated phospholipids or to activate LCAT with such lipid substrates.
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  • 67
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 199-207 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: folding pathway ; hydrophobic interaction ; long-range and long-distance interactions ; secondary structure ; tertiary structure ; module structure ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: To explain the rapidity of the process of protein folding, we cite two aspects of hydrophobic interaction: its long-range nature and the specificity of pairing after the formation of secondary structures. These two factors, when incorporated with the growth-type mechanism, can determine the folding pathway of proteins. This mechanism is applied to myoglobin. Appropriate introduction of side chins of amino acid residues and the heme group attached to His 93 yield a refolded tertiary structure that is in good agreement with the native structure.
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  • 68
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 69
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 99-122 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein structure ; protein coding regions ; sequence homology ; reading frame ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: We have examined oligopeptides with lengths ranging from 2 to 11 residues in protein sequences that show no obvious evolutionary relationship. All sequences in the Protein Identification Resource database were carefully classified by sensitive homology searches into superfamilies to obtain unbiased oligopeptide counts. The results, contrary to previous studies, show clear prejudices in protein sequences. The oligopeptide preferences were used to help decide the significance of sequence homologies and to improve the more general methods for detecting protein coding regions within nucleotide sequences.
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  • 70
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 18-31 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: flexibility ; trp repressor ; DNA-binding domains ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: An orthorhombic crystal form of trp repressor (aporepressor plus L-tryptophan ligand) was solved by molecular replacement, refined to 1.65 Å resolution, and compared to the structure of the repressor in trigonal crystals. Even though these two crystal forms of repressor were grown under identical conditions, the refined structures have distinctly different conformations of the DNA-binding domains. Unlike the repressor/aporepressor structural transition, the conformational shift is not caused by the binding or loss of the L-tryptophan ligand. We conclude that while L-tryptophan binding is essential for forming a specific complex with trp operator DNA, the corepressor ligand does not lock the repressor into a single conformation that is complementary to the operator. This flexibility may be required by the various binding modes proposed for trp repressor in its search for and adherence to its three different operator sites.
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  • 71
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 53-59 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: ricin ; retroviral integrase ; conserved residues ; homologous sequences ; active site ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Plant ribosome-inhibiting proteins are shown to be homologous at the domain level to RNase H form Escherichia coli and to two regions of the pol gene product of retroviral reverse transcriptases. One of these regions carries the viral integrase or int function, while the other has previously been suggested to contain the viral RNase H exo activity. Several residues conserved among the ribosome inhibitors, E. coli RNase H, and the integrase proteins are seen to occupy a prominent cleft in the tertiary structure of the ribosome inhibitor ricin, suggesting roles in binding or catalysis. It is likely that these homologous sequences represent modern derivatives of an ancient protein-folding unit capable of nucleic acid binding and modification which has been incorporated into a variety of enzyme functions.
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  • 72
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 32-52 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: alpha-helix ; distance-dependent ; finite-difference method ; Poisson-Boltzmann equation ; protein electrostatics ; rhodanese ; solvent effects ; subtilisin ; Tanford-Kirkwood theory ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Electrostatic interactions between pairs of atoms in proteins are calculated with a model based on the linearized Poisson-Boltzmann equation. The equation is solved accurately by a method that takes into account the detailed shape of the protein. This paper presents applications to several systems. Experimental data for the interaction of ionized residues with an active site histidine in subtilisin BPN' allow the model to be tested, using various assumptions for the electrical properties of the protein and solvent. The electrostatic stabilization of the active site thiolate or rhodanese is analyzed, with attention to the influence of α-helices. Finally, relationships between electrostatic potential and charge-charge distance are reported for large and small globular proteins. The above results are compared with those of simpler electrostatic models, including Coulomb's law with both a distance-dependent dielectric constant (∊ = R) and a fixed dielectric constant (∊ = 2), and Tanford-Kirkwood theory. The primary conclusions are as follows: (1) The Poisson-Boltzmann model agrees with the subtilisin data over a range of ionic strengths; (2) two α-helices generate a large potential in the active site of rhodanese; (3) ∊ = R overestimates weak electrostatic interactions but yields relatively good results for strong ones; (4) Tanford-Kirkwood theory is a useful approximation to detailed solutions of the linearized Poisson-Boltzmann equation in globular proteins; and (5) the modified Tanford-Kirkwood theory overscreens the measured electrostatic interactions in subtilisin.
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  • 73
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 97-101 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: URF ; nucleotide-binding sites ; pattern descriptor ; computer search ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: In an effort to identify the structural elements essential to a given protein function a new pattern-directed inference system has been developed. It has been employed to identify a potential dinucleotide-binding domain within the human mitochondrial unidentified reading frame 6 product, thereby supporting an earlier study that this gene may encode a NADH dehydrogenase subunit.
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  • 74
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 85-96 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: molecular modeling ; energy minimization ; lysine/fibrin binding ; kringle structures ; plasminogen ; tissue plasminogen activator ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The Lys binding site of kringle 1 and 4 (K1 and K4) of plasminogen (PG) has been modeled on the basis of the three-dimensional structure of kringle 1 of prothrombin and 300- and 600-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance observations. These structures were then compared to the corresponding regions of modeled kringle 1 and 2 of tissue plasminogen activator (PA). The coordinates of the modeled structures have been refined by energy minimization in the presence and absence of ∊-aminocaproic acid ligand in order basically to remove unacceptable van der Waals contacts. The binding site is characterized by an apparent dipolar surface, the polar parts of which are separated by a hydrophobic region of highly conserved aromatic residues. Zwitterionic ligands such as Lys and ∊-aminocaproic acid form ion pair interactions with Asp55 and Asp57 located on the dipolar surface; the latter are also conserved in all the Lys binding kringles. The cationic center of the dipolar surface is Arg71, in the case of PGK4, and is composed of Arg34 and Arg71 in PGK1. The doubly charged anionic/cationic interaction centers of the latter might account for the larger binding constants of PGK1 for like-ligands but the modeling suggests that PGK4 might be kinetically faster in binding bulkier ligands. The binding site region of PAK2, which also binds Lys, resembles those of PGK1 and PGK4. Since PAK2 lacks both cationic center Arg residues, ligand carboxylate binding appears to be accomplished though an imidazolium ion of His64, which is located just below the outer surface of the kringle.
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  • 75
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 76
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 3 (1988), S. 262-265 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein conformation ; conformational equilibria ; free energy stimulation ; protein folding ; thermodynamic perturbation ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A direct attack on the protein-folding problem has been initiated with the free energy perturbation methods of molecular dynamics. The complete conformational probability map for the alanine dipeptide is presented. This work uses the SPC model for the explicit hydration of the dipeptide. Free energy differences for the four observed minima (β, αR, αL, C7ax) are given, and the free energy barriers between minima are outlined.
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  • 77
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. i 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 78
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: single-standard DNA-binding protein ; protein-nucleic acid interactions ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Using ultraviolet light, both the 33,000-dalton single-standard DNA-binding protein from T4 bacteriophage (gp32)as well as a 25,000-dalton limited trypsin cleavage product of gp32 (core gp32*) that retains high affinity for single-stranded DNA can be crosslinked to an oligodeoxynucleotide, p(dT)8. After photolysis, a single tryptic peptide crosslinked to p(dT)8 was isolated by anion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography. Gas-phase sequencing of this modified peptide gave the following sequence: Gln-Val-Ser-Gly-(X)-Ser-Asn-Tyr-Asp-Glu-Ser-Lys, which corresponds to residues 179-190 in gp32. Based on the absence of the expected phenylthiohydantoin derivative of phenylalanine 183 at cycle 5 (X) we infer that crosslinking has occurred at this position and that phenylalanine 183 is at the interface of the gp32:P(dT)8 complex in an orientation that allows covalent bond formation with the thymine radical produced by ultraviolet irradiation.
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  • 79
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 7-18 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein electrostatics ; conformational energy ; solvation ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: In this report we describe an accurate numerical method for calculating the total electrostatic energy of molecules of arbitrary shape and charge distribution, accounting for both Coulombic and solvent polarization terms. In addition to the solvation energies of individual molecules, the method can be used to calculate the electrostatic energy associated with conformational changes in proteins as well as changes in solvation energy that accompany the binding of charged substrates. The validity of the method is examined by calculating the hydration energies of acetate, methyl ammonium, ammonium, and methanol. The method is then used to study the relationship between the depth of a charge within a protein and its interaction with the solvent. Calculations of the relative electrostatic energies of crystal and misfolded conformations of Themiste dyscritum hemerythrin and the VL domain of an antibody are also presented. The results indicate that electrostatic charge-solvent interactions strongly favor the crystal structures. More generally, it is found that charge-solvent interactions, which are frequently neglected in protein structure analysis, can make large contributions to the total energy of a macromolecular system.
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  • 80
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 19-30 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Conformation search ; CONGEN ; misfolded structures ; solvent-modified potentials ; protein folding ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Various theoretical concepts, such as free energy potentials, electrostatic interaction potentials, atomic packing, solvent-exposed surface, and surface charge distribution between native proteins and misfolded protein models. Misfolded models were constructed by introducing incorrect side chains onto polypeptide backbones: side chains of the α-helical hemerythrin were modeled on the β-sheeted backbone of immunoglobulin VL domain, whereas those of the VL domain were similarly modeled on he hemerythrin backbone. CONGEN, a conformational space sampling program, was used to construct the side chains, in contrast to the previous work,1 where incorrect side chains were modeled in all trans conformations. Capability of the conformational search procedure to reproduce native conformations was gauged first by rebuilding (the correct) side chains in hemerythrin and the VL domain: constructs with r.m.s differences from the x-ray side chains 2.2-2.4 Å were produced, and many calculated conformations matched the native ones quite well. Incorrectly folded models were then constructed by the same conformational protocol applied to incorrect amino acid sequences. All CONGEN constructs, both correctly and incorrectly folded, were characterized by exceptionally small molecular surfaces and low potential energies. Surface charge density, atomic packing, and Coulomb formula-based electrostatic interactions of the misfolded structures and the correctly folded proteins were similar, and therefore of little criteria clearly favored the native structures over the misfolded ones: (1) solvent-exposed side-chain nonpolar surface, (2) number of buried ionizable groups, and (3) empirical free energy functions that incorporate solvent effects.
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  • 81
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein simulation ; dihydrofolate reductase ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A study of the binding of the antibacterial agent trimethoprim to Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase was carried out using energy minimization techniques with both a full, all-atom valence force field and a united atom force field. Convergence criteria ensured that no significant structural or energetic changes would occur with further minimization. Root-mean-square (RMS) deviations of both minimized structures with the experimental structure with the experimental structure were calculated for selected regions of the protein. In the active site, the all-atom minimized structure fit the experimental structure much better than did the united atom structure. To ascertain what constitutes a good fit, the RMS deviations between crystal structures of the same enzyme either from different species or in different crystal environments were compared. The differences between the active site of all-atom minimized structure and the experimental structure are similar to differences observed between crystal structures of the same protein.Finally, the energetics of ligand binding were analyzed for the all-atom minimized coordinates. Strain energy induced in the ligand, the corresponding entropy loss due to shifts in harmonic frequencies, and the role of specific residues in ligand binding were examined. Water molecules, even those not in direct contact with the ligand, were found to have significant interaction energies with the ligand. Thus, the inclusion of at least one shell of waters may be vital for accurate simulations of enzyme complexes.
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  • 82
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 48-55 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: nuclear magnetic resonance ; computer modeling ; linear peptides ; omega loop ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The solution structure of a 38-amino-acid-residue, biologically active fragment of bovine growth hormone (bGH96-133) was investigated with a combined nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and computer modeling approach. With the distance geometry program DISGEO and distance constraints derived from the nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) experiments, it was found that residues Ser-100 to Tyr-110 circumscribe an Ω-loop, a recently categorized feature of nonregular secondary protein structure.
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  • 83
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 56-62 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Protein engineering ; mutagenesis ; enzyme catalysis ; conformational changes ; domain movement ; hinge bending ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) is a monomeric enzyme (Mr ∼ 45,000) composed of two globular domains. Each domain corresponds approximately to the amino- and carboxyterminal halves of the polypeptide chain. The carboxy-terminal end extends over the interdomain “hinge” region and packs against the amino-terminal domain. It has been proposed that domain movement, resulting in closure of the active site left, is essential for the catalytic of PGK. Large-scale conformational changes have also been postulated to explain activation of the enzyme by sulfate ions. Using site-specific mutagenesis, we have removed a 15-amino-acid carboxy-terminal fragment, in order to probe its role in the substrate- and sulfate-induced conformational changes. The truncated enzyme exhibited approximately 1% of the activity of native PGK and lost the ability to undergo sulfateinduced activation. The Km for ATP was essentially unchanged (Km = 0.23mM), whereas the Km value for 3-phosphoglycerate was increased about eightfold (Km = 3.85 mM and 0.50 mM, respectively). These results suggest that the carboxy-terminal segment is important for the mechanism of substrate- and specific-induced conformational transitions. CD spectra and sedimentation velocity measurements indicate that the carboxy-terminal peptide is essential for structural integrity of PGK. The increased susceptibility of the truncated enzyme to thermal inactivation implies that the carboxy-terminal peptide also contributes to the stability of PGK.
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  • 84
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 63-70 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: molecular graphics ; protein complex ; electron transfer ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A three-dimensional model of an electron-transfer complex between the tetrahemic cytochrome c3 and the ferredoxin I from the sulfatereducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (Norway strain) has been generated through computer graphics methods. The model is based on the known X-ray structure of the cytochrome and on a model of the ferredoxin that has been derived through computer graphics modeling and energy minimization methods, from the X-ray structure of the homologous ferredoxin from Peptococcus aerogenes. Four possible models of interaction between the two molecules were examined by bringing in close proximity each of the four hemes and the redox center (4Fe-4S) of the ferredoxin and by optimizing the ion pairs interactions. One of these models shows by far the “best” structure in terms of charges, interactions, and complementary f the topology of the contact surfaces. In this complex, the distance between the iron atoms of the ferredoxin redox center and the hemic iron atom is 11.8 Å, which compares well with those found between redox centers in other complexes. The contact surface area between the two molecules is 170 Å2.
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  • 85
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 86
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    Keywords: dUTPase ; nucleotide binding enzyme ; X-ray crystallography ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Deoxyuridine triphosphate nucleotidohydrolase (dUTPase), an enzyme in the nucleotide metabolism that is a pyrophosphatase hydrolyzing dUTP, has been crystallized. The crystals belong to the trigonal space group R3 and diffract beyond 2 Å. The native dUTPase crystals and a mercury derivative are stable in the X-ray beam and are suitable for a high resolution X-ray structure analysis.
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  • 87
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 77-88 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein structure ; diffraction ; anomalous scattering ; x-ray crystallography ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The molecular structure of lamprey hemoglobin was previously determined and refined by conventional crystallographic analysis. In this study, the structural analysis has been repeated in the course of developing the method of multiwavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) for phase determination. New experimental and analytical procedures that were devised to perform this determination should have general applicability. These include an experimental design to optimize signal strength and reduce systematic errors, experimental evaluation of anomalous scattering factors, and a least-squares procedure for analyzing the MAD data. MAD phases for the structure at 3Å resolution are as accurate overall as the multiple isomorphous replacement (MIR) phases determined previously.
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  • 88
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 89-98 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: membrane proteins ; channels ; circular dichroism spectroscopy ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The secondary structure of alamethicin, a membrane channel-forming polypeptide, has been examined by circular dichroism spectroscopy to determine the relationship of its conformation in organic solution to its conformation in a membrane-bound state. The spectrum of alamethicin in small unilamellar dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles is significantly different from its spectrum in 10% methanol/acetonitrile, the solvent from which it was crystallized (Fox and Richards: Nature 300:325-330, 1982), as well as its spectrum in methanol, the solvent in which NMR studies have been done (Banerjee and Chan: Biochemistry 22:3709-3713, 1983). This suggests that structural models based on studies of the molecule in organic solvents may not be entirely appropriate for the membrane-bound state. To distinguish between different models for channel formation and insertion, two different methods were used to associate the alamethicin with vesicles; in addition, the effect of oligomerization on the conformation of the membrane-bound state was investigated. These studies are consistent with a modified insertion model in which alamethicin monomers, dimers, or trimers associate with the bilayer and then spontaneously oligomerize to form a prechannel with a higher helix content. This aggregate could then “open” upon application of an appropriate gating transmembrane potential.
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  • 89
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: α/β barrels ; crystal structure ; glucose isomerase ; xylose isomerase ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The structure of Xylose isomerase (X.I.) from Actinoplanes missouriensis has been solved to 2.8 Angstroms resolution. Phases were determined from a single Eu3+ derivative and from the noncrystallographic 22 symmetry of the tetrameric molecule. An atomic model was built and subjected to restrained crystallographic refinement. The resulting model is shown to be closely similar to the recently reported X.I.'s structures from three other bacterial sources. Each monomer is found to be composed of an eight-stranded α/β “T.I.M.” barrel forming an N-terminal domain of 328 residues followed by a large loop of 66 residues embracing an adjacent subunit. Analysis of intersubunit packing shows that the X.I. tetramer is an assembly of two tight dimers. The β barrel fits a simple hyperboloid model as other T.I.M. barrels do. The active site, identified as the binding site for the inhibitor xylitol, is located at the carboxyl end of the beta strands in the barrel next to a pair binding site for Eu3+ ions, which are assumed to the sites for the divalent ions involved in catalysis. Active sites in the tetramer are oriented towards the interface between dimmers. It is suggested that subunit interfaces might stabilize the active site region and this might explain the oligomeric nature of the other α/β barrel enzymes.
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  • 90
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 173-181 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: DNA binding protein ; ligand binding ; equilibrium dialysis ; dimer ; stability ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Availability of the three-dimensional structure of the trp repressor of Escherichia coli and a large group of repressor mutants has permitted the identification and analysis of mutants with substitutions of the amino acid residues that from the tryptophan binding pocket. Mutant aporepressors selected for study were overproduced using a multicopy expression plasmid. Equilibrium dialysis with 14C-tryptophan and purified mutant and wild type aporepressors was employed to determine tryptophan binding constants. The results obtained indicate that replacement of theronine 44 by methionine (TM44) or arginine 84 by histidine (RH84) lowers the affinity for tryptophan approximately two-and four-fold, respectively. Replacement of ariginine 54 by histidine (RH84) or glycine 85 by ariginine (GR85) results in complete loss of tryptophan binding activity. Purified mutant and wild type aporepressors were used in vitro heterodimer studies. The trp repressor of E. coli functions as a stable dimer. A large number of trp repressor mutants prduces defective repressors that are transdominant to the wild type repressor in vivo. The transdominance presumably results from the formation of inactive or slightly active heterodimers between the mutant and wild type polypeptide subunits. An in vitro assay was developed to detect and measure heterodimer formation. Heterodimer formation was thermally induced, and heterodimers were separated on nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels. Aporepressors readily formed heterodimer formation upon treatment at 65°C for 3 minutes. Heterodimer formation was significantly retarded by the presence of the corepressor, L-tryptophan. Indole-3-propionic acid, 5-methyl tryptophan, and other analogs of tryptophan, as well as indole, also inhibited heterodimer formation. These results indicate that the presence of the indole moiety in the corepressor binding pocket increases the stability of the dimer.
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  • 91
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: consensus sequences ; secondary structure ; mannose 6-phosphate ; substrate specificity ; proteolytic processing ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Recently developed computer programs, including secondary structure and epitopic site predictions, have been used to align lysosomal proteins for maximum homology, based on conservative interchanges, and the aligned sequences have been searched for potential sites for posttranslational modification, glycosyaltion, and binding and catalysis of substrate. The homology and prediction of the posttranslational modification of the α- and β-subunits of hexosaminidase is in good agreement with previous observations, and an explanation of the differing substrate specificities of the two subunits is advanced. We shows that the striking homology between α-glucosidase and isomaltase is reflected in that apparent conversation of the active site in both enzymes. Nonhomologous regions have been examined in detail in a search for binding sited for glycogen and maltose, and two such sites have been tentatively identified. A highly redundant consensus sequence for the Phosphorylation of mannose in lysosomal proteins, YXX(Y, W, or F), is suggested.
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  • 92
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 190-204 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: computer graphics ; energy minimization ; proteolytic enzymes ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Two genes that are expressed when precursor cytotoxic T lymphocytes are transformed to T killer cells have been cloned and sequenced. The derived amino acid sequences, coding for the cytotoxic cell protease 1 (CCP1) and Hannuka factor (HF) are highly homologous to members of the serine proteinase family. Comparative molecular model building using the known three-dimensional structures and the derived amino acid sequences of the lymphocyte enzymes has been provided useful information, especially in predicting the conformations of the substrate binding sites. In applying this modelling procedure, we used the X-ray structures of four serine proteinase to provide a structurally based sequences alignment: α-chymotrypsin (CHT), bovine trypsin (BT), Streptomyces griseus trypsin (SGT), and rat must cell protease 2 (RMCP2). The root mean square differences in α-carbon atom positions among these four structures when compared in a pairwise fashions range form 0.79 to 0.97 Å for structurally equivalent residues. Te sequences of the two lymphocyte enzymes were then aligned to these proteinase using chemical criteria and the superimposed X-ray structures as guides. The alignment showed that the sequence of CCP1 was most similar to RMCP2, whereas HF has regions of homology with both RMCP2 and BT. RmCP2 and BT as templates for HF, the molecular models were constructed. Intermolecular steric clashes that resulted from replacement of amino acid chains of the templates by the aligned residues of CCP1 and HF were relieved by adjustment of the side chain conformational angels in an interactive computer graphics device. This process was followed by energy minimization of the enzyme model to optimize the stereochemical geometry and to relieve any remaining unacceptably close nonbonded contacts. The resulting model of CCP1 has an arginie residue at position 226 in the specificity pocket, thereby predicting a substrate preference for P1 aspartate or glutamate residues. The model also predicts favorable binding for a small hydrophobic residue at the P2 position of the substrate. The primary specificity pocket of HF resembles that of BT and therefore predicts a lysine or arginine preference for the P1 residue. The arginine at position 99 in the model of HF suggests a preference for aspartate or glutamate side chains in the P2 positions of the substrate. Both CCP1 and HF have a free cysteine in the segment of the polypeptide 88 to 93. Models of the dimeric form of these enzymes can be constructed by forming disulfide bridges between the suitably oriented monomers, ie., Cys88-Cys88′ for CCP1 and Cys93-Cys93′ for HF.
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  • 93
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 205-210 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: slow-binding inhibition ; transition-state analog ; conformational change ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Boronic acid derivatives of good peptide substrate of the serine proteases cause slow-binding inhibition, manifested as biphasic binding (Kettner and Shenvi: J. Biol. Chem. 259:15106-15114, 1984). These inhibitors are thought to act as reaction-intermediate analogs. Three peptides Boronic acids - Ac-Pro-boro-Val-OH, DNS-Ala-Pro-boro-Val-OH, and Ac-Ala-Ala-Pro-boro-Val-OH - were chosen for farultraviolet circular dichroism (CD) studies in order to determine whether the second phase involves a conformational change of pancreatic elastase. The dipeptide is a simple competitive inhibitors (Ki = 0.27 μM) and the latter are slow-binding inhibitors (Ki = 16.4 and 0.25 nM, respectively). Spectral deconvolution and correction for the formation of antiparallel β-sheet by the peptide inhibitors itself indicate that there is no significant change in the secondary structure of the enzyme in the either the initial or final inhibitors complex. A kinetic experiment confirmed that the slow-binding step was not associated with a CD spectral change, and that therefore a protein conformational change was not responsible for the sow binding.
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  • 94
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    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988) 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 95
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 229-239 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: repressor proteins ; helix dipole ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The DNA-binding helix pairs in gene repressor and activator were compared with other approximately perpendicular pairs of adjacent helices in the known protein structures. Two other examples of closely matching conformations were found in cytochrome c peroxidase (residues 153-174) and in ribosomal L7/L12 protein (residues 68-89). Another group of such offset “lap-joints” are the Ca-binding “EF hand” structures, which bind a positive rather than a negative ligand. The EF hands turn out to match the DNA-binding motifs quite well (outside of the loop) if their sequence direction is reversed. This conformation is thus not as unusual as had been thought, but may have a more generalized role in ion binding and occasionally occur in a purely structural role.
    Additional Material: 12 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 96
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 240-250 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein structure ; X-Ray crystal structure ; homology ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Two new globin structures have recently been determined at high resolution: the globin from the mollusc Aplysia limacina at 1.6 A resolution and a new refinement of the structure from sea lamprey. Two amino acid sequences of these homologous molecules have only 30% residue identity in an optimal alignment. We discuss some of the problems arising in the alignment of Aplysia globin with other globins of known structure, a challenging problem because of the distant relationship. Four independent approaches were applied to the alignment of the Aplysia and lamprey globins, including those based on individual sequence comparisons, structural analysis, and the relatively new method of templates or fingerprints derived for an entire family of proteins. We also compare these two new structures with what is already known about the globin family. A detailed description of the two structures shows that the two molecules contain the main structural features common to all the globins so far studied with several minor but interesting hitherto unobserved variations.
    Additional Material: 5 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 97
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Proteins: Structure, Function, and Genetics 4 (1988), S. 211-227 
    ISSN: 0887-3585
    Keywords: protein-folding ; multiple pathways ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The diffusion-collision model has been used to analyze the folding kinetics of myoglobins. The microdomains, which are the basic units that coalesce during the folding, are identified with the helices and the stabilizing contacts between helices are determined form the native structure. Both association and disassociation reactions are included and a range of stabilization parameters is investigated to determine the variations in overall rate and the relative contributions made by the different intermediates during the folding process. In a comparison of folding to the native state and to the midpoint of the folding transitions. (i.e., 50% native protein at the completion of the reaction) significant differences in the contributing intermediates are found.
    Additional Material: 7 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 98
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Ovary ; Steroid-secreting cells ; Ultrastructure ; Chorionic gonadotropin ; Chicken
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructural characteristics of the ovarian medulla of the newly hatched white leghorn chick were studied in control animals and compared with chicks that were treated with human chorionic gonadotropin during embryonic development. The ovarian medulla was mainly occupied by epithelial cells which formed cords or islets surrounded by a basal lamina. Within this epithelial compartment, steroidogenic cells, poorly differentiated cells and a lacunary system could be recognized. When chicks were treated with human chorionic gonadotropin, steroidogenic cells became discernible; there was an increment in the amount of cytoplasm and the area of mitochondria. Poorly differentiated cells exhibited signs of stimulation, and transitional images suggested the transformation of these cells into steroidogenic cells. The epithelial cells of the lacunar system also displayed stimulated cytoplasmic organelles. Evidence was supplied suggesting that relatively undifferentiated cells persist in the ovarian medulla until hatching and can develop into steroidogenic cells under gonadotropic stimulation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 99
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 251 (1988), S. 243-248 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Thoracic duct ; Smooth muscle cell ; Ultrastructure ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The three-dimensional cytoarchitecture and ultrastructure of the smooth muscle cells in the wall of the rat thoracic duct were investigated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The muscle layer basically consists of a single layer of circularly arranged cells. The smooth muscle cell is fusiform or ribbon-like in shape, as in veins or venules with a similar or smaller diameter. Connections by spinous processes are observed between adjacent muscle cells along their length. Spot-like membrane contacts frequently occur in areas where facing membranes are closely apposed. These are thought to be gap junctions and may be responsible for electrical coupling and mechanical attachment. Large invaginations arranged regularly in rows on the surface of the smooth muscle cells can be observed. These invaginations are closely associated with a flattened sarcoplasmic reticulum, and caveolae tend to open into the invaginations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 100
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Smooth muscle ; Intermediate filaments ; Dual network ; Ultrastructure ; Ascidian ; Halocynthia roretzi
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary An extensive network of intermediate filaments that interconnected cytoplasmic dense bodies and connected the dense bodies to the cell surface was revealed in double-fixed, tannic acid-stained preparations of ascidian smooth muscle. The filament network ran through spaces in the continuous network of myofibrils, connecting them longitudinally, obliquely and transversely to form an intimately associated, dual network. In their transverse passage, the intermediate filaments ran across myofibrils along I-zones exclusively, interconnecting successive dense bodies. The pattern of attachment of intermediate filaments to dense bodies was predominantly “one-sided.” The filaments, which themselves were not incorporated into the contractile apparatus, remained folded or unfolded between myofibrils and between sarcomere-like structures in synchrony with the contraction-relaxation cycles. These results suggest that the intermediate filaments mechanically maintain the organization and arrangement of myofibrils via an intimate association with the myofibrils in the regions of the dense bodies, in such a way that the filaments do not impede muscle function. Based on these observations, a new model for the network of intermediate filaments in smooth muscle cells is proposed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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