Search results for "Erich"

showing 10 items of 805 documents

Transmission Electron Microscopy of GroEL, GroES, and the Symmetrical GroEL/ES Complex

1994

Two new 2-D crystal forms of the Escherichia coli chaperone GroEL (cpn60) 2 x 7-mer have been produced using the negative staining-carbon film (NS-CF) technique. These 2-D crystals, which contain the cylindrical GroEL in side-on and end-on orientations, both possess p21 symmetry, with two molecules in the respective unit cells. The crystallographically averaged images correlate well with those obtained by other authors from single particle analysis of GroEL and our own previous crystallographic analysis. 2-D crystallization of the smaller chaperone GroES (cpn10) 7-mer has also been achieved using the NS-CF technique. Crystallographically averaged images of GroES single particle images indic…

biologyChemistrySingle particle analysisChaperonin 60GroESChromatography Ion ExchangeGroELlaw.inventionModels StructuralMicroscopy ElectronCrystallographyMolecular geometryStructural BiologylawChaperone (protein)Chaperonin 10Escherichia colibiology.proteinMoleculeProtein quaternary structureCrystallizationCrystallizationJournal of Structural Biology
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ChemInform Abstract: One-Step Synthesis, Crystallographic Studies and Antimicrobial Activity of New 4-Diazopyrazole Derivatives.

2010

Summary A number of new 4-diazopyrazole derivatives were prepared by the reaction of 1- R -3-methyl-5(R 1 -substituted)benzamidopyrazoles with a sevenfold excess of nitrous acid in acetic medium. The compounds were tested for activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Streptococcus faecalis, Listeria monocytogenes, Candida albicans, Candida tropicalis and Paecilomyces varioti . The highest microbial susceptibility was shown by Gram-positive bacteria, with minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) in the range 0.5–12.5 μg/mL. For S aureus the R 1 substituents were screened utilizing the Topliss operational scheme. The 4-nitro g…

biologyChemistryStreptococcusGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeAntimicrobialMicrobiologyCandida tropicalisStaphylococcus epidermidisStaphylococcus aureusmedicinePaecilomycesCandida albicansEscherichia coliChemInform
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Towards a new treatment against polymicrobial infections: high antibacterial activity of lemon IntegroPectin against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Esche…

2020

AbstractLemon IntegroPectin obtained via hydrodynamic cavitation of waste lemon peel in water only shows high antibacterial activity against two Gram-negative bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli. The antibacterial effect against the ubiquitous pathogen P. aeruginosa was evaluated in terms of the minimal bactericidal (MBC) and minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC). Preliminary insight on the antibacterial mechanism of IntegroPectin originates from investigating its inhibitory activity against E. coli. Given the non-cytotoxic nature of citrus IntegroPectin and the ease of its reproducible production in large amounts, the route is open to the industrial development of a new …

biologyPseudomonas aeruginosaChemistryDrug resistancemedicine.disease_causeAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyMinimum inhibitory concentrationmedicineAntibacterial activityEscherichia coliPathogenBacteria
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Metal specificity of the Ni(II) and Zn(II) binding sites of the N-terminal and G-domain of E. coli HypB

2021

HypB is one of the chaperones required for proper nickel insertion into [NiFe]-hydrogenase. Escherichia coli HypB has two potential Ni(II) and Zn(II) binding sites—the N-terminal one and the so-called GTPase one. The metal-loaded HypB–SlyD metallochaperone complex activates nickel release from the N-terminal HypB site. In this work, we focus on the metal selectivity of the two HypB metal binding sites and show that (i) the N-terminal region binds Zn(II) and Ni(II) ions with higher affinity than the G-domain and (ii) the lower affinity G domain binds Zn(II) more effectively than Ni(II). In addition, the high affinity N-terminal domain, both in water and membrane mimicking SDS solution, has a…

biologychemistry.chemical_elementZincmedicine.disease_causeInorganic ChemistryMetalCrystallographyNickelchemistryG-domainChaperone (protein)visual_artbiology.proteinvisual_art.visual_art_mediummedicineMetallochaperone complexBinding siteEscherichia coliDalton Transactions
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GTPases of the Rho Subfamily Are Required for Brucella abortus Internalization in Nonprofessional Phagocytes

2001

Members of the genus Brucella are intracellular -Proteobacteria responsible for brucellosis, a chronic disease of humans and animals. Little is known about Brucella virulence mechanisms, but the abilities of these bacteria to invade and to survive within cells are decisive factors for causing disease. Transmission electron and fluorescence microscopy of infected nonprofessional phagocytic HeLa cells revealed minor membrane changes accompanied by discrete recruitment of F-actin at the site of Brucella abortus entry. Cell uptake of B. abortus was negatively affected to various degrees by actin, actin-myosin, and microtubule chemical inhibitors. Modulators of MAPKs and protein-tyrosine kinases…

biologymedia_common.quotation_subjectIntracellular parasiteBRUCELLA ABORTUSVirulenceCell BiologyCDC42BrucellaGTPasebiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryMicrobiologyBRUCELOSISCytotoxic T cellBRUCELLAESCHERICHIA COLIBACTERIASInternalizationMolecular BiologyIntracellularmedia_commonJournal of Biological Chemistry
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P783 Ciprofloxacin resistance in ESBL producing enterobacteriaceae colonizing the gut in IBD patients

2017

biologymedicine.drug_classbusiness.industryAntibioticsGastroenterologyKlebsiella oxytocaGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseUlcerative colitisEnterobacteriaceaeMicrobiologyCiprofloxacinCiprofloxacin resistanceEscherichiamedicinebusinessBacteriamedicine.drugJournal of Crohn's and Colitis
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EFFECTS OF SENSITIZED AND UNSENSITIZED LONGWAVE U.V.-IRRADIATION ON THE SOLUTION PROPERTIES OF DNA

1971

— Two types of photoreactions occur in DNA irradiated in aqueous systems with longwave u.v.-light (Λ > 295 nm), namely, (a) thymine dimerization, and (b) single- and double-strand breakage of the sugar phosphate backbone; these two reactions are unrelated. The presence of acetophenone as a photosensitizer caused an increase in dimerization by a factor of 16, and an increase in single-strand breaks by a factor of 4. The number of thymine dimers per single-strand break is about 100 in the sensitized and 25 in the unsensitized reaction. The alteration of the radius of gyration of DNA molecules is that expected by the degradation observed. At the same time the change in hyperchromicity is very …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCarbon IsotopesAqueous solutionSugar phosphatesUltraviolet RaysHyperchromicityPyrimidine dimerDNAGeneral MedicinePhotochemistryBiochemistryThymineRadiation Effectschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryEscherichia coliRadius of gyrationPhotosensitizerPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThymineDNAPhotochemistry and Photobiology
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Enzymatic and Chemo-Enzymatic Approaches Towards Natural and Non-Natural Alkaloids: Indoles, Isoquinolines, and Others

2010

Abstract The multi-step enzyme catalysed biosyntheses of monoterpenoid indole and isoquinoline alkaloids are described. Special emphasis is placed on those pathways leading to alkaloids of pharmacological and medicinal significance which have been fully elucidated at the enzyme level. The successful identification and cloning of cDNAs of single enzymes and their application provides great opportunities to develop novel strategies for both in vitro and in vivo alkaloid production in whole plants or tissue cultures, as well as in microbial systems such as Escherichia coli and yeast. Enzyme crystallisation, 3D analyses and site-directed mutation allowed rational engineering of enzyme substrate…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCloningIndole testendocrine systemorganic chemicalsAlkaloidSubstrate (chemistry)medicine.disease_causecomplex mixturesYeastchemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymechemistryBiochemistrymedicineheterocyclic compoundsIsoquinolineEscherichia coli
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Human neuroglobin: crystals and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis

2002

Neuroglobin, a recently discovered member of the haemoglobin superfamily, is primarily expressed in the brain of humans and other vertebrates, where it has been proposed to enhance O(2) supply in response to hypoxia or ischaemia, protecting the neuron from hypoxic injury. Neuroglobin is the first example of a vertebrate haemoglobin in which a hexacoordinate haem geometry has been detected. A triple mutant (replacing three Cys residues) of human neuroglobin (151 amino acids) has been expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and crystallized in two crystal forms, the best of which diffracts to 1.95 A resolution using synchrotron radiation. The crystals belong to space group P2(1), with unit-ce…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCrystallographyProtein moleculesResolution (electron density)HexacoordinateNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsGeneral MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causeRecombinant ProteinsAmino acidGlobinsCrystalCrystallographychemistryX-Ray DiffractionStructural BiologyNeuroglobinX-ray crystallographymedicineHumansEscherichia coli
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C4-dicarboxylate metabolons: Interaction of C4-dicarboxylate transporters of Escherichia coli with cytosolic enzymes

2021

AbstractMetabolons represent the structural organization of proteins for metabolic or regulatory pathways. Here the interaction of enzymes fumarase FumB and aspartase AspA with the C4-DC transporters DcuA and DcuB of Escherichia coli was tested by a bacterial two-hybrid (BACTH) assay in situ, or by co-chromatography (mSPINE). DcuB interacted strongly with FumB and AspA, and DcuA with AspA. The fumB-dcuB and the dcuA-aspA genes encoding the respective proteins are known for their colocalization on the genome and the production of co-transcripts. The data consistently suggest the formation of DcuB/FumB, DcuB/AspA and DcuA/AspA metabolons in fumarate respiration for the uptake of L-malate, or …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCytosolEnzymechemistryBiochemistryFumaraseNitrogen assimilationmedicineTransporterMetabolonmedicine.disease_causeGeneEscherichia coli
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