Search results for "Gene Expression"

showing 10 items of 4085 documents

DAZAP2 acts as specifier of the p53 response to DNA damage.

2021

Abstract The DNA damage-responsive tumor suppressors p53 and HIPK2 are well established regulators of cell fate decision-making and regulate the cellular sensitivity to DNA-damaging drugs. Here, we identify Deleted in Azoospermia-associated protein 2 (DAZAP2), a small adaptor protein, as a novel regulator of HIPK2 and specifier of the DNA damage-induced p53 response. Knock-down or genetic deletion of DAZAP2 strongly potentiates cancer cell chemosensitivity both in cells and in vivo using a mouse tumour xenograft model. In unstressed cells, DAZAP2 stimulates HIPK2 polyubiquitination and degradation through interplay with the ubiquitin ligase SIAH1. Upon DNA damage, HIPK2 site-specifically ph…

DNA damageAcademicSubjects/SCI00010Ubiquitin-Protein LigasesRegulatorAntineoplastic AgentsCell fate determinationProtein Serine-Threonine Kinases03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineUbiquitinCell Line TumorGeneticsAnimalsPromoter Regions GeneticGeneMolecular BiologyCells Cultured030304 developmental biologyRegulation of gene expressionCell Nucleus0303 health sciencesbiologyNuclear ProteinsRNA-Binding ProteinsCell biologyUbiquitin ligaseGene Expression Regulation030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer cellbiology.proteinTumor Suppressor Protein p53Carrier ProteinsDNA DamageNucleic acids research
researchProduct

2α-Hydroxyalantolactone from Pulicaria undulata: activity against multidrug-resistant tumor cells and modes of action.

2020

Abstract Background Sesquiterpene lactones having α-methylene-γ-lactone moiety are promising natural metabolites showing various biological activity. One of the major metabolites isolated from Pulicaria undulata, 2α-hydroxyalantolactone (PU-1), has not been investigated in detail yet. Multidrug resistance (MDR) represents a major obstacle for cancer chemotherapy and the capability of novel natural products to overcoming MDR is of great interest. Purpose Exploring the molecular modes of action for potent natural product metabolites. Methods The resazurin reduction assay was employed to evaluate the cytotoxicity of PU-1 on sensitive and their corresponding drug-resistant cell lines (overexpre…

DNA damagePharmaceutical ScienceApoptosisPulicaria03 medical and health sciencesPhosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases0302 clinical medicineCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryHumansPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway030304 developmental biologyPhosphoinositide-3 Kinase InhibitorsPharmacology0303 health sciencesLeukemiaCell growthChemistryCell cycleG2-M DNA damage checkpointMolecular biologyAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicBlotGene expression profilingG2 Phase Cell Cycle CheckpointsGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticComplementary and alternative medicineApoptosisDrug Resistance Neoplasm030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMolecular MedicineSesquiterpenesDNA DamagePhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
researchProduct

Nuclear expression of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease increases with progression of ovarian carcinomas.

2003

Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE alias Ref-1) is a key enzyme in the base excision repair pathway. Besides its function in DNA repair, APE serves to maintain several transcription factors in an active reduced state such as c-Fos, c-Jun, NF-kappaB, p53 and HIF-1alpha, all of which have been shown to play a role in tumorigenesis. Because of the importance of APE in maintaining genomic stability and gene regulation, we examined whether APE expression is associated with survival and histopathological parameters of patients with ovarian cancer.Tissue sections of primary epithelial ovarian carcinomas from 141 patients were immunostained using a monoclonal antibody directed against APE.Nucl…

DNA repairvirusesBiologymedicine.disease_causestomatognathic systemOvarian carcinomamedicineBiomarkers TumorDNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) LyaseHumansNeoplasm StagingRegulation of gene expressionCell NucleusOvarian NeoplasmsObstetrics and Gynecologysocial sciencesBase excision repairmedicine.diseasePrognosisMolecular biologyImmunohistochemistrybody regionsSurvival RateOncologyTumor progressionCancer researchDisease ProgressionImmunohistochemistryFemaleOvarian cancerCarcinogenesisGynecologic oncology
researchProduct

Purification of Leuconostoc mesenteroides citrate lyase and cloning and characterization of the citCDEFG gene cluster

1998

ABSTRACT A citrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.6 ) was purified 25-fold from Leuconostoc mesenteroides and was shown to contain three subunits. The first 42 amino acids of the β subunit were identified, as well as an internal peptide sequence spanning some 20 amino acids into the α subunit. Using degenerated primers from these sequences, we amplified a 1.2-kb DNA fragment by PCR from Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. cremoris . This fragment was used as a probe for screening a Leuconostoc genomic bank to identify the structural genes. The 2.7-kb gene cluster encoding citrate lyase of L. mesenteroides is organized in three open reading frames, citD , citE , and citF , encoding, respectively, the three ci…

DNA BacterialATP citrate lyaseMolecular Sequence DataGene ExpressionBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyBacterial ProteinsCarbon-Sulfur LigasesMultienzyme ComplexesGene clusterAcyl Carrier ProteinEscherichia colimedicineLeuconostocAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidStructural geneOxo-Acid-LyasesSequence Analysis DNALyasebiology.organism_classificationEnzymes and ProteinsMolecular biologyOxaloacetate decarboxylaseBiochemistryGenes BacterialLeuconostoc mesenteroidesMultigene FamilyCoenzyme A-TransferasesLeuconostoc
researchProduct

Putrescine as a signal to modulate the indispensable ABA increase under cold stress.

2009

2 páginas -- PAGS nros. 219-220

DNA BacterialAcclimatizationMutantArabidopsisCold acclimationPlant ScienceBiologyGenes Plantchemistry.chemical_compoundGene Expression Regulation PlantpolyamineFreezingCold acclimationputrescineMode of actionAnalysis of VarianceArabidopsis ProteinsReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionGene Expression ProfilingfungiWild typefood and beveragesfreezing toleranceArticle AddendumComplementationCold TemperatureMutagenesis InsertionalArginine decarboxylasechemistryBiochemistryABARNA PlantMutationPutrescinegene expressionPolyamineArginine decarboxylaseAbscisic AcidResearch ArticlePlant signalingbehavior
researchProduct

Cloning and sequencing of the gene encoding α-acetolactate decarboxylase fromLeuconostoc oenos

1996

The alsD gene encoding alpha-acetolactate decarboxylase was isolated from a genomic library of Leuconostoc oenos, using a screening procedure developed on microtiter plates. The nucleotide sequence of alsD encodes a putative protein of 239 amino acids showing significant similarity with other bacterial alpha-acetolactate decarboxylases. Upstream from alsD lies an open reading frame (alsS) which is highly similar to bacterial genes coding for catabolic alpha-acetolactate synthases. Northern (RNA) blotting analyses indicated the presence of a 2.4-kb dicistronic transcript of alsS and alsD. This suggests that the alsS and alsD genes are organized in a single operon.

DNA BacterialCarboxy-LyasesOperonMolecular Sequence DataRestriction MappingBiologyMicrobiologyGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicGeneticsLeuconostocGenomic libraryCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyGeneGeneticsCloningSequence Homology Amino AcidNucleic acid sequenceGene Expression Regulation BacterialSequence Analysis DNABlotting Northernbiology.organism_classificationAcetolactate decarboxylaseAcetolactate SynthaseRNA BacterialOpen reading framePhenotypeBiochemistryGenes BacterialLactatesLeuconostocFEMS Microbiology Letters
researchProduct

Gene Cloning, Transcriptional Analysis, Purification, and Characterization of Phenolic Acid Decarboxylase from Bacillus subtilis

1998

Phenolic acids, also called substituted cinnamic acids, are important lignin-related aromatic acids and natural constituents of plant cell walls. These acids (particularly ferulic, p-coumaric, and caffeic acids) bind the complex lignin polymer to the hemicellulose and cellulose in plants (1) or are generally esterified with tartaric acid (for example, in grape must, wine, and cider) and can be released as free acids during wine making by some cinnamoyl esterase activities (9). Most often, free phenolic acids are metabolized by different microorganisms into 4-vinyl derivatives and then are eventually reduced into 4-ethyl derivatives (5, 6). Some of these volatile phenols, particularly vinyl …

DNA BacterialCarboxy-lyasesCarboxy-LyasesMolecular Sequence DataGenetics and Molecular BiologyBacillus subtilisBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyEsteraseGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicSubstrate SpecificityFerulic acidchemistry.chemical_compoundCaffeic acidEscherichia coliPhenolsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularDNA Primerschemistry.chemical_classificationEcologyBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino Acidfood and beveragesChromosome MappingPhenolic acidGene Expression Regulation Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationRecombinant ProteinsAmino acidchemistryBiochemistryGenes BacterialbacteriaFood ScienceBiotechnologyBacillus subtilis
researchProduct

Efficient Control of raf Gene Expression by CAP and Two Raf Repressors that Bend DNA in Opposite Directions

1999

The plasmid-borne raf operon of Escherichia coli encodes proteins involved in the uptake and utilisation of the trisaccharide raffinose. The operon is subject to dual regulation; to negative control by the binding of RafR repressor to twin operators, O1 and O2, and to positive control by the cAMP-binding protein, CAP. We have identified the CAP binding site (CBS) as a 22 bp palindromic sequence with incomplete dyad symmetry by deletion analysis, DNasel footprinting and electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) of CAP-DNA complexes. The CBS is centred 60.5 bp upstream of the transcription start point and partially overlaps O1. In vivo, CAP increases rafA (alpha-galactosidase) gene express…

DNA BacterialCyclic AMP Receptor ProteinOperonMolecular Sequence DataClinical BiochemistryRepressorCooperativityBiologyBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsGene expressionCyclic AMPBinding siteMolecular BiologyDyad symmetryPalindromic sequenceBinding SitesBase SequenceGene Expression Regulation BacterialMolecular biologyProto-Oncogene Proteins c-rafchemistryGenes BacterialNucleic Acid ConformationCarrier ProteinsDNABiological Chemistry
researchProduct

Developmental control of the heat-shock stress regulon in Streptomyces coelicolor

1995

In the differentiating eubacterium Streptomyces coelicolor, nutritional imbalances activate a developmental programme which involves the heat-shock stress regulon. In liquid batch cultures, the growth curve could be separated into four components: rapid growth 1 (RG1), transition (T), rapid growth 2 (RG2) and stationary (S). Patterns of gene expression in cultures subjected to heat shock in various phases were recorded on two-dimensional gels and analysed using advanced statistical methods. The responses of all heat-shock proteins (HSPs) were highly dependent upon the growth phase, thus demonstrating that the four phases of growth were physiologically distinct. For many HSPs, the levels of …

DNA BacterialGrowth phaseBlotting WesternRegulonMicrobiologyMicrobiologyBacterial ProteinsHeat shock stressGene expressionElectrophoresis Gel Two-DimensionalEubacteriumIsoelectric PointMolecular BiologyGenebiologyStreptomyces coelicolorCell DifferentiationGene Expression Regulation BacterialGrowth curve (biology)Reference Standardsbiology.organism_classificationStreptomycesCell biologyMolecular WeightRegulonHeat-Shock ResponseMolecular Microbiology
researchProduct

Requirement of the Lactobacillus casei MaeKR two-component system for L-malic acid utilization via a malic enzyme pathway.

2009

ABSTRACTLactobacillus caseican metabolizel-malic acid via malolactic enzyme (malolactic fermentation [MLF]) or malic enzyme (ME). Whereas utilization ofl-malic acid via MLF does not support growth, the ME pathway enablesL. caseito grow onl-malic acid. In this work, we have identified in the genomes ofL. caseistrains BL23 and ATCC 334 a cluster consisting of two diverging operons,maePEandmaeKR, encoding a putative malate transporter (maeP), an ME (maeE), and a two-component (TC) system belonging to the citrate family (maeKandmaeR). Homologous clusters were identified inEnterococcus faecalis,Streptococcus agalactiae,Streptococcus pyogenes, andStreptococcus uberis. Our results show that ME is …

DNA BacterialLactobacillus caseiHistidine KinaseMalic enzymeCatabolite repressionDNA FootprintingMalatesGenetics and Molecular Biologymedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and Biotechnologychemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsOperonmedicineEnterococcus faecalisDirect repeatPromoter Regions Geneticchemistry.chemical_classificationEcologybiologySequence Homology Amino AcidGene Expression Profilingfungifood and beveragesStreptococcusGene Expression Regulation Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyAmino acidResponse regulatorLacticaseibacillus caseichemistryBiochemistryMultigene FamilyStreptococcus pyogenesMalic acidProtein KinasesMetabolic Networks and PathwaysFood ScienceBiotechnologyProtein BindingSignal TransductionTranscription FactorsApplied and environmental microbiology
researchProduct