Search results for "Mutant"

showing 10 items of 670 documents

Hybrid compounds generated by the introduction of a nogalamycin-producing plasmid into Streptomyces argillaceus

2003

The combination of genetic material from different antibiotic-producing organisms is a versatile and ever-expanding approach for the production of novel, hybrid compounds possessing bioactivity. The introduction of a plasmid (pSY21b) derived from Streptomyces nogalater and encoding PKS for nogalamycin production into the host strain S. argillaceus A43 led to the production of three new compounds in addition to the normally produced mithramycin. The new compounds are hybrids in the sense that they share features associated with the genes of both the host and the introduced plasmid. The structural elucidation of the novel compounds relied primarily on NMR spectroscopy, which revealed the thre…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGlycosylationStrain (chemistry)StereochemistryNogalamycinMutantGlycosideGeneral Medicinechemistry.chemical_compoundAglyconePlasmidchemistryBiochemistryStreptomyces argillaceusStreptomyces nogalater
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Deletion and insertion mutants of HBsAg particles

1992

We have found previously that hybrid 22-nm HBsAg particles can be created by insertion of short antigenic sequences into the HBV major envelope protein [1]. We have now performed a detailed deletion mutagenesis of the S gene of HBV encoding HBsAg. Deletion of the 51 C-terminal amino acids including most of the third and all of the fourth hydrophobic domain of the S protein did not affect particle assembly and secretion. However, secretion of 22-nm particles was abolished by minor deletions in the N-terminal region. Insertion and deletion/substitution mutants carrying a poliovirus epitope at the N-terminus and the preSl region at the C-terminus have been characterized.

chemistry.chemical_classificationHBsAgPoliovirusMutantBiologymedicine.disease_causeVirologyMolecular biologyEpitopeAmino acidDeletion MutagenesischemistrymedicineSecretionGene
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Acid tolerance inLeuconostoc oenos. Isolation and characterization of an acid-resistant mutant

1996

The acid tolerance ofLeuconostoc oenos was examined in cells surviving at pH 2.6, which is lower than the acid limit of growth (about pH 3.0). Acid-adapted cells survived better than non-adapted cells. Tolerance to acid stress was found to be dependent upon the adaptive pH. Acid resistance was increased by an order of magnitude for cultures adapted to a pH of about 2.9. Inhibiting protein synthesis with chloramphenicol prior to acid shock revealed that acid adaptation may involve two separate systems, one of which appears to be independent of protein synthesis. The acid-resistant mutant LoV8413, isolated during a long-term survival screen at pH 2.6, was found to be able to grow in acidic me…

chemistry.chemical_classificationMethionineMolecular massChloramphenicolMutantGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and Biotechnologychemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymechemistryBiochemistrymedicineProtein biosynthesisLeuconostocBacteriaBiotechnologymedicine.drugApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology
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High speed X-ray analysis of plant enzymes at room temperature.

2013

X-ray measurements at room temperature (295 K) deliver high quality data sets with unprecedented speed (2 min), as shown for crystallized raucaffricine-O-β-D-glucosidase (RG), its mutant RG-Glu186Gln and several ligand complexes of the enzyme which participates in alkaloid biosynthesis in the plant Rauvolfia. The data obtained are compared with data sets measured under typical cryo conditions (100K). Under both conditions, density maps are highly comparable and favor the described protocol for room temperature measurements, potentially paving the way for future crystallographic studies capturing biosynthetic pathway intermediates.

chemistry.chemical_classificationModels MolecularRauvolfiabiologyLigandX-RaysMutantMolecular ConformationTemperaturePlant ScienceGeneral MedicineHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryTemperature measurementRauwolfiaCrystallographyEnzymeAlkaloidschemistryRauvolfia serpentinaHydrolaseX-ray crystallographyMolecular BiologyGlucosidasesPhytochemistry
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Glutathione metabolism and heavy metal detoxification in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

1991

Sixty glutathione-deficient mutants (gsh −) of Schizosaccharomyces pombe have been isolated by their resistance towards the mutagen N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) and their sensitivity to the heavy metal Cadmium (Cd). fifty-three mutants show glutathione contents of less than 5% compared with the wild-type. The residual glutathione contents correlate with the resistance to MNNG, with the sensitivity to Cd and with the growth rate in minimal medium. The gsh −, Cd-sensitive (Cd s) mutants also show sensitivity to other heavy metals. Wild-type strains, but not the gsh − mutants, are able to excrete the heavy metal, very likely as a sulfide-containing compound. This inability of th…

chemistry.chemical_classificationMutantMutagenGeneral MedicineGlutathioneMetabolismBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationGlutathione synthetasechemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymechemistryBiochemistrySchizosaccharomyces pombeGeneticsmedicineHeavy metal detoxificationCurrent Genetics
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Fatty acid composition of mutants of the moss Physcomitrella patens

1981

Abstract The fatty acid composition of various mutant strains of the moss Physcomitrella patens has been compared to the wild-type. These included strains defective in their responses to auxins and/or cytokinins, one which releases much more cytokinin into the medium than the wild-type, and two aphototropic strains. The lipids of the aphototropic mutants were also studied after culture in different light regimes. Although some differences in fatty acid composition have been found between strains, these alone are probably not responsible for their physiological differences. Considerable changes occur in many fatty acids in senescent or dark-grown material, including changes in the proportion…

chemistry.chemical_classificationMutantPhospholipidfood and beveragesPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineHorticultureBiologyPhyscomitrella patensbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryMossFunariaceaechemistry.chemical_compoundGlycolipidchemistryBiochemistryAuxinBotanyCytokininMolecular BiologyPhytochemistry
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Determination of the stability of protein pools from the cell wall of fungi.

2002

Stability of the protein populations present in the cell wall of three ascomycetous fungi Candida albicans, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Yarrowia lipolytica was investigated. Cell wall proteins were either labeled with biotin or radiolabeled with amino acids, and chased for a period of time representing several generations. Proteins linked by non-covalent or covalent bonds were separated and their turnover was analyzed. No significant turnover took place during the chase period, and in fact radioactive proteins were accumulated in the wall during the period possibly by transfer through the secretory pathway. This transfer did not involve de novo protein synthesis; it was inhibited by azide,…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeMutantBiotinYarrowiaGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyAmino acidCell wallFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundBiotinchemistryBiochemistryAscomycotaCell WallProtein biosynthesisMolecular BiologySecretory pathwayResearch in microbiology
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Exopolysaccharides favor the survival of Erwinia amylovora under copper stress through different strategies.

2010

Erwinia amylovora causes fire blight, a destructive disease of rosaceous plants very difficult to control. We demonstrated that copper, employed to control plant diseases, induces the "viable-but-nonculturable" (VBNC) state in E. amylovora. Moreover, it was previously reported that copper increases production of its main exopolysaccharide (EPS), amylovoran. In this work, the copper-complexing ability of amylovoran and levan, other major EPS of E. amylovora, was demonstrated. Following this, EPS-deficient mutants were used to determine the role of these EPSs in survival of this bacterium in AB mineral medium with copper, compared to their wild type strain and AB without copper. Tot…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyVirulenceMutantPolysaccharides BacterialVirulenceGeneral MedicineErwiniaPolysaccharidebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyEnterobacteriaceaeMicrobiologyAnti-Bacterial AgentsFructansFructanchemistryGenes BacterialFire blightMutationErwinia amylovoraMolecular BiologyBacteriaCopperPlant DiseasesResearch in microbiology
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Rücktitelbild: Promoter Activation in Δ hfq Mutants as an Efficient Tool for Specialized Metabolite Production Enabling Direct Bioactivity Testing (A…

2019

chemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistryChemistryMetaboliteMutantGeneral MedicineAngewandte Chemie
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Back Cover: Promoter Activation in Δ hfq Mutants as an Efficient Tool for Specialized Metabolite Production Enabling Direct Bioactivity Testing (Ange…

2019

chemistry.chemical_compoundbiologyBiochemistryChemistryMetaboliteMutantINTCover (algebra)General ChemistryProteobacteriabiology.organism_classificationCatalysisAngewandte Chemie International Edition
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