Search results for "Respiratory protein"

showing 10 items of 40 documents

Neuroglobin mRNA expression after transient global brain ischemia and prolonged hypoxia in cell culture.

2006

Abstract Neuroglobin is a nerve-specific respiratory protein that has been proposed to play an important role in the protection of brain neurons from ischemic and hypoxic injuries. Here, we investigated the regulation of neuroglobin expression after transient global ischemia in the rat brain using mRNA in situ hybridization and under hypoxic stress in cultured neuronal cell lines (PC12, HN33) by quantitative RT-PCR. While neuroglobin mRNA expression was significantly enhanced in cell culture after severe prolonged hypoxia (0–1% O 2 for 24 h), we did not find any significant increases in neuroglobin mRNA levels in the rat brain after transient global ischemia. Vegf and Glut1 mRNAs showed inc…

MaleVascular Endothelial Growth Factor APathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCell SurvivalIschemiaNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsIn situ hybridizationBiologyPC12 CellsBrain ischemiaOxygen ConsumptionGene expressionmedicineAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerRats WistarMolecular BiologyCells CulturedIn Situ HybridizationNeuronsReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionGeneral NeuroscienceHypoxia (medical)medicine.diseaseCell HypoxiaCell biologyGlobinsRatsRespiratory proteinCell cultureIschemic Attack TransientNeuroglobinNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomDevelopmental BiologyBrain research
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Evolution of molluscan hemocyanin structures

2013

AbstractHemocyanin transports oxygen in the hemolymph of many molluscs and arthropods and is therefore a central physiological factor in these animals. Molluscan hemocyanin molecules are oligomers composed of many protein subunits that in turn encompass subsets of distinct functional units. The structure and evolution of molluscan hemocyanin have been studied for decades, but it required the recent progress in DNA sequencing, X-ray crystallography and 3D electron microscopy to produce a detailed view of their structure and evolution. The basic quaternary structure is a cylindrical decamer 35nm in diameter, consisting of wall and collar (typically at one end of the cylinder). Depending on th…

Models MolecularEvolutionProtein Conformationmedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitProtein Data Bank (RCSB PDB)BiophysicsCrystallography X-RayHemocyaninBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryRespiratory proteinsPaleontologyHemolymphElectron microscopymedicineQuaternary structureAnimalsMolecular BiologybiologyHemocyanincomputer.file_formatKeyhole limpet hemocyaninProtein Data BankBiological EvolutionMolluscaEvolutionary biologyHemocyaninsbiology.proteinProtein quaternary structureKLHcomputerKeyhole limpet hemocyaninOxygen bindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics
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All hierarchical levels are involved in conformational transitions of the 4×6-meric tarantula hemocyanin upon oxygenation

2002

The respiratory protein of the tarantula Eurypelma californicum is a 4 x 6-meric hemocyanin that binds oxygen with high cooperativity. This requires the existence of different conformations which have been confirmed by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Here we present reconstructed 3D-models of the oxy- and deoxy-forms of tarantula hemocyanins, as obtained by fitting small angle X-rays scattering curves on the basis of known X-ray structures and electron microscopy of related hemocyanins. For the first time, the involvement of movements at all levels of the quaternary structure was confirmed for an arthropod hemocyanin upon oxygenation. The two identical 2 x 6-meric half-molecules of the…

Models MolecularMacromolecular SubstancesProtein Conformationmedicine.medical_treatmentAllosteric regulationBiophysicsCooperativityRandom hexamerBiochemistryOligomerAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineAnimalsMolecular BiologySmall-angle X-ray scatteringSpidersHemocyaninOxygenRespiratory proteinCrystallographychemistryHemocyaninsProtein quaternary structureOxidation-ReductionProtein BindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics
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Small-angle X-ray Scattering-based Three-dimensional Reconstruction of the Immunogen KLH1 Reveals Different Oxygen-dependent Conformations

2003

For decades the respiratory protein keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH1) from the marine gastropod Megathura crenulata has been used widely as a potent immunostimulant, useful hapten carrier, and valuable agent in the treatment of bladder carcinoma. Although much information on the immunological properties of KLH1 is available, biochemical and structural data are still incomplete. Small-angle x-ray scattering revealed the existence of two conformations, an oxy state being slightly more compact than the deoxy state. Based on small-angle scattering curves, a newly developed Monte Carlo algorithm delivered a surface representation of proteins. The massive changes of the surfaces of reconstructed d…

Models MolecularProtein Conformationmedicine.medical_treatmentMegathura crenulataCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryAllosteric RegulationmedicineAnimalsScattering RadiationMoleculeAntigensMolecular BiologybiologyScatteringSmall-angle X-ray scatteringHemocyaninCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationOxygenRespiratory proteinMicroscopy ElectronCrystallographyMolluscaHemocyaninsbiology.proteinHaptenKeyhole limpet hemocyaninJournal of Biological Chemistry
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The Sequence of a Gastropod Hemocyanin (HtH1 from Haliotis tuberculata)

2000

The eight functional units (FUs), a-h, of the hemocyanin isoform HtH1 from Haliotis tuberculata (Prosobranchia, Archaeogastropoda) have been sequenced via cDNA, which provides the first complete primary structure of a gastropod hemocyanin subunit. With 3404 amino acids (392 kDa) it is the largest polypeptide sequence ever obtained for a respiratory protein. The cDNA comprises 10,758 base pairs and includes the coding regions for a short signal peptide, the eight different functional units, a 3'-untranslated region of 478 base pairs, and a poly(A) tail. The predicted protein contains 13 potential sites for N-linked carbohydrates (one for HtH1-a, none for HtH1-c, and two each for the other si…

Models MolecularSignal peptideDNA ComplementaryProtein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataOctopodiformesBiologyBiochemistryEvolution MolecularArchaeogastropodaComplementary DNAmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsComputer SimulationAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyPeptide sequencePhylogenyGene LibrarySequence Homology Amino AcidProtein primary structureHemocyaninCell BiologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationRespiratory proteinBiochemistryMolluscaHemocyaninsProtein BindingJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Localization of neuroglobin protein in the mouse brain.

2003

Neuroglobin is a recently discovered vertebrate oxygen-binding respiratory protein. In situ hybridization data demonstrated that neuroglobin-mRNA is widely expressed in neuronal cells of the central and peripheral nervous systems as well as in endocrine cells. The present study was conducted to investigate the presence of neuroglobin protein in neurons of the mouse brain. A polyclonal antibody directed against a synthetic peptide of neuroglobin was raised in rabbits and affinity-purified. The specificity of the antibody was demonstrated by ELISA and preabsorption tests. We report here for the first time that neuroglobin is expressed on the protein level in many brain sites including cerebra…

Nervous systemBrain ChemistryCerebellumMice Inbred BALB CGeneral NeuroscienceBinding proteinCentral nervous systemBrainNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyCell biologyGlobinsRespiratory proteinMicemedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroglobinmedicineAnimalsBrainstemNeuroscienceImmunostainingNeuroscience letters
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Neuroglobin and Other Nerve Haemoglobins

2008

The nervous system of animals requires huge amounts of metabolic energy and thus oxygen. Intracellular haemoglobins sporadically occur in glial cells and neurons of various invertebrate taxa, including Annelida, Arthropoda, Echiura, Mollusca, Nematoda and Nemertea. At least some of these respiratory proteins sustain the aerobic metabolism and thus the excitability of the nervous system. Recently, we have identified neuroglobin as an oxygen-binding protein of vertebrate neurons. The physiological role of neuroglobin, which is apparently present in much lower amounts than many invertebrate nerve haemoglobins, is less well established. Phylogenetic analyses have shown that neuroglobin is ortho…

Nervous systemNemerteabiologyNervous tissueVertebratebiology.organism_classificationCell biologyRespiratory proteinmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroglobinbiology.animalmedicineGlobinIntracellular
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Neuroglobin: A Respiratory Protein of the Nervous System

2004

Nerve tissues exhibit some of the highest oxygen consumption rates found in the body. Neuroglobin, a heme protein distantly related to hemoglobin, is thought to enhance the supply of oxygen to the neurons, the eye, and some endocrine tissues. Neuroglobin may promote neuronal survival under hypoxic conditions as they occur, for example, in stroke.

NeuronsNervous systemHemeproteinPhysiologyCellular respirationCell RespirationMolecular Sequence DataNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyGlobinsCell biologyRespiratory proteinmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroglobinmedicineAnimalsHumansEndocrine systemAmino Acid SequenceGlobinHemoglobinNeurosciencePhysiology
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A vertebrate globin expressed in the brain.

2000

Haemoglobins and myoglobins constitute related protein families that function in oxygen transport and storage in humans and other vertebrates. Here we report the identification of a third globin type in man and mouse. This protein is predominantly expressed in the brain, and therefore we have called it neuroglobin. Mouse neuroglobin is a monomer with a high oxygen affinity (half saturation pressure, P50 approximately 2 torr). Analogous to myoglobin, neuroglobin may increase the availability of oxygen to brain tissue. The human neuroglobin gene (NGB), located on chromosome 14q24, has a unique exon-intron structure. Neuroglobin represents a distinct protein family that diverged early in metaz…

Protein familyRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyMiceAnimalsHumansGlobinAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularChromosomes Human Pair 14Expressed Sequence TagsMice Inbred BALB CMultidisciplinarySequence Homology Amino AcidGene Expression ProfilingCytoglobinOxygen transportNitric oxide dioxygenaseBrainChromosome MappingExonsMolecular biologyIntronsGlobin foldCell biologyGlobinsRespiratory proteinOxygenNeuroglobinNature
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Red blood with blue-blood ancestry: Intriguing structure of a snail hemoglobin

2006

The phylogenetic enigma of snail hemoglobin, its isolated occurrence in a single gastropod family, the Planorbidae, and the lack of sequence data, stimulated the present study. We present here the complete cDNA and predicted amino acid sequence of two hemoglobin polypeptides from the planorbid Biomphalaria glabrata (intermediate host snail for the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni ). Both isoforms contain 13 different, cysteine-free globin domains, plus a small N-terminal nonglobin “plug” domain with three cysteines for subunit dimerization (total M r ≈ 238 kDa). We also identified the native hemoglobin molecule and present here a preliminary 3D reconstruction from electron microscopical …

Protein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataBiologyEvolution MolecularHemoglobinschemistry.chemical_compoundImaging Three-DimensionalHemolymphHemolymphImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsBiomphalaria glabrataAmino Acid SequenceGlobinPhylogenyMultidisciplinaryBiomphalariaSequence Homology Amino AcidHemocyaninBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyProtein Structure TertiaryRespiratory proteinMyoglobinchemistryHemoglobinProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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