Search results for "adenosine triphosphatase"

showing 10 items of 79 documents

Nuclear Translocation of Mismatch Repair Proteins MSH2 and MSH6 as a Response of Cells to Alkylating Agents

2000

Mammalian mismatch repair has been implicated in mismatch correction, the prevention of mutagenesis and cancer, and the induction of genotoxicity and apoptosis. Here, we show that treatment of cells specifically with agents inducing O(6)-methylguanine in DNA, such as N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, elevates the level of MSH2 and MSH6 and increases GT mismatch binding activity in the nucleus. This inducible response occurs immediately after alkylation, is long-lasting and dose-dependent, and results from translocation of the preformed MutSalpha complex (composed of MSH2 and MSH6) from the cytoplasm into the nucleus. It is not caused by an increase in MSH2 gen…

CytoplasmDNA RepairBase Pair MismatchRNA StabilityChromosomal translocationmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundMismatch Repair Endonuclease PMS2Adenosine TriphosphatasesNuclear ProteinsMethylnitrosoureaNeoplasm ProteinsDNA-Binding ProteinsMutS Homolog 2 ProteinDNA mismatch repairMutL Protein Homolog 1Protein BindingAlkylating AgentsMethylnitronitrosoguanidinecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesGuanineActive Transport Cell NucleusBiologyCell LineO(6)-Methylguanine-DNA MethyltransferaseProto-Oncogene ProteinsDNA Repair ProteinmedicineHumansRNA MessengerneoplasmsMolecular BiologyAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingCell NucleusMutagenesisnutritional and metabolic diseasesDNACell BiologyDNA MethylationMolecular biologydigestive system diseasesMSH6DNA Repair EnzymesGene Expression RegulationchemistryMSH2Carrier ProteinsGenotoxicityDNADNA DamageHeLa CellsJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Differential salinity-induced variations in the activity of H+-pumps and Na+/H+ antiporters that are involved in cytoplasm ion homeostasis as a funct…

2011

The characterisation of cellular responses to salinity in staple crops is necessary for the reliable identification of physiological markers of salinity tolerance. Under saline conditions, variations in proton gradients that are generated by membrane-bound H⁺ pumps are crucial for maintaining cytoplasm homeostasis. We examined short (15 h) and longer term effects (4 days) of NaCl stress on the H⁺ pumping activities that are associated with the plasma membrane (P-ATPase) and the tonoplast (V-ATPase and V-PPase) in rice (Oryza sativa L.) callus lines that displayed different levels of NaCl tolerance and were established from two japonica rice cultivars. The applied stress conditions were base…

CytoplasmSalinitySodium-Hydrogen ExchangersGenotypePhysiologyAntiporterPlant ScienceVacuoleSodium ChlorideBiologyCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundSpecies SpecificityStress PhysiologicalBotanyGeneticsHomeostasisAdenosine TriphosphatasesOryza sativaHydrolysisCell MembraneSodiumfood and beveragesBiological TransportOryzaSalt ToleranceProton PumpsPlants Genetically ModifiedGenetically modified riceEnzyme ActivationSalinityIon homeostasischemistryCytoplasmBiophysicsX-GlucPlant Physiology and Biochemistry
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Multiple roles for ISWI in transcription, chromosome organization and DNA replication.

2003

ISWI functions as the ATPase subunit of multiple chromatin-remodeling complexes. These complexes use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to slide nucleosomes and increase chromatin fluidity, thereby modulating the access of transcription factors and other regulatory proteins to DNA. Here we discuss recent progress toward understanding the biological functions of ISWI, with an emphasis on its roles in transcription, chromosome organization and DNA replication.

DNA ReplicationTranscriptional ActivationHMG-boxTranscription GeneticBiophysicsBiologyBiochemistryATP-dependent chromatin remodeling ISWI Transcription Replication Chromosome structureChromatin remodelingChromosomesAdenosine TriphosphateControl of chromosome duplicationStructural BiologyGeneticsNucleosomeAnimalsHumansTranscription factorGeneticsAdenosine TriphosphatasesDNA replicationChromatin Assembly and DisassemblyChromatinSettore BIO/18 - GeneticaGene Expression RegulationOrigin recognition complexTranscription FactorsBiochimica et biophysica acta
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Eel ATPase activity as biomarker of thiobencarb exposure

2003

Abstract European eels ( Anguilla anguilla ) were exposed to a sublethal thiobencarb concentration of 0.22 mg/L in a flow-through system for 96 h. Mg 2+ and Na + –K + adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activities were evaluated in gill and muscle tissues at 2, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h of thiobencarb exposure. Gill ATPase activities were rapidly inhibited from 2 h of contact onward. Highest inhibition was registered for Na + , K + -ATPase (85%) from 2 to 12 h. Both Mg 2+ and total ATPase were inhibited (>73%) during the first hours of toxicant exposure. At the end of the exposure period (96 h) ATPase activities were still different from those of the controls (>50%). Significant inhibition was…

GillsMuscle tissueGillmedicine.medical_specialtyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisATPasechemistry.chemical_compoundThiocarbamatesAnguillidaeInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsTissue DistributionMuscle SkeletalAdenosine Triphosphataseschemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyHerbicidesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEnvironmental ExposureGeneral MedicineAnguillabiology.organism_classificationPollutionmedicine.anatomical_structureEnzymeEndocrinologychemistryBiochemistryEnzyme inhibitorToxicitybiology.proteinBiomarkersWater Pollutants ChemicalToxicantEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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Effects of primary- and secondary-treated bleached kraft mill effluents on the immune system and physiological parameters of roach.

2000

The present study was designed to examine, whether, effluents from a modern pulp and paper mill using elemental chlorine-free/total chlorine-free (ECF/TCF) bleaching, exert effects on the immune system of fish and, in addition, to relate these findings to physiological parameters known to be affected by bleached kraft-mill effluents (BKME). Roach (Rutilus rutilus) were exposed in laboratory conditions to primary- or secondary-treated effluent from a pulp and paper mill. In order to study their capability to respond to foreign antigens they were immunised with bovine gamma-globulin (BGG) prior to exposure. The number of anti-BGG antibody-secreting cells (ASC) and the number of immunoglobulin…

GillsPaperHydrocortisoneNeutrophilsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisIndustrial WasteSpleenEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayFresh WaterAquatic Scienceengineering.materialAndrologyImmune systemAntigenCell MovementmedicineCytochrome P-450 CYP1A1AnimalsLymphocytesRespiratory BurstAdenosine Triphosphatasesbiologybusiness.industryPulp (paper)FishesPaper millWater-Electrolyte Balancebiology.organism_classificationLiver Glycogenmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunoglobulin MImmune SystemImmunologyengineeringOsmoregulationbiology.proteinCarbohydrate MetabolismRutilusAntibodyChlorinebusinessWater Pollutants ChemicalAquatic toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
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Hepatitis B virus maturation is sensitive to functional inhibition of ESCRT-III, Vps4, and gamma 2-adaptin.

2007

ABSTRACT Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is an enveloped DNA virus that presumably buds at intracellular membranes of infected cells. HBV budding involves two endocytic host proteins, the ubiquitin-interacting adaptor γ2-adaptin and the Nedd4 ubiquitin ligase. Here, we demonstrate that HBV release also requires the cellular machinery that generates internal vesicles of multivesicular bodies (MVBs). In order to perturb the MVB machinery in HBV-replicating liver cells, we used ectopic expression of dominant-negative mutants of different MVB components, like the ESCRT-III complex-forming CHMP proteins and the Vps4 ATPases. Upon coexpression of mutated CHMP3, CHMP4B, or CHMP4C forms, as well as of ATPa…

Hepatitis B virusVacuolar Proton-Translocating ATPasesEndosomeImmunologyEndocytic cycleVesicular Transport Proteinsmacromolecular substancesEndosomesmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyESCRTVirusCell LineViral ProteinsVirologymedicineHumansAdaptor Protein Complex gamma SubunitsHepatitis B virusAdenosine TriphosphatasesMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyEndosomal Sorting Complexes Required for TransportVirus AssemblyDNA virusMolecular biologyUbiquitin ligaseCell biologyGenome Replication and Regulation of Viral Gene ExpressionMicroscopy FluorescenceInsect Sciencebiology.proteinHepatocytesATPases Associated with Diverse Cellular ActivitiesEctopic expressionJournal of virology
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Morphology of experimentally denervated and reinnervated rat facial muscle I. Histochemical and histological findings

1994

The morphological changes in rat facial muscles were evaluated after permanent denervation and were compared with findings after immediate reinnervation. Thirty rats underwent transection of the left and right facial nerves immediately followed by hypoglossal-facial nerve anastomosis on the right side (muscular reinnervation) and removal of 8-10 mm of the facial plexus on the left side (permanent muscular denervation). Levator labii muscle samples of both sides were collected sequentially at 2, 6, 7, 10, 20, and 24 weeks after surgery and submitted to routine histological and enzyme histochemical staining procedures. In normal levator labii muscles a typical "chessboard" pattern was found, …

Hypoglossal NervePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyVitamin KFacial MusclesMyofibrilsPerimysialmedicineAnimalsRegenerationRats WistarNerve TransferAdenosine TriphosphatasesNADH Tetrazolium ReductaseDenervationMuscle DenervationHistocytochemistrybusiness.industryAnastomosis SurgicalGeneral MedicineAnatomyFibrosisFacial nerveMuscle DenervationRatsFacial NerveFacial musclesmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyConnective TissueGlycerophosphatesNerve TransferFemaleAtrophybusinessHypoglossal nerveReinnervationEuropean Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology
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Comparative study on the inhibition of Na+, K+-activated ATPase activity by chlorpromazine, promazine, imipramine, and their monodesmethyl metabolites

1972

The inhibition of the sodium- and potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Na-K-ATPase, EC 3.6.1.3) activity by chlorpromazine, promazine and imipramine was compared with that by the monodesmethyl metabolites of these drugs. The experiments were performed with a deoxycholate- and sodium iodide-treated microsomal enzyme preparation from rat brain. It was shown in dose-response curves as well as in double-reciprocal Lineweaver-Burk plots of Na-K-ATPase activity against KCl concentration that the monodesmethyl metabolites were stronger inhibitors than their parent compounds. The results obtained with the desmethyl metabolites and imipramine as inhibitors indicate competitive inhibition wh…

ImipramineChlorpromazineReceptors DrugSodiumchemistry.chemical_elementPharmacologyMethylationImipramineNon-competitive inhibitionMicrosomesDesipraminemedicineAnimalsChlorpromazinePromazinePromazineAdenosine TriphosphatasesPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationChemistrySodiumBrainGeneral MedicineDesmethylRatsEnzyme ActivationBiochemistryPotassiumFemaleProtein Bindingmedicine.drugTricyclicNaunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology
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ISWI Regulates Higher-Order Chromatin Structure and Histone H1 Assembly In Vivo

2007

Imitation SWI (ISWI) and other ATP-dependent chromatin-remodeling factors play key roles in transcription and other processes by altering the structure and positioning of nucleosomes. Recent studies have also implicated ISWI in the regulation of higher-order chromatin structure, but its role in this process remains poorly understood. To clarify the role of ISWI in vivo, we examined defects in chromosome structure and gene expression resulting from the loss of Iswi function in Drosophila. Consistent with a broad role in transcriptional regulation, the expression of a large number of genes is altered in Iswi mutant larvae. The expression of a dominant-negative form of ISWI leads to dramatic a…

Imitation SWINucleosome assemblyTranscription GeneticQH301-705.5RNA-POLYMERASE-IIPROTEINCHROMOSOME ARCHITECTUREGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHistones03 medical and health sciencesNUCLEOSOME REMODELING FACTORHigher Order Chromatin StructureHistone H1NucleosomeAnimalsTRANSCRIPTIONBiology (General)LIVING CELLSMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyGENE-EXPRESSIONRegulation of gene expressionGeneticsAdenosine Triphosphatases0303 health sciencesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyGeneral Neuroscience030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyGenetics and GenomicsCell BiologyChromatin Assembly and DisassemblyChromatinChromatinCell biologyDROSOPHILAHistoneGene Expression RegulationLarvaMutationbiology.proteinLINKER HISTONEGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsDOSAGE COMPENSATION
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Human Hsp60 with Its Mitochondrial Import Signal Occurs in Solution as Heptamers and Tetradecamers Remarkably Stable over a Wide Range of Concentrati…

2014

It has been established that Hsp60 can accumulate in the cytosol in various pathological conditions, including cancer and chronic inflammatory diseases. Part or all of the cytosolic Hsp60 could be naive, namely, bear the mitochondrial import signal (MIS), but neither the structure nor the in solution oligomeric organization of this cytosolic molecule has still been elucidated. Here we present a detailed study of the structure and self-organization of naive cytosolic Hsp60 in solution. Results were obtained by different biophysical methods (light and X ray scattering, single molecule spectroscopy and hydrodynamics) that all together allowed us to assay a wide range of concentrations of Hsp60…

LightCancer Treatmentlcsh:MedicinePlasma protein bindingMitochondrionBiochemistrySmall-Angle ScatteringCell-free systemScatteringchemistry.chemical_compoundCytosolProtein structureBasic Cancer ResearchMacromolecular Structure AnalysisMedicine and Health SciencesScattering RadiationHsp60 Gro EL Recombinant proteinslcsh:ScienceAdenosine TriphosphatasesMultidisciplinaryAqueous solutionMolecular StructurePhysicsElectromagnetic RadiationHydrolysisRecombinant ProteinsMitochondriaChemistryMonomerOncologyBiochemistryPhysical SciencesInterdisciplinary PhysicsHSP60Research ArticleProtein BindingProtein Structureanimal structuresBiophysicschemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologycomplex mixturesMitochondrial ProteinsHumansProtein InteractionsMolecular BiologyInflammationChemical PhysicsCell-Free Systemlcsh:RfungiLight ScatteringBiology and Life SciencesProteinsProtein ComplexesChaperonin 60Chaperone ProteinsCytosolSpectrometry FluorescencechemistryMolecular Complexeslcsh:QPLoS ONE
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