Search results for "amino acid sequence"

showing 10 items of 1296 documents

A screening of five Bacillus thuringiensis Vip3A proteins for their activity against lepidopteran pests

2014

Five Bacillus thuringiensis Vip3A proteins (Vip3Aa, Vip3Ab, Vip3Ad, Vip3Ae and Vip3Af) and their corresponding trypsin-activated toxins were tested for their toxicity against eight lepidopteran pests: Agrotis ipsilon, Helicoverpa armigera, Mamestra brassicae, Spodoptera exigua, Spodoptera frugiperda, Spodoptera littoralis, Ostrinia nubilalis and Lobesia botrana. Toxicity was first tested at a high dose at 7 and 10. days. No major differences were found when comparing protoxins vs. trypsin-activated toxins. The proteins that were active against most of the insect species were Vip3Aa, Vip3Ae and Vip3Af, followed by Vip3Ab. Vip3Ad was non-toxic to any of the species tested. Considering the res…

biologyfungiMolecular Sequence DataAgrotis ipsilonSpodopteraHelicoverpa armigerabiology.organism_classificationLobesia botranaPlants Genetically ModifiedOstriniaMicrobiologyInsecticide ResistanceLepidopteraBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisBotanyExiguaAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceSpodoptera littoralisPest Control BiologicalEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Natriuretic peptide system: physiology and clinical utility

2004

This review discusses the physiology of natriuretic peptides as a group and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) in more detail. It will also highlight implications for the use of the natriuretic peptides in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with cardiovascular disease.The heart secretes two major natriuretic peptides: atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), which is synthesized in the atrial myocardium, and BNP, which is synthesized in the ventricular myocardium. Both ANP and BNP are released in response to atrial and ventricular stretch, respectively, and will cause balanced vasodilation, natriuresis, and inhibition of the sympathetic nervous system and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis. …

business.industrymedicine.drug_classMolecular Sequence DataPhysiologyPrognosisCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineBrain natriuretic peptideNPR2Cardiovascular DiseasesNatriuretic Peptide BrainNatriuretic peptideHumansMedicineAmino Acid SequenceNatriuretic PeptidesbusinessPeptide sequenceAtrial Natriuretic FactorBiomarkersCurrent Opinion in Critical Care
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Evaluation and comparison of tailor-made stationary phases based on spherical silica-based beads for capillary electrochromatography via peptide sepa…

2004

Small cyclic peptides have been employed to elucidate the performance of novel sorbents as stationary phases in capillary electrochromatography (CEC). In this paper chain length dependencies for ordinary liquid chromatographic sorbents are reported together with findings acquired on beads specifically designed to suit CEC. The latter, tailor-made, spherical, porous silica exhibits a distinguished surface modification to meet the criteria anticipated to enhance performance profiles in CEC. With well-characterised peptides resembling the analytes, probing of the CEC system in a systematic manner (predominantly via the organic modifier content of the background electrolyte (BE)) reveals insigh…

chemistry.chemical_classificationAnalyteCapillary electrochromatographyChromatographySilicon dioxideClinical BiochemistryAnalytical chemistryCell BiologyGeneral MedicineElectrolyteSilicon DioxideBiochemistryCyclic peptideAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryElectrochromatographycardiovascular systemSurface modificationAmino Acid SequencePorosityPeptidesChromatography Micellar Electrokinetic CapillaryJournal of chromatography. B, Analytical technologies in the biomedical and life sciences
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Structural Properties of Carnation Mottle Virus p7 Movement Protein and Its RNA-binding Domain

2001

Plant viral movement proteins (MPs) participate actively in the intra- and intercellular movement of RNA plant viruses to such an extent that MP dysfunction impairs viral infection. However, the molecular mechanism(s) of their interaction with cognate nucleic acids are not well understood, partly due to the lack of structural information. In this work, a protein dissection approach was used to gain information on the structural and RNA-binding properties of this class of proteins, as exemplified by the 61-amino acid residue p7 MP from carnation mottle virus (CarMV). Circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that CarMV p7 is an alpha/beta RNA-binding soluble protein. Using synthetic peptides de…

chemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesCarlavirusC-terminusMolecular Sequence DataRNA-Binding ProteinsRNACell BiologyBiologyAlanine scanningBiochemistryProtein Structure SecondaryAmino acidViral ProteinsProtein structureBiochemistrychemistryRNAAmino Acid SequenceBinding siteMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceBinding domainJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Proteolytic cleavage of soybean Bowman-Birk inhibitor monitored by means of high-performance capillary electrophoresis. Implications for the mechanis…

1996

The hydrolysis of the soybean Bowman-Birk inhibitor in the presence of catalytic amounts of bovine trypsin and the formation of the non-covalent enzyme-inhibitor complex with an equimolar amount of enzyme are monitored by means of high-performance capillary electrophoresis (HPCE). The inhibitor is cleaved in the trypsin-reactive and more slowly in the chymotrypsin-reactive subdomain. HPCE proves itself as the only reliable analytical tool to monitor these reactions in clear contrast to classical electrophoretic, chromatographic and enzymatic methods. The most efficient separation of the intact and the two active site cleaved forms of the inhibitor was achieved in borate buffer at pH 10.0. T…

chemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesChromatographybiologyChemistryHydrolysisMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsElectrophoresis CapillaryActive siteCleavage (embryo)BiochemistryCatalysisProtein Structure TertiaryKineticsElectrophoresisHydrolysisReaction rate constantEnzymeCapillary electrophoresisBiochemistryEnzyme inhibitorbiology.proteinAmino Acid SequenceTrypsin Inhibitor Bowman-Birk SoybeanJournal of Biochemical and Biophysical Methods
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Posttranslational processing of human alpha 2-HS glycoprotein (human fetuin). Evidence for the production of a phosphorylated single-chain form by he…

1994

alpha 2-HS glycoprotein (alpha 2-HS) is a major protein occurring in human blood and calciferous tissues. Due to extensive sequence identity, alpha 2-HS has been grouped with the fetuins, a family of proteins that occur in fetal plasma in high concentrations. Native alpha 2-HS undergoes a series of posttranslational modifications including proteolytic processing, multiple N-glycosylations and O-glycosylations, and sulfation of the carbohydrate side chains. Various two-chain forms of alpha 2-HS have been prepared from human plasma, however, the single-chain precursor has not yet been isolated. Here, we have studied the biosynthesis of alpha 2-HS by a human hepatoma cell line, HepG2. We demon…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCarcinoma HepatocellularGlycosylationLiver NeoplasmsMolecular Sequence DataAlpha (ethology)PeptideBiologyBiochemistryFetuinSerineSulfationchemistryBiochemistryTumor Cells CulturedPhosphorylationHumansAmino Acid Sequencealpha-FetoproteinsPhosphorylationGlycoproteinPeptide sequenceProtein Processing Post-TranslationalEuropean journal of biochemistry
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Chloroplastic glutamine synthetase from Brassica napus.

1993

chemistry.chemical_classificationChloroplastsDatabases FactualPhysiologyMolecular Sequence DataNucleic acid sequenceBrassicaPlant ScienceBrassicaBiologyGenetic codebiology.organism_classificationGenes PlantChloroplastOpen Reading FramesEnzymechemistryBiochemistryGlutamate-Ammonia LigaseComplementary DNAGlutamine synthetaseGeneticsAmino Acid SequenceCarbon-Nitrogen LigasesResearch Article
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Retention behaviour of paracelsin peptides on reversed-phase silicas with varying n-alkyl chain length and ligand density.

1989

As part of further investigations on the characterization of the ligand-induced conformational stabilization of peptides, two series of n-alkyldimethylsilyl bonded silicas have been prepared. In series A the n-alkyl chain length, n, of the bonded phase was varied between 1 and 20 carbon atoms at a constant ligand density. In series B the ligand density, alpha exp, was gradually changed from 0 to 4.1 mumol/m2 on a C1, C4, C6, C8 and C18 bonded phase. The retention behaviour of four peptides of the paracelsin family were examined under isocratic conditions, using a ternary mobile phase of water-methanol-acetonitrile (22:39:39, v/v/v). Plots of k' versus n showed pronounced maxima between n = …

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyLigandChemistryOrganic ChemistryMolecular Sequence DataTemperaturePeptideGeneral MedicineLigandsBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryHydrophobic effectPartition coefficientPhase (matter)Spectrophotometry UltravioletAmino Acid SequenceTernary operationSelectivityPeptidesAlkylChromatography High Pressure LiquidAntimicrobial Cationic PeptidesJournal of chromatography
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Sequence-specific and DNA structure-dependent interactions of Escherichia coli MutS and human p53 with DNA

2013

Many proteins involved in DNA repair systems interact with DNA that has structure altered from the typical B-form helix. Using magnetic beads to immobilize DNAs containing various types of structures, we evaluated the in vitro binding activities of two well-characterized DNA repair proteins, Escherichia coli MutS and human p53. E. coli MutS bound to double-stranded DNAs, with higher affinity for a G/T mismatch compared to a G/A mismatch and highest affinity for larger non-B-DNA structures. E. coli MutS bound best to DNA between pH 6 and 9. Experiments discriminated between modes of p53-DNA binding, and increasing ionic strength reduced p53 binding to nonspecific double-stranded DNA, but had…

chemistry.chemical_classificationDNA ligaseDNA clampHMG-boxBase pairEscherichia coli ProteinsOsmolar ConcentrationBiophysicsDNACell BiologyBiologyBiochemistryMutS DNA Mismatch-Binding ProteinDNA binding siteBiochemistrychemistryMutS-1Escherichia coliHumansNucleic Acid ConformationProtein–DNA interactionAmino Acid SequenceTumor Suppressor Protein p53Molecular BiologyReplication protein AAnalytical Biochemistry
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Discriminative features of type I and type III secreted proteins from Gram-negative bacteria

2006

AbstractThe amino acid composition of sequences and structural attributes (α-helices, β-sheets) of C-and N-terminal fragments (50 amino acids) were compared to annotated (SWISS-PROT/ TrEMBL) type I (20 sequences) and type III (22 sequences) secreted proteins of Gram-negative bacteria.The discriminant analysis together with the stepwise forward and backward selection of variables revealed the frequencies of the residues Arg, Glu, Gly, Ile, Met, Pro, Ser, Tyr, Val as a set of strong (1-P < 0.001) predictor variables to discriminate between the sequences of type I and type III secreted proteins with a cross-validated accuracy of 98.6–100 %. The internal and external validity of discriminant…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGram-negative bacteriaGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyQH301-705.5General Neurosciencediscriminant analysisbiology.organism_classificationLinear discriminant analysisgram-negative bacteriaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyamino acid sequenceAmino acidSecretory proteinBiochemistrychemistryprotein secretionSecretionBiology (General)General Agricultural and Biological SciencesPeptide sequenceBacteriaGramOpen Life Sciences
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