Search results for "sequence data"

showing 10 items of 1952 documents

Involvement of an Alkane Hydroxylase System of Gordonia sp. Strain SoCg in Degradation of Solid n-Alkanes▿

2010

ABSTRACT Enzymes involved in oxidation of long-chain n -alkanes are still not well known, especially those in Gram-positive bacteria. This work describes the alkane degradation system of the n -alkane degrader actinobacterium Gordonia sp. strain SoCg, which is able to grow on n -alkanes from dodecane (C 12 ) to hexatriacontane (C 36 ) as the sole C source. SoCg harbors in its chromosome a single alk locus carrying six open reading frames (ORFs), which shows 78 to 79% identity with the alkane hydroxylase (AH)-encoding systems of other alkane-degrading actinobacteria. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR showed that the genes encoding AlkB (alkane 1-monooxygenase), RubA3 (rubredoxin), RubA4…

food.ingredientMutantMolecular Sequence DataAlkBGene ExpressionStreptomyces coelicolorGordoniaLong-chain n-alkaneGordoniaSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generalemedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyPolymerase Chain ReactionGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryfoodRubredoxinAlkanesSPME/GC-MSmedicineEscherichia coliNADH NADPH OxidoreductasesGordonia BacteriumEscherichia coliBiotransformationSequence DeletionEcologybiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionRubredoxinsStreptomyces coelicolorGordonia BacteriumSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationCarbonalkane hydroxylase AlkBBiochemistrybiology.proteinBiodegradationCytochrome P-450 CYP4AFatty AlcoholsBacteriaFood ScienceBiotechnology
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Pythium contiguanum nomen novum (syn. Pythium dreschleri Paul), its antagonism to Botrytis cinerea, ITS1 region of its nuclear ribosomal DNA, and its…

2000

Pythium drechsleri Paul was described as a new species from soil samples taken in a salt-marsh of Arzew, Algeria [Paul, B. (1988) Une nouvelle espece de Pythium isolee d'une saline de l'ouest Algerien. Cryptogam. Mycol. 9, 325-333]. The name of the fungus, P. drechsleri, is a nomen invalidum, as it is a later homonym of P. drechsleri Rajgopalan and Ramakrishnan [Rajagopalan, S. and Ramakrishnan, K. (1971) Phycomycetes in agricultural soils with special reference to the Pythiaceae. Madras Univ. J. Sect. B 37,38, 100-117]. A new name, Pythium contiguanum is now being given to P. drechsleri Paul. This species is characterised by its contiguous inflated type of sporangia, smooth-walled oogonia …

food.ingredientNomen novumMolecular Sequence DataPythiumMicrobiologyDNA RibosomalPolymerase Chain ReactionIntergenic regionfoodTerminology as TopicBotanyAntibiosisGeneticsRNA Ribosomal 18SPythiumMolecular BiologyRibosomal DNASoil MicrobiologyBotrytisBotrytis cinereabiologyBase SequenceSporangiumbiology.organism_classificationPythiaceaeRNA Ribosomal 5.8SBotrytisFEMS microbiology letters
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Isolation of Gram-positive n-alkane degraders from a hydrocarbon-contaminated Mediterranean shoreline.

2007

Aims: To investigate the petroleum hydrocarbon (HC)-degrading potential of indigenous micro-organisms in a sandy Mediterranean coast, accidentally contaminated with petroleum-derived HCs. Methods and Results: Using culturable methods, a population of Gram-positive n-alkane degraders was detected in the contaminated soil. Five isolates, identified as one Nocardia, two Rhodococcus and two Gordonia strains, were able to degrade medium- and long-chain n-alkanes up to C36 as assessed by growth assays and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. Diverging alkane hydroxylase-encoding genes (alkB) were detected by PCR, using degenerated primers, in all the strains; multiple sequences were obt…

food.ingredientPopulationMolecular Sequence DataAlkBColony Count MicrobialGordoniaSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleGram-Positive BacteriaApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyPolymerase Chain ReactionGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryMicrobiologyactinomycetes alkB GC-MS analysis Gordonian-alkane degradation Nocardia Rhodococcus.BioremediationfoodRNA Ribosomal 16SAlkanesSoil PollutantseducationSoil Microbiologyeducation.field_of_studyBacteriological TechniquesbiologyBase SequenceNocardiaGeneral MedicineSettore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organicabiology.organism_classificationNocardiaceaeHydrocarbonsActinobacteriaBiodegradation EnvironmentalItalybiology.proteinActinomycetalesCytochrome P-450 CYP4ARhodococcusBiotechnologyJournal of applied microbiology
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Validation and application of a PCR primer set to quantify fungal communities in the soil environment by real-time quantitative PCR

2011

Fungi constitute an important group in soil biological diversity and functioning. However, characterization and knowledge of fungal communities is hampered because few primer sets are available to quantify fungal abundance by real-time quantitative PCR (real-time Q-PCR). The aim in this study was to quantify fungal abundance in soils by incorporating, into a real-time Q-PCR using the SYBRGreen (R) method, a primer set already used to study the genetic structure of soil fungal communities. To satisfy the real-time Q-PCR requirements to enhance the accuracy and reproducibility of the detection technique, this study focused on the 18S rRNA gene conserved regions. These regions are little affec…

fungal abundance organic carbon content real-time Q-PCR length polymorphism SYBRGreen method type de sol[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]lcsh:MedicinePlant SciencePlant Roots18S ribosomal RNASYBRGreen methodtype de sol[ SDE ] Environmental SciencesSoilFungal Reproductionlcsh:ScienceDNA FungalPhylogenyorganic carbon content2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesDiversityMultidisciplinaryfungal abundanceEcologyEcologyRevealsFungal geneticsPolymerase-chain-reactionAgricultureBiodiversityAmpliconSoil Ecologysoil texture amplification enzymatique de l'adnBacterial communitiesSamplesreal-time Q-PCRCommunity Ecology[SDE]Environmental SciencesRhizosphereResearch ArticleSoil textureIn silicoMolecular Sequence DataSoil ScienceComputational biologyMycologyBiologyReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionMicrobiologyMicrobial Ecology03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityMedicago truncatulaMicrobial communityRNA Ribosomal 18SSoil ecologyBiology030304 developmental biologyDNA PrimersRibosomal-Rna genes[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]030306 microbiologylcsh:RFungiBotanyReproducibility of Resultslength polymorphismsoil textureSequence Analysis DNADna15. Life on landamplification enzymatique de l'adnDNA extractionlcsh:QPrimer (molecular biology)
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Interaction of glutamic-acid-rich proteins with the cGMP signalling pathway in rod photoreceptors.

1999

The assembly of signalling molecules into macromolecular complexes (transducisomes) provides specificity, sensitivity and speed in intracellular signalling pathways. Rod photoreceptors in the eye contain an unusual set of glutamic-acid-rich proteins (GARPs) of unknown function. GARPs exist as two soluble forms, GARP1 and GARP2, and as a large cytoplasmic domain (GARP' part) of the beta-subunit of the cyclic GMP-gated channel. Here we identify GARPs as multivalent proteins that interact with the key players of cGMP signalling, phosphodiesterase and guanylate cyclase, and with a retina-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR), through four, short, repetitive sequences. In electron mic…

genetic structuresPhosphodiesterase InhibitorsMolecular Sequence DataCyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation ChannelsGlutamic AcidNerve Tissue ProteinsPlasma protein bindingBiologyIn Vitro TechniquesRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceTransducinEye ProteinsPeptide sequenceCyclic GMPMultidisciplinaryPhosphoric Diester HydrolasesPhosphodiesteraseProteinsTransporterGlutamic acidRod Cell Outer SegmentRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyBiochemistryCytoplasmGuanylate CyclaseATP-Binding Cassette TransportersCattleTransducinSignal transductionProtein BindingSignal TransductionNature
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Microbial succession of nitrate-reducing bacteria in the rhizosphere of Poa alpina across a glacier foreland in the Central Alps

2006

International audience; Changes in community structure and activity of the dissimilatory nitrate-reducing community were investigated across a glacier foreland in the Central Alps to gain insight into the successional pattern of this functional group and the driving environmental factors. Bulk soil and rhizosphere soil of Poa alpina was sampled in five replicates in August during the flowering stage and in September after the first snowfalls along a gradient from 25 to 129 years after deglaciation and at a reference site outside the glacier foreland (> 2000 years deglaciated). In a laboratory-based assay, nitrate reductase activity was determined colorimetrically after 24 h of anaerobic inc…

glacierTime FactorsMolecular Sequence DataBulk soilEcological successionNitrate reductaseNitrate ReductasePlant RootsMicrobiologydiversitysoil03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundNitrateGermanyBotanyIce Coverpâturin des alpesGlacier forelandPoaEcosystemPhylogenySoil MicrobiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPoa alpina030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesRhizosphereBacteriabiology030306 microbiologyDiscriminant AnalysisGenetic Variation15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationmolecular anlysispoa alpina[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitologychemistrycommunity structureMonte Carlo MethodSoil microbiologyPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthEnvironmental Microbiology
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CUDA-BLASTP: Accelerating BLASTP on CUDA-enabled graphics hardware

2011

Scanning protein sequence database is an often repeated task in computational biology and bioinformatics. However, scanning large protein databases, such as GenBank, with popular tools such as BLASTP requires long runtimes on sequential architectures. Due to the continuing rapid growth of sequence databases, there is a high demand to accelerate this task. In this paper, we demonstrate how GPUs, powered by the Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA), can be used as an efficient computational platform to accelerate the BLASTP algorithm. In order to exploit the GPU's capabilities for accelerating BLASTP, we have used a compressed deterministic finite state automaton for hit detection as wel…

graphics hardwareSource codeComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectGraphics hardwareGraphics processing unitParallel computingGeneral Purpose Computation on Graphics Processing Unit (GPGPU)Computational scienceInstruction setCUDAGeneticsComputer GraphicsDatabases Proteinmedia_commondynamic programmingFinite-state machineSequence databaseApplied MathematicsProteinsCompute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA)sequence alignmentGeneral-purpose computing on graphics processing unitsAlgorithmsSoftwareBiotechnology
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Antifungal activity improved by coproduction of cyclodextrins and anabaenolysins in Cyanobacteria

2015

Department of Chemistry, Nanoscience Center, University of Jyväskylä, FI-40014, Jyväskylä, Finland Cyclodextrins are cyclic oligosaccharides widely used in the pharmaceutical industry to improve drug delivery and to increase the solubility of hydrophobic compounds. Anabaenolysins are lipopeptides produced by cyanobacteria with potent lytic activity in cholesterolcontaining membranes. Here, we identified the 23- To 24-kb gene clusters responsible for the production of the lipopeptide anabaenolysin. The hybrid nonribosomal peptide synthetase and polyketide synthase biosynthetic gene cluster is encoded in the genomes of three anabaenolysin-producing strains of Anabaena.We detected previously u…

hydroxyamino fatty acidAntifungal Agentsnatural productsMolecular Sequence DataBiologyCyanobacteriata3111chemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsNonribosomal peptidePolyketide synthaseGene clusterSolubilityCandida albicanschemistry.chemical_classificationCyclodextrinsMultidisciplinarybioactive compoundsAnabaenaNRPSta1182LipopeptideBiological SciencesPKSbiology.organism_classificationchemistryBiochemistryGenes Bacterialbiology.proteinPhotosynthetic bacteriaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Recurrent domestication by Lepidoptera of genes from their parasites mediated by Bracoviruses

2015

Bracoviruses are symbiotic viruses associated with tens of thousands of species of parasitic wasps that develop within the body of lepidopteran hosts and that collectively parasitize caterpillars of virtually every lepidopteran species. Viral particles are produced in the wasp ovaries and injected into host larvae with the wasp eggs. Once in the host body, the viral DNA circles enclosed in the particles integrate into lepidopteran host cell DNA. Here we show that bracovirus DNA sequences have been inserted repeatedly into lepidopteran genomes, indicating this viral DNA can also enter germline cells. The original mode of Horizontal Gene Transfer (HGT) unveiled here is based on the integrativ…

hôteanimal structuresBase Sequenceadn virallcsh:QH426-470Biodiversité et EcologieMolecular Sequence DataWaspsinsecte parasitefungiGenes InsectvirusSpodopterabracovirusBiodiversity and Ecologylcsh:GeneticsPolydnaviridaeDNA ViralAnimalsguêpelepidoptera[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologygénomique des populationsResearch Article
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Phosphorylation of the Goodpasture antigen by type A protein kinases.

1995

Collagen IV is the major component of basement membranes. The human alpha 3 chain of collagen IV contains an antigenic domain called the Goodpasture antigen that is the target for the circulating immunopathogenic antibodies present in patients with Goodpasture syndrome. Characteristically, the gene region encoding the Goodpasture antigen generates multiple alternative products that retain the antigen amino-terminal region with a five-residue motif (KRGDS). The serine therein appears to be the major in vitro cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation site in the isolated antigen and can be phosphorylated in vitro by two protein kinases of approximately 50 and 41 kDa associated with human …

inorganic chemicalsCollagen Type IVAnti-Glomerular Basement Membrane DiseaseMolecular Sequence DataBiochemistryAutoantigensSerineAntigenmedicineSerineGoodpasture syndromeHumansAmino Acid SequencePhosphorylationProtein kinase AMolecular BiologyBasement membranebiologyBase SequenceKinaseCell Biologymedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyCyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinasesenzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates)medicine.anatomical_structureOligodeoxyribonucleotidesbiology.proteinPhosphorylationCollagenAntibodyThe Journal of biological chemistry
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