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41.
Tyrosine uptake by membrane vesicles derived from rat brain has been investigated. The uptake is dependent on an Na+ gradient ([Na+]outside > [Na+]inside). The uptake is transport into an osmotically active space and not a binding artifact as indicated by the effect of increasing the medium osmolarity. The process is stimulated by a membrane potential (negative inside) as demonstrated by the effect of the ionophores valinomycin and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and anions with different permeabilities. Kinetic data show that tyrosine is accumulated by two systems with different affinities. Tyrosine uptake is inhibited by the presence of phenylalanine and tryptophan.  相似文献   
42.
The contribution of the 1–6 N-terminal sequence to the conformational properties of the S-peptide (the 1–20 sequence of ribonuclease A) was assessed by determining in the ribonuclease S′ system the helical content and the binding capability of synthetic [Orn10]-S-peptide analogs, in which lysine1, glutamic2 and threonine3 were progressively deleted, alanine4 and alanine5were alternatively replaced by serine, and alanine6 was substituted by serine or proline. Both the deletion of the three N-terminal residues and the alanine6/proline replacement produces the loss of the helical structure up to lysine7. No or minor effects are found in all other cases. From the comparison of the binding data, the energy for the conformational stabilization of the N-terminal region was calculated to amount to 1.4 kcal/mol. The results are discussed in comparison with the known x-ray data of the enzyme, with some predictive rules of secondary structure which were applied to this region and with the known phylogenetic variance of the residues in this region.  相似文献   
43.
In order to determine the influence of amino acid side-chains on α-helix stability, in relation to the protein folding process, the coil-helix transitions of some synthetic [Orn 10]-S-peptide analogues, containing, in position 8, Phe, Tyr, Ile, Ala, cpGly2 and Gly, were investigated by the technique of circular dichroism under two different sets of conditions. First, the transitions of the Speptide analogues in water/trifluoroethanol mixtures were recorded. From the pattern of the transitions and from the ellipticity values in 97% trifluoroethanol, the following increasing order of amino acids as α-helix formers was found: Gly < Tyr ≤ Phe < cpGly < Ala < Ile. This finding indicates that the conformational parameters (Chou & Fasman, 1974) of the residues in position 8 play an important but not exclusive role in α-helix stability, since the hydrophobicity of the side-chain (Nozaki & Tanford, 1971) of residue 8 exerts a strong influence. From the second approach, studying the capability of the S-peptide analogues to bind to S-protein, the following increasing order was found: (Gly, Ala) < Ile < cpGly < Tyr < Phe. This result reveals that the conformational parameters of the residues in position 8 play no role, whereas their hydrophobic character and side-chain interactions with surrounding residues in the S-protein portion are the determining binding factors. This finding explains the reason for the Phe8 invariance in RNAase A during evolution, and furnishes evidence for the relevant role of long-range interactions in the protein folding process.  相似文献   
44.
Circular dichroism studies on synthetic peptides related to the C-terminal region of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c were carried out and compared with conformational studies on horse cytochrome c fragments. Evidence is presented for a weaker predisposition for ordered structure in the former peptides when compared with the corresponding region in horse cytochrome c. These findings agree with theoretical predictions and with observations that yeast and other mammalian type cytochromes c differ in several minor respects.  相似文献   
45.
Photosynthetic fructose-1,6-diphosphatase (FDPase) fractions I and II, earlier purified from spinach leaves, show a similar amino acid composition, with the exception of a higher glutamic acid content in the latter. In both fractions glutamic and aspartic acids are the main amino acids. pH activity profiles of fractions I and II are similar, with optima at 8·65–8·70, both showing a high specificity for fructose- 1,6-diphosphate. These two fractions are Mg2+-dependent for activity, with an Optimum Mg2+ concentration of 10 mM in standard conditions, which shifts to 5 mM when the MG2+/EDTA ratio is increased to 10; Mn2+ and Co2+ are slightly active. EDTA enhances FDPase activity slightly, with an optimum at 0·4–0·8 mM. Cysteine has no activating effect, and acts as an inhibitor above 10 mM. Both I and II have an optimum substrate concentration of 4 mM, and the substrate inhibits at concns above this value. Kinetic velocity curves are sigmoidal, with the concave zone located in the range of physiological substrate concns. (Hill coefficient 1·75 for both). This suggests a strong regulatory role of fructose-1,6-diphosphate. Km values are 1·4 × 10−3 M (fraction I) and 1·1 × 10−3 M (fraction II). The highest activity rate occurs at 60°, in accordance with the high thermostability of both fractions; the activation energies are 14·3 kcal/mol (fraction I) and 13·0 kcal/mol (fraction II).  相似文献   
46.
Desiccation, resulting from extremely dry environmental conditions, is a serious obstacle to the survival of organisms. Water is vital for the maintenance of intracellular structure and prevents the irreversible formation of aggregates, an occurrence leading to loss of cellular function. To characterize genetic variation in desiccation stress resistance (DSR) in Drosophila melanogaster Meigen, an intercontinental set of recombinant inbred lines (RIL) is used. Flies are exposed to a low humidity environment (<10% relative humidity) at a constant temperature of 25 °C. Desiccation stress resistance is higher in RIL derived from a backcross to the parental stock sensitive to heat stress (from Denmark) than in RIL derived from the reciprocal backcross to the heat‐stress resistant stock (from Australia). Composite interval mapping reveals significant quantitative trail loci (QTL) for DSR in the set of RIL. Both major and minor effects QTL are detected, suggesting a complex genetic architecture. When compared with a previous investigation performed on the same set of RIL, the present study indicates that not all traits of resistance to environmental stressors are affected in the same direction by segregating co‐localized QTL.  相似文献   
47.
Summary A biometric analysis of body proportions with presumably functional meaning for microhabitat selection was made on 12 species of Liolaemus lizards in central Chile. Characters studied were forelimb length, hindlimb length, tail length (all standardized by the corresponding snout-vent length), and the ratio forelimb/hindlimb length. It is shown that irrespective of terrestrial, saxicolous, or arboreal habits, Liolaemus species are remarkably similar in body proportions. The only exceptions are: L. lemniscatus, an open ground-dweller which exhibits significantly shorter limbs; and L. chiliensis and L. schroederi, both shrub-climbers which exhibit significantly longer tail. It is concluded that the adaptive radiation of Liolaemus lizards in central Chile has been accomplished mainly by diversification of activity time, food size, and microhabitat type. Morphological divergence in body proportions seems to have played an unimportant role.  相似文献   
48.
The role of the kinetochore during meiotic chromosome segregation in C. elegans oocytes has been a matter of controversy. Danlasky et al. (2020. J. Cell. Biol. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202005179) show that kinetochore proteins KNL-1 and KNL-3 are required for early stages of anaphase during female meiosis, suggesting a new kinetochore-based model of chromosome segregation.

Meiosis consists of two consecutive chromosome segregation events preceded by a single round of DNA replication. Homologous chromosomes are separated in meiosis I, which is followed by sister chromatid separation in meiosis II to produce haploid gametes. Both of these stages require chromosomes/chromatids to align during metaphase before separating to opposite poles during anaphase. During mitosis, microtubules emanating from centrosomes at opposite poles of the cell bind chromosomes through a multiprotein complex called the kinetochore, allowing chromosomes to be pulled apart (1, 2). This segregation event takes place in two stages: anaphase A, where chromosomes are pulled toward spindle poles due to microtubule depolymerization, and anaphase B, where spindle poles themselves move farther apart, taking the attached chromosomes with them (3, 4). In many organisms, including mammals, oocytes lack centrosomes, and it has been of great interest to clarify the mechanisms used to ensure chromosomes are properly segregated during female meiosis (5, 6). Caenorhabditis elegans has served as a model for studying both mitosis and meiosis, but the mechanisms operating during female meiosis have been a matter of debate and controversy.In 2010, Dumont et al. showed that the kinetochore is required for chromosome alignment and congression during metaphase (7). However, they suggested that chromosome segregation was the result of microtubule polymerization between the segregating chromosomes (Fig. 1), resulting in a pushing force exerted onto chromosomes toward the spindle poles in a largely kinetochore-independent manner (7). This mechanism was also supported by the finding that CLIP-associated protein (CLASP)–dependent microtubule polymerization between the segregating chromosomes is essential for chromosome separation (8). An alternative model suggested that chromosomes are transported through microtubule-free channels toward the spindle poles by the action of dynein (9). Later evidence put in doubt a role for dynein and favored a model in which chromosomes initially separate when the spindle shortens and the poles overlap with chromosomes in an anaphase A–like mechanism. This is then followed by separation of chromosome-bound poles by outward microtubule sliding in an anaphase B–like fashion (10). However, because microtubules emanating from the spindle poles are not required to separate the homologous chromosomes but microtubules between the separating chromosomes are (8), this model is unlikely, at least as an explanation for mid-/late-anaphase movement. Furthermore, although lateral microtubule interactions with chromosomes predominate during metaphase of C. elegans oocyte meiosis, cryo-electron tomography data described end-on attachments between the separating chromosomes as anaphase progresses (11). This led to the suggestion that lateral microtubule interactions with chromosomes are responsible for the initial separation, but microtubule polymerization between the separating chromosomes is required for the later stages of segregation (11). The mechanisms involved in this initial separation have remained obscure. In this issue, Danlasky et al. show that the kinetochore is in fact required for the initial stages of chromosome segregation during female meiosis—an important step forward in our understanding of the mechanisms governing acentrosomal chromosome segregation (12).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Some of the key findings in Danlasky et al. Kinetochore proteins surround the outer surface of the chromosomes, resulting in a characteristic cup shape. As anaphase progresses, chromosomes come into close contact to the spindle poles (anaphase A). Chromosome stretching is provided by KNL-1, MIS-12 (KNL-3), and NDC-80 (KMN)–dependent forces. Once the spindle starts elongating (anaphase B), central spindle microtubules provide the pushing forces for chromosome segregation. At this stage, kinetochore proteins also occupy the inward face of separating chromosomes. Upon KMN network depletion, bivalents flatten, and chromosome congression and alignment are defective. Anaphase A chromosome movement is almost absent, which leads to error-prone anaphase B.By simultaneously depleting kinetochore proteins KNL-1 and KNL-3 in C. elegans, Danlasky et al. observed the meiotic chromosome congression and alignment defects described in previous studies (7). However, this double-depletion phenotype displayed three key characteristics that suggested a role for kinetochores in chromosome segregation, which are discussed below.The kinetochore is required for bivalent stretching. It was previously shown that the bivalent chromosomes stretch before the initiation of segregation (10). Danlasky et. al found that this stretching of the chromosomes did not occur when KNL-1,3 were depleted, indicating that the kinetochore is required for this process (Fig. 1). Together with the observation that kinetochore proteins appear to extend toward the spindle poles, this finding suggested that pulling forces resulting from the interaction between the kinetochore and spindle microtubules are occurring during metaphase/preanaphase (Fig. 1).The kinetochore is required for anaphase A. In C. elegans female meiosis, anaphase A occurs when homologous chromosomes begin to separate during spindle shortening, and anaphase B when the chromosomes separate alongside the spindle poles (10). Danlasky et al. observed that KNL-1,3 depletion drastically reduced the velocity of anaphase A, as chromosomes only separated when spindle poles began to move apart. This indicated that pulling forces caused by the interaction between the kinetochore and spindle microtubules are also important for the initial separation of homologous chromosomes in anaphase A.The kinetochore is required for proper separation of homologous chromosomes. In KNL-1,3 depletion strains, 60% of bivalents failed to separate before segregation began, resulting in intact bivalents being pulled to the same spindle pole (Fig. 1). This failure of homologous chromosomes to separate was not thought to be a result of KNL-1,3 depletion interfering with the cleavage of cohesin that holds the two homologous chromosomes together because (a) separase and AIR-2AuroraB, both of which are required for cohesin cleavage, localized normally during metaphase and anaphase, and (b) bivalents separated by metaphase II. This leaves the possibility open that the failure of bivalents to separate was due to the disrupted pulling forces thought to be important in bivalent stretching and anaphase A.Altogether, these data strongly indicate that the kinetochore is required not only for chromosome congression and alignment but also for the early stages of homologue separation. Anaphase B occurred successfully in the absence of KNL-1,3 but was more error prone, likely as a result of the earlier congression and anaphase A defects. While it is clear that chromosome masses do segregate in the absence of the kinetochore, this segregation is highly erroneous as a result of defects during the earlier stages of segregation in anaphase A (Fig. 1).The findings of Danlasky et al. raise testable hypotheses that could significantly enhance our understanding of acentrosomal chromosome segregation. Further investigation of the proposed pulling forces required during metaphase and early anaphase will be of great interest. Additionally, a more detailed analysis of the dynamic localization of separase and Securin, as well as assessing successful cohesin cleavage when KNL-1,3 are depleted, would back up the assertion that the failure of homologous chromosomes to separate was not due to the kinetochore impacting cohesin cleavage. It has previously been shown that the CLASP orthologue CLS-2 in C. elegans localizes to the kinetochore surrounding the bivalent chromosomes during metaphase before relocalizing to the central spindle during anaphase (7, 8, 13). It will be interesting to examine whether this key microtubule-stabilizing protein contributes to anaphase A pulling forces alongside its essential role in microtubule polymerization between chromosomes in anaphase B (8).While the regulation of proper chromosome segregation during acentrosomal meiosis in C. elegans is not yet fully understood, Danlasky et al.’s results represent a significant step forward in this endeavor by showing that the kinetochore is in fact required for the early stages of chromosome segregation.  相似文献   
49.
50.
The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii does not synthesize high‐value ketocarotenoids like canthaxanthin and astaxanthin; however, a β‐carotene ketolase (CrBKT) can be found in its genome. CrBKT is poorly expressed, contains a long C‐terminal extension not found in homologues and likely represents a pseudogene in this alga. Here, we used synthetic redesign of this gene to enable its constitutive overexpression from the nuclear genome of C. reinhardtii. Overexpression of the optimized CrBKT extended native carotenoid biosynthesis to generate ketocarotenoids in the algal host causing noticeable changes the green algal colour to reddish‐brown. We found that up to 50% of native carotenoids could be converted into astaxanthin and more than 70% into other ketocarotenoids by robust CrBKT overexpression. Modification of the carotenoid metabolism did not impair growth or biomass productivity of C. reinhardtii, even at high light intensities. Under different growth conditions, the best performing CrBKT overexpression strain was found to reach ketocarotenoid productivities up to 4.3 mg/L/day. Astaxanthin productivity in engineered C. reinhardtii shown here might be competitive with that reported for Haematococcus lacustris (formerly pluvialis) which is currently the main organism cultivated for industrial astaxanthin production. In addition, the extractability and bio‐accessibility of these pigments were much higher in cell wall‐deficient C. reinhardtii than the resting cysts of H. lacustris. Engineered C. reinhardtii strains could thus be a promising alternative to natural astaxanthin producing algal strains and may open the possibility of other tailor‐made pigments from this host.  相似文献   
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