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1.
Incontinentia pigmenti (IP), or "Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome," is an X-linked dominant disorder characterized by abnormalities of skin, teeth, hair, and eyes; skewed X-inactivation; and recurrent miscarriages of male fetuses. IP results from mutations in the gene for NF-kappaB essential modulator (NEMO), with deletion of exons 4-10 of NEMO accounting for >80% of new mutations. Male fetuses inheriting this mutation and other "null" mutations of NEMO usually die in utero. Less deleterious mutations can result in survival of males subjects, but with ectodermal dysplasia and immunodeficiency. Male patients with skin, dental, and ocular abnormalities typical of those seen in female patients with IP (without immunodeficiency) are rare. We investigated four male patients with clinical hallmarks of IP. All four were found to carry the deletion normally associated with male lethality in utero. Survival in one patient is explained by a 47,XXY karyotype and skewed X inactivation. Three other patients possess a normal 46,XY karyotype. We demonstrate that these patients have both wild-type and deleted copies of the NEMO gene and are therefore mosaic for the common mutation. Therefore, the repeat-mediated rearrangement leading to the common deletion does not require meiotic division. Hypomorphic alleles, a 47,XXY karyotype, and somatic mosaicism therefore represent three mechanisms for survival of males carrying a NEMO mutation.  相似文献   
2.
The enzyme aminopeptidase N (APN, also known as CD13) is known to play an important role in tumor proliferation, attachment, angiogenesis, and tumor invasion. In this study, we hypothesized that a radiolabeled high affinity APN inhibitor could be potentially useful for imaging APN expression in vivo. Here, we report synthesis, radiolabeling, and biological evaluation of new probestin conjugates containing a tripeptide, N,N-dimethylglycyl-l-lysinyl-l-cysteinylamide (N(3)S), chelator. New probestin conjugates were synthesized by solid-phase peptide synthesis method, purified by reversed-phase HPLC, and characterized by electrospray mass spectrometry. The conjugates were complexed with Re(V) and (99m)Tc(V) by transmetalation using corresponding Re(V) or (99m)Tc(V) gluconate synthon. The mass spectral analyses of ReO-N(3)S-Probestin conjugates were consistent with the formation of neutral Re(V)O-N(3)S complexes. Initial biological activity of ReO-N(3)S-Probestin conjugates determined by performing an in vitro APN enzyme assay using intact HT-1080 cells demonstrated higher inhibition of APN enzyme activity than bestatin. In vivo biodistribution and whole body planar imaging studies of (99m)TcO-N(3)S-PEG(2)-Probestin performed in nude mice xenografted with human fibrosarcoma tumors derived from HT-1080 cells demonstrated a tumor uptake value of 2.88 ± 0.64%ID/g with tumor-to-blood and tumor-to-muscle ratios of 4.8 and 5.3, respectively, at 1 h postinjection (p.i.). Tumors were clearly visible in whole body planar image obtained at 1 h p.i., but not when the APN was competitively blocked with a coinjection of excess nonradioactive ReO-N(3)S-PEG(2)-Probestin conjugate. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using high affinity APN inhibitor conjugates as targeting vectors for in vivo targeting of APN.  相似文献   
3.
Death-associated protein kinase 1 (DAPK-1) is a Ca2+/CaM-regulated kinase involved in multiple cellular signalling pathways that trigger cell survival, apoptosis, and autophagy. An alternatively spliced product expressed from the dapk1 locus, named s-DAPK-1, does not contain the kinase domain but has part of the DAPK-1 ankyrin-repeat and a novel polypeptide tail extension which is processed proteolytically in vivo. Cleavage of this polypeptide tail from s-DAPK-1 can regulate the ability of the protein to mimic one of the biological functions of DAPK-1 in promoting membrane blebbing. The full-length DAPK-1 protein is a relatively long-lived protein whose half-life is regulated by stress-activated signals from TNFR1 or HSP90 that can promote DAPK-1 protein degradation. Transfection of s-DAPK-1 into cells can also have a direct effect on DAPK-1 protein itself by promoting DAPK-1 de-stabilization. This effect does not require the novel polypeptide tail-extension of s-DAPK-1, as the core ankyrin-repeat containing region of s-DAPK-1 is sufficient to promote DAPK-1 protein de-stabilization. Conversely, the minimal domain on full-length DAPK-1 that responds to the effect of s-DAPK-1 is not the ankyrin-repeat domain but the core kinase domain of DAPK-1. The de-stabilization of DAPK-1 by s-DAPK-1 is not dependent upon the proteasome. However, s-DAPK-1 itself is a very short-lived protein which is regulated by a proteasomal-dependent pathway. Together, these data identify a novel function of s-DAPK-1 in controlling the half-life of DAPK-1 protein itself and indicate that the degradation of each gene product is controlled by two distinct degradation pathways.  相似文献   
4.
Alpha-14 giardin (annexin E1), a member of the alpha giardin family of annexins, has been shown to localize to the flagella of the intestinal protozoan parasite Giardia lamblia. Alpha giardins show a common ancestry with the annexins, a family of proteins most of which bind to phospholipids and cellular membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner and are implicated in numerous membrane-related processes including cytoskeletal rearrangements and membrane organization. It has been proposed that alpha-14 giardin may play a significant role during the cytoskeletal rearrangement during differentiation of Giardia. To gain a better understanding of alpha-14 giardin's mode of action and its biological role, we have determined the three-dimensional structure of alpha-14 giardin and its phospholipid-binding properties. Here, we report the apo crystal structure of alpha-14 giardin determined in two different crystal forms as well as the Ca2+-bound crystal structure of alpha-14 giardin, refined to 1.9, 1.6 and 1.65 Å, respectively. Although the overall fold of alpha-14 giardin is similar to that of alpha-11 giardin, multiwavelength anomalous dispersion phasing was required to solve the alpha-14 giardin structure, indicating significant structural differences between these two members of the alpha giardin family. Unlike most annexin structures, which typically possess N-terminal domains, alpha-14 giardin is composed of only a core domain, followed by a C-terminal extension that may serve as a ligand for binding to cytoskeletal protein partners in Giardia. In the Ca2+-bound structure we detected five bound calcium ions, one of which is a novel, highly coordinated calcium-binding site not previously observed in annexin structures. This novel high-affinity calcium-binding site is composed of seven protein donor groups, a feature rarely observed in crystal structures. In addition, phospholipid-binding assays suggest that alpha-14 giardin exhibits calcium-dependent binding to phospholipids that coordinate cytoskeletal disassembly/assembly during differentiation of the parasite.  相似文献   
5.
We present a new synthesis, based on a suite of complementary approaches, of the primary production and carbon sink in forests of the 25 member states of the European Union (EU‐25) during 1990–2005. Upscaled terrestrial observations and model‐based approaches agree within 25% on the mean net primary production (NPP) of forests, i.e. 520±75 g C m?2 yr?1 over a forest area of 1.32 × 106 km2 to 1.55 × 106 km2 (EU‐25). New estimates of the mean long‐term carbon forest sink (net biome production, NBP) of EU‐25 forests amounts 75±20 g C m?2 yr?1. The ratio of NBP to NPP is 0.15±0.05. Estimates of the fate of the carbon inputs via NPP in wood harvests, forest fires, losses to lakes and rivers and heterotrophic respiration remain uncertain, which explains the considerable uncertainty of NBP. Inventory‐based assessments and assumptions suggest that 29±15% of the NBP (i.e., 22 g C m?2 yr?1) is sequestered in the forest soil, but large uncertainty remains concerning the drivers and future of the soil organic carbon. The remaining 71±15% of the NBP (i.e., 53 g C m?2 yr?1) is realized as woody biomass increments. In the EU‐25, the relatively large forest NBP is thought to be the result of a sustained difference between NPP, which increased during the past decades, and carbon losses primarily by harvest and heterotrophic respiration, which increased less over the same period.  相似文献   
6.
We have determined the DNA sequence of the two adjacent genes for the alpha and beta chains of tryptophan synthase in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, along with 34 5'-flanking and 799 3'-flanking base pairs. The gene order is trpBA as predicted from earlier genetic studies, and the two cistrons overlap by 4 bp; a ribosome binding site for the second gene is evident in the coding sequence of the first gene. We have also determined the location of three large deletions eliminating portions of each gene. A detailed comparison of the deduced P. aeruginosa amino acid sequence with those published for E. coli, Bacillus subtilis, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows much similarity throughout the beta and most of the alpha subunit. Most of the residues implicated by chemical modification or mutation as being critical for enzymatic activity are conserved, along with many others, suggesting that three-dimensional structure has remained largely constant during evolution. We also report the construction of a recombinant plasmid that overproduces a slightly modified alpha subunit from P. aeruginosa that can form a functionally effective multimer with normal E. coli beta 2 subunit in vivo.   相似文献   
7.
Small monomeric RAC/ROP GTPases act as molecular switches in signal transduction processes of plant development and stress responses. They emerged as crucial players in plant-pathogen interactions either by supporting susceptibility or resistance. In a recent publication, we showed that constitutively activated (CA) mutants of different barley (Hordeum vulgare) RAC/ROPs regulate susceptibility to barley fungal leaf pathogens of different life style in a contrasting way. This illustrates the distinctive signalling roles of RAC/ROPs for different plant-pathogen combinations. We also reported the involvement of RAC/ROPs in plant epidermis development in a monocotyledonous plant. Here we further discuss a failure of CA HvRAC/ROP-expressing barley to normally develop stomata.Key words: Hordeum vulgare, G-proteins, RAC, ROP, cell expansion, stomata, transpirationMembers of the RHO family of small G-proteins in plants (RAC/ROPs) regulate signal transduction processes at the plasma membrane.1 They act as multifunctional signalling switches in plant development and a variety of stress responses. RAC/ROP GTPases play regulatory roles in polar growth and cell morphogenesis in several cell systems including pollen tubes, developing root hairs and leaf pavement cells.2In a recent publication,3 we showed that constitutively activated (CA) mutants of different barley (Hordeum vulgare) RAC/ROPs support susceptibility to the barley powdery mildew fungus Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei (Bgh). CA HvRAC1 supported susceptibility to biotrophic Bgh but resistance to hemibiotrophic Magnaporthe oryzae in barley at the penetration level in both cases. Additionally, CA HvRAC1 supported local callose deposition at sites of attack from Bgh and a secondary H2O2 burst in whole non-penetrated epidermal cells. This supports a regulatory function of RAC/ROPs in plant defence1 and the potential corruption of defence pathways in susceptibility to Bgh. Because the rice ortholog of HvRAC1, OsRAC1, can regulate an H2O2 burst via activation of the plasma membrane NADPH oxidase OsRBOHB,4 one can speculate that the secondary H2O2 burst in CA HvRAC1 barley could also be caused by over-activation of an NADPH oxidase. However, CA HvRAC1 barley was also more susceptible to fungal penetration, and penetrated cells did not show an H2O2 burst. Hence, CA HvRAC1 did not contribute to penetration resistance, and the H2O2 burst might have been suppressed by Bgh after successful penetration. Interestingly, Bgh secretes a catalase during interaction with the plant.5The involvement of RAC/ROPs in plant development has been widely studied in the dicots Arabidopsis and tobacco. In Arabidopsis, CA AtRAC/ROPs disturb root hair tip growth and epidermal cell morphogenesis.6,7 We showed similar developmental aberrations as a result of CA HvRAC/ROP expression in monocotyledonous barley. Root hair polarity disruption and enhanced leaf epidermal cell expansion was observed in CA HvRAC/ROP expressing barley. Here, we further report on reduced or abnormal development of stomata as an effect of CA HvRAC/ROP expression.In barley, stomata and short epidermal cells alternate in a row of leaf epidermal cells (Fig. 1A). The number of stomata number was significantly reduced in three CA HvRAC/ROP (CA HvRACB, CAHvRAC3, CA HvRAC1) expressing barley genotypes when compared to azygous controls (barley siblings that lost the transgene due to segregation) (Fig. 1E). In part, this could be explained by enhanced length of epidermal cells intercalated between stomata (Fig. 1B). The presence of longer epidermal cells in all CA HvRAC/ROP-barleys further supports that RAC/ROPs are operating in epidermal cell expansion.3Open in a separate windowFigure 1Stomatal abnormalities observed in CA HvROPexpressing transgenic barley leaves. (A) Wild type leaf adaxial epidermis with alternating stomata complexes (arrows) and short epidermal cells (asterisk). (B) Presence of more than one short epidermal cell in between two stomata. Arrows point the stomata. Double headed arrows highlight intercalated cells with enhanced cell length (C) Two stomata lacking an intercalated short epidermal cell. (D) Stoma failed to develop and left an abnormal blank cell. (E) Average number of stomata present in 5 cm of a stomatal row in transgenic plants expressing distinct CA barley CA HvRAC/ROPs. For all samples, stomatal rows present on either side of the mid rib were counted in the leaf upper epidermis. Fully expanded leaves of 3-weeks-old barley plants were used for counting stomata. Error bars show 95% confidence intervals. Repetition of the experiment led to similar results. Scale bars = 50 µm.Previously, we carried out porometry experiments to measure stomata conductivity in CA HvRACB expressing barley leaves.8 The CA HvRACB leaves showed up to 50% less transpiration than azygous controls without any treatment. Additionally, CA HvRACB leaves were less responsive to abscisic acid (ABA) and subsequently they could not effectively reduce transpiration when treated with ABA or when cut-off from water supply.8 Our data on numbers of stomata per leaf segment could now explain the lower rates of transpiration in non-stressed CA HvRACB barley when compared to wild type.Apart from the stomata number, developmental abnormalities were observed in the arrangement of epidermal cells. Generally, the shape of epidermal cells was less regular in CA HvRAC/ROP barley.3 We also observed the presence of more than one short epidermal cell in between two stomata (Fig. 1B) or two stomata lacking an intercalated short epidermal cell (Fig. 1C), or stomata failed to develop, which ended up in an abnormally short epidermal cell (Fig. 1D). Although such abnormalities were also rarely observed in wild type plants, all three CA HvRAC/ROP-barley leaves exhibited a clearly higher frequency of abnormalities in a given length of a stomata row. Together, CA HvRAC/ROPs had an effect on both the number and development of stomata. These observations suggest that RAC/ROPs are not only operating in cell expansion but also in barley cell differentiation for stomata development.  相似文献   
8.
Death-associated protein kinase 1 (DAPK-1) is a multidomain protein kinase with diverse roles in autophagic, apoptotic and survival pathways. Bioinformatic screens were used to identify a small internal mRNA from the DAPK-1 locus (named s-DAPK-1). This encodes a 295 amino acid polypeptide encompassing part of the ankyrin-repeat domain, the P-loop motifs, part of the cytoskeletal binding domain of DAPK-1, and a unique C-terminal 'tail' extension not present in DAPK-1. Expression of s-DAPK-1 mRNA was detected in a panel of normal human tissues as well as primary colorectal cancers, indicating that its expression occurs in vivo. s-DAPK-1 gene transfection into cells produces two protein products: one with a denatured mass of 44 kDa, and a smaller product of 40 kDa. Double alanine mutation of the C-terminal tail extension of s-DAPK-1 (Gly296/Arg297) prevented production of the 40 kDa fragment, suggesting that the smaller product is generated by in vivo proteolytic processing. The s-DAPK-1 gene cannot substitute for full-length DAPK-1 in an mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase-dependent apoptotic transfection assay. However, the transfection of s-DAPK-1 was able to mimic full-length DAPK-1 in the induction of membrane blebbing. The 44 kDa protease-resistant mutant s-DAPK-1G296A/R297A had very low activity in membrane blebbing, whereas the 40 kDa s-DAPK-1Deltatail protein exhibited the highest levels of membrane blebbing. Deletion of the tail extension of s-DAPK-1 increased its half-life, shifted the equilibrium of the protein from cytoskeletal to soluble cytosolic pools, and altered green fluorescent protein-tagged s-DAPK-1 protein localization as observed by confocal microscopy. These data highlight the existence of an alternative product of the DAPK-1 locus, and suggest that proteolytic removal of the C-terminal tail of s-DAPK-1 is required to stimulate maximally its membrane-blebbing function.  相似文献   
9.
The role of migratory birds in the movement of the highly pathogenic (HP) avian influenza H5N1 remains a subject of debate. Testing hypotheses regarding intercontinental movement of low pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) viruses will help evaluate the potential that wild birds could carry Asian-origin strains of HP avian influenza to North America during migration. Previous North American assessments of LPAI genetic variation have found few Asian reassortment events. Here, we present results from whole-genome analyses of LPAI isolates collected in Alaska from the northern pintail (Anas acuta), a species that migrates between North America and Asia. Phylogenetic analyses confirmed the genetic divergence between Asian and North American strains of LPAI, but also suggested inter-continental virus exchange and at a higher frequency than previously documented. In 38 isolates from Alaska, nearly half (44.7%) had at least one gene segment more closely related to Asian than to North American strains of LPAI. Additionally, sequences of several Asian LPAI isolates from GenBank clustered more closely with North American northern pintail isolates than with other Asian origin viruses. Our data support the role of wild birds in the intercontinental transfer of influenza viruses, and reveal a higher degree of transfer in Alaska than elsewhere in North America.  相似文献   
10.
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