首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
8-Hydroxyguanine (7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine, abbreviated as 8-OH-G or 8-oxoG) is the site of a frequent mutagenic DNA lesion produced by oxidative damage. MutM of E. coli and OGG1 of Saccharomyces cervisiae are known to possess 8-OH-G glycosylase and apurinic (AP) site lyase activity. cDNA clones of four isoforms (types 1a, 1b, 1c, and 2) of human OGG1 homologs (hMMH) were isolated. In order to examine whether expression of hMMH (hOGG1) protein actually occurs in human cells, we prepared type 1a specific antibody, and by using this antibody, we showed that type 1a protein isolated from HeLaS3 has 8-OH-G glycosylase/lyase activity. Furthermore, we showed that type 1a protein is a major enzyme for repair of the 8-OH-G lesion in human cells. In our second study, we generated a mouse line carrying an inactivated mutant Mmh allele by targeted gene disruption. Liver extracts of Mmh homozygous mutant mice were found to have loss of the nicking activity for the 8-OH-G site. In addition, the amount of endogenous 8-OH-G in liver DNA of the homozygous mice increased linearly with age, reaching 7-fold increase in 14 week old mice, over that of wild-type or heterozygous mice. Furthermore, when homozygous mice were fed the oxygen radical-forming agent KBrO3, to provide oxidative stress, the level of 8-OH-G in kidney DNA was tremendously increased: more than 200-fold as that of control mice without oxidative stress after 12 weeks of age. These results indicate that Ogg1/Mmh plays an essential role in the repair of the 8-OH-G residue in DNA produced by oxidative stress.  相似文献   

2.
A particularly important stress for all cells is the one produced by reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are formed as byproducts of cell metabolism. Among DNA damages induced by ROS, 8-hydroxyguanine (8-OH-G) is certainly the product that has retained most of the attention in the past few years. The biological relevance of 8-OH-G in DNA has been unveiled by the study of Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes involved in the neutralization of the mutagenic effects of 8-OH-G. These genes, fpg and mutY for E. coli and OGG1 for yeast, code for DNA glycosylases. Inactivation of any of those genes leads to a spontaneous mutator phenotype, characterized by the increase in GC to TA transversions. In yeast, the OGG1 gene encodes a DNA glycosylase/AP lyase that excises 8-OH-G from DNA. In human cells, the OGG1 gene is localized on chromosome 3p25 and encodes two forms of hOgg1 protein which result from an alternative splicing of a single messenger RNA. The alpha-hOgg1 protein has a nuclear localization whereas the beta-hOgg1 is targeted to the mitochondrion. Biochemical studies on the alpha-hOgg1 protein show that it is a DNA glycosylase/AP lyase that excises 8-OH-G and Fapy-G from gamma-irradiated DNA. Several approaches have been used to study the biological role of OGG1 in mammalian cells, ranging from its overexpression in cell lines to the generation of homozygous ogg1-/- null mice. Furthermore, to explore a possible role in the prevention of cancer, the cDNA coding for alpha-hOgg1 has been sequenced in human tumors. All these results point to 8-OH-G as an endogenous source of mutations in eukaryotes and to its likely involvement in the process of carcinogenesis. A review of the recent literature on the mammalian Ogg1 proteins, the main repair system involved in the elimination of this mutagenic lesion, is presented.  相似文献   

3.
Mokkapati SK  Wiederhold L  Hazra TK  Mitra S 《Biochemistry》2004,43(36):11596-11604
The eukaryotic 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) provides the major activity for repairing mutagenic 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) induced in the genome due to oxidative stress. Earlier in vitro studies showed that, after excising the base lesion, the human OGG1 remains bound to the resulting abasic (AP) site in DNA and does not turn over efficiently. The human AP-endonuclease (APE1), which cleaves the phosphodiester bond 5' to the AP site, in the next step of repair, displaces the bound OGG1 and thus increases its turnover. Here we show that NEIL1, a DNA glycosylase/AP lyase specific for many oxidized bases but with weak 8-oxoG excision activity, stimulates turnover of OGG1 in a fashion similar to that of APE1 and carries out betadelta-elimination at the AP site. This novel collaboration of two DNA glycosylases, which do not stably interact with each other, in stimulating 8-oxoguanine repair is possible because of higher AP site affinity and stronger AP lyase activity of NEIL1 relative to OGG1. Comparable levels of NEIL1 and OGG1 in some human cells raise the possibility that NEIL1 serves as a backup enzyme to APE1 in stimulating 8-oxoG repair in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
The human 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) is the major DNA glycosylase responsible for repair of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) and ring-opened fapyguanine, critical mutagenic DNA lesions that are induced by reactive oxygen species. Here we show that OGG1 is acetylated by p300 in vivo predominantly at Lys338/Lys341. About 20% of OGG1 is present in acetylated form in HeLa cells. Acetylation significantly increases OGG1's activity in vitro in the presence of AP-endonuclease by reducing its affinity for the abasic (AP) site product. The enhanced rate of repair of 8-oxoG in the genome by wild-type OGG1 but not the K338R/K341R mutant, ectopically expressed in oxidatively stressed OGG1-null mouse embryonic fibroblasts, suggests that acetylation increases OGG1 activity in vivo. At the same time, acetylation of OGG1 was increased by about 2.5-fold after oxidative stress with no change at the polypeptide level. OGG1 interacts with class I histone deacetylases, which may be responsible for its deacetylation. Based on these results, we propose a novel regulatory function of OGG1 acetylation in repair of its substrates in oxidatively stressed cells.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Human 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase (OGG1) is the main human base excision protein that removes a mutagenic lesion 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) from DNA. Since OGG1 has DNA glycosylase and weak abasic site (AP) lyase activities and is characterized by slow product release, turnover of the enzyme acting alone is low. Recently it was shown that human AP endonuclease (APE1) enhances the activity of OGG1. This enhancement was proposed to be passive, resulting from APE1 binding to or cleavage of AP sites after OGG1 dissociation. Here we present evidence that APE1 could actively displace OGG1 from its product, directly increasing the turnover of OGG1. We have observed that APE1 forms an electrophoretically detectable complex with OGG1 cross-linked to DNA by sodium borohydride. Using oligonucleotide substrates with a single 8-oxoG residue located in their 5'-terminal, central or 3'-terminal part, we have demonstrated that OGG1 activity does not increase only for the first of these three substrates, indicating that APE1 interacts with the DNA stretch 5' to the bound OGG1 molecule. In kinetic experiments, APE1 enhanced the product release constant but not the rate constant of base excision by OGG1. Moreover, OGG1 bound to a tetrahydrofuran analog of an abasic site stimulated the activity of APE1 on this substrate. Using a concatemeric DNA substrate, we have shown that APE1 likely displaces OGG1 in a processive mode, with OGG1 remaining on DNA but sliding away in search for a new lesion. Altogether, our data support a model in which APE1 specifically recognizes an OGG1/DNA complex, distorts a stretch of DNA 5' to the OGG1 molecule, and actively displaces the glycosylase from the lesion.  相似文献   

7.
The generation of reactive oxygen species in the cell provokes, among other lesions, the formation of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) in DNA. Due to mispairing with adenine during replication, 8-oxoG is highly mutagenic. To minimise the mutagenic potential of this oxidised purine, human cells have a specific 8-oxoG DNA glycosylase/AP lyase (hOGG1) that initiates the base excision repair (BER) of 8-oxoG. We show here that in vitro this first enzyme of the BER pathway is relatively inefficient because of a high affinity for the product of the reaction it catalyses (half-life of the complex is >2 h), leading to a lack of hOGG1 turnover. However, the glycosylase activity of hOGG1 is stimulated by the major human AP endonuclease, HAP1 (APE1), the enzyme that performs the subsequent step in BER, as well as by a catalytically inactive mutant (HAP1-D210N). In the presence of HAP1, the AP sites generated by the hOGG1 DNA glycosylase can be occupied by the endonuclease, avoiding the re-association of hOGG1. Moreover, the glycosylase has a higher affinity for a non-cleaved AP site than for the cleaved DNA product generated by HAP1. This would shift the equilibrium towards the free glycosylase, making it available to initiate new catalytic cycles. In contrast, HAP1 does not affect the AP lyase activity of hOGG1. This stimulation of only the hOGG1 glycosylase reaction accentuates the uncoupling of its glycosylase and AP lyase activities. These data indicate that, in the presence of HAP1, the BER of 8-oxoG residues can be highly efficient by bypassing the AP lyase activity of hOGG1 and thus excluding a potentially rate limiting step.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Nohmi T  Kim SR  Yamada M 《Mutation research》2005,591(1-2):60-73
Chromosome DNA is continuously exposed to various endogenous and exogenous mutagens. Among them, oxidation is one of the most common threats to genetic stability, and multiple DNA repair enzymes protect chromosome DNA from the oxidative damage. In Escherichia coli, three repair enzymes synergistically reduce the mutagenicity of oxidized base 8-hydroxy-guanine (8-OH-G). MutM DNA glycosylase excises 8-OH-G from 8-OH-G:C pairs in DNA and MutY DNA glycosylase removes adenine incorporated opposite template 8-OH-G during DNA replication. MutT hydrolyzes 8-OH-dGTP to 8-OH-dGMP in dNTP pool, thereby reducing the chance of misincorporation of 8-OH-dGTP by DNA polymerases. Simultaneous inactivation of MutM and MutY dramatically increases the frequency of spontaneous G:C to T:A mutations, and the deficiency of MutT leads to the enhancement of T:A to G:C transversions more than 1000-fold over the control level. In humans, the functional homologues of MutM, MutY and MutT, i.e., OGG1, MUTYH (MYH) and MTH1, contribute to the protection of genomic DNA from oxidative stress. Interestingly, several polymorphic forms of these proteins exist in human populations, and some of them are suggested to be associated with cancer susceptibility. Here, we review the polymorphic forms of OGG1, MUTYH and MTH1 involved in repair of 8-OH-G and 8-OH-dGTP, and discuss the significance of the polymorphisms in the maintenance of genomic integrity. We also summarize the polymorphic forms of human DNA polymerase eta, which may be involved in damage tolerance and mutagenesis induced by oxidative stress.  相似文献   

10.
Clustered damages are formed in DNA by ionising radiation and radiomimetic anticancer agents and are thought to be biologically severe. 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), a major DNA damage resulting from oxidative attack, is highly mutagenic leading to a high level of G·C→T·A transversions if not previously excised by OGG1 DNA glycosylase/AP lyase proteins in eukaryotes. However, 8-oxoG within clustered DNA damage may present a challenge to the repair machinery of the cell. The ability of yeast OGG1 to excise 8-oxoG was determined when another type of damage [dihydrothymine, uracil, 8-oxoG, abasic (AP) site or various types of single-strand breaks (SSBs)] is present on the complementary strand 1, 3 or 5 bases 5′ or 3′ opposite to 8-oxoG. Base damages have little or no influence on the excision of 8-oxoG by yeast OGG1 (yOGG1) whereas an AP site has a strong inhibitory effect. Various types of SSBs, obtained using either oligonucleotides with 3′- and 5′-phosphate termini around a gap or through conversion of an AP site with either endonuclease III or human AP endonuclease 1, strongly inhibit excision of 8-oxoG by yOGG1. Therefore, this large inhibitory effect of an AP site or a SSB may minimise the probability of formation of a double-strand break in the processing of 8-oxoG within clustered damages.  相似文献   

11.
In mammalian cells, repair of the most abundant endogenous premutagenic lesion in DNA, 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), is initiated by the bifunctional DNA glycosylase OGG1. By using purified human proteins, we have reconstituted repair of 8-oxoG lesions in DNA in vitro on a plasmid DNA substrate containing a single 8-oxoG residue. It is shown that efficient and complete repair requires only hOGG1, the AP endonuclease HAP1, DNA polymerase (Pol) β and DNA ligase I. After glycosylase base removal, repair occurred through the AP lyase step of hOGG1 followed by removal of the 3′-terminal sugar phosphate by the 3′-diesterase activity of HAP1. Addition of PCNA had a slight stimulatory effect on repair. Fen1 or high concentrations of Pol β were required to induce strand displacement DNA synthesis at incised 8-oxoG in the absence of DNA ligase. Fen1 induced Pol β strand displacement DNA synthesis at HAP1-cleaved AP sites differently from that at gaps introduced by hOGG1/HAP1 at 8-oxoG sites. In the presence of DNA ligase I, the repair reaction at 8-oxoG was confined to 1 nt replacement, even in the presence of high levels of Pol β and Fen1. Thus, the assembly of all the core proteins for 8-oxoG repair catalyses one major pathway that involves single nucleotide repair patches.  相似文献   

12.
The repair enzyme 8-oxoguanine glycosylase/ apyrimidinic/apurinic lyase (OGG) removes 8-hydroxy-2'deoxyguanosine (oh8dG) in human cells. Our goal was to examine oh8dG-removing activity in the cell nuclei of male C57BL/6 mouse brains treated with either forebrain ischemia-reperfusion (FblR) or sham operations. We found that the OGG activity in nuclear extracts, under the condition in which other nucleases did not destroy the oligodeoxynucleotide duplex, excised oh8dG with the greatest efficiency on the oligodeoxynucleotide duplex containing oh8dG/dC and with less efficiency on the heteroduplex containing oh8dG/dT, oh8dG/dG, or oh8dG/dA. This specificity was the same as for the recombinant type 1 OGG (OGG1) of humans. We observed that the OGG1 peptide and its activity in the mouse brain were significantly increased after 90 min of ischemia and 20-30 min of reperfusion. The increase in the protein level and in the activity of brain OGG1 correlated positively with the elevation of FblR-induced DNA lesions in an indicator gene (the c-fos gene) of the brain. The data suggest a possibility that the OGG1 protein may excise oh8dG in the mouse brain and that the activity of OGG1 may have a functional role in reducing oxidative gene damage in the brain after FblR.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The yeast OGG1 gene was recently cloned and shown to encode a protein that possesses N-glycosylase/AP lyase activities for the repair of oxidatively damaged DNA at sites of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoguanine). Similar activities have been identified for Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg) and Drosophila ribosomal protein S3. Both Fpg and S3 also contain a deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) activity that removes 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate at an incised 5' apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites via a beta-elimination reaction. Drosophila S3 also has an additional activity that removes trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate at a 3' incised AP site by a Mg2+-dependent hydrolytic mechanism. In view of the substrate similarities between Ogg1, Fpg and S3 at the level of base excision repair, we examined whether Ogg1 also contains dRpase activities. A glutathione S-transferase fusion protein of Ogg1 was purified and subsequently found to efficiently remove sugar-phosphate residues at incised 5' AP sites. Activity was also detected for the Mg2+-dependent removal of trans -4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate at 3' incised AP sites and from intact AP sites. Previous studies have shown that DNA repair proteins that possess AP lyase activity leave an inefficient DNA terminus for subsequent DNA synthesis steps associated with base excision repair. However, the results presented here suggest that in the presence of MgCl2, Ogg1 can efficiently process 8-oxoguanine so as to leave a one nucleotide gap that can be readily filled in by a DNA polymerase, and importantly, does not therefore require additional enzymes to process trans -4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate left at a 3' terminus created by a beta-elimination catalyst.  相似文献   

15.
8-Oxoguanine (8-oxoG), a common and mutagenic form of oxidized guanine in DNA, is eliminated mainly through base excision repair. In human cells its repair is initiated by human OGG1 (hOGG1), an 8-oxoG DNA glycosylase. We investigated the effects of an acute cadmium exposure of human lymphoblastoid cells on the activity of hOGG1. We show that coinciding with alteration of the redox cellular status, the 8-oxoG DNA glycosylase activity of hOGG1 was nearly completely inhibited. However, the hOGG1 activity returned to normal levels once the redox cellular status was normalized. In vitro, the activity of purified hOGG1 was abolished by cadmium and could not be recovered by EDTA. In cells, however, the reversible inactivation of OGG1 activity by cadmium was strictly associated with reversible oxidation of the protein. Moreover, the 8-oxoG DNA glycosylase activity of purified OGG1 and that from crude extracts were modulated by cysteine-modifying agents. Oxidation of OGG1 by the thiol oxidant diamide led to inhibition of the activity and a protein migration pattern similar to that seen in cadmium-treated cells. These results suggest that cadmium inhibits hOGG1 activity mainly by indirect oxidation of critical cysteine residues and that excretion of the metal from the cells leads to normalization of the redox cell status and restoration of an active hOGG1. The results presented here unveil a novel redox-dependent mechanism for the regulation of OGG1 activity.  相似文献   

16.
DNA glycosylases are key enzymes in the first step of base excision DNA repair, recognizing DNA damage and catalyzing the release of damaged nucleobases. Bifunctional DNA glycosylases also possess associated apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) lyase activity that nick the damaged DNA strand at an abasic (or AP) site, formed either spontaneously or at the first step of repair. NEIL1 is a bifunctional DNA glycosylase capable of processing lesions, including AP sites, not only in double-stranded but also in single-stranded DNA. Here, we show that proteins participating in DNA damage response, YB-1 and RPA, affect AP site cleavage by NEIL1. Stimulation of the AP lyase activity of NEIL1 was observed when an AP site was located in a 60 nt-long double-stranded DNA. Both RPA and YB-1 inhibited AP site cleavage by NEIL1 when the AP site was located in single-stranded DNA. Taking into account a direct interaction of YB-1 with the AP site, located in single-stranded DNA, and the high affinity of both YB-1 and RPA for single-stranded DNA, this behavior is presumably a consequence of a competition with NEIL1 for the DNA substrate. Xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group C protein (XPC), a key protein of another DNA repair pathway, was shown to interact directly with AP sites but had no effect on AP site cleavage by NEIL1.  相似文献   

17.
8-Hydroxyguanine (7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine: oh8Gua) is a damaged form of guanine induced by oxygen-free radicals and causes GC to TA transversions. Previously we isolated the hOGG1 gene, a human homolog of the yeast OGG1 gene, which encodes a DNA glycosylase and lyase to excise oh8Gua in DNA. In this study, we isolated a mouse homolog (Ogg1) of the OGG1 gene, characterized oh8Gua-specific DNA glycosylase/AP lyase activities of its product, and determined chromosomal localization and exon-intron organization of this gene. A predicted protein possessed five domains homologous to human and yeast OGG1 proteins. Helix-hairpin-helix and C2H2 zinc finger-like DNA-binding motifs found in human and yeast OGG1 proteins were also retained in mouse Ogg1 protein. The properties of a GST fusion protein were identical to human and yeast OGG1 proteins in glycosylase/lyase activities, their substrate specificities, and suppressive activities against the spontaneous mutagenesis of an Escherichia coli mutM mutY double mutant. The mouse Ogg1 gene was mapped to Chromosome (Chr) 6, and consisted of 7 exons approximately 6 kb long. Two DNA-binding motifs were encoded in exons 4 through 5. These data will facilitate the investigation of the OGG1 gene to elucidate the relationship between oxidative DNA damage and carcinogenesis. Received: 17 July 1997 / Accepted: 15 September 1997  相似文献   

18.
Eight alternatively spliced isoforms of human 8‐oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (OGG1) (OGG1‐1a to ‐1c and ‐2a to ‐2e) are registered in the National Center for Biotechnology Information. OGG1(s) in mitochondria have not yet been fully characterized biochemically. In this study, we purified mitochondrial recombinant OGG1‐1b protein and compared its activity with nuclear OGG1‐1a protein. The reaction rate constant (kg) of the 7,8‐dihydro‐8‐oxoguanine (8‐oxoG) glycosylase activity of OGG1‐1b was 8‐oxoG:C >> 8‐oxoG:T >> 8‐oxoG:G > 8‐oxoG:A (7.96, 0.805, 0.070, and 0.015 min?1, respectively) and that of the N‐glycosylase/DNA lyase activity (kgl) of OGG1‐1b was 8‐oxoG:C > 8‐oxoG:T ?8‐oxoG:G >> 8‐oxoG:A (0.286, 0.079, 0.040, and negligible min?1, respectively). These reaction rate constants were similar to those of OGG1‐1a except for kgl against 8‐oxoG:A. APEX nuclease 1 was required to promote DNA strand breakage by OGG1‐1b. These results suggest that OGG1‐1b is associated with 8‐oxoG cleavage in human mitochondria and that the mechanism of this repair is similar to that of nuclear OGG1‐1a.  相似文献   

19.
A major DNA lesion is the strongly mutagenic 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) base, formed by oxidative attack at guanine and which leads to a high level of G.C-->T.A transversions. Clustered DNA damages are formed in DNA following exposure to ionizing radiation or radiomimetic anticancer agents and are thought to be biologically severe. The presence of 8-oxoG within clustered DNA damage may present a challenge to the repair machinery of the cell, if the OGG1 DNA glycosylase/AP lyase protein, present in eukaryotic cells, does not efficiently excise its substrate, 8-oxoG. In this study, specific oligonucleotide constructs containing an 8-oxoG located in several positions opposite to another damage (5,6-dihydrothymine (DHT), uracil, 8-oxoG, AP site, or various types of single strand breaks) were used to determine the relative efficiency of purified human OGG1 and mammalian XRS5 nuclear extracts to excise 8-oxoG from clustered damages. A base damage (DHT, uracil, and 8-oxoG) on the opposite strand has little or no influence on the rate of excision of 8-oxoG whereas the presence of either an AP site or various types of single strand breaks has a strong inhibitory effect on the formation of a SSB due to the excision of 8-oxoG by both hOGG1 and the nuclear extract. The binding of hOGG1 to 8-oxoG is not significantly affected by the presence of a neighboring lesion.  相似文献   

20.
The OGG1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae codes for a DNA glycosylase that excises 7,8-dihydro-8- oxoguanine (8-OxoG) and 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5- N -methylformamidopyrimidine (Fapy) from damaged DNA. In this paper, we have analysed the substrate specificity and the catalytic mechanism of the Ogg1 protein acting on DNA subtrates containing 8-OxoG residues or apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites. The Ogg1 protein displays a marked preference for DNA duplexes containing 8-OxoG placed opposite a cytosine, the rank order for excision of 8-OxoG and cleavage efficiencies being 8-OxoG/C >8-OxoG/T >>8-OxoG/G and 8-OxoG/A. The cleavage of the DNA strand implies the excision of 8-OxoG followed by abeta-elimination reaction at the 3'-side of the resulting AP site. The Ogg1 protein efficiently cleaves a DNA duplex where a preformed AP site is placed opposite a cytosine (AP/C). In contrast, AP/T, AP/A or AP/G substrates are incised with a very low efficiency. Furthermore, cleavage of 8-OxoG/C or AP/C substrates implies the formation of a reaction intermediate that is converted into a stable covalent adduct in the presence of sodium borohydre (NaBH4). Therefore, the Ogg1 protein is a eukaryotic DNA glycosylase/AP lyase. Sequence homology searches reveal that Ogg1 probably shares a common ancestor gene with the endonuclease III of Escherichia coli. A consensus sequence indicates a highly conserved lysine residue, K120 of endonuclease III or K241 of Ogg1, respectively. Mutations of K241 to Gln (K241Q) and Arg (K241R) have been obtained after site directed mutagenesis of OGG1. Mutation K241Q completely abolishes DNA glycosylase activity and covalent complex formation in the presence of NaBH4. However, the K241Q mutant still binds DNA duplexes containing 8-OxoG/C. In contrast, K241R mutation results in a catalytically active form of Ogg1. These results strongly suggest that the free amino group of Lys241 is involved in the catalytic mechanism of the Ogg1 protein.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号