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1.
A galactose-specific carbohydrate binding protein has been identified in eggs and embryos of the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus . This protein, named echinonectin (Alliegro et al., 1988, J. Cell Biol. 107; 2319–2327) has been described as a cell-substrate adhesion protein functioning during embryonic development. The purified protein has an apparent molecular weight of 220 kDa and exists as a dimer of apparently identical 110 kDa subunits. The carbohytrate specificity of the purified protein was examined through the use of competition assays. The protein has a marked specificity for galactose and fucose and a higher affinity for polymers of galactose or galactose sulfate such as carrageenan.  相似文献   

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Porphyromonas gingivalis, a Gram-negative asaccharolytic anaerobe, is a major causative organism of chronic periodontitis. Because the bacterium utilizes amino acids as energy and carbon sources and incorporates them mainly as dipeptides, a wide variety of dipeptide production processes mediated by dipeptidyl-peptidases (DPPs) should be beneficial for the organism. In the present study, we identified the fourth P. gingivalis enzyme, DPP5. In a dpp4-7-11-disrupted P. gingivalis ATCC 33277, a DPP7-like activity still remained. PGN_0756 possessed an activity indistinguishable from that of the mutant, and was identified as a bacterial orthologue of fungal DPP5, because of its substrate specificity and 28.5% amino acid sequence identity with an Aspergillus fumigatus entity. P. gingivalis DPP5 was composed of 684 amino acids with a molecular mass of 77,453, and existed as a dimer while migrating at 66 kDa on SDS-PAGE. It preferred Ala and hydrophobic residues, had no activity toward Pro at the P1 position, and no preference for hydrophobic P2 residues, showed an optimal pH of 6.7 in the presence of NaCl, demonstrated Km and kcat/Km values for Lys-Ala-MCA of 688 μm and 11.02 μm−1 s−1, respectively, and was localized in the periplasm. DPP5 elaborately complemented DPP7 in liberation of dipeptides with hydrophobic P1 residues. Examinations of DPP- and gingipain gene-disrupted mutants indicated that DPP4, DPP5, DPP7, and DPP11 together with Arg- and Lys-gingipains cooperatively liberate most dipeptides from nutrient oligopeptides. This is the first study to report that DPP5 is expressed not only in eukaryotes, but also widely distributed in bacteria and archaea.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Schistosomiasis japonica remains a major public health problem in China. Its pathogen, Schistosoma japonicum has a complex life cycle and a unique repertoire of genes expressed at different life cycle stages. Exploring schistosome gene regulation will yield the best prospects for new drug targets and vaccine candidates. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a highly conserved class of noncoding RNA that control many biological processes by sequence-specific inhibition of gene expression. Although a large number of miRNAs have been identified from plants to mammals, it remains no experimental proof whether schistosome exist miRNAs.

Methodology and Results

We have identified novel miRNAs from Schistosoma japonicum by cloning and sequencing a small (18–26 nt) RNA cDNA library from the adult worms. Five novel miRNAs were identified from 227 cloned RNA sequences and verified by Northern blot. Alignments of the miRNAs with corresponding family members indicated that four of them belong to a metazoan miRNA family: let-7, miR-71, bantam and miR-125. The fifth potentially new (non conserved) miRNA appears to belong to a previously undescribed family in the genus Schistosome. The novel miRNAs were designated as sja-let-7, sja-miR-71, sja-bantam, sja-miR-125 and sja-miR-new1, respectively. Expression of sja-let-7, sja-miR-71 and sja-bantam were analyzed in six stages of the life cycle, i.e. egg, miracidium, sporocyst, cercaria, schistosomulum, and adult worm, by a modified stem-loop reverse transcribed polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method developed in our laboratory. The expression patterns of these miRNAs were highly stage-specific. In particular, sja-miR-71 and sja-bantam expression reach their peaks in the cercaria stage and then drop quickly to the nadirs in the schistosomulum stage, following penetration of cercaria into a mammalian host.

Conclusions

Authentic miRNAs were identified for the first time in S. japonicum, including a new schistosome family member. The different expression patterns of the novel miRNAs over the life stages of S. japonicum suggest that they may mediate important roles in Schistosome growth and development.  相似文献   

5.
To determine the prevalence of drug resistant bacteria colonizing laboratory mice, we isolated and characterized vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus species (VRE) from commercially available mice. A total of 24 VRE isolates were obtained from 19 of 21 mouse strains supplied by 4 commercial breeding companies. Of these, 19 isolates of E. gallinarum and 5 isolates of E. casseliflavus possessing the vanC1 and vanC2/3 genes intrinsically, exhibited intermediate resistance to vancomycin respectively. In addition, these isolates also exhibited diverse resistant patterns to erythromycin, tetracycline, and ciprofloxacin, whereas the use of antibiotics had not been undertaken in mouse strains tested in this study. Although 6 virulence-associated genes (ace, asa, cylA, efaA, esp, and gelE) and secretion of gelatinase and hemolysin were not detected in all isolates, 23 of 24 isolates including the isolates of E. casselifalvus secreted ATP into culture supernatants. Since secretion of ATP by bacteria resident in the intestinal tract modulates the local immune responses, the prevalence of ATP-secreting VRE in mice therefore needs to be considered in animal experiments that alter the gut microflora by use of antibiotics.  相似文献   

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Nitrogen is one of the most important limiting factors for plant growth. However, as ammonium is readily converted into ammonia (NH3) when soil pH rises above 8.0, this activity depletes the availability of ammonium (NH4 +) in alkaline soils, consequently preventing the growth of most plant species. The perennial wild grass Puccinellia tenuiflora is one of a few plants able to grow in soils with extremely high salt and alkaline pH (>9.0) levels. Here, we assessed how this species responds to ammonium under such conditions by isolating and analyzing the functions of a putative ammonium transporter (PutAMT1;1). PutAMT1;1 is the first member of the AMT1 (ammonium transporter) family that has been identified in P. tenuiflora. This gene (1) functionally complemented a yeast mutant deficient in ammonium uptake (2), is preferentially expressed in the anther of P. tenuiflora, and (3) is significantly upregulated by ammonium ions in both the shoot and roots. The PutAMT1;1 protein is localized in the plasma membrane and around the nuclear periphery in yeast cells and P. tenuiflora suspension cells. Immunoelectron microscopy analysis also indicated that PutAMT1;1 is localized in the endomembrane. The overexpression of PutAMT1;1 in A. thaliana enhanced plant growth, and increased plant susceptibility to toxic methylammonium (MeA). Here, we confirmed that PutAMT1;1 is an ammonium-inducible ammonium transporter in P. tenuiflora. On the basis of the results of PutAMT1;1 overexpression in A. thaliana, this gene might be useful for improving the root to shoot mobilization of MeA (or NH4 +).  相似文献   

9.
In addition to the S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AD) present in all organisms, trypanosomatids including Leishmania spp. possess an additional copy, annotated as the putative S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase-like proenzyme (ADL). Phylogenetic analysis confirms that ADL is unique to trypanosomatids and has several unique features such as lack of autocatalytic cleavage and a distinct evolutionary lineage, even from trypanosomatid ADs. In Trypanosoma ADL was found to be enzymaticaly dead but plays an essential regulatory role by forming a heterodimer complex with AD. However, no structural or functional information is available about ADL from Leishmania spp. Here, in this study, we report the cloning, expression, purification, structural and functional characterization of Leishmania donovani (L. donovani) ADL using biophysical, biochemical and computational techniques. Biophysical studies show that, L. donovani ADL binds S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and putrescine which are natural substrates of AD. Computational modeling and docking studies showed that in comparison to the ADs of other organisms including human, residues involved in putrescine binding are partially conserved while the SAM binding residues are significantly different. In silico protein-protein interaction study reveals that L. donovani ADL can interact with AD. These results indicate that L. donovani ADL posses a novel substrate binding property and may play an essential role in polyamine biosynthesis with a different mode of function from known proteins of the S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase super family.  相似文献   

10.
Lactobacilli are known to use plant materials as a food source. Many such materials are rich in rhamnose-containing polyphenols, and thus it can be anticipated that lactobacilli will contain rhamnosidases. Therefore, genome sequences of food-grade lactobacilli were screened for putative rhamnosidases. In the genome of Lactobacillus plantarum, two putative rhamnosidase genes (ram1Lp and ram2Lp) were identified, while in Lactobacillus acidophilus, one rhamnosidase gene was found (ramALa). Gene products from all three genes were produced after introduction into Escherichia coli and were then tested for their enzymatic properties. Ram1Lp, Ram2Lp, and RamALa were able to efficiently hydrolyze rutin and other rutinosides, while RamALa was, in addition, able to cleave naringin, a neohesperidoside. Subsequently, the potential application of Lactobacillus rhamnosidases in food processing was investigated using a single matrix, tomato pulp. Recombinant Ram1Lp and RamALa enzymes were shown to remove the rhamnose from rutinosides in this material, but efficient conversion required adjustment of the tomato pulp to pH 6. The potential of Ram1Lp for fermentation of plant flavonoids was further investigated by expression in the food-grade bacterium Lactococcus lactis. This system was used for fermentation of tomato pulp, with the aim of improving the bioavailability of flavonoids in processed tomato products. While import of flavonoids into L. lactis appeared to be a limiting factor, rhamnose removal was confirmed, indicating that rhamnosidase-producing bacteria may find commercial application, depending on the technological properties of the strains and enzymes.Lactobacilli such as Lactobacillus plantarum have been used for centuries to ferment vegetables such as cabbage, cucumber, and soybean (34). Fruit pulps, for instance, those from tomato, have also been used as a substrate for lactobacilli for the production of probiotic juices (38). Recently, the full genomic sequences of several lactobacilli have become available (1, 22). A number of the plant-based substrates for lactobacilli are rich in rhamnose sugars, which are often conjugated to polyphenols, as in the case of cell wall components and certain flavonoid antioxidants. Utilization of these compounds by lactobacilli would involve α-l-rhamnosidases, which catalyze the hydrolytic release of rhamnose. Plant-pathogenic fungi such as Aspergillus species produce the rhamnosidases when cultured in the presence of naringin, a rhamnosilated flavonoid (24, 26). Bacteria such as Bacillus species have also been shown to use similar enzyme activities for metabolizing bacterial biofilms which contain rhamnose (17, 40).In food processing, rhamnosidases have been applied primarily for debittering of citrus juices. Part of the bitter taste of citrus is caused by naringin (Fig. (Fig.1),1), which loses its bitter taste upon removal of the rhamnose (32). More recently, application of rhamnosidases for improving the bioavailability of flavonoids has been described. Human intake of flavonoids has been associated with a reduced risk of coronary heart disease in epidemiological studies (19). Food flavonoids need to be absorbed efficiently from what we eat in order to execute any beneficial function. Absorption occurs primarily in the small intestine (12, 37). Unabsorbed flavonoids will arrive in the colon, where they will be catabolized by the microflora, which is then present in huge quantities. Therefore, it would be desirable for flavonoids to be consumed in a form that is already optimal for absorption in the small intestine prior to their potential degradation. For the flavonoid quercetin, it has been demonstrated that the presence of rhamnoside groups inhibits its absorption about fivefold (20). A number of flavonoids which are present in frequently consumed food commodities, such as tomato and citrus products, often carry rutinoside (6-β-l-rhamnosyl-d-glucose) or neohesperidoside (2-β-l-rhamnosyl-d-glucose) residues (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Therefore, removal of the rhamnose groups from such flavonoid rutinosides and neohesperidosides prior to consumption could enhance their intestinal absorption. With this aim, studies were recently carried out toward the application of fungal enzyme preparations as a potential means to selectively remove rhamnoside moieties (16, 30).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Chemical structures of rhamnose-containing flavonoids from plants. Relevant carbon atoms in glycoside moieties are numbered. (1) Rutin (quercetin-3-glucoside-1→6-rhamnoside); (2) narirutin (naringenin-7-glucoside-1→6-rhamnoside); (3) naringin (naringenin-7-glucoside-1→2-rhamnoside); (4) p-nitrophenol-rhamnose.In view of the frequent occurrence of lactobacilli on decaying plant material and fermented vegetable substrates, one could anticipate that their genomes carry one or more genes encoding enzymes capable of utilizing rhamnosilated compounds. In the work reported here, we describe the identification of three putative rhamnosidase genes in lactobacillus genomes. We expressed these genes in Escherichia coli and characterized their gene products. The activities of all three lactobacillus rhamnosidases on flavonoids naturally present in tomato pulp were then assessed. One of the L. plantarum genes, which encoded the enzyme with the highest activity and stability in E. coli, was then also expressed in Lactococcus lactis, with the aim of investigating the potential use of such a recombinant organism to improve the bioavailability of fruit flavonoids and thus their efficacy in common foodstuffs.  相似文献   

11.
Lipids and lipid-metabolizing esterases/lipases are highly important for the mycobacterial life cycle and, possibly, for mycobacterial virulence. In this study, we expressed 10 members of the Lip family of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Among the 10 proteins, LipL displayed a significantly high enzymatic activity for the hydrolysis of long-chain lipids. The optimal temperature for the lipase activity of LipL was demonstrated to be 37°C, and the optimal pH was 8.0. The lipase active center was not the conserved motif G-x-S-x-G, but rather the S-x-x-K and GGG motifs, and the key catalytic amino acid residues were identified as G50, S88, and K91, as demonstrated through site-directed mutagenesis experiments. A three-dimensional modeling structure of LipL was constructed, which showed that the GGG motif was located in the surface of a pocket structure. Furthermore, the subcellular localization of LipL was demonstrated to be on the mycobacterial surface by Western blot analysis. Our results revealed that the LipL protein could induce a strong humoral immune response in humans and activate a CD8+ T cell-mediated response in mice. Overall, our study identified and characterized a novel lipase denoted LipL from M. tuberculosis, and demonstrated that LipL functions as an immunogen that activates both humoral and cell-mediated responses.  相似文献   

12.
A 135-kD actin-bundling protein was purified from pollen tubes of lily (Lilium longiflorum) using its affinity to F-actin. From a crude extract of the pollen tubes, this protein was coprecipitated with exogenously added F-actin and then dissociated from F-actin by treating it with high-ionic-strength solution. The protein was further purified sequentially by chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column, a gel-filtration column, and a diethylaminoethyl-cellulose ion-exchange column. In the present study, this protein is tentatively referred to as P-135-ABP (Plant 135-kD Actin-Bundling Protein). By the elution position from a gel-filtration column, we estimated the native molecular mass of purified P-135-ABP to be 260 kD, indicating that it existed in a dimeric form under physiological conditions. This protein bound to and bundled F-actin prepared from chicken breast muscle in a Ca2+-independent manner. The binding of 135-P-ABP to actin was saturated at an approximate stoichiometry of 26 actin monomers to 1 dimer of P-135-ABP. By transmission electron microscopy of thin sections, we observed cross-bridges between F-actins with a longitudinal periodicity of 31 nm. Immunofluorescence microscopy using rhodamine-phalloidin and antibodies against the 135-kD polypeptide showed that P-135-ABP was colocalized with bundles of actin filaments in lily pollen tubes, leading us to conclude that it is the factor responsible for bundling the filaments.Actin filaments, one of the major components of the cytoskeleton, are organized into a highly ordered architecture and are involved in various kinds of cell motility. Their architecture is regulated by several kinds of actin-binding proteins, including cross-linking proteins, severing proteins, end-capping proteins, and monomer-sequestering proteins in animal, protozoan, and yeast cells (Stossel et al., 1985; Pollard and Cooper, 1986; Vandekerckhove and Vancompernolle, 1992). In plant cells the organization of the actin cytoskeleton also changes remarkably during the cell cycle or during developmental processes, and it is suggested that actin-binding proteins are involved in their dynamic change. However, little is known about actin-binding proteins in plant cells.Only a low-Mr actin-binding and -depolymerizing protein, profilin, in white birch (Betula verrucosa; Valenta et al., 1991), maize (Zea mays; Staiger et al., 1993; Ruhlandt et al., 1994), bean (Phaseolus vulgaris; Vidali et al., 1995), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum; Mittermann et al., 1995), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum; Darnowski et al., 1996), Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Huang et al., 1996), and lily (Lilium longiflorum; Vidali and Hepler, 1997), and an ADF in lily (Kim et al., 1993), rapeseed (Brassica napus; Kim et al., 1993), and maize (Rozycka et al., 1995; Lopez et al., 1996), have been identified by biochemical or molecular biological means.The native and recombinant forms of these proteins are capable of binding to animal or plant actin (Valenta et al., 1993; Giehl et al., 1994; Ruhlandt et al., 1994; Lopez et al., 1996; Perelroizen et al., 1996; Carlier et al., 1997). Plant profilin expressed in mammalian BHK-21 cells (Rothkegel et al., 1996) or profilin-deficient Dictyostelium discoideum cells (Karakesisoglou et al., 1996) was able to functionally substitute for endogenous profilin in these cells. The introduction of plant profilin into living stamen hair cells by microinjection caused the rapid reduction of the number of actin filaments (Staiger et al., 1994; Karakesisoglou et al., 1996; Ren et al., 1997). These results indicate that plant profilin and ADF share many functional similarities with other eukaryote profilins and ADFs.It is well known that the actin cytoskeleton undergoes dynamic changes in organization during hydration and activation of the vegetative cells of pollen grains (Pierson and Cresti, 1992). Before hydration actin filaments exist as fusiform or spiculate structures (a storage form), but they are rearranged to form a network upon hydration (Heslop-Harrison et al., 1986; Tiwari and Polito, 1988). In the growing pollen tube there are strands or bundles of actin filaments parallel to the long axis (Perdue et al., 1985; Pierson et al., 1986; Miller et al., 1996) that are involved in cytoplasmic streaming (Franke et al., 1972; Mascarenhas and Lafountain, 1972) and transport of vegetative nuclei and generative cells to the growing tip (Heslop-Harrison et al., 1988; Heslop-Harrison and Heslop-Harrison, 1989). Characterization of the function of actin-binding proteins is essential to understanding the regulation of actin organization during the developmental process of pollen. Since only a small number of vacuoles containing proteases develop in pollen grains and pollen tubes at a younger stage, pollen tubes are suitable materials for isolating and biochemically studying actin-binding proteins responsible for organizing actin filaments into various forms.In a previous paper we reported that several components in a crude extract prepared from lily pollen tubes, including a 170-kD myosin heavy chain and 175-, 135-, and 110-kD polypeptides, could be coprecipitated with exogenously added F-actin (Yokota and Shimmen, 1994). We also found that rhodamine-labeled F-actin was tightly bound to the glass surface treated with the fraction containing the 135- and 110-kD polypeptides (Yokota and Shimmen, 1994). These results suggested that either one or both of the 135- and 110-kD polypeptides possesses an F-actin-binding activity. In the present study, we purified the 135-kD polypeptide from lily pollen tubes by biochemical procedures and then characterized its F-actin-binding properties and distribution in the pollen tubes. This protein was able to bundle F-actin isolated from chicken breast muscle and colocalized with actin-filament bundles in pollen tubes. We refer to this protein as P-135-ABP (Plant 135-kD Actin-Bundling Protein).  相似文献   

13.
Examination of supernatant fractions from broth cultures of Lactobacillus fermentum BR11 revealed the presence of a number of proteins, including a 27-kDa protein termed Sep. The amino-terminal sequence of Sep was determined, and the gene encoding it was cloned and sequenced. Sep is a 205-amino-acid protein and contains a 30-amino-acid secretion signal and has overall homology (between 39 and 92% identity) with similarly sized proteins of Lactobacillus reuteri, Enterococcus faecium, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus agalactiae, and Lactobacillus plantarum. The carboxy-terminal 81 amino acids of Sep also have strong homology (86% identity) to the carboxy termini of the aggregation-promoting factor (APF) surface proteins of Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus johnsonii. The mature amino terminus of Sep contains a putative peptidoglycan-binding LysM domain, thereby making it distinct from APF proteins. We have identified a common motif within LysM domains that is shared with carbohydrate binding YG motifs which are found in streptococcal glucan-binding proteins and glucosyltransferases. Sep was investigated as a heterologous peptide expression vector in L. fermentum, Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG and Lactococcus lactis MG1363. Modified Sep containing an amino-terminal six-histidine epitope was found associated with the cells but was largely present in the supernatant in the L. fermentum, L. rhamnosus, and L. lactis hosts. Sep as well as the previously described surface protein BspA were used to express and secrete in L. fermentum or L. rhamnosus a fragment of human E-cadherin, which contains the receptor region for Listeria monocytogenes. This study demonstrates that Sep has potential for heterologous protein expression and export in lactic acid bacteria.  相似文献   

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Abscisic acid (ABA) is an essential phytohormone that regulates plant stress responses. ABA receptors in Arabidopsis thaliana (AtPYLs) have been extensively investigated by structural, biochemical, and in vivo studies. In contrast, relatively little is known about the ABA signal transduction cascade in rice. Besides, the diversities of AtPYLs manifest that the information accumulated in Arabidopsis cannot be simply adapted to rice. Thus, studies on rice ABA receptors are compulsory. By taking a bioinformatic approach, we identified twelve ABA receptor orthologs in Oryza sativa (japonica cultivar-group) (OsPYLs), named OsPYL1–12. We have successfully expressed and purified OsPYL1–3, 6 and 10–12 to homogeneity, tested the inhibitory effects on PP2C in Oryza sativa (OsPP2C), and measured their oligomerization states. OsPYL1–3 mainly exhibit as dimers and require ABA to inhibit PP2C’s activity. On the contrary, OsPYL6 retains in the monomer-dimer equilibrium state and OsPYL10–11 largely exist as monomers, and they all display an ABA-independent phosphatase inhibition manner. Interestingly, although OsPYL12 seems to be a dimer, it abrogates the phosphatase activity of PP2Cs in the absence of ABA. Toward a further understanding of OsPYLs on the ABA binding and PP2C inhibition, we determined the crystal structure of ABA-OsPYL2-OsPP2C06 complex. The bioinformatic, biochemical and structural analysis of ABA receptors in rice provide important foundations for designing rational ABA-analogues and breeding the stress-resistant rice for commercial agriculture.  相似文献   

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Mg-chelatase catalyzes the ATP-dependent insertion of Mg2+ into protoporphyrin-IX to form Mg-protoporphyrin-IX. This is the first step unique to chlorophyll synthesis, and it lies at the branch point for porphyrin utilization; the other branch leads to heme. Using the stromal fraction of pea (Pisum sativum L. cv Spring) chloroplasts, we have prepared Mg-chelatase in a highly active (1000 pmol 30 min−1 mg−1) and stable form. The reaction had a lag in the time course, which was overcome by preincubation with ATP. The concentration curves for ATP and Mg2+ were sigmoidal, with apparent Km values for Mg2+ and ATP of 14.3 and 0.35 mm, respectively. The Km for deuteroporphyrin was 8 nm. This Km is 300 times lower than the published porphyrin Km for ferrochelatase. The soluble extract was separated into three fractions by chromatography on blue agarose, followed by size-selective centrifugal ultrafiltration of the column flow-through. All three fractions were required for activity, clearly demonstrating that the plant Mg-chelatase requires at least three protein components. Additionally, only two of the components were required for activation; both were contained in the flow-through from the blue-agarose column.  相似文献   

19.
The discovery and identification of Ovis aries (sheep) miRNAs will further promote the study of miRNA functions and gene regulatory mechanisms. To explore the microRNAome (miRNAome) of sheep in depth, samples were collected that included eight developmental stages: the longissimus dorsi muscles of Texel fetuses at 70, 85, 100, 120, and 135 days, and the longissimus dorsi muscles of Ujumqin fetuses at 70, 85, 100, 120, and 135 d, and lambs at 0 (birth), 35, and 70 d. These samples covered all of the representative periods of Ovis aries growth and development throughout gestation (about 150 d) and 70 d after birth. Texel and Ujumqin libraries were separately subjected to Solexa deep sequencing; 35,700,772 raw reads were obtained overall. We used ACGT101-miR v4.2 to analyze the sequence data. Following meticulous comparisons with mammalian mature miRNAs, precursor hairpins (pre-miRNAs), and the latest sheep genome, we substantially extended the Ovis aries miRNAome. The list of pre-miRNAs was extended to 2,319, expressing 2,914 mature miRNAs. Among those, 1,879 were genome mapped to unique miRNAs, representing 2,436 genome locations, and 1,754 pre-miRNAs were mapped to chromosomes. Furthermore, the Ovis aries miRNAome was processed using an elaborate bioinformatic analysis that examined multiple end sequence variation in miRNAs, precursors, chromosomal localizations, species-specific expressions, and conservative properties. Taken together, this study provides the most comprehensive and accurate exploration of the sheep miRNAome, and draws conclusions about numerous characteristics of Ovis aries miRNAs, including miRNAs and isomiRs.  相似文献   

20.
Aquaporins are highly selective water channel proteins integrated into plasma membranes of single cell organisms; plant roots and stromae; eye lenses, renal and red blood cells in vertebrates. To date, only a few microbial aquaporins have been characterized and their physiological importance is not well understood. Here we report on the cloning, expression and characterization of a novel aquaporin, RsAqpZ, from a purple photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodobacter sphaeroides ATCC 17023. The protein was expressed homologously at a high yield (∼20 mg/L culture) under anaerobic photoheterotrophic growth conditions. Stopped-flow light scattering experiments demonstrated its high water permeability (0.17±0.05 cm/s) and low energy of activation for water transport (2.93±0.60 kcal/mol) in reconstituted proteoliposomes at a protein to lipid ratio (w/w) of 0.04. We developed a fluorescence correlation spectroscopy based technique and utilized a fluorescent protein fusion of RsAqpZ, to estimate the single channel water permeability of RsAqpZ as 1.24 (±0.41) x 10−12 cm3/s or 4.17 (±1.38)×1010 H2O molecules/s, which is among the highest single channel permeability reported for aquaporins. Towards application to water purification technologies, we also demonstrated functional incorporation of RsAqpZ in amphiphilic block copolymer membranes.  相似文献   

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