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1.
Hemoglobin from an adult camel (Camelus dromedarius) was prepared from the red cell lysate by CM- and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The purified hemoglobin showed a lesser mobility on starch gel electrophoresis at pH 8.5 than that of human hemoglobin C. Native camel hemoglobin contains 95-99% alkali-resistant hemoglobin and in soluble in 2.94 M K2HPO4/KH2PO4 buffer. Different forms of camel hemoglobin show similar ammonium sulfate precipitation curves. Indirect evidence for the stability of camel hemoglobin solutions was obtained from several sources. Spontaneous met-hemoglobin formation is extremely slow and minimal quantities of degradation products appear on starch gel electrophoresis and on chromatographic separation. The alpha and beta chains of camel hemoglobin A were separated on a CM-23 column by the use of a pyridine formate gradient. Large peptide fragments were obtained by tryptic digestion of maleylated alpha and beta chains. The N-terminal structure of the alpha and beta chains and of tryptic maleylated peptides derived from alpha and beta chains are presented. Between adult camel hemoglobin and adult human hemoglobin six amino acid differences in the N-terminal 20 amino acid residues of the alpha chain, at residues: 4, 5, 12, 14, 17, and 19; eight amino acid substitutions were found in the beta chain at positions: 4, 5, 6, 9, 12, 13, 16, and 19. Substitutions at alpha5 Ala leads to Lys, and beta19 Asn leads to Lys, increase the net positive charge of camel hemoglobin by two, while other substitutions result in no charge differences. The molecular basis of the stability of camel adult hemoglobin is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome C was purified from camel skeletal muscles using ammonium sulphate fractionation and gel filtration on Sephadex G25 and Sephecryl S200 columns. The preparations were pure by SDS-PAGE criteria, with molecular weight of 12,300 Dalton. The electrophoretic mobility of camel cytochrome C was the same as that of the horse heart. The spectral characteristics of the isolated cytochrome C were also investigated.  相似文献   

3.
The amino acid sequence of a recently isolated camel milk protein rich in half-cystine has been determined by peptide analyses. The 117-residue protein has 16 half-cystine residues, concluded to correspond to disulfide bridges and suggesting a tight conformation of the molecule. Comparisons of the structure with those of other proteins reveal several interesting relationships. The camel protein is clearly homologous with a previously reported rat whey phosphoprotein of possible importance for mammary gland growth regulation, and with a mouse protein of probable relationship to neurophysins. The camel, rat and mouse proteins may represent species variants from a rapidly evolving gene. Residue identities in pairwise comparisons are 40% for the camel/rat proteins and 33% for the camel/mouse proteins, with 38 positions conserved in all three forms. The camel protein also reveals an internal repeat pattern similar to that for the other two proteins. The homology between the three milk whey proteins has wide implications for further relationships. Thus, previously noticed similarities, involving either of the milk proteins, include limited similarities to casein phosphorylation sites for the camel protein, to neurophysins in repeat and half-cystine patterns for the mouse and rat proteins, and to an antiprotease for the rat protein. These similarities are reinforced by the camel protein structure and the recognition of the three whey proteins as related. Finally a few superficial similarities with the insulin family of peptides and with some other peptides of biological importance are noticed. Combined, the results relate the camel protein in a family of whey proteins, and extend suggestions of relationships with some binding proteins.  相似文献   

4.
1. Actins were purified from camel brain, skeletal muscle and heart muscle and their properties were compared. 2. Individual actins were homogeneous and comigrated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). 3. Isoelectric focusing analysis of camel skeletal muscle and heart muscle actin showed a single polypeptide of the alpha-species, while camel brain actin showed two polypeptides of the beta- and gamma-species typical of non-muscle actin. 4. Actins from camel skeletal muscle and heart muscle showed a greater degree of similarity to each other and to rabbit skeletal muscle actin and showed some differences from camel brain actin, as confirmed by amino acid analysis and one-dimensional peptide mapping.  相似文献   

5.
Camel erythrocyte membranes are distinguished by some unique properties of stability and composition. Notable is their abundance in proteins (protein: lipid ratio of 3 : 1). Membrane proteins of camel erythrocytes were compared with those of human erythrocytes, which have been intensively investigated. Proteins were extracted with various aqueous media (EDTA, alkaline or high ionic strength) and with ionic and non-ionic detergents and were analyzed by gel electrophoresis. In membranes of camel erythrocytes, the peripheral proteins constitute, proportionally, a much smaller fraction of total proteins than in the human erythrocyte, while their distribution is identical per unit of surface area. The camel erythrocyte membrane is particularly rich in integral proteins and in intramembranous particles. The proteins in this membrane are more closely organized than in the human system, as revealed by crosslinking and freeze-etching studies. It is proposed that protein-protein interaction of integral proteins, presumably constituting an “integral skeleton”, is a dominant structural feature stabilizing the camel erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

6.
A method for collection of camel semen by electroejaculation has been described for the first time. The volume of the ejaculates obtained was slightly lower than that obtained using an artificial vagina. The sperm count was considerably higher, but other parameters including pH, percentage of live sperm and sperm dimensions were comparable to those of ejaculates collected by the artificial vagina. The camel spermatozoon is generally smaller than those of other animals. The head is somewhat elliptical in shape and slightly tapering at the base. Mean sperm dimensions for the head, middle piece and tail in μm were 5.5, 6.9 and 35.6 respectively; total sperm length was 48.0 μm.  相似文献   

7.
This study aimed to evaluate amino acids content and the electrophoretic profile of camel milk casein from different camel breeds. Milk from three different camel breeds (Majaheim, Wadah and Safrah) as well as cow milk were used in this study.Results showed that ash and moisture contents were significantly higher in camel milk casein of all breeds compared to that of cow milk. On the other hand, casein protein of cow milk was significantly higher compared to that of all camel milk breeds. Molecular weights of casein patterns of camel milk breeds were higher compared to that of cow milk.Essential (Phe, Lys and His) and non-essential amino acids content was significantly higher in cow milk casein compared to the casein of all camel milk breeds. However, there was no significant difference for the other essential amino acids between cow casein and the casein of Safrah breed and their quantities in cow and Safrah casein were significantly higher compared to the other two breeds. Non-essential amino acids except Arg and the essential amino acids (Met, Ile, Lue and Phe) were also significantly higher in cow milk α-casein compared to α-casein from all camel breeds. Moreover, essential amino acids (Val, Phe and His) and the non-essential amino acids (Gly and Ser) content was significantly higher in cow milk β-casein compared to the β-casein of all camel milk breeds and the opposite was true for Lys, Thr, Met and Ile. However, Met, Ile, Phe and His were significantly higher for β-casein of Majaheim compared to the other two milk breeds. The non-essential amino acids (Gly, Tyr, Ala and Asp) and the essential amino acids (Thr, Val and Ile) were significantly higher in cow milk κ-casein compared to that for all camel milk breeds. There was no significant difference among all camel milk breeds in their κ-casein content of most essential amino acids.Relative migration of casein bands of camel milk casein was not identical. The relative migration of αs-, β- and κ-casein of camel casein was slower than those of cow casein. The molecular weights of αs-, β- and κ-casein of camel caseins were 27.6, 23.8 and 22.4 KDa, respectively. More studies are needed to elucidate the structure of camel milk.  相似文献   

8.
The ability of camel liver microsomes to metabolise a range of common environmental carcinogens including benzo(a)pyrene, dimethylbenzanthracene and aflatoxin B1 has been investigated. The camel liver has shown the ability to metabolise benzo(a)pyrene, dimethylbenzanthracene and aflatoxin B1 to a number of metabolites. The major metabolites of benzo(a)pyrene produced by camel liver enzymes were identified as its mono-hydroxy derivatives and suggest that the metabolic detoxification pathways of carcinogen metabolism are predominant in this species. Benzo(a)pyrene metabolising activity in camel liver required NADPH and was inhibited by CO and alpha-naphthoflavone suggesting the involvement of cytochrome P450 in the metabolism of this carcinogen by camel liver. The cytochrome P450-dependent metabolism of carcinogen and other specific substrates such as ethoxyresorufin and ethoxycoumarin, by camel liver enzymes, was about 50% higher than that of rat liver enzymes. The cytochrome P450-dependent metabolism of a variety of carcinogenic and other substrates by camel liver demonstrated that there are multiple forms of cytochrome P450 enzymes involved in the metabolism of a wide array of xenobiotics and pollutants.  相似文献   

9.
The aim of this study was to characterize a S. equi subspecies equi strain isolated from an Ethiopian camel by different molecular techniques (Ribotyping and PCR-Ribotyping). We compared the results obtained with those generated from two strains of the Pasteur Collection. The ribotyping showed the highest power of differentiation, distinguishing between the strains analyzed, whereas PCR-Ribotyping was able only to differentiate the camel isolate but not the strains from the Pasteur Collection. The application of this technique will be very useful to establish a clonal relationship among equine and camelids strains and help the prevention and cure of the equine and camel pathology.  相似文献   

10.
1. The distribution of phosphofructokinase isoenzymes have been compared among camel, rat and rabbit livers. 2. Only a single phosphofructokinase isoenzyme is present in the camel liver which has shown different physical and regulatory properties from the isoenzymes of rat and rabbit liver. 3. The ammonium sulphate precipitation curves of the camel and rabbit enzymes were monophasic, whereas the rat enzyme was biphasic. 4. Rabbit liver phosphofructokinase was slightly more anodic than the rat enzyme, whereas the camel enzyme was the least anodic as shown by the techniques of DEAE-cellulose chromatography and cellulose acetate electrophoresis. 5. Partially purified camel liver phosphofructokinase showed different regulatory properties from the rabbit and rat isoenzymes as the apparent Km values were 0.58, 0.45 and 0.82 mM respectively.  相似文献   

11.
Significantly higher hypoxanthine over uric acid ratios were found in camel plasma and urine, with respect to those of zebu. Enzyme levels of purine catabolism were markedly lower in camel than in zebu liver. Oxidation of hypoxanthine appears to be the limiting step of purine metabolism in camel liver. Any hepatic hypoxanthine appears to be actively converted into IMP in camel liver, rather than oxidized to uric acid.  相似文献   

12.
Xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) was purified in the presence of dithiothrietol from camel milk with yields of up to 22.2mg/l that were comparable to those obtained from bovine and human milk sources. On SDS-PAGE, the freshly purified camel milk XOR had a protein flavin (A280/A450) ratio of 5.3 +/- 0.4 and appeared homogenous with a single major band of approximately Mr 145.3 KDa. Surprisingly, in all the batches (n = 8) purified camel milk XOR showed no detectable activity towards xanthine or NADH. The molybdenum content of camel XOR was comparable to human and goat milk enzymes. After resulphuration, camel milk XOR gave a specific activity of 1.1 nmol/min/mg and 13.0 nmol/min/mg enzyme towards pterin (fluorimetric assay) and xanthine (spectrophotometric assay) respectively. This activity was markedly lower than that of human, bovine and goat enzymes obtained under the same conditions. These findings suggest that the molybdo-form of camel enzyme is totally under desulpho inactive form. It is possible that camel neonates are equipped with an enzymic system that reactivates XOR in their gut and consequently generates antibacterial reactive oxygen species.  相似文献   

13.
The present study analyzed the existence of carbohydrases in camel pancreas compared to some other ruminants. Disaccharidases (maltase, cellobiase, lactase, trehalase and sucrase), glucoamylase and alpha-amylase were detected in pancreas of camel, sheep, cow and buffalo. Enzyme levels in sheep were lower than in the other ruminants. The highest level was detected for alpha-amylase (EC 3.2.1.2). Moderate activity levels were detected for glucoamylase (EC 3.2.1.3) and maltase (EC 3.2.1.20), while other disaccharidases showed very low activity. The results suggested that, in addition to alpha-amylase, glucoamylase and maltase may be synthesized and secreted from pancreas to the small intestine in ruminants. Camel pancreatic glucoamylase was purified and characterized. The purification procedure included glycogen precipitation and chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose and Sepharose 6B. The molecular mass was 58 kDa for native and denatured enzyme using gel filtration and SDS-PAGE, respectively. The enzyme had a pH optimum at 5.5 and a Km of 10 mg starch/mL with more affinity toward potato soluble starch than the other carbohydrates. Glucoamylase had a temperature optimum at 50 degrees C with heat stability up to 30 degrees C. The effect of different cations and inhibitors was examined. The camel pancreatic glucoamylase may possess an essential thiol.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes belong to a superfamily of monooxygenases which are phase I enzymes responsible for the first pass metabolism of about 90% of drugs in animals. However, these enzymes are often polymorphic and metabolism of the same drug in different species or different individuals is influenced by genetic and non-genetic factors. Bactrian camels are capable of survival in harsh living environments, being able to consume diets that are often toxic to other mammals and can tolerate extreme water and food deprivation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the Bactrian camel’s special metabolic pathways and unique detoxification capabilities are attributable to particularities of the CYP gene family. The Bactrian camel’s whole genome sequencing data were systemically analyzed and annotated, and then, CYP gene family was searched from the whole protein database and compared with CYP gene families of cattle, horse, chicken, and human. The total of 63 CYP gene copies were found in Bactrian camel’s whole genome and were classified into 17 families and 38 subfamilies. Among them, 9 multi-gene families were found, and CYP2, CYP3, and CPY4 have 27, 6, and 7 subfamilies, accounting for 43, 10, and 11% in camel CYP gene, respectively. In comparison with cattle, chicken, horse, and human, the distribution of CYP gene subfamilies in camel is different, with more CYP2J and CYP3A copies in the Bactrian camel, which may contribute to the Bactrian camel’s specific biological characteristics and metabolic pathways. Comparing to the cow, horse, chicken, and human CYP genes, the distribution of CYP gene subfamilies is distinct in the Bactrian camel. The higher copy number of CYP2J gene and CYP3A gene in Bactrian camel may be the important factors contributing to the distinct biological characteristics and metabolic pathways of Bactrian camels for adaptation to the harsh environments.  相似文献   

15.
R. Ji  P. Cui  F. Ding  J. Geng  H. Gao  H. Zhang  J. Yu  S. Hu  H. Meng 《Animal genetics》2009,40(4):377-382
The evolutionary relationship between the domestic bactrian camel and the extant wild two-humped camel and the factual origin of the domestic bactrian camel remain elusive. We determined the sequence of mitochondrial cytb gene from 21 camel samples, including 18 domestic camels (three Camelus bactrianus xinjiang , three Camelus bactrianus sunite , three Camelus bactrianus alashan , three Camelus bactrianus red , three Camelus bactrianus brown and three Camelus bactrianus normal ) and three wild camels ( Camelus bactrianus ferus ). Our phylogenetic analyses revealed that the extant wild two-humped camel may not share a common ancestor with the domestic bactrian camel and they are not the same subspecies at least in their maternal origins. Molecular clock analysis based on complete mitochondrial genome sequences indicated that the sub-speciation of the two lineages had begun in the early Pleistocene, about 0.7 million years ago. According to the archaeological dating of the earliest known two-humped camel domestication (5000–6000 years ago), we could conclude that the extant wild camel is a separate lineage but not the direct progenitor of the domestic bactrian camel. Further phylogenetic analysis suggested that the bactrian camel appeared monophyletic in evolutionary origin and that the domestic bactrian camel could originate from a single wild population. The data presented here show how conservation strategies should be implemented to protect the critically endangered wild camel, as it is the last extant form of the wild tribe Camelina.  相似文献   

16.
To gain knowledge on the molecular basis of diversity of several clans of Saudi camel (Camelus dromedarius) characterization of these animals was conducted at both genetic and protein levels. To this end, blood and milk samples were collected from several camel breeds at different Saudi Arabia locations (northern Jeddah, Riyadh, and Alwagh governorates). Genomic DNA was extracted from blood of four Saudi camel breeds (Majahem, Safra, Wadha, and Hamara), and DNA fragments of the casein and α-lactalbumin genes were amplified. The retrieved DNA sequences were analyzed for genetic variability. The inter-simple sequence repeat technique was used for confirming the relationships among the analyzed camel breeds, and the PCR–RFLP with two restriction enzymes was utilized for exploring their molecular variations. The number of haplotypes, gene diversity, nucleotide diversity, average number of nucleotide differences, and sequence conservation were calculated for all the analyzed DNA sequences. These analyses revealed the presence of several single nucleotide polymorphisms in the analyzed DNA sequences. A group of neighbor joining trees was built for inferring the evolutionary variations among the studied animals. Protein profiling of milk from different camel clans was also conducted, and differences between and within the Saudi camel clans were easily found based on the isoelectric focusing (IEF) profiles using ampholytes with different IEF range. This study revealed that analyzed camel breeds show low levels of genetic differences. This may be a reflection of the evolutionary history of C. dromedarius that was domesticated based on a highly homogeneous ancestor ecotype.  相似文献   

17.
The camel (camelus dromedarius) milk proteose peptone 3 (PP3) was purified successively by size exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography and reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography and then characterized by amino acid residue composition determination and chemical microsequencing after CNBr or trypsin cleavages. In comparison with the previously reported structure of camel milk whey protein, the camel PP3 contains an insertion in the N-terminal region which has approximately 24 residues, whereas the remaining C-terminal regions of these two homologous proteins are essentially identical. The camel PP3 seems to contain a potential O-glycosylation site localized in this insertion and 2 or 3 phosphorylated serine residues. PP3 belongs to the glycosylation-dependent cell adhesion molecule 1 (GlyCAM-1) family and could therefore play an immunological role in the camel or its suckling young.  相似文献   

18.
Camel erythrocytes have exceptional osmotic resistance and is believed to be due to augmented water-binding associated with the high hydrophilicity of camel hemoglobin. In practical terms this means that the proportion of osmotically non-removable water in camel erythrocytes is nearly 3-fold greater than that in human erythrocytes (approximately 65 vs approximately 20%). The relationship between water diffusion and the osmotic characteristics of intracellular water is the subject of this report. The amount of osmotically inactive water is 2-fold greater in camel hemoglobin solution in vitro compared to that of human, but water diffusion does not differ in camel and human hemoglobin solutions. However, the evaluation of water diffusion by magnetic resonance measurements in camel erythrocytes revealed approximately 15% lower apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) compared with human erythrocytes. When human erythrocytes were dehydrated to the level of camel erythrocytes, their osmotic and water diffusion properties were similar. These results show that a lower ADC is associated with a more pronounced increase in osmotically inactive water fraction. It is proposed that increased hemoglobin hydrophilicity allows not only augmented water-binding, but also a closer hemoglobin packaging in vivo, which in turn is associated with slower ADC and increased osmotic resistance.  相似文献   

19.
Dromedary camels have been implicated consistently as the source of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) human infections and attention to prevent and control it has focused on camels. To understanding the epidemiological role of camels in the transmission of MERS-CoV, we utilized an iterative empirical process in Geographic Information System (GIS) to identify and qualify potential hotspots for maintenance and circulation of MERS-CoV, and produced risk-based surveillance sites in Kenya. Data on camel population and distribution were used to develop camel density map, while camel farming system was defined using multi-factorial criteria including the agro-ecological zones (AEZs), production and marketing practices. Primary and secondary MERS-CoV seroprevalence data from specific sites were analyzed, and location-based prevalence matching with camel densities was conducted. High-risk convergence points (migration zones, trade routes, camel markets, slaughter slabs) were profiled and frequent cross-border camel movement mapped. Results showed that high camel-dense areas and interaction (markets and migration zones) were potential hotspot for transmission and spread. Cross-border contacts occurred with in-migrated herds at hotspot locations. AEZ differential did not influence risk distribution and plausible risk factors for spatial MERS-CoV hotspots were camel densities, previous cases of MERS-CoV, high seroprevalence and points of camel convergences. Although Kenyan camels are predisposed to MERS-CoV, no shedding is documented to date. These potential hotspots, determined using anthropogenic, system and trade characterizations should guide selection of sampling/surveillance sites, high-risk locations, critical areas for interventions and policy development in Kenya, as well as instigate further virological examination of camels.  相似文献   

20.
Camel invokes fascinating chapter of Indian desert history and is integral component of its ecosystem. Camel population has reached a crisis point after three decades of decline (75%) causing major concern to the policy makers. >28% of Indian camel is not yet characterized. It is imperative to describe country’s camel germplasm and its existing diversity for designing conservation plan. One such population is Sindhi, distributed along border with Pakistan. Twenty five microsatellite markers being valuable tool for estimating genetic diversity were selected to elucidate genetic variability and relationship of Sindhi with two registered camel breeds of India- Marwari and Kharai. The standard metrics of genomic diversity detected moderate variability in all the three populations. A total of 303 alleles with a mean of 8.116 ± 0.587 alleles per locus were found in total of 143 animals. Sindhi population had intermediate allelic diversity with 8.522 ± 1.063 alleles per locus. Corresponding values in Marwari and Kharai were 8.783 ± 0.962 and 7.043 ± 1.030, respectively. Genetic variability within the breeds was moderate as evidenced by the mean observed heterozygosity of 0.556 ± 0.025. Sindhi camel population harbors higher genetic variability (Ho = 0.594) as compared to the two registered camel breeds (Marwari, 0.543 and Kharai, 0.531). Mean expected heterozygosity under Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was higher than the observed values across the three camel groups, indicating deviations from assumptions of this model. In fact, average positive F value of 0.084 to 0.206 reflected heterozygote deficiency in these populations. These Indian camel populations have not experienced serious demographic bottlenecks in the recent past. Differences among populations were medium and accounted for 7.3% of total genetic variability. Distinctness of three camel populations was supported by all the approaches utilized to study genetic relationships such as genetic distances, phylogenetic relationship, correspondence analysis, clustering method based on Bayesian approach and individual assignment. Sindhi camel population was clearly separated from two registered breeds of Indian camel. Results conclude Sindhi to be a separate genepool. Moderate genetic diversity provides an optimistic viewpoint for the survival of severely declining indigenous camel populations with appropriate planning strategies for conserving the existing genetic variation and to avoid any escalation of inbreeding.  相似文献   

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