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251.
252.

Background

With the prompt developments of regenerative medicine, the potential clinical applications of human embryonic stem cells have attracted intense attention. However, the labor-intensive and complex manual cell selection processes required during embryonic stem cell culturing have seriously limited large-scale production and broad applications. Thus, availability of a label-free, non-invasive platform to replace the current cumbersome manual selection has become a critical need.

Results

A non-invasive, label-free, and time-efficient optical platform for determining the quality of human embryonic stem cell colonies was developed by analyzing the scattering signals from those stem cell colonies. Additionally, confocal microscopy revealed that the cell colony morphology and surface structures were correlated with the resulting characteristic light scattering patterns. Standard immunostaining assay (Oct-4) was also utilized to validate the quality-determination from this light scattering protocol. The platform developed here can therefore provide identification accuracy of up to 87% for colony determination.

Conclusions

Our study here demonstrated that light scattering patterns can serve as a feasible alternative approach to replace conventional manual selection for human embryonic stem cell cultures.  相似文献   
253.
Atrazine-degrading microorganisms designated EAA-3 and EAA-4, belonging to the genus Nocardioides, were obtained from an agricultural soil in Nigeria. The degradation kinetics of the two strains revealed total disappearance of 25 mg l?1 of atrazine in less than 72 h of incubation at the rate of 0.42 mg l?1 h?1 and 0.35 mg l?1 h?1, respectively. Screening for atrazine catabolic genes in these organisms revealed the presence of trzN, atzB, and atzC. Other genes, specifically atzA, atzD, and trzD, were not detected. Potential intermediates of atrazine catabolic route such as hydroxyatrazine, desethylatrazine, and desisopropylatrazine were utilized as sources of carbon and energy, while desisopropyl desethyl-2-hydroxyatrazine and desisopropyl-2-hydroxyatrazine were attacked but in the presence of glucose. A soil microcosm study showed that degradation was faster in microcosms contaminated with 13 mg of atrazine per g?1 of soil compared with 480 mg g?1 of soil. In the former, degradation was 10% higher in the inoculated soil than the non-inoculated control (natural attenuation) over the 28-day study period. Corresponding value obtained for the latter was nearly 70% higher. This study has demonstrated that the bacterial strains isolated enhanced atrazine degradation and the catabolic activities of these strains were not affected with increasing soil atrazine concentration.  相似文献   
254.
Even though cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death for men and women, the vast majority of animal studies use male animals. Because female reproductive hormones have been associated with cardioprotective states, many investigators avoid using female animals because these hormones are cyclical and may introduce experimental variability. In addition, no studies have investigated the specific effects of the estrous cycle on cardiac ischemic injury. This study was conducted to determine whether the estrous cycle stage influences the susceptibility to ischemic injury in rat hearts. Estrous cycle stage was determined by using vaginal smear cytology, after which hearts underwent either in vivo (surgical) or ex vivo (isolated) ischemia–reperfusion injury. For in vivo studies, the left anterior coronary artery was ligated for 25 min of ischemia and subsequently released for 120 min of reperfusion. Infarct sizes were 42% ± 6%; 49% ± 4%; 40% ± 9%; 47% ± 9% of the zone-at-risk for rats in proestrus, estrus, metestrus, and diestrus, respectively. For ex vivo studies, isolated, perfused hearts underwent global ischemia and reperfusion for 25 and 120 min, respectively. Similar to our in vivo studies, the ex vivo rat model showed no significant differences in susceptibility to infarction or extent of cardiac arrhythmia according to estrous stage. To our knowledge, these studies provide the first direct evidence that the stage of estrous cycle does not significantly alter cardiac ischemia–reperfusion injury in rats.Abbreviations: VF, ventricular fibrillation; VT, ventricular tachycardiaCardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality throughout the industrialized world, with ischemic heart disease being a major manifestation of cardiovascular disease. Many investigators use animal models to advance our understanding of the etiology and mechanisms involved. Although ischemic heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women, the overwhelming majority of studies use male animals. Perhaps the most common reason for this practice is that physiologic fluctuations in female reproductive hormones such as estrogen may be a confounding variable, given the influence of female reproductive hormones on various organ systems.25 Despite the assertion that cyclical variations in female reproductive hormones may confound experimental studies, few data are available that support estrous-cycle–dependent variations in susceptibility to ischemic heart injury.Epidemiologic studies suggest that, compared with men, women have lower cardiac mortality prior to undergoing menopause.40 Consistent with human studies, experimental models in several species commonly show that the degree of cardiac injury in young female animals is lower than that in male counterparts.7,9,21,22,42 Exogenous administration of estrogen has a clear effect in reducing injury,14,15 but whether endogenous cyclical variations in female reproductive hormones affect cardiac injury is not known.Rats and mice are commonly used species to examine cardiac ischemia–reperfusion injury. Unlike humans, rodents do not undergo menstruation, during which the uterine endometrium sloughs off and is expelled through the vagina, but rather the uterine lining of rodents is reabsorbed during an estrous cycle.24 The rat estrous cycle is typically 4 to 5 d in length and is defined by 4 separate stages: proestrus, estrus, metestrus, and diestrus. Proestrus is characterized by increasing levels of estrogen. At the end of proestrus, ovulation (signaled by luteinizing hormone) occurs and marks the beginning of the estrus cycle. During metestrus and diestrus, the uterine lining regenerates, and the cycle starts again.24,33 These stages induce changes in the composition of the epithelium of the vagina and the presence of inflammatory cells, which can easily be detected by using vaginal cytology.18,35We conducted the current study to determine whether estrous cycle stage influences the susceptibility to ischemia–reperfusion injury in the rat heart. Because the stage of the estrous cycle may influence cardiac injury either directly (via a direct effect of circulating hormones), or indirectly (by inducing changes that are intrinsic to the heart), we used both in vivo and ex vivo models of injury.  相似文献   
255.
In the past decade, mass-spectrometry-based methods have emerged for the quantitative profiling of dynamic changes in protein phosphorylation, allowing the behavior of thousands of phosphorylation sites to be monitored in a single experiment. However, when one is interested in specific signaling pathways, such shotgun methodologies are not ideal because they lack selectivity and are not cost and time efficient with respect to instrument and data analysis time.Here we evaluate and explore a peptide-centric antibody generated to selectively enrich peptides containing the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) consensus motif. This targeted phosphoproteomic strategy is used to profile temporal quantitative changes of potential PKA substrates in Jurkat T lymphocytes upon prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) stimulation, which increases intracellular cAMP, activating PKA. Our method combines ultra-high-specificity motif-based immunoaffinity purification with cost-efficient stable isotope dimethyl labeling. We identified 655 phosphopeptides, of which 642 (i.e. 98%) contained the consensus motif [R/K][R/K/X]X[pS/pT]. When our data were compared with a large-scale Jurkat T-lymphocyte phosphoproteomics dataset containing more than 10,500 phosphosites, a minimal overlap of 0.2% was observed. This stresses the need for such targeted analyses when the interest is in a particular kinase.Our data provide a resource of likely substrates of PKA, and potentially some substrates of closely related kinases. Network analysis revealed that about half of the observed substrates have been implicated in cAMP-induced signaling. Still, the other half of the here-identified substrates have been less well characterized, representing a valuable resource for future research.The identification and quantification of protein phosphorylation under system perturbations is an integral part of systems biology (1, 2). The combination of phosphopeptide enrichment (36), stable isotope labeling, and high-resolution mass spectrometry (MS) methods (79) has become the method of choice for the identification of novel phosphorylation sites and for the quantitation of temporal dynamics within signaling networks (10, 11), allowing the behavior of thousands of phosphorylation sites to be studied in a single experiment (10, 12, 13). Nowadays, one of the most commonly adopted high-throughput phosphoproteomics strategies utilizes two consecutive separation steps: (i) an initial fractionation to reduce the sample complexity, and (ii) a phosphopeptide-specific affinity purification. Such techniques include strong cation exchange fractionation under acidic conditions (3), followed by a chelation-based method with the use of metal ions (i.e. immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (4), metal oxide affinity chromatography (10, 14), or Ti4+ immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (6)). Alternatives to strong cation exchange for the first sample fractionation step have also been reported, including the use of electrostatic repulsion liquid chromatography (15, 16), which is well suited for the identification of multiply phosphorylated peptides, or hydrophilic interaction chromatography (17).Although the number of detected phosphorylated peptides is nowadays impressive, these kinds of methodologies are still inclined to identify/quantify the more abundant phosphoproteins present in a sample. For example, phosphotyrosine peptides are underrepresented because of their relatively lower abundance.In order to analyze key signaling events that may occur on less abundant phosphoproteins, more targeted approaches, focused on a specific pathway or a specific post-translational modification, are thus still essential. Studies examining post-translational modifications are often based on immunoaffinity purification at the protein or peptide level using dedicated antibodies. Recent examples include the selective enrichment of acetylated lysines (18) and phosphorylated tyrosines (19, 20). More recently, the first specific methods targeting serine/threonine phosphorylation motifs using immune-affinity assays have emerged (21, 22). The advantages of targeted approaches are their potentially higher sensitivity and more specific throughput with, as a consequence, relatively faster and easier data interpretation, which make them attractive for many systems biology applications.Immunoaffinity enrichment can be applied at both the protein and the peptide level, and both have been explored to study protein tyrosine phosphorylation (23). The first one results mainly in information on total protein phosphorylation levels. The detection of the actual phosphoresidue might be hampered by the high content of unmodified peptides derived from the immune-purified phosphoprotein and its binding partners. Immunoprecipitation at the peptide level (20, 24, 25), in contrast, leads to improved phosphosite characterization, with the identification of hundreds of sites, albeit with the loss (generally) of information regarding total protein expression.To profile the dynamic regulation of phosphorylation events via mass spectrometry, stable isotope labeling is often implemented, either with the use of amino acids in cell culture (10) or via chemical peptide labeling of the proteolytic digests (26, 27). To identify low-abundant signaling events, phosphoprotein/phosphopeptide immunoprecipitation is typically performed on several milligrams of material because of the substoichiometric abundance of post-translational modifications. This may hamper the use of expensive isotope-labeling reagents such as iTRAQ or tandem mass tag reagents, given the large amount of chemicals needed. Boersema et al. (28) introduced an alternative sensitive and accurate triplex labeling approach using inexpensive reagents (i.e. formaldehyde) that is much less limited in terms of the sample type or amount. We combined this latter stable-isotope dimethyl labeling approach (2729) with highly specific antibodies raised against a set of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) phosphorylated substrates as based on the current literature (11, 3034). It is generally accepted that PKA phosphorylates sites with the reasonably stringent consensus motif [R/K][R/K/X]X[pS/pT]. It should be noted that this consensus motif resembles somewhat the motifs of other AGC kinases (e.g. Akt, PKG, PKC).The basicity of the PKA motifs may hamper their analysis via MS-based proteomics, especially when trypsin is used as a protease, as the peptides may become too small to be sequenced. The use of trypsin is also unfavorable in the approach presented here when attempting to immunoprecipitate peptides bearing the PKA motif. Therefore, we decided to use Lys-C in order to keep the (dominant (RRX[pS/pT])) phosphorylated motif intact. To enhance identification, we applied decision-tree MS/MS technology (9), which makes use of HCD and ETD for more efficient fragmentation, higher mass accuracy in tandem MS mode, and less background noise (35).We applied this method to screen the response of Jurkat T cells to prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) treatment. PGE2 is a potent inflammatory mediator that plays an important role in several immune-regulatory actions (36). It is produced by many different cell types, including tumor cells, where carcinogenesis is associated with chronic inflammatory responses (37). PGE2 signaling in T cells is initiated by its binding to the G protein–coupled receptors EP1, -2, -3, and -4. Signaling pathways that are initiated by PGE2 are for the most part under control of the second messenger cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP),1 which is generated from ATP by adenylyl cyclase when PGE2 binds to EP2 or EP4 receptors. One of the primary targets of cAMP is PKA—cAMP binding releases the catalytic subunit activating the kinase. In the current study, we efficiently enriched close to 650 phosphopeptides containing the [R/K][R/K/X]X[pS/pT] consensus motif. Almost all these sites were absent in a recently reported comprehensive phosphoproteomics dataset of Jurkat T cells (12), compiled using shotgun strong cation exchange–immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography analysis and containing ∼10,500 phosphorylation sites, illustrative of the complementarity and selectivity of our approach. The qualitative and quantitative data presented here provide a wide-ranging and credible resource of likely PKA substrates. Network analysis confirmed several established cAMP-dependent signaling nodes in our dataset, although most identified potential PKA substrates are “novel” (i.e. not previously reported and/or linked to PKA). Therefore, the dataset presented here can be considered as a comprehensive and reliable resource for future research into cAMP-related signaling.  相似文献   
256.
Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS) is one of the most common recessive human disorders and is characterized by multiple congenital malformations as well as neurosensory and cognitive abnormalities. A rat model of SLOS has been developed that exhibits progressive retinal degeneration and visual dysfunction; however, the molecular events underlying the degeneration and dysfunction remain poorly understood. Here, we employed a well-controlled, ion-current-based approach to compare retinas from the SLOS rat model to retinas from age- and sex-matched control rats (n = 5/group). Retinas were subjected to detergent extraction and subsequent precipitation and on-pellet-digestion procedures and then were analyzed on a long, heated column (75 cm, with small particles) with a 7-h gradient. The high analytical reproducibility of the overall proteomics procedure enabled reliable expression profiling. In total, 1,259 unique protein groups, ∼40% of which were membrane proteins, were quantified under highly stringent criteria, including a peptide false discovery rate of 0.4%, with high quality ion-current data (e.g. signal-to-noise ratio ≥ 10) obtained independently from at least two unique peptides for each protein. The ion-current-based strategy showed greater quantitative accuracy and reproducibility over a parallel spectral counting analysis. Statistically significant alterations of 101 proteins were observed; these proteins are implicated in a variety of biological processes, including lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, cell death, proteolysis, visual transduction, and vesicular/membrane transport, consistent with the features of the associated retinal degeneration in the SLOS model. Selected targets were further validated by Western blot analysis and correlative immunohistochemistry. Importantly, although photoreceptor cell death was validated by TUNEL analysis, Western blot and immunohistochemical analyses suggested a caspase-3-independent pathway. In total, these results provide compelling new evidence implicating molecular changes beyond the initial defect in cholesterol biosynthesis in this retinal degeneration model, and they might have broader implications with respect to the pathobiological mechanism underlying SLOS.Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS)1 is an autosomal recessive disorder associated with subnormal growth and failure to thrive, mental retardation and neurosensory deficits, and multiple congenital anomalies, including dysmorphologies (1, 2). Early epidemiological studies estimated the incidence of SLOS as 1 in 20,000 to 1 in 60,000 live births, primarily among Caucasians (1, 2). However, more recent studies suggest that the SLOS carrier frequency is ∼1 in 30 to 1 in 50; this predicts a much higher actual disease frequency, ranging from 1 in 1,590 to 1 in 17,000 (3, 4), making SLOS the fourth most common autosomal recessive human disease (after cystic fibrosis, phenylketonuria, and hemochromatosis). Mutation of the DHCR7 gene is the intrinsic cause of SLOS; this gene encodes the enzyme DHCR7 (3β-hydroxysterol-Δ7-reductase, a.k.a. 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase; EC1.3.1.21), which catalyzes the final step in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway, reducing the Δ7 double bond and thus converting 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) to cholesterol (4, 5). As a consequence, markedly reduced levels of cholesterol and aberrantly elevated levels of the cholesterol precursor 7DHC (and its epimer, 8DHC) are observed in the majority of affected SLOS patients (6, 7). Therefore, the clinical suspicion of SLOS is confirmed by elevated 7DHC in plasma or tissues, typically demonstrated via chromatographic methods (e.g. HPLC or GC/MS) (8, 9).Visual capacity may become compromised in SLOS patients because of a variety of congenital or postnatal pathologies, such as cataracts, aniridia, corneal endothelium defects, sclerocornea, electrophysiological defects in the retina, optic nerve abnormalities, or other ophthalmologic problems (10, 11). We currently lack full knowledge of the exact pathobiological mechanism underlying SLOS, but additional insights may be afforded by studies employing a rodent model of the disease in which rats are treated with AY9944 (trans-1,4-bis[2-chlorobenzylaminomethyl] cyclohexane dihydrochloride), a relatively selective inhibitor of DHCR7 (1214). We previously described progressive retinal degeneration in this rat model of SLOS, which is characterized by the shortening of retinal rod outer segments, pyknosis and thinning of the outer nuclear layer (ONL) of the retina (which contains the photoreceptor nuclei), and accumulation of membranous/lipid inclusions in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) (12, 13). Reduced rod outer segment membrane fluidity, primarily caused by a dramatic (30 to 40 mol%) decline in docosahexaenoic acid (22:6, n3) levels relative to age-matched controls, also was observed in the SLOS rat model by three postnatal months (15, 16). Retinal function and sterol steady-state in the same rat model of SLOS can be partially rescued using a high-cholesterol diet (2% by weight), although histological degeneration of the retina still occurs (17). However, the molecular mechanisms that underlie the observed electrophysiological defects in the retina, the accumulation of membranous/lipid inclusions in the RPE, the shortening of retinal rod outer segments, and the initiation of ONL pyknosis in the SLOS rat model remain poorly understood. Therefore, a comprehensive profiling of the retinal proteomes of AY9944-treated versus age-matched untreated control rats may contribute to further understanding of the underlying mechanisms responsible for the retinopathy associated with the SLOS model and, by extension, the human disease.Nevertheless, extensive and reliable expression profiling of the retinal proteome remains a prominent challenge, owing to the need to quantify data from multiple animals and a high percentage of integral membrane and membrane-associated proteins (18, 19). Label-free approaches can compare multiple replicates (2022) with quantitative accuracy comparable to that attained with stable isotope-labeling methods (2325). However, in order to achieve reliable relative quantification, highly quantitative and reproducible sample preparation and LC/MS analysis are required for relatively large-scale sample cohorts.In the present study, we performed a reproducible, well-controlled, ion-current-based comparative proteomic analysis of the retinas from AY9944-treated versus age/sex-matched control rats (n = 5 animals per group). A high-concentration detergent mixture was used for the efficient extraction of proteins from retinas, and samples then underwent a reproducible precipitation/on-pellet-digestion procedure and long-column, 7-h nano-LC-MS analysis. These approaches ensured extensive comparative analysis of retina samples with 10 animals. The preparative and analytical procedures were carefully optimized and controlled to ensure optimal reproducibility. Two label-free approaches, the ion-current-based method and a spectral counting method, were compared in parallel. The altered proteins were subjected to functional annotation, and selected groups of proteins of interest were further validated by means of Western blot and correlative immunohistochemical analysis.  相似文献   
257.
Many protein activities are driven by ATP binding and hydrolysis. Here, we explore the ATP binding proteome of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana using acyl-ATP (AcATP)1 probes. These probes target ATP binding sites and covalently label lysine residues in the ATP binding pocket. Gel-based profiling using biotinylated AcATP showed that labeling is dependent on pH and divalent ions and can be competed by nucleotides. The vast majority of these AcATP-labeled proteins are known ATP binding proteins. Our search for labeled peptides upon in-gel digest led to the discovery that the biotin moiety of the labeled peptides is oxidized. The in-gel analysis displayed kinase domains of two receptor-like kinases (RLKs) at a lower than expected molecular weight, indicating that these RLKs lost the extracellular domain, possibly as a result of receptor shedding. Analysis of modified peptides using a gel-free platform identified 242 different labeling sites for AcATP in the Arabidopsis proteome. Examination of each individual labeling site revealed a preference of labeling in ATP binding pockets for a broad diversity of ATP binding proteins. Of these, 24 labeled peptides were from a diverse range of protein kinases, including RLKs, mitogen-activated protein kinases, and calcium-dependent kinases. A significant portion of the labeling sites could not be assigned to known nucleotide binding sites. However, the fact that labeling could be competed with ATP indicates that these labeling sites might represent previously uncharacterized nucleotide binding sites. A plot of spectral counts against expression levels illustrates the high specificity of AcATP probes for protein kinases and known ATP binding proteins. This work introduces profiling of ATP binding activities of a large diversity of proteins in plant proteomes. The data have been deposited in ProteomeXchange with the identifier PXD000188.ATP binding and hydrolysis are the driving processes in all living organisms. Hundreds of cellular proteins are able to bind and hydrolyze ATP to unfold proteins, transport molecules over membranes, or phosphorylate small molecules or proteins. Proteins with very different structures are able to bind ATP. A large and important class of ATP binding proteins is that of the kinases, which transfer the gamma phosphate from ATP to substrates. Kinases, and particularly protein kinases, play pivotal roles in signaling and protein regulation.The genome of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana encodes for over 1099 protein kinases and hundreds of other ATP binding proteins (1, 2). Protein kinases are involved in nearly all signaling cascades and regulate processes ranging from cell cycle to flowering and from immunity to germination. Many protein kinases in plants are receptor-like kinases (RLKs), often carrying extracellular leucine-rich repeats (LRRs). The RLK class contains at least 610 members (3), including famous examples such as receptors involved in development (e.g. BRI1, ER, CLV1) and immunity (e.g. FLS2, EFR). Other important classes are mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (MPKs) (20 different members), MPK kinase kinase kinases (MAP3Ks) (60 different members (4)), and calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPKs) (34 different members (5)). Because of their diverse and important roles, protein kinases have been intensively studied in plant science. The current approach is to study protein kinases individually—a daunting task, considering the remaining hundreds of uncharacterized protein kinases. New approaches are necessary in order to study protein kinases and other ATP binding proteins globally rather than individually.ATP binding activities of protein kinases and other proteins can be detected globally by acyl-ATP (AcATP) probes (6, 7) (Fig. 1A). AcATP binds to the ATP pocket of ATP binding proteins and places the acyl group in close proximity to conserved lysine residues in the ATP binding pocket. The acyl phosphonate moiety serves as an electrophilic warhead that can be nucleophilically attacked by the amino group of the lysine, resulting in a covalent attachment of the acyl reporter of the AcATP probe on the lysine and a concomitant release of ATP. The reporter tag is usually a biotin to capture and identify the labeled proteins. Labeled proteins can be displayed on protein blots using streptavidin-HRP. However, because AcATP labels many ATP binding proteins and protein kinases are of relatively low abundance, mass spectrometry is more often used to identify and quantify labeling with AcATP probes. The analysis is preferably done using Xsite, a procedure that involves trypsination of the entire labeled proteome, followed by analysis of the biotinylated peptides rather than the biotinylated proteins (8). This “KiNativ ” approach provides enough depth and resolving power to monitor ∼160 protein kinases in a crude mammalian proteome (7). Of the 518 human protein kinases (9), 394 (76%) have been detected via AcATP labeling (6).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Structure and mechanism of labeling with BHAcATP. A, BHAcATP contains ATP, an acyl phosphate reactive group, and a biotin tag. When BHAcATP binds to the ATP binding pocket of a protein, the amino group of the nearby lysine reacts with the carbonyl carbon, which results in the covalent binding of the biotin tag to the protein while ATP is released. B, typical BHAcATP labeling profile of Arabidopsis leaf proteome. Arabidopsis leaf extracts were labeled with BHAcATP and the biotinylated proteins were detected on protein blots using streptavidin-HRP. Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining indicates equal loading. Asterisks indicate endogenously biotinylated proteins MCCA and BCCP. White, black, and gray arrowheads indicate bands containing ATBP+RBCL, PGK1, and a mix of ATP binding proteins, respectively. Abbreviations: MCCA, 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase; BCCP, biotin carboxyl carrier protein; ATPB, chloroplastic ATPase; RBCL, ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase; PGK1, phosphoglycerate kinase-1.KiNativ has mostly been used to validate targets of human drugs that target protein kinases using competitive labeling experiments. This approach has been used to identify selective inhibitors of, for example, Parkinson''s disease protein kinase LRRK2 (10), the BMK1 and JNK MAP kinases (11, 12), and the mTOR kinase (13). Importantly, the correlation of the biological activity of protein-kinase-inhibiting drugs with inhibitor affinity detected using KiNativ is better than that achieved when affinities are determined by assays using heterologously expressed protein kinases (7). This improved correlation illustrates that assays in the native environment provide a more realistic measure of protein kinase function.In addition to characterizing inhibitors selectively, AcATP probes can also display differential ATP binding activities of protein kinases. For example, labeling with AcATP probes during infection with dengue virus displayed a 2- to 8-fold activation of a DNA-dependent protein kinase (14) Similarly, AcATP labeling revealed an unexpected Raf kinase activation in extracts upon protein kinase inhibitor treatment (7). In conclusion, profiling with AcATP probes is a powerful approach for monitoring protein kinases and offers unprecedented opportunities to identify selective protein kinase inhibitors and discover protein kinases with differential ATP binding activities.In this work, we introduce AcATP profiling of plant proteomes. In addition to the analysis of labeled peptides, we characterized labeling using gel-based approaches and discovered that biotin is often oxidized in this procedure. We also performed an in-depth analysis of labeling sites in proteins other than protein kinases, which had not been done before. We discuss labeling outside known nucleotide binding pockets and investigate the correlation of labeling sites with protein abundance. We describe 63 labeling sites of known nucleotide binding pockets, of which 24 represent a remarkable diversity of protein kinases, including several LRR-RLKs. This work launches a new approach to study ATP binding proteins in plant science.  相似文献   
258.
Candida species exhibit a variety of ploidy states and modes of sexual reproduction. Most species possess the requisite genes for sexual reproduction, recombination, and meiosis, yet only a few have been reported to undergo a complete sexual cycle including mating and sporulation. Candida albicans, the most studied Candida species and a prevalent human fungal pathogen, completes its sexual cycle via a parasexual process of concerted chromosome loss rather than a conventional meiosis. In this study, we examine ploidy changes in Candida tropicalis, a closely related species to C. albicans that was recently revealed to undergo sexual mating. C. tropicalis diploid cells mate to form tetraploid cells, and we show that these can be induced to undergo chromosome loss to regenerate diploid forms by growth on sorbose medium. The diploid products are themselves mating competent, thereby establishing a parasexual cycle in this species for the first time. Extended incubation (>120 generations) of C. tropicalis tetraploid cells under rich culture conditions also resulted in instability of the tetraploid form and a gradual reduction in ploidy back to the diploid state. The fitness levels of C. tropicalis diploid and tetraploid cells were compared, and diploid cells exhibited increased fitness relative to tetraploid cells in vitro, despite diploid and tetraploid cells having similar doubling times. Collectively, these experiments demonstrate distinct pathways by which a parasexual cycle can occur in C. tropicalis and indicate that nonmeiotic mechanisms drive ploidy changes in this prevalent human pathogen.  相似文献   
259.
Pygoscelis penguins are experiencing general population declines in their northernmost range whereas there are reported increases in their southernmost range. These changes are coincident with decadal‐scale trends in remote sensed observations of sea ice concentrations (SIC) and sea surface temperatures (SST) during the chick‐rearing season (austral summer). Using SIC, SST, and bathymetry, we identified separate chick‐rearing niche spaces for the three Pygoscelis penguin species and used a maximum entropy approach (MaxEnt) to spatially and temporally model suitable chick‐rearing habitats in the Southern Ocean. For all Pygoscelis penguin species, the MaxEnt models predict significant changes in the locations of suitable chick‐rearing habitats over the period of 1982–2010. In general, chick‐rearing habitat suitability at specific colony locations agreed with the corresponding increases or decreases in documented population trends over the same time period. These changes were the most pronounced along the West Antarctic Peninsula where there has been a rapid warming event during at least the last 50 years.  相似文献   
260.
N-Phenylanthranilic acid (NPAA) causes renal papillary necrosis (RPN) in the rat following repeated oral dosing. Non-invasive early detection of RPN is difficult, but a number of potential biomarkers have been investigated, including phospholipid and uronic acid excretion. This study used 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic analysis of urine to investigate urinary metabolic perturbations occurring in the rat following exposure to NPAA. Male Alderley Park rats received NPAA (300, 500 or 700?mg?kg?1?day?1 orally) for 7?days, and urine was collected on days 7–8, 14–15, 21–22 and 28–29. In a separate study, urine was collected on days 1–2, 3–4, 5–6 and 7–8 from rats receiving 500?mg?kg?1?day?1. Samples were analysed by 1H NMR spectroscopy combined with multivariate data analysis and clinical chemistry. Histopathology and clinical chemistry analysis of terminal blood samples was carried out following termination on days 4, 6, 8 and 29 (4?week time course) and days 2, 4, 6 and 8 (8?day study). Urine analysis revealed a marked, though variable, excretion of β-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate and acetone (ketone bodies) seen on days 3–4, 5–6 and 7–8 of the study. It is postulated that the ketonuria might be secondary to an alteration in fatty acid metabolism due to inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis. In addition, an elevation in urinary ascorbate was observed during the first 8?days of the study. Ascorbate is considered to be a biomarker of hepatic response, probably reflecting an increased hepatic activity due to glucuronidation of NPAA.  相似文献   
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