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61.
1. Three random linear copolymers composed of two or three of the amino acids d-tyrosine, d-glutamic acid, d-alanine and d-lysine, and a branched multichain copolymer with a poly-d-lysine backbone and polymeric side chains of d-tyrosine and d-glutamic acid, were found to be non-antigenic in rabbits, by precipitin and passive cutaneous anaphylaxis, and in guinea pigs, by delayed hypersensitivity tests. The corresponding four copolymers of l-amino acids were shown to be antigenic by all the three criteria. 2. No immunological cross-reactions were observed between the polypeptides composed of d-amino acids and the corresponding l-amino acid copolymers. 3. Similarly, an azobenzenearsonic acid conjugate of poly-d-tyrosine was shown to be non-antigenic in guinea pigs, in contrast with an analogous conjugate of poly-l-tyrosine. Animals sensitized with the conjugate of poly-l-tyrosine did not exhibit delayed skin reactions, when cross-tested with the d-conjugate. 4. A linear polymer composed of d-tyrosine, l-glutamic acid and l-alanine was found to be immunogenic and to cross-react with the corresponding polymer composed exclusively of d-amino acids.  相似文献   
62.
1. The novel enzyme, erythro-beta-hydroxyaspartate dehydratase, a key enzyme of the beta-hydroxyaspartate pathway (Kornberg & Morris, 1963, 1965), has been purified 30-fold from extracts of glycollate-grown Micrococcus denitrificans. The purified preparation was devoid of erythro-beta-hydroxyaspartate-aldolase activity, and free from enzymes that act on oxaloacetate. 2. Properties of the purified dehydratase were studied by direct assay of the enzymic formation of oxaloacetate and ammonia from added erythro-beta-hydroxyaspartate. 3. The enzyme was highly substrate-specific, utilizing only the l-isomer of erythro-beta-hydroxyaspartate (K(m), 0.43mm, and V(max.), 99mumoles of oxaloacetate formed/min./mg. of protein at pH9.15 and 30 degrees ). Of many compounds tested, only maleate was a competitive inhibitor (K(i), 32mm at pH7.6). 4. The optimum pH for activity was about 9.5. The K(m) varied with pH, showing a marked optimum at pH7.8. The V(max.) also varied with pH in a manner suggesting the presence in the enzyme-substrate complex of a dissociable group of pK'(a) about 8.5. 5. Carbonyl reagents were inhibitory, but of three thiol reagents tested only p-chloromercuribenzoate was inhibitory. 6. A partially resolved preparation of the enzyme was activated four-fold by the addition of pyridoxal phosphate and thereby restored to half activity. 7. EDTA (0.1mm) was almost completely inhibitory, activity being restored by bivalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+) and Mn(2+)); no activation by univalent cations was observed. 8. The findings are discussed in the light of reported properties of related hydroxyamino acid dehydratases.  相似文献   
63.
Ras interaction with the GTPase-activating protein (GAP)   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Biologically active forms of Ras complexed to GTP can bind to the GTPase-activating protein (GAP), which has been implicated as possible target of Ras in mammalian cells. In order to study the structural features of Ras required for this interaction, we have evaluated a series of mutant ras proteins for the ability to bind GAP and a series of Ras peptides for the ability to interfere with this interaction. Point mutations in the putative effector region of Ras (residues 32-40) that inhibit biological activity also impair Ras binding to GAP. An apparent exception is the Thr to Ser substitution at residue 35; [Ser-35]Ras binds to GAP as effectively as wild-type Ras even though this mutant is biologically weak in both mammalian and S. cerevisiae cells. In vitro, [Ser-35]Ras can also efficiently stimulate the S. cerevisiae target of Ras, adenylyl cyclase, indicating that other factors may influence Ras/protein interactions in vivo. Peptides having Ras residues 17-44 and 17-32 competed with the binding of Ras to E. coli-expressed GAP with IC50 values of 2.4 and 0.9 microM, respectively, whereas Ras peptide 17-26 was without effect up to 400 microM. A related peptide from the yeast GTP-binding protein YPT1 analogous to Ras peptide 17-32 competed with an IC50 value of 19 microM even though the YPT1 protein itself is unable to bind to GAP. These results suggest that determinants within Ras peptide 17-32 may be important for Ras binding to GAP.  相似文献   
64.
The thylakoids of cryptomonads are unique in that their lumens are filled with an electron-dense substance postulated to be phycobiliprotein. In this study, we used an antiserum against phycoerythrin (PE) 545 of Rhodomonas lens (gift of R. MacColl, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY) and protein A-gold immunoelectron microscopy to localize this light-harvesting protein in cryptomonad cells. In sections of whole cells of R. lens labeled with anti-PE 545, the gold particles were not uniformly distributed over the dense thylakoid lumens as expected, but instead were preferentially localized either over or adjacent to the thylakoid membranes. A similar pattern of labeling was observed in cell sections labeled with two different antisera against PE 566 from Cryptomonas ovata. To determine whether PE is localized on the outer or inner side of the membrane, chloroplast fragments were isolated from cells fixed in dilute glutaraldehyde and labeled in vitro with anti-PE 545 followed by protein A-small gold. These thylakoid preparations were then fixed in glutaraldehyde followed by osmium tetroxide, embedded in Spurr, and sections were labeled with anti-PE 545 followed by protein A-large gold. Small gold particles were found only at the broken edges of the thylakoids, associated with the dense material on the lumenal surface of the membrane, whereas large gold particles were distributed along the entire length of the thylakoid membrane. We conclude that PE is located inside the thylakoids of R. lens in close association with the lumenal surface of the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   
65.
We have shown previously that insulin stimulates fluid phase endocytosis in 3T3-L1 adipocytes (Gibbs et al., 1986). Using [14C]sucrose as an endocytotic marker, we show here that phenylarsine oxide, a trivalent arsenical which binds neighboring dithiols, blocked not only insulin-stimulated fluid phase endocytosis, but basal endocytosis as well. The Ki for this process was 6 microM in the presence or absence of insulin and the time required for inhibition was less than 2.5 min, the limit of detection in our assay system. These results can be compared with the inhibitory effect of phenylarsine oxide on insulin-stimulated glucose transport. Although the Ki for insulin-stimulated transport (7 microM) was similar to that for inhibition of endocytosis, basal glucose transport was not affected by the inhibitor. Further, when cells were prestimulated with insulin causing maximal stimulation of the glucose transport rate, phenylarsine oxide induced a time-dependent reduction to the basal rate (t 1/2 of 10 min), despite the fact that endocytosis was blocked immediately. This observation suggests that if the transporter is recycled by an exocytotic/endocytotic mechanism, it is distinct from fluid-phase endocytosis/exocytosis, which is a vesicle-mediated process, and provides further evidence that the transporter may undergo intrinsic activation/inactivation which does not require vesicle movement.  相似文献   
66.
We have determined the nucleotide sequence of a cDNA encoding spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase (CA). The open reading frame encodes a protein consisting of a transit peptide and a mature CA protein with a predicted mass of 24, 116 daltons. This represents the first report of a nucleotide sequence of a plant CA.  相似文献   
67.
Serum samples collected from feral and domestic swine (Sus scrofa) in Florida and feral swine in Georgia and Texas were assayed by plaque reduction for their virus neutralizing (VN) antibodies against the porcine transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGE). None of 560 samples collected from feral swine contained VN antibodies for TGE virus, but experimentally infected feral swine seroconverted. None of 665 samples from domestic swine contained TGE-VN antibodies. These results indicate feral swine are not a significant reservoir for TGE virus in southern states, but are capable of becoming infected and developing VN antibodies against TGE.  相似文献   
68.
A versatile shuttle system has been developed for genetic complementation with cloned genes of transformable and non-transformableNeisseria mutants. By random insertion of a selectable marker into the conjugativeNeisseria plasmidptetM25.2, a site within this plasmid was identified that is compatible with plasmid replication and with conjugative transfer of plasmid. Regions flanking the permissive insertion site of ptetM25.2 were cloned inEscherichia coli and served as a basis for the construction of the Hermes vectors. Hermes vectors are composed of anE. coli replicon that does not support autonomous replication inNeisseria, e.g. ColE1, p15A, orori fd, fused with a shuttle consisting of a selectable marker and a multiple cloning site flanked by the integration region of ptetM25.2. Complementation of a non-transformableNeisseria strain involves a three-step process: (i) insertion of the desired gene into a Hermes vector; (ii) transformation of Hermes into aNeisseria strain containing ptetM25.2 to create a hybrid ptetM25.2 via gene replacement by the Hermes shuttle cassette; and (iii) conjugative transfer of the hybrid ptetM25.2 into the finalNeisseria recipient. Several applications for the genetic manipulation of pathogenicNeisseriae are described.  相似文献   
69.
Our objective is to test an optimality model of human fertility that specifies the behavioral requirements for fitness maximization in order (a) to determine whether current behavior does maximize fitness and, if not, (b) to use the specific nature of the behavioral deviations from fitness maximization towards the development of models of evolved proximate mechanisms that may have maximized fitness in the past but lead to deviations under present conditions. To test the model we use data from a representative sample of 7,107 men living in Albuquerque, New Mexico, between 1990 and 1993. The model we test proposes that low fertility in modern settings maximizes number of grandchildren as a result of a trade-off between parental fertility and next generation fertility. Results do not show the optimization, although the data do reveal a trade-off between parental fertility and offspring education and income. We propose that two characteristics of modern economies have led to a period of sustained fertility reduction and to a corresponding lack of association between income and fertility. The first is the direct link between costs of investment and wage rates due to the forces of supply and demand for labor in competitive economies. The second is the increasing emphasis on cumulative knowledge, skills, and technologies in the production of resources. Together they produce historically novel conditions. These two features of modern economies may interact with evolved psychological and physiological mechanisms governing fertility and parental investment to produce behavior that maximizes the economic productivity of lineages at the expense of fitness. If cognitive processes evolved to track diminishing returns to parental investment and if physiological processes evolved to regulate fertility in response to nutritional state and patterns of breast feeding, we might expect non-adaptive responses when returns from parental investment do not diminish until extremely high levels are reached. With high economic payoffs from parental investment, people have begun to exercise cognitive regulation of fertility through contraception and family planning practices. Those cognitive processes maynot have evolved to handle fitness trade-offs between fertility and parental investment. A preliminary presentation of this data was published in R. I. M. Dunbar, ed.,Human Reproduction Decisions: Biological and Social Perspectives. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995. Support for the research project, “Male Fertility and Parenting in New Mexico,” began with two seed grants from the University of New Mexico’s Biomedical Research Grants Program, 1988 and 1989, and one from the University of New Mexico Research Allocations Committee, 1988. Further seed money as well as interim funding came from the William T. Grant Foundation (#89130589 and #91130501). The major support for the project came from the National Science Foundation from 1990 to 1993 (#BNS-9011723 and #DBS-911552). Both National Science Foundation grants included Research Experience for Undergraduates supplements. Hillard S. Kaplan is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. His earlier research and publications focused on food sharing, time allocation, parental investment, and reproductive strategies among Ache hunter-gatherers in Paraguay, Machiguenga and Piro forager-horticulturalists in Peru, and villagers of several ethnicities in Botswana. New research and theory concern fertility, parental investment, and mating strategies in developed and developing nations. This research formulates a new theory of reproductive decision-making and the demographic transition, integrating human capital and parental investment theory in a synthesis of economic and evolutionary approaches. Jane B. Lancaster is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. Her research and publications are on human reproductive biology and behavior, especially human parental investment; women’s reproductive biology of pregnancy, lactation, and child-spacing; and male fertility and investment in children. Current research with Hillard S. Kaplan is on male life history strategies among a large sample of men in New Mexico. She has coedited three books on human parental investment:School-Age Pregnancy and Parenthood (with B. Hamburg),Parenting across the Life Span (with J. Altmann, A. Rossi, and L. Sherrod), andOffspring Abuse and Neglect (with R. Gelles). She is scientific editor of a quarterly journal,Human Nature: An Interdisciplinary, Biosocial Perspective published by Aldine de Gruyter. She is also a council member of the newly formed Human Behavior and Evolution Society. John A. Bock is Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow in Epidemiology and Population Health at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University. His research focuses on the allocation of parental investment and the determinants of children’s activities, integrating aspects of economic and evolutionary theory. He has ongoing field research with Bantu and Bushmen agro-pastoralists and forager-horticulturalists in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. He is also collaborating with Lancaster and Kaplan on the determinants of progeny distribution and homosexuality among New Mexican men. Sara E. Johnson is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of New Mexico. Her major research trajectory focuses on trade-offs in life history characters. Her research experience includes participation in a study of variation in growth and development among children in a multi-ethnic community in the Okavango Delta, Botswana, in addition to her dissertation work on individual variation in growth and mortality among juvenile baboons. She is collaborating with Lancaster and Kaplan on the association between survival and fertility among Albuquerque men.  相似文献   
70.
A potent and specific small molecule inhibitor of farnesyl-protein transferase, L-739,749, caused rapid morphological reversion and growth inhibition of ras-transformed fibroblasts (Rat1/ras cells). Morphological reversion occurred within 18 h of L-739,749 addition. The reverted phenotype was stable for several days in the absence of inhibitor before the transformed phenotype reappeared. Cell enlargement and actin stress fiber formation accompanied treatment of both Rat1/ras and normal Rat1 cells. Significantly, inhibition of Ras processing did not correlate with the initiation or maintenance of the reverted phenotype. While a single treatment with L-739,749 was sufficient to morphologically revert Rat1/ras cells, repetitive inhibitor treatment was required to significantly reduce cell growth rate. Thus, the effects of L-739,749 on transformed cell morphology and cytoskeletal actin organization could be separated from effects on cell growth, depending on whether exposure to a farnesyl-protein transferase inhibitor was transient or repetitive. In contrast, L-739,749 had no effect on the growth, morphology, or actin organization of v-raf-transformed cells. Taken together, the results suggest that the mechanism of morphological reversion is complex and may involve farnesylated proteins that control the organization of cytoskeletal actin.  相似文献   
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