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31.
    
Territorial songs of the nearly trans-PalaearcticSylvia curruca complex recorded in various area parts of the three major taxa groups (curruca, althaea, minula) are analyzed. Playback experiments substantiate the differences between the three groups. In view of their locally sympatric distribution and distinct territorial songs thecurruca, althaea andminula groups are considered different species of superspeciesSylvia [curruca].  相似文献   
32.
There are two protein primers involved in picornavirus RNA replication, VPg, the viral protein of the genome, and VPgpUpUOH. A cis-acting replication element (CRE) within the open reading frame of poliovirus (PV) RNA allows the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 3DPol to catalyze the conversion of VPg into VPgpUpUOH. In this study, we used preinitiation RNA replication complexes (PIRCs) to determine when CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation occurs relative to the sequential synthesis of negative- and positive-strand RNA. Guanidine HCl (2 mM), a reversible inhibitor of PV 2CATPase, prevented CRE-dependent VPgpUpUOH synthesis and the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis. VPgpUpUOH and nascent negative-strand RNA molecules were synthesized coincident in time following the removal of guanidine, consistent with PV RNA functioning simultaneously as a template for CRE-dependent VPgpUpUOH synthesis and negative-strand RNA synthesis. The amounts of [32P]UMP incorporated into VPgpUpUOH and negative-strand RNA products indicated that 100 to 400 VPgpUpUOH molecules were made coincident in time with each negative-strand RNA. 3′-dCTP inhibited the elongation of nascent negative-strand RNAs without affecting CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation. A 3′ nontranslated region mutation which inhibited negative-strand RNA synthesis did not inhibit CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation. Together, the data implicate 2CATPase in the mechanisms whereby PV RNA functions as a template for reiterative CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation before and during negative-strand RNA synthesis.A common feature of positive-strand RNA viruses is the asymmetric replication of viral RNA. Poliovirus (PV) RNA replication has been studied extensively; however, it remains to be determined exactly how the synthesis of negative-strand RNA and that of positive-strand RNA are mechanistically distinct, culminating in the synthesis of greater amounts of positive-strand than negative-strand RNA (2). A cis-acting replication element (CRE) within the 2C open reading frame of PV RNA functions as a template for the conversion of the viral protein of the genome (VPg) into VPgpUpUOH (24, 26, 37). 3D polymerase (3DPol), in concert with other viral proteins, catalyzes the conversion of VPg into VPgpUpUOH on CRE RNA templates (22). It remains to be determined whether the tyrosine hydroxyl of VPg (14, 20, 21), the 3′ hydroxyl of VPgpUpUOH (22, 23, 43), or both (38) are used to prime negative-strand RNA synthesis. It would be informative to know whether VPg is converted into VPgpUpUOH before, during, and/or after the initiation of viral negative-strand RNA synthesis. Conversion of VPg into VPgpUpUOH before the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis would be consistent with the possibility that it primes the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis. Conversely, if VPg were not converted into VPgpUpUOH until after the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis, VPgpUpUOH could not possibly participate in the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis. Also, because multiple copies of VPgpUpUOH are necessary to prime reiterative initiation of positive-strand RNA synthesis (35), VPg is most likely converted into abundant amounts of VPgpUpUOH before the initiation of positive-strand RNA synthesis.PV preinitiation RNA replication complexes (PIRCs) were used in this study to examine when VPg is converted into VPgpUpUOH. PIRCs assemble and accumulate when PV mRNA is translated in reaction mixtures containing cytoplasmic extracts from uninfected HeLa cells and 2 mM guanidine HCl, a reversible inhibitor of viral RNA replication (5). The viral replication proteins expressed from the viral mRNA interact with lipid membranes in the cytoplasmic extracts to form RNA replication complexes (RCs) similar to those in infected cells (12). PIRCs convert VPg into VPgpUpUOH and initiate viral RNA replication when they are isolated from reaction mixtures containing guanidine and resuspended in reaction mixtures lacking guanidine (6, 19). Guanidine HCl functions as a reversible inhibitor of PV RNA replication, both in cells (11) and in cell-free translation-replication reactions (6). In cells, PV RNA RCs fail to immediately initiate RNA replication following the removal of guanidine HCl (11). Rather, PV RCs formed in the presence of guanidine in cells appear to be translocated to a region of the cytoplasm where the RCs and their contents may be recycled and/or destroyed (11), possibly by autophagic vesicles (17). Recycling and/or destruction of RCs by autophagic vesicles would preclude their function upon the removal of guanidine. PIRCs, which form in the presence of guanidine during the translation of PV mRNA in cytoplasmic extracts of HeLa cells, immediately initiate both negative-strand RNA synthesis and CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation upon the removal of guanidine (6, 19). Viral RNA replication and VPgpUpUOH synthesis are monitored by the incorporation of radiolabeled UTP (19-21). It is important to note that RNA replication in the context of PIRCs is artificial in that the PIRCs are stalled with guanidine and purified and then the guanidine block is removed. Despite this artificiality, the mechanisms of RNA replication within PIRCs appear to reliably represent the mechanisms of RNA replication in cells. There are several advantageous features of the PIRC experimental system: viral RNA replication is synchronous and sequential, with negative-strand RNA being made before positive-strand RNA (6); viral RNA replication is asymmetric, with an excess of positive-strand RNA being made from each negative-strand template; VPg is converted into VPgpUpUOH in a CRE-dependent manner (20, 21); and the reaction conditions, including nucleoside triphosphate concentrations, are easily manipulated (38). Importantly, PIRCs contain all of the viral proteins associated with RNA replication and RNA replication by PIRCs faithfully mimics the asymmetric replication of PV RNA observed in cells.PV protein 2C, the target of guanidine HCl (30), is a critical but poorly understood component of PIRCs and RNA RCs in cells. PV protein 2C has an NH-terminal amphipathic helix which interacts with cellular membranes (40), a central ATPase domain where guanidine-resistant and guanidine-dependent mutations arise (31, 32), a cysteine-rich zinc binding motif (29), and a COOH-terminal RNA binding domain (34) which appears to work in concert with amino acid residues at the NH terminus to bind RNA. 2CATPase can oligomerize (1, 41), anchoring viral replication proteins and RNA templates within membranous RCs (4). The ability of guanidine HCl to reversibly inhibit both CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation and negative-strand RNA synthesis implicates 2CATPase in the mechanisms by which PV RNA functions coordinately as a template for both RNA replication and CRE-dependent VPgpUpUOH synthesis (19, 21).In this study, we found that VPg was converted into VPgpUpUOH before and during negative-strand RNA synthesis and that 2CATPase activity, in the context of membranous PIRCs, allowed PV RNA to function simultaneously as a template for CRE-dependent VPg uridylylation and as a template for negative-strand RNA synthesis. We discuss how picornaviruses coordinate the synthesis of nucleotidylylated protein primers with other steps of viral RNA replication.  相似文献   
33.
34.
The structures of polio-, coxsackie-, and rhinovirus polymerases have revealed a conserved yet unusual protein conformation surrounding their buried N termini where a β-strand distortion results in a solvent-exposed hydrophobic amino acid at residue 5. In a previous study, we found that coxsackievirus polymerase activity increased or decreased depending on the size of the amino acid at residue 5 and proposed that this residue becomes buried during the catalytic cycle. In this work, we extend our studies to show that poliovirus polymerase activity is also dependent on the nature of residue 5 and further elucidate which aspects of polymerase function are affected. Poliovirus polymerases with mutations of tryptophan 5 retain wild-type elongation rates, RNA binding affinities, and elongation complex formation rates but form unstable elongation complexes. A large hydrophobic residue is required to maintain the polymerase in an elongation-competent conformation, and smaller hydrophobic residues at position 5 progressively decrease the stability of elongation complexes and their processivity on genome-length templates. Consistent with this, the mutations also reduced viral RNA production in a cell-free replication system. In vivo, viruses containing residue 5 mutants produce viable virus, and an aromatic phenylalanine was maintained with only a slightly decreased virus growth rate. However, nonaromatic amino acids resulted in slow-growing viruses that reverted to wild type. The structural basis for this polymerase phenotype is yet to be determined, and we speculate that amino acid residue 5 interacts directly with template RNA or is involved in a protein structural interaction that stabilizes the elongation complex.Members of the Picornaviridae family of small RNA viruses cause a wide range of diseases in humans, including liver disease, heart disease, aseptic meningitis, the common cold, and poliomyelitis. The picornaviruses include the most common human viruses, which are the rhinoviruses that spread through respiratory pathways, and the second most common viruses, which are enteroviruses that spread by fecal-oral transmission. These viruses have ≈7.5-kb positive-sense genomes containing a single large open reading frame encoding a ≈250-kDa polyprotein that is cleaved into about a dozen different proteins by viral proteases (20). Their genome life cycle is completely RNA based, with replication being driven by the viral 3Dpol protein, an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP).After viral RNA translation and polyprotein processing, 3Dpol replicates the infecting positive-strand RNA template into a negative-strand intermediate that is subsequently used as a template for positive-strand synthesis. During these processes, 3Dpol interacts with multiple templates, substrates, and other viral proteins; however, many aspects of these events remain obscure. The crystal structures of several picornaviral 3Dpol enzymes have been solved, and these all conform to the “right hand” analogy commonly used to describe polymerases as having palm, thumb, and finger domains (10, 14, 18, 22, 27, 29). Based on homology to other polymerases and the structures of 3Dpol-RNA complexes with foot-and-mouth disease and Norwalk virus polymerases, the finger domain interacts with the template RNA, the palm domain contains the active-site aspartate residues that coordinate the metals needed for catalysis, and the thumb domain contacts the exiting duplex RNA product (13, 26, 30).Poliovirus is among the most-studied picornaviruses, and its polymerase has been thoroughly characterized biochemically (3, 15) and structurally (28, 29). Processive RNA synthesis requires the formation of a stable 3Dpol elongation complex through a multistep process involving at least two conformational changes (2). First, following RNA binding, there is a slow (t1/2 ≈ 12 s) conformational change that results in a 3Dpol-RNA complex poised for nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) incorporation. Second, following the addition of the first nucleotide to the primer, there is another conformational change to produce a very stable elongation complex with an in vitro half-life on the order of several hours. The polymerase begins processive elongation after the formation of this stable elongation complex, and each nucleotide addition cycle involves a five-step mechanism, of which NTP repositioning and NTP catalysis are rate limiting (3). Similar experiments using the homologous foot-and-mouth disease virus polymerase reveal an analogous set of complexes resulting in an elongation complex with a half-life of 27 h (1). Although these viral polymerase complexes have been well characterized biochemically, there is relatively little known about any structural changes involved in elongation complex formation or the catalytic cycle itself; all the 3Dpol structures solved thus far show essentially the same conformation, with no evidence for significant conformational changes upon RNA or NTP binding.The activation of several picornaviral polymerases is dependent upon correct cleavage of 3Dpol from the viral 3CDpro precursor protein in order to create a new N terminus that can be buried in a pocket at the base of the 3Dpol finger domain. This buried N terminus has been observed in poliovirus, coxsackievirus, rhinovirus, and foot-and-mouth disease virus polymerases (10, 14, 22, 29). In solving the structure of poliovirus polymerase, we observed that burying the N terminus resulted in a subtle but important conformational change in the active site whereby Asp238 was repositioned to make a key hydrogen bond with the 2′ hydroxyl of a bound NTP (29). Addition or deletion of a single residue at the N terminus abolished enzyme activity, and mutation of Gly1 to alanine resulted in a partially active enzyme with slightly altered positioning of Asp238. Further data from coxsackievirus polymerase showed that the addition of a second N-terminal glycine also inactivated the enzyme, but activity could be restored by also deleting Glu2, indicating that there is a specific length requirement in the N-terminal sequence of the enzyme (10). A prime candidate for involvement in such a length requirement is residue Phe5 of coxsackievirus 3Dpol that corresponds to Trp5 in poliovirus 3Dpol. In the 3Dpol structures, there is a backbone distortion in the β-strand composed of residues 1 to 9 that results in this large hydrophobic amino acid being solvent exposed rather than buried in an adjacent hydrophobic pocket (Fig. (Fig.11 A). This unusual conformation at residue 5 is conserved among picornaviral polymerase structures, and substitution mutations at this residue had significant effects on coxsackievirus polymerase activity (10). Large hydrophobic amino acids at residue 5 increased 3Dpol activity, while small amino acids at residue 5 decreased 3Dpol activity (10). Based on these data, we previously proposed that the 3Dpol catalytic cycle involves a conformational change wherein residue 5 flips into an adjacent hydrophobic patch on the polymerase to aid in NTP positioning, and such a conformational change would require the N terminus to be correctly buried to act as a stable pivot for the rotational movement.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Elongation complex formation. (A) Structure of poliovirus polymerase showing the distortion of the β-sheet conformation between residues 3 and 4 that results in Trp5 being solvent exposed adjacent to a large hydrophobic patch composed of residues from the index (green) and middle (orange) fingers. (B) Cartoon of the PETE (polymerase elongation template element) RNAs used in complex formation assays. Both RNAs are G-less until the sixth nucleotide from the end, which limits secondary structure and stops elongation before the 5′ end to avoid possible end effects. The asterisk indicates the position of the amino-modified deoxythymidine where the IRDye label is covalently attached. (C) Denaturing PAGE showing the time course for formation of the +1 and +2 products from the two RNAs. Elongation complexes were formed by incubating 1 μM each PETE RNA, 15 μM 3Dpol, and 40 μM ATP and GTP at 22°C for various times as indicated. (D) Kinetics of +2 complex formation rates obtained from band intensity data curve fit to a single exponential. The resulting formation time constants are listed in Table Table11.In this work, we have investigated the role of residue 5 in 3Dpol in further detail by examining how a series of mutations in poliovirus 3Dpol affects RNA binding, elongation complex formation, elongation rate, and elongation complex stability. The data show that residue 5 mutations have major effects on the stability of the elongation complex, with minor effects on elongation complex formation and no effect on RNA binding affinities and elongation rates. Replication defects are also observed in the context of viral replication centers where residue 5 mutations significantly reduce RNA synthesis in cell-free coupled translation-replication reactions and slow the growth of infectious virus in cells.  相似文献   
35.

Introduction  

The objectives of this study were to determine small arterial elasticity (SAE) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and to investigate its relationship with intima media thickness (IMT), accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), endothelial activation and inflammation.  相似文献   
36.
The molecular mechanisms by which plants sense their micronutrient status, and adapt to their environment in order to ensure a sufficient micronutrient supply, are poorly understood. Zinc is an essential micronutrient for all living organisms. when facing a shortage in zinc supply, plants adapt by enhancing the zinc uptake capacity. The molecular regulators controlling this adaptation were recently identified. in this mini-review, we highlight recent progress in understanding the adaptation to zinc deficiency in plants and discuss the future challenges to fully unravel its molecular basis.Key words: adaptation, zinc deficiency, biofortification, molecular regulators, plant nutritionIn an increasingly populated world, agricultural production is an essential element of social development. Agriculture is the primary source of all nutrients required for human life, and nutrient sufficiency is the basis for good health and welfare of the human population.1 Soils with zinc deficiency are widespread in the world, affecting large areas of cultivated soils in India, Turkey, China, Brazil and Australia,2,3 making zinc the most common crop micronutrient deficiency.4 In addition, risk of inadequate zinc diet and zinc malnutrition are estimated to affect one-third of the global human population, i.e., around two billion people.5 Most affected are people living in developing countries, where diets are rich in cereal-based foods. Cereal grains are rich in phytate, which is a potent anti-nutrient, limiting micronutrient bioavailability.6 Zinc deficiency in crop production can be easily ameliorated through zinc fertilization, making agronomic biofortification an important strategy,3 however in the poorer regions, the required infrastructure to provide a reliable supply of zinc fertilizers of sufficient quality, is often not available. In those situations, biofortified crops, in which the zinc status of crops is genetically improved by selective breeding or via biotechnology, offer a rural-based intervention that will more likely reach the population.7 Different traits can be targeted to developing such improved crops, such as plant zinc deficiency tolerance, zinc use efficiency and the accumulation of zinc in edible parts. However, insufficient knowledge on the molecular mechanisms and the regulation of the zinc homeostasis network in plants is a serious bottleneck when pursuing zinc biofortification.  相似文献   
37.
HepG‐2 cells are widely used as a cell model to investigate hepatocellular carcinomas and the effect of anticancer drugs such as doxorubicin, an effective antineoplastic agent, which has broad antitumoral activity against many solid and hematological malignancies. To investigate the effect of doxorubicin on the protein pattern, we used complementary proteomic workflows including 2‐D gel‐based and gel‐free methods. The analysis of crude HepG2 cell extracts by 2‐D DIGE provided data on 1835 protein spots which was then complemented by MS‐centered analysis of stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture‐labeled cells. The monitoring of more than 1300 distinct proteins, including proteins of the membrane fraction provides the most comprehensive overview on the proteome of the widely used model cell line HepG2. Of the proteins monitored in total, 155 displayed doxorubicin‐induced changes in abundance. Functional analysis revealed major influences of doxorubicin on proteins involved in protein synthesis, DNA damage control, electron transport/mitochondrial function, and tumor growth. The strongest decrease in level was found for proteins involved in DNA replication and protein synthesis, whereas proteins with a function in DNA damage control and oxidative stress management displayed increased levels following treatment with doxorubicin compared with control cells. Furthermore, the doxorubicin‐associated increase in levels of multiple forms of keratins 8, 18, and 19 and other structural proteins revealed an influence on the cytoskeleton network.  相似文献   
38.

Background  

Tanzania has a high tuberculosis incidence, and genotyping studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the country are necessary in order to improve our understanding of the epidemic. Spoligotyping is a potentially powerful genotyping method due to fast generation of genotyping results, high reproducibility and low operation costs. The recently constructed SpolDB4 database and the model-based program 'spotclust' can be used to assign isolates to families, subfamilies and variants. The results of a study can thus be analyzed in a global context.  相似文献   
39.
Apoptotic cells are thought to play an essential role in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We hypothesise that delayed or altered clearance of apoptotic cells after UV irradiation will lead to inflammation in the skin of SLE patients. Fifteen SLE patients and 13 controls were irradiated with two minimal erythemal doses (MEDs) of ultraviolet B light (UVB). Subsequently, skin biopsies were analysed (immuno)histologically, over 10 days, for numbers of apoptotic cells, T cells, macrophages, and deposition of immunoglobulin and complement. Additionally, to compare results with cutaneous lesions of SLE patients, 20 biopsies of lupus erythematosus (LE) skin lesions were analysed morphologically for apoptotic cells and infiltrate. Clearance rate of apoptotic cells after irradiation did not differ between patients and controls. Influx of macrophages in dermal and epidermal layers was significantly increased in patients compared with controls. Five out of 15 patients developed a dermal infiltrate that was associated with increased epidermal influx of T cells and macrophages but not with numbers of apoptotic cells or epidermal deposition of immunoglobulins. Macrophages were ingesting multiple apoptotic bodies. Inflammatory lesions in these patients were localised near accumulations of apoptotic keratinocytes similar as was seen in the majority of LE skin lesions. In vivo clearance rate of apoptotic cells is comparable between SLE patients and controls. However, the presence of inflammatory lesions in the vicinity of apoptotic cells, as observed both in UVB-induced and in LE skin lesions in SLE patients, suggests that these lesions result from an inflammatory clearance of apoptotic cells.  相似文献   
40.
The fact that colchicines inhibits hepatic secretion of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) particles has been interpreted to mean that microtubules are involved in hepatic VLDL secretion. To further define this relationship, we have attempted to see if changes in hepatic VLDL secretion are associated with changes in hepatocyte microtubule or tubulin content. Accordingly, hepatic secretion of VLDL was increased in rats, and the hepatocyte content of both microtubules (using quantitative morphometric methods) and tubulin (using a time-decay colchicine binding assay) was determined. In acute experiments, VLDL secretion was increased by perfusion of isolated rat livers for 2 h with varying concentrations of free fatty acids (FFA). Results indicate that hepatic VLDL triglyceride (TG) secretion at perfusate FFA levels of 0.7 μEq/ml is threefold greater (P < 0.01) than when livers are perfused without added FFA. However, no differences are observed in the content of microtubules in these livers: specifically, microtubules occupy 0.029 percent of hepatocyte cytoplasm in livers perfused without FFA and 0.030 percent of cytoplasm in livers perfused with FFA. In chronic experiments, rats were fed for 1 wk with either standard rat chow or a hyperlipidemic (sucrose/lard) diet. With the experimental diet, plasma triglyceride levels increase threefold over controls, and liver VLDL-TG production, as determined by [(3)H]glycerol turnover studies, is 55 percent greater (P < 0.01) than controls. However, microtubules occupy 0.027 percent of the cytoplasm of hepatocyte cytoplasm whether rats are on standard or hyperlipidemic diets. Furthermore, the tubulin content of isolated hepatocytes does change, and represents 1 percent of hepatocyte soluble protein, irrespective of diet. These results suggest that increases in hepatic VLDL secretion can occur without any demonstrable change in hepatocyte assembled microtubule or tubulin content, and raise questions as to the role played by microtubules in hepatic VLDL secretion.  相似文献   
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