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121.
Static light scattering of high amylopectin waxy maize starch gently dispersed in 90% dimethyl sulfoxide–water yielded a weight average molecular weight Mw and radius of gyration Rg of 560×106 g/mol and 342 nm, respectively. To obtain an independent hydrodynamic characterization of these solutions, we measured the sedimentation coefficient for the main component in an analytical ultracentrifuge. The value of s0, the infinite dilution sedimentation coefficient, was 199 S. The translational diffusion coefficient D0 in very dilute solutions was measured by dynamic light scattering at 90° and found to be 2.33×10−9 cm2/s. An effective hydrodynamic radius Rh was calculated from this diffusion constant using the Stokes–Einstein equation and found to be 348 nm. The structure-related parameter ρ=Rg/Rh was calculated to be 0.98. The weight average molecular weight calculated from the Svedberg equation using the values measured for s0 and D0 was 593×106 g/mol. This result is in reasonable agreement with the light scattering results. As light scattering results are subject to experimental errors due to the possibility of dust contamination, the presence of microgel or aggregates, and the questionable applicability of light scattering theory to interpret results for macromolecular sizes approaching the wave length of light used as a source for scattering, it is advisable to have corroborating hydrodynamic data when possible to further validate light scattering results in this very high molecular weight range.  相似文献   
122.
Today''s major excitement in biology centers on signaling: How can a cell or organism measure the myriad of environmental cues, integrate it, and acclimate to the new conditions? Hormonal signals and second messengers are in the focus of most of these studies, e.g., regulation of glucose transporter GLUT4 cycling by insulin, or regulation of plant growth by auxin or brassinosteroids.13 In comparison, we generally assume that we know almost everything about basic metabolism since it has been studied for many decades; for example we know since the early 80s that allosteric regulation by fructose-2,6-bisphophate plays an important role in regulating glycolysis in plants and animals.4 This may be the reason why studies of metabolism appear to be a bit out of fashion. But if we look to other organisms such as E. coli or yeast, we rapidly realize that metabolism is controlled by complex interconnected signaling networks, and that we understand little of these signaling networks in humans and plants.5,6 As it turns out, the cell registers many metabolites, and flux through the pathways is regulated using complex signaling networks that involve calcium as well as hormones.Key Words: flux, fluxome, glucose, glutamate, phosphate, sucrose, fluorescence resonance energy transfer, biosensorOne of the reasons for the fable for hormones lies in the simple fact that it is easier to observe macroscopic changes, such as changes in the architecture of a plant than to determine metabolite levels, but also here new tools are urgently needed that allow quantification of these small molecules. Visualization of starch levels provided a significant advance, and in combination with mutant screens allowed to identify fundamental components of starch metabolism.79 The biggest advance for the signaling field was the development of advanced chemical and genetically encoded calcium dyes.1012 No such dyes are available for hormones or metabolites, as soon as we try to determine levels of metabolites (or signaling molecules), we run into the issues of compartmentation and cellular differences in tissues. Today, the same enzymatic assays used decades ago are still widely used to determine metabolite levels. Although significant advances in chromatography and mass spectrometry based metabolite analysis have moved the study of metabolism to ‘omics’ era, compartmentalization of metabolism still presents a major challenge. Especially the large vacuoles of plant cells are a major obstacle, since even fractionation studies suffer from contamination. Moreover, with the current set of tools it is not possible to determine the dynamic changes in metabolite levels in different subcellular compartments in real time in vivo. Radiotracers have helped a lot to identify and quantify intermediates and to assemble pathways, originally using pulse labeling followed by paper chromatography. Today 13C-labeling is used together with mass spectrometry to obtain insights into metabolic flux control.13 This tool set for the first time enabled the comparison of mutants and study regulatory networks involved in sugar signaling. While significant, advances in radiotracer experiments do not provide cellular or subcellular information and only limited temporal resolution, they do provide efficient means for studying metabolite fluxes through complex and/or not well-defined pathways. Thus there is a clear need for metabolite specific dyes that can be targeted to subcellular compartments and that would enable flux measurements in response to environmental cues helping to push metabolic research back into the focus of signaling-related biology.In 2002, we developed the first prototype “metabolic dye” FRET sensor for maltose.14,15 A similar glucose sensor was recently employed for measuring tracer-independent transport of glucose across the ER membrane of liver cells.16 After resolving some issues such as low signal-to-noise and gene silencing in plants, we are now able to compare glucose levels between cells in an intact root in real time.17 The parallel development of sucrose and phosphate sensors complements the set of tools, in future experiments providing a comparison of sucrose, phosphate and glucose fluxes in intact tissues with both temporal (below seconds) and spatial resolution (cellular and subcellular).18,19The first experiments already led to a big surprise: glucose supplied to the root is rapidly taken up and is rapidly metabolized.17 Roots expressing the highest affinity sensor FLIPglu170n responded to glucose perfusion suggesting that the steady state glucose level in the root is less than 100 nM, the estimated detection limit for this sensor in these first experiments. The first experiments were limited by the mixing kinetics in the bath used for perfusion, while improvement of the chamber now allow for faster for glucose exchange. We estimate that glucose levels fall from a steady state level of approximately 5 mM in the cytosol when perfused with 5 mM glucose to below 100 nM in about three minutes. For the sensor with an affinity of 600 µM the rate of glucose accumulation, which is composed of the various rates that affect the steady state in the cytosol such as metabolism, compartmentation and transport across the plasma membrane, is in the range of 527 ± 77 µM glucose/min and that for glucose removal is 317 ± 37 (Fig. 1; Chaudhuri B, Frommer WB, unpublished). Questions that arise are: Which transport systems drive uptake? How much does the vacuole contribute to the observed flux and steady state levels? Is the capacity of hexokinase at levels below its Km still sufficient to phosphorylate glucose efficient enough to pull glucose below 100 nM or does hexokinase have different properties in vivo compared to what we know from the purified enzyme? Are there different transporters and enzymes contributing to flux in the low (1–10 mM) and the ultrahigh affinity (low µM) phases? Are there spatial differences in the root? Why do roots take up glucose so efficiently in the first place? The combination of the sensors with information from the expression-LEDs from Birnbaum and Benfey20 and specific knock-out mutants should help answering some of these questions.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Quantitative analysis of glucose flux from an Arabidopsis root expressing FLIPglu-600µΔ13, a FRET sensor for glucose with an affinity of 600 µM. The root of a 10 day-old seedling was placed into a perfusion chamber and perfused with hydroponic medium with or without 5 mM glucose. eCFP was excited and emission was recorded for eCFP and eYFP every 10 seconds (essentially as decsribed in ref. 17). The emission intensities for a region-of-interest were averaged and the emission ratio was determined at the two wavelengths for each image of a time series and plotted on the Y-axis against time on the X-axis. Addition of glucose is indicated.Another big surprise is the dramatic gradient of glucose across the plasma membrane, which has important implications for our understanding of transport processes across the plasma membrane as well as the intracellular membranes.17 Information about the gradients is relevant in the context of apo- and symplasmic unloading routes in roots21 and the contribution of proton-coupled transporters in cellular export.22 It will thus be interesting to follow the extracellular levels using surface-anchored sensors. Now that besides high sensitivity glucose FLIPs17 we also generated nanosensors for sucrose19 and phosphate,18 complementing the similar tool sets for calcium23 and pH,24 it is possible to compare multiple parameters and to follow flux at different levels and to calibrate against other influences.The improvements of the signal-to-noise ratio of the FRET-based metabolite sensors25 makes the FLIPs a standard tool for every lab interested in measuring ion-, sugar- or amino acid flux in living cells. Since the nanosensors are genetically encoded, they can be used to characterize intracellular fluxes16,26 in any organism for which transformation protocols have been established. The existing sets of sensors are simple to use, constructs are available through Addgene and Arabidopsis lines from the Arabidopsis Stock Center. Detailed instructions for imaging can be found at: http://carnegiedpb.stanford.edu/research/frommer/research_frommer_protocols.php. These tools will hopefully become a standard system not only for physiological analyses, but in addition provide a new way for high throughput fluxomics studies.  相似文献   
123.
124.
Several organochlorinated pesticides including DDT, PCBs and dieldrin have been reported to cause immune suppression and increase susceptibility to infection in animals. Often this manifestation is accompanied by atrophy of major lymphoid organs. It has been suggested that increased apoptotic cell death leading to altered T-B cell ratios, and loss of regulatory cells in critical numbers leads to perturbations in immune function. The major objective of our study was to define the mechanism by which endosulfan, an organochlorinated pesticide, induces human T-cell death using Jurkat, a human T-cell leukemic cell line, as an in vitro model. We exposed Jurkat cells to varying concentrations of endosulfan for 0-48 h and analyzed biochemical and molecular features characteristic of T-cell apoptosis. Endosulfan lowered cell viability and inhibited cell growth in a dose- and time-dependent manner. DAPI staining was used to enumerate apoptotic cells and we observed that endosulfan at 10-200 M induced a significant percentage of cells to undergo apoptotic cell death. At 48 h, more than 90% cells were apoptotic with 50 M of endosulfan. We confirmed these observations using both DNA fragmentation and annexin-V binding assays. It is now widely being accepted that mitochondria undergo major changes early during the apoptotic process. We examined mitochondrial transmembrane potential (m) in endosulfan treated cells to understand the role of the mitochondria in T-cell apoptosis. Within 30 min of chemical exposure, a significant percentage of cells exhibited a decreased incorporation of DiOC6(3), a cationic lipophilic dye into mitochondria indicating the disruption of m. This drop in m was both dose- and time-dependent and correlated well with other parameters of apoptosis. We also examined whether this occurred by the down regulation of bcl-2 protein expression that is likely to increase the susceptibility of Jurkat cells to endosulfan toxicity. Paradoxically, the intracellular expression of bcl-2 protein was elevated in a dose dependent manner suggesting endosulfan-induced apoptosis occurred by a non-bcl-2 pathway. Based on these data, as well as those reported elsewhere, we propose the following sequence of events to account for T-cell apoptosis induced by endosulfan: uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation excess ROS production GSH depletion oxidative stress disruption of m release of cytochrome C and other apoptosis related proteins to cytosol apoptosis. This study reports for the first time that endosulfan can induce apoptosis in a human T-cell leukemic cell line which may have direct relevance to loss of T cells and thymocytes in vivo. Furthermore, our data strongly support a role of mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress in endosulfan toxicity.  相似文献   
125.

Background

E-cadherin is a major component of adherens junctions. Impaired expression of E-cadherin in the small intestine and colon has been linked to a disturbed intestinal homeostasis and barrier function. Down-regulation of E-cadherin is associated with the pathogenesis of infections with enteropathogenic bacteria and Crohn''s disease.

Methods and Findings

To genetically clarify the function of E-cadherin in intestinal homeostasis and maintenance of the epithelial defense line, the Cdh1 gene was conditionally inactivated in the mouse intestinal epithelium. Inactivation of the Cdh1 gene in the small intestine and colon resulted in bloody diarrhea associated with enhanced apoptosis and cell shedding, causing life-threatening disease within 6 days. Loss of E-cadherin led cells migrate faster along the crypt-villus axis and perturbed cellular differentiation. Maturation and positioning of goblet cells and Paneth cells, the main cell lineage of the intestinal innate immune system, was severely disturbed. The expression of anti-bacterial cryptidins was reduced and mice showed a deficiency in clearing enteropathogenic bacteria from the intestinal lumen.

Conclusion

These results highlight the central function of E-cadherin in the maintenance of two components of the intestinal epithelial defense: E-cadherin is required for the proper function of the intestinal epithelial lining by providing mechanical integrity and is a prerequisite for the proper maturation of Paneth and goblet cells.  相似文献   
126.
A computer system DIROM for oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesisand artificial gene design has been designed for better experimentalplanning and control. DIROM permits searching for optimal oligonucleotideswith respect to certain important parameters, namely sufficientenergy of oligonucleotide-target hybridization, the secondarystructure of oligonuc-tide and target DNA, the presence of alternatebinding sites in the target DNA and terminal G/C pairs. It canalso be used to plan polymerase chain reaction experiments,for optimal primer selection, in sequencing, etc. DIROM enablesone to search for both existing and potential restriction sites,to perform vector + target sequence construction. The systemconsists of a set of original algorithms that formalize theempirical knowledge of oligonucleotide action as primers.  相似文献   
127.
Dipeptidyl peptidase 4/CD26 (DP4) is a multifunctional serine protease liberating dipeptide from the N-terminus of (oligo)peptides which can modulate the activity of these peptides. The enzyme is involved in physiological processes such as blood glucose homeostasis and immune response. DP4 substrate specificity is characterized in detail using synthetic dipeptide derivatives. The specificity constant k(cat)/K(m) strongly depends on the amino acid in P?-position for proline, alanine, glycine and serine with 5.0 x 10? M?1 s?1, 1.8 x 10? M?1 s?1, 3.6 x 102 M?1 s?1, 1.1 x 102 M?1 s?1, respectively. By contrast, kinetic investigation of larger peptide substrates yields a different pattern. The specific activity of DP4 for neuropeptide Y (NPY) cleavage comprising a proline in P?-position is the same range as the k(cat)/K(m) values of NPY derivatives containing alanine or serine in P?-position with 4 x 10? M?1 s?1, 9.5 x 10? M?1 s?1 and 2.1 x 10? M?1 s?1, respectively. The proposed existence of an additional binding region outside the catalytic center is supported by measurements of peptide substrates with extended chain length. This 'secondary' binding site interaction depends on the amino acid sequence in P?'-P?'-position. Interactions with this binding site could be specifically blocked for substrates of the GRF/glucagon peptide family. By contrast, substrates not belonging to this peptide family and dipeptide derivative substrates that only bind to the catalytic center of DP4 were not inhibited. This more selective inhibition approach allows, for the first time, to distinguish between substrate families by substrate-discriminating inhibitors.  相似文献   
128.
Lipemic serum from three patients with acute pancreatitis and type IV hyperlipemia was fractionated into very-low-density lipoproteins and clear serum. Amylase activity (determined by the Phadebas method) in the component fractions did not exceed that in the original lipemic serum. Addition of these fractions or VLDL and chylomicrons from asymptomatic patients with hyperlipemia to nonlipemic serum from patients with "routine acute pancreatitis" did not inhibit amylase activity or alter the electrophoretic mobility of amylase isoenzymes. Therefore the normal amylase activity often observed in hyperlipemic pancreatitis does not result from an inhibition of amylase activity by serum lipoproteins.  相似文献   
129.
We examined plant community responses to interactions between arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and availability of atmospheric CO2 and soil N. Communities of 14 plant species were grown in mesocosms containing living or killed AM fungal inoculum, ambient or elevated atmospheric CO2 and low or enriched soil N. After one growing season, significantly different plant communities existed in the different treatments. Plant species richness was lowest in +N mesocosms and highest in +AM + CO2 mesocosms. At ambient CO2, AM fungi reduced richness but at elevated CO2 they increased it. This was caused by changes in mortality rates of several C3 forbs and may suggest that CO2 enrichment ameliorates the carbon cost of some AM symbioses. Soil moisture was higher in +CO2 mesocosms but +AM counteracted this effect. These results suggest that AM symbioses may be important mediators of plant community responses to anthropogenic CO2 and N enrichment.  相似文献   
130.
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