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1
Bacillus subtilis SalA (YbaL) negatively regulates expression of scoC, which encodes the repressor for the alkaline exoprotease gene, aprE.
2004-05-01

During the course of screening for exoprotease-deficient mutants among Bacillus subtilis gene disruptants, a strain showing such a phenotype was identified. The locus responsible for this phenotype was the previously unknown gene ybaL, which we renamed salA. The predicted gene product encoded by salA belongs to the Mrp family, which is widely conserved among archaea, ...

PubMed

2
Bacillus subtilis SalA (YbaL) Negatively Regulates Expression of scoC, Which Encodes the Repressor for the Alkaline Exoprotease Gene, aprE
2004-05-01

During the course of screening for exoprotease-deficient mutants among Bacillus subtilis gene disruptants, a strain showing such a phenotype was identified. The locus responsible for this phenotype was the previously unknown gene ybaL, which we renamed salA. The predicted gene product encoded by salA belongs to the Mrp family, which is widely conserved among archaea, ...

PubMed Central

3
Engineering and directed evolution of a Ca2+ binding site A-deficient AprE mutant reveal an essential contribution of the loop Leu75-Leu82 to enzyme activity.
2009-08-20

An aprE mutant from B. subtilis 168 lacking the connecting loop Leu(75)-Leu(82) which is predicted to encode a Ca(2+) binding site was constructed. Expression of the mutant gene (aprEDeltaLeu(75)-Leu(82)) produced B. subtilis colonies lacking protease activity. Intrinsic fluorescence analysis revealed spectral ...

PubMed

4
Engineering and Directed Evolution of a Ca2+ Binding Site A-Deficient AprE Mutant Reveal an Essential Contribution of the Loop Leu75�Leu82 to Enzyme Activity
2009-08-20

An aprE mutant from B. subtilis 168 lacking the connecting loop Leu75�Leu82 which is predicted to encode a Ca2+ binding site was constructed. Expression of the mutant gene (aprE?Leu75�Leu82) ...

PubMed Central

5
Document - Life Sciences Data Archive - NASA

Apr 21, 2011 ... The influence of microgravity and spaceflight on columella cell ultrastructure in starch-deficient mutants of Arabidopsis. ...

NASA Website

6
The key enzyme of sulfate assimilation, adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase, is regulated by HY5 in Arabidopsis.
2011-07-04

Plant sulfate assimilation is regulated by demand for reduced sulfur, as is its key enzyme, adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase (APR). In a genetic screen for mutants lacking this regulation, we identified the bZIP transcription factor LONG HYPOCOTYL?5 (HY5) as a necessary component of the regulatory circuit. Regulation of APR ...

PubMed

7
High Pigment1 Mutation Negatively Regulates Phototropic Signal Transduction in Tomato Seedlings1
2004-02-01

Phototropins and phytochromes are the major photosensory receptors in plants and they regulate distinct photomorphogenic responses. The molecular mechanisms underlying functional interactions of phototropins and phytochromes remain largely unclear. We show that the tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) phytochrome A deficient mutant fri lacks phototropic curvature to low fluence ...

PubMed Central

8
Enhancement of the Catalytic Activity of a 27 kDa Subtilisin-Like Enzyme from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens CH51 by in Vitro Mutagenesis.
2011-08-03

AprE51 from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens CH51 is a 27 kDa subtilisin-like protease with fibrinolytic activity. To enhance the catalytic activity of AprE51, two residues, Gly-169 and Ser-101, which, according to the three-dimensional structural model of subtilisin, are located in the P1 substrate-binding site and S3 subsite, respectively, were mutated by ...

PubMed

9
Starch Metabolism in Space-Grown Soybean ... - LSDA - Experiment

Apr 21, 2011 ... Effects of microgravity and clinorotation on stress ethylene production in two starchless mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. ...

NASA Website

10
NafA Negatively Controls Neisseria meningitidis Piliation
2011-07-01

Bacterial auto-aggregation is a critical step during adhesion of N. meningitidis to host cells. The precise mechanisms and functions of bacterial auto-aggregation still remain to be fully elucidated. In this work, we characterize the role of a meningococcal hypothetical protein, NMB0995/NMC0982, and show that this protein, here denoted NafA, acts as an anti-aggregation factor. NafA was confirmed ...

PubMed Central

11
Expression Analysis of the VTC2 and VTC5 Genes Encoding GDP-L-Galactose Phosphorylase, an Enzyme Involved in Ascorbate Biosynthesis, in Arabidopsis thaliana.
2011-09-07

Arabidopsis thaliana contains two GDP-L-galactose phosphorylase genes, VTC2 and VTC5, which are critical for ascorbate (AsA) biosynthesis. We investigated the expression levels of both VTC2 and VTC5 genes in wild-type A. thaliana and the AsA deficient mutants during early seedling growth. Ascorbate accumulated to an equal extent in all ...

PubMed

12
Data Sets - Life Sciences Data Archive - NASA

Apr 21, 2011 ... Figure 5 shows intracellular growth profiles of Salmonella T3SS mutants in HT-29 monolayers and 3-D cells. ... Select genomic and proteomic responses of the infected host. T3SS mutants. Tissue pathology. Wildtype mutants ...

NASA Website

13
Construction of a Bacillus subtilis double mutant deficient in extracellular alkaline and neutral proteases.
1984-10-01

A mutant strain of Bacillus subtilis carrying lesions in the structural genes for extracellular neutral (nprE) and serine (aprA) proteases was constructed by the gene conversion technique. This mutant had less than 4% of the extracellular protease activity of the wild type and sporulated normally, indicating that neither of these ...

PubMed Central

14
Complex Signaling Network in Regulation of Adenosine 5?-Phosphosulfate Reductase by Salt Stress in Arabidopsis Roots1[W
2008-03-01

Sulfur-containing compounds play an important role in plant stress defense; however, only a little is known about the molecular mechanisms of regulation of sulfate assimilation by stress. Using known Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants in signaling pathways, we analyzed regulation of the key enzyme of sulfate assimilation, adenosine 5?-phosphosulfate reductase ...

PubMed Central

15
Adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase (APR2) mutation in Arabidopsis implicates glutathione deficiency in selenate toxicity.
2011-09-01

APR2 is the dominant APR (adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase) in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, and converts activated sulfate to sulfite, a key reaction in the sulfate reduction pathway. To determine whether APR2 has a role in selenium tolerance and metabolism, a mutant Arabidopsis line ...

PubMed

16
Biological Activity and Enrichment of Spermatogonial Stem Cells in Vitamin A-Deficient and Hyperthermia-Exposed Testes ...

... Activity and Enrichment of Spermatogonial Stem Cells in Vitamin A-Deficient and Hyperthermia-Exposed Testes from Mice ... cells in a cell population. We hypothesized that vitamin A-deficient (VAD) and hyp...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

17
4/7/2010 POSTER Presentations NOTE: Some research areas will be combined for judging purposes 7-Apr-10

Tejpal Astha Gupta / Dej Characterization of egg-laying defective and levamisole-resistant unc mutants

E-print Network

18
Phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C mediates carbon sensing and vegetative nuclear duplication rates in Aspergillus nidulans.
2011-07-19

In this work, we disrupted one of three putative phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C genes of Aspergillus nidulans and studied its effect on carbon source sensing linked to vegetative mitotic nuclear division. We showed that glucose does not affect nuclear division rates during early vegetative conidial germination (6-7�h) in either the wild type or the plcA-deficient ...

PubMed

19
A class B scavenger receptor mediates the cellular uptake of carotenoids in Drosophila
2002-08-06

Carotenoids are currently being intensely investigated regarding their potential to lower the risk of chronic disease and vitamin A deficiency. Invertebrate models in which vitamin A deficiency is not lethal allow the isolation of blind but viable mutants affected in the pathway leading from dietary carotenoids to vitamin A. Using a mutant in one of these ...

PubMed Central

20
Conditional Kif3a ablation causes abnormal hedgehog signaling topography, growth plate dysfunction and ectopic cartilage formation in mouse cranial base synchondroses
2007-06-01

SUMMARYThe motor protein Kif3a and primary cilia regulate important developmental processes, but their roles in skeletogenesis remain ill defined. Here we created mice deficient in Kif3a in cartilage and focused on the cranial base and synchondroses. Kif3a deficiency caused cranial base growth retardation and dys-morphogenesis evident in neonatal animals ...

PubMed Central

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21
Distinct roles of long/short fimbriae and gingipains in homotypic biofilm development by Porphyromonas gingivalis
2009-05-26

BackgroundPorphyromonas gingivalis, a periodontal pathogen, expresses a number of virulence factors, including long (FimA) and short (Mfa) fimbriae as well as gingipains comprised of arginine-specific (Rgp) and lysine-specific (Kgp) cysteine proteinases. The aim of this study was to examine the roles of these components in homotypic biofilm development by P. gingivalis, as well as in accumulation ...

PubMed Central

22
Selective IgA deficiency and spondyloarthropathy: a distinct disease?
1990-08-01

A woman with selective IgA deficiency and severe ankylosing spondylitis (AS), complicated by intractable peripheral arthritis, is described. Three previous cases of selective IgA deficiency and AS have been reported, all of whom had severe AS. It is suggested that selective IgA ...

PubMed Central

23
Roles for menaquinone and the two trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) reductases in TMAO respiration in Salmonella typhimurium: Mu d(Apr lac) insertion mutations in men and tor.
1983-09-01

Three groups of mutants defective in trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) reduction were isolated from Salmonella typhimurium LT2 subjected to transposition mutagenesis with Mu d(Apr lac). Mutants were identified by their acidic reaction on a modified MacConkey-TMAO medium. Group I consisted of pleiotropic chlorate-resistant ...

PubMed Central

24
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, Apr. 2005, p. 2727�2736 Vol. 187, No. 8 0021-9193/05/$08.00 0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.8.2727�2736.2005

. Mutants of FtsZ Targeting the Protofilament Interface: Effects on Cell Division and GTPase Activity Sambra division protein FtsZ assembles into straight protofilaments, one subunit thick, in which subunits appear of the mutant protein at four to five times the wild-type FtsZ level. Remarkably, the top mutants were even

E-print Network

25
The pathogenesis of ovine footrot.
2011-04-14

Ovine footrot is a contagious and debilitating disease that is of major economic significance to the sheep meat and wool industries. The causative bacterium is the gram negative anaerobe Dichelobacter nodosus. Research that has used a classical molecular genetics approach has led to major advances in our understanding of the role of the key virulence factors of D. nodosus in the disease process. ...

PubMed

26
A newborn lethal defect due to inactivation of retinaldehyde dehydrogenase type 3 is prevented by maternal retinoic acid treatment
2003-11-25

The retinoic acid (RA) signal, produced locally from vitamin A by retinaldehyde dehydrogenase (Raldh) and transduced by the nuclear receptors for retinoids (RA receptor and 9-cis-RA receptor), is indispensable for ontogenesis and homeostasis of numerous tissues. We demonstrate that Raldh3 knockout in mouse suppresses RA synthesis and causes malformations restricted to ocular and nasal regions, ...

PubMed Central

27
A Polysaccharide Deacetylase Gene (pdaA) Is Required for Germination and for Production of Muramic ?-Lactam Residues in the Spore Cortex of Bacillus subtilis
2002-11-01

The predicted amino acid sequence of Bacillus subtilis yfjS (renamed pdaA) exhibits high similarity to those of several polysaccharide deacetylases. ?-Galactosidase fusion experiments and results of Northern hybridization with sporulation sigma mutants indicated that the pdaA gene is transcribed by E?G RNA polymerase. pdaA-deficient ...

PubMed Central

28
Activation of subtilin precursors by Bacillus subtilis extracellular serine proteases subtilisin (AprE), WprA, and Vpr.
2003-04-25

The maturation of the peptide antibiotic (lantibiotic) subtilin in Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6633 includes posttranslational modifications of the propeptide and proteolytic cleavage of the leader peptide. To identify subtilin processing activities, we used antimicrobial inactive subtilin precursors consisting of the leader peptide which was still attached to the fully matured propeptide. Two ...

PubMed

29
Phosphatidylethanolamine is not essential for growth of Sinorhizobium meliloti on complex culture media.
2004-03-01

In addition to phosphatidylglycerol (PG), cardiolipin (CL), and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), Sinorhizobium meliloti also possesses phosphatidylcholine (PC) as a major membrane lipid. The biosynthesis of PC in S. meliloti can occur via two different routes, either via the phospholipid N-methylation pathway, in which PE is methylated three times in order to obtain PC, or via the ...

PubMed

30
Phosphatidylethanolamine Is Not Essential for Growth of Sinorhizobium meliloti on Complex Culture Media
2004-03-01

In addition to phosphatidylglycerol (PG), cardiolipin (CL), and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), Sinorhizobium meliloti also possesses phosphatidylcholine (PC) as a major membrane lipid. The biosynthesis of PC in S. meliloti can occur via two different routes, either via the phospholipid N-methylation pathway, in which PE is methylated three times in order to obtain PC, or via the ...

PubMed Central

31
Directed evolution studies with combinatorial libraries of T4 lysozyme mutants.
1996-02-01

Gene duplication with divergence to new functions has been an important mechanism in protein evolution. However, the questions of how many new functions can arise from a particular ancestral gene and how many mutational steps are typically required to generate new functions have been difficult to approach experimentally. We have addressed these questions using T4 lysozyme as a model system by ...

PubMed

32
A manganese transporter, BB0219 (BmtA), is required for virulence by the Lyme disease spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi.
2009-02-13

Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the causative agent of Lyme disease, is transmitted to mammalian hosts through an arthropod (tick) vector. To establish infection, Bb must acquire essential nutrients, including transition metals, from its mammalian and tick hosts. Thus far, no metal transporter has been identified in Bb. Here, we report the identification of the first metal transporter, BmtA (BB0219), ...

PubMed

33
Biochemical and Genetic Characterization of an Extracellular Protease from Pseudomonas fluorescens CY091
1998-03-01

Pseudomonas fluorescens CY091 cultures produce an extracellular protease with an estimated molecular mass of 50 kDa. Production of this enzyme (designated AprX) was observed in media containing CaCl2 or SrCl2 but not in media containing ZnCl2, MgCl2, or MnCl2. The ...

PubMed Central

34
GacA, the response regulator of a two-component system, acts as a master regulator in Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 by controlling regulatory RNA, transcriptional activators, and alternate sigma factors.
2003-12-01

Concerted investigations of factors affecting host-pathogen interactions are now possible with the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and its model pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000, as their whole genome sequences have become available. As a prelude to analysis of the regulatory genes and their targets, we have focused on GacA, the response regulator of a two-component system. The ...

PubMed

35
Functional Analysis of Histone Methyltransferase G9a in B and T Lymphocytes1
2008-07-01

Lymphocyte development is controlled by dynamic repression and activation of gene expression. These developmental programs include the ordered, tissue-specific assembly of Ag receptor genes by V(D)J recombination. Changes in gene expression and the targeting of V(D)J recombination are largely controlled by patterns of epigenetic modifications imprinted on histones and DNA, which alter chromatin ...

PubMed Central

36
Coronin-1A links cytoskeleton dynamics to TCR alpha beta-induced cell signaling.
2008-10-21

Actin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in regulating T cell receptor (TCR)-induced immunological synapse (IS) formation and signaling. Using gene targeting, we demonstrate that the hematopoietic specific, actin- and Arp2/3 complex-binding protein coronin-1A contributes to both processes. Coronin-1A-deficient mice specifically showed ...

PubMed

37
Coronin-1A Links Cytoskeleton Dynamics to TCR??-Induced Cell Signaling
2008-10-21

Actin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in regulating T cell receptor (TCR)-induced immunological synapse (IS) formation and signaling. Using gene targeting, we demonstrate that the hematopoietic specific, actin- and Arp2/3 complex-binding protein coronin-1A contributes to both processes. Coronin-1A-deficient mice specifically showed ...

PubMed Central

38
An enzymatically inactivated hemoglobinase from Necator americanus induces neutralizing antibodies against multiple hookworm species and protects dogs against heterologous hookworm infection
2009-09-01

Hookworms digest hemoglobin from erythrocytes via a proteolytic cascade that begins with the aspartic protease, APR-1. Ac-APR-1 from the dog hookworm, Ancylostoma caninum, protects dogs against hookworm infection via antibodies that neutralize enzymatic activity and interrupt blood-feeding. Toward developing a human hookworm vaccine, we expressed both ...

PubMed Central

39
Accumulation of lysosulfatide in the brain of arylsulfatase A-deficient mice.
2011-02-07

Lysosomal storage diseases are a group of disorders where accumulation of catabolites is manifested in the lysosomes of different cell types. In metachromatic leukodystrophy (Arylsulfatase A [EC.3.1.6.8] deficiency) storage of the glycosphingolipid sulfatide in the brain leads to demyelination, resulting in neuromotor co-ordination deficits and regression. In a mouse model for metachromatic ...

PubMed

40
Accumulation of lysosulfatide in the brain of arylsulfatase A-deficient mice
2011-02-07

Lysosomal storage diseases are a group of disorders where accumulation of catabolites is manifested in the lysosomes of different cell types. In metachromatic leukodystrophy (Arylsulfatase A [EC.3.1.6.8] deficiency) storage of the glycosphingolipid sulfatide in the brain leads to demyelination, resulting in neuromotor co-ordination deficits and regression. In a mouse model for metachromatic ...

PubMed Central

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41
Method of Identifying an Individual Homozygous or Heterozygous for Lactate Dehydrogenase-A Deficiency.
1991-01-01

The invention relates to a method of identifying an individual homozygous or heterozygous for lactate dehydrogenase-A deficiency comprising amplifying a DNA segment of exon 6 of the lactate dehydrogenase-A gene of the individual and analyzing products of ...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

42
Involvement of the D-Type Cyclins in Germ Cell Proliferation and Differentiation in the Mouse1

... during spermatogenesis, cyclin D2 expression was studied in vitamin A-deficient testis. Cyclin D2 was not expressed in the undifferentiated A spermatogonia in vitamin A-deficient testis but was strongly in...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

43
Extracellular protease of Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, a biocontrol factor with activity against the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita.
2005-09-01

In Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, mutation of the GacA-controlled aprA gene (encoding the major extracellular protease) or the gacA regulatory gene resulted in reduced biocontrol activity against the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita during tomato and soybean infection. Culture supernatants of strain CHA0 inhibited egg hatching and induced mortality of M. incognita ...

PubMed

44
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, Apr. 2002, p. 3678�3687 Vol. 76, No. 8 0022-538X/02/$04.00 0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.8.3678�3687.2002

. 1999. Vaccine potential of a herpes simplex virus type 2 mutant deleted in the PK domain of the large. Samaniego, R. H. Bonneau, N. A. DeLuca, and S. S. Tevethia. 1999. Immunogenicity of herpes simplex virus with a replication deficient mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) induces a CD8 cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL

E-print Network

45
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, Apr. 2007, p. 3198�3207 Vol. 189, No. 8 0021-9193/07/$08.00 0 doi:10.1128/JB.01833-06

that mutants with missense mutations can provide insight into PilQ function. The goal of this study defects in pilQ pilT double mutants, the 19 pilQ missense mutations and the pilQ::cat null mutation were). (A, C, and E) Bar 0.5 m. (B and D) Bar 100 nm. VOL. 189, 2007 pilQ MISSENSE MUTATIONS IN N

E-print Network

46
The subtilisin-like protease AprV2 is required for virulence and uses a novel disulphide-tethered exosite to bind substrates.
2010-11-24

Many bacterial pathogens produce extracellular proteases that degrade the extracellular matrix of the host and therefore are involved in disease pathogenesis. Dichelobacter nodosus is the causative agent of ovine footrot, a highly contagious disease that is characterized by the separation of the hoof from the underlying tissue. D. nodosus secretes three subtilisin-like proteases whose analysis ...

PubMed

47
The Subtilisin-Like Protease AprV2 Is Required for Virulence and Uses a Novel Disulphide-Tethered Exosite to Bind Substrates
2010-11-24

Many bacterial pathogens produce extracellular proteases that degrade the extracellular matrix of the host and therefore are involved in disease pathogenesis. Dichelobacter nodosus is the causative agent of ovine footrot, a highly contagious disease that is characterized by the separation of the hoof from the underlying tissue. D. nodosus secretes three subtilisin-like proteases whose analysis ...

PubMed Central

48
The Evaluation of Qualitative and Quantitative Procedures in ...
1985-05-01

... Accession Number : ADA158139. Title : The Evaluation of Qualitative and Quantitative Procedures in the Detection of IgA - Deficient Donors. ...

DTIC Science & Technology

49
The surface-anchored NanA protein promotes pneumococcal brain endothelial cell invasion.
2009-08-17

In humans, Streptococcus pneumoniae (SPN) is the leading cause of bacterial meningitis, a disease with high attributable mortality and frequent permanent neurological sequelae. The molecular mechanisms underlying the central nervous system tropism of SPN are incompletely understood, but include a primary interaction of the pathogen with the blood-brain barrier (BBB) endothelium. All SPN strains ...

PubMed

50
The surface-anchored NanA protein promotes pneumococcal brain endothelial cell invasion
2009-08-31

In humans, Streptococcus pneumoniae (SPN) is the leading cause of bacterial meningitis, a disease with high attributable mortality and frequent permanent neurological sequelae. The molecular mechanisms underlying the central nervous system tropism of SPN are incompletely understood, but include a primary interaction of the pathogen with the blood�brain barrier (BBB) endothelium. All SPN strains ...

PubMed Central

51
Frequent mutations within the genomic magnetosome island of Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense are mediated by RecA.
2011-08-01

Genes for magnetosome formation in magnetotactic bacteria are clustered in large genomic magnetosome islands (MAI). Spontaneous deletions and rearrangements were frequently observed within these regions upon metabolic stress. This instability was speculated to be due to RecA-dependent homologous recombination between the numerous sequence repeats present within the MAI. Here, we show that a ...

PubMed

52
Clumping Factor A Interaction with Complement Factor I Increases C3b Cleavage on the Bacterial Surface of Staphylococcus aureus and Decreases Complement-Mediated Phagocytosis?
2010-04-25

The human complement system is important in the immunological control of Staphylococcus aureus infection. We showed previously that S. aureus surface protein clumping factor A (ClfA), when expressed in recombinant form, bound complement control protein factor I and increased factor I cleavage of C3b to iC3b. In the present study, we show that, compared to the results for the wild type, when ...

PubMed Central

53
A Toxin-Antitoxin Module in Bacillus subtilis Can Both Mitigate and Amplify Effects of Lethal Stress
2011-08-29

BackgroundBacterial type-2 (protein-protein) toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules are two-gene operons that are thought to participate in the response to stress. Previous work with Escherichia coli has led to a debate in which some investigators conclude that the modules protect from stress, while others argue that they amplify lethal stress and lead to programmed cell death. To avoid ambiguity arising ...

PubMed Central

54
Vol. 175, No. 7JOURNAL OF BACTrERIOLOGY, Apr. 1993, p. 1961-1970 0021-9193/93/071961-10$02.00/0

hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT) (28, 36). SHMT catalyzes the conversion of serine and tetrahydrofo- late to glycine and 5 or serine, amino acids synthesized by SHMT, because these amino acids are supplied in the medium. Rather, the pheno- types must arise because strain DG232 cannot synthesize a key metabolite or because mutant SHMT

E-print Network

55
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, Apr. 2005, p. 2903�2907 Vol. 187, No. 8 0021-9193/05/$08.00 0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.8.2903�2907.2005

. NOTES Role of the Rep Helicase Gene in Homologous Recombination in Neisseria gonorrhoeae Kimberly A coli, the Rep helicase has been implicated in replication fork progression, replication restart is the Rep helicase. Escherichia coli rep mutants were originally identified by their inability to support

E-print Network

56
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, Apr. 1995, p. 1683�1691 Vol. 177, No. 7 0021-9193/95/$04.00 0

. Isolation, characterization and complementation of Salmonella typhimurium chemotaxis mutants. J. Mol. Biol and Salmonella typhimurium: cellular and molecular biology. American Society for Microbiology, Washington, D:3118�3123. 35. Shioi, J., and B. L. Taylor. 1984. Oxygen taxis and proton motive force in Salmonella typhimurium

E-print Network

57
Bacteriophage Mu as a genetic tool to study Erwinia amylovora pathogenicity and hypersensitive reaction on tobacco.
1990-02-01

Erwinia amylovora 1430 was shown to be sensitive to Mu G(-) particles. Infection resulted either in lytic development or in lysogenic derivatives with insertion of the Mu genome at many sites in the bacterial chromosome. We used the Mu d1Bx::Tn9 (lac Apr Cmr) derivative, called Mu dX, to identify mutants affected in pathogenicity and in their ability to ...

PubMed Central

58
Phosphatidylcholine levels in Bradyrhizobium japonicum membranes are critical for an efficient symbiosis with the soybean host plant.
2001-03-01

Phosphatidylcholine (PC), the major membrane phospholipid in eukaryotes, is found in only some bacteria including members of the family Rhizobiaceae. For this reason, it has long been speculated that rhizobial PC might be required for a successful interaction of rhizobia with their legume host plants in order to allow the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. A major pathway for PC formation ...

PubMed

59
Activation of brain endothelium by pneumococcal neuraminidase NanA promotes bacterial internalization.
2010-06-16

Streptococcus pneumoniae (SPN), the leading cause of meningitis in children and adults worldwide, is associated with an overwhelming host inflammatory response and subsequent brain injury. Here we examine the global response of the blood-brain barrier to SPN infection and the role of neuraminidase A (NanA), an SPN surface anchored protein recently described to promote central nervous system ...

PubMed

60
Anaerobiosis, formate, nitrate, and pyrA are involved in the regulation of formate hydrogenlyase in Salmonella typhimurium.
1984-06-01

Three groups of mutants defective in the fermentative production of gas were isolated from Salmonella typhimurium LT2 subjected to transposition mutagenesis with Mu d(Apr lac). One group consisted of strains which lacked hydrogenase. The mutation site for this group was located in the vicinity of the known hyd gene. A second group consisted of ...

PubMed Central

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61
Lack of association between the pseudo deficiency mutation in the arylsulfatase A gene on chromosome 22 with schizophrenia
1994-09-01

Arylsulfatase-A deficiency causes the neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disease metachromatic leukodystrophy. In the late-onset variant, schizophrenia-like psychosis is a frequent finding and sometimes given as the initial diagnosis. A mutant allele, pseudo-deficiency, causes deficient enzyme activity but no apparent clinical effect. ...

Energy Citations Database

62
Glutaredoxin function for the carboxyl-terminal domain of the plant-type 5?-adenylylsulfate reductase
1998-07-07

5?-Adenylylsulfate (APS) reductase (EC 1.8.99.-) catalyzes the reduction of activated sulfate to sulfite in plants. The evidence presented here shows that a domain of the enzyme is a glutathione (GSH)-dependent reductase that functions similarly to the redox cofactor glutaredoxin. The APR1 cDNA encoding APS reductase from Arabidopsis thaliana is able to complement the cysteine ...

PubMed Central

63
uvrA is an acid-inducible gene involved in the adaptive response to low pH in Streptococcus mutans.
2001-10-01

The pH-inducible acid tolerance response (ATR) is believed to play a major role in acid adaptation and virulence of Streptococcus mutans. To study this phenomenon in S. mutans JH1005, differential display PCR was used to identify and clone 13 cDNA products that had increased expression in response to pH 5.0 compared to that of pH 7.5-grown cells. One of these products, confirmed to be pH inducible ...

PubMed

64
Root Respiration Associated with Ammonium and Nitrate Absorption and Assimilation by Barley 1
1992-08-01

We examined nitrate assimilation and root gas fluxes in a wild-type barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Steptoe), a mutant (nar1a) deficient in NADH nitrate reductase, and a mutant (nar1a;nar7w) deficient in both NADH and NAD(P)H nitrate reductases. Estimates of in vivo nitrate assimilation from excised roots and whole ...

PubMed Central

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