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Second Position (second + position)
Selected AbstractsA genetic polymorphism in the coding region of the gastric intrinsic factor gene (GIF) is associated with congenital intrinsic factor deficiency,HUMAN MUTATION, Issue 1 2004Marilyn M. Gordon Abstract Congenital intrinsic factor (IF) deficiency is a disorder characterized by megaloblastic anemia due to the absence of gastric IF (GIF, GenBank NM_005142) and GIF antibodies, with probable autosomal recessive inheritance. Most of the reported patients are isolated cases without genetic studies of the parents or siblings. Complete exonic sequences were determined from the PCR products generated from genomic DNA of five affected individuals. All probands had the identical variant (g.68A>G) in the second position of the fifth codon in the coding sequence of the gene that introduces a restriction enzyme site for Msp I and predicts a change in the mature protein from glutamine5 (CAG) to arginine5 (CGG). Three subjects were homozygous for this base exchange and two subjects were heterozygous, one of which was apparently a compound heterozygote at positions 1 and 2 of the fifth codon ([g.67C>G] + [g.68A>G]). The other patient, heterozygous for position 2, had one heterozygous unaffected parent. Most parents were heterozygous for this base exchange, confirming the pattern of autosomal recessive inheritance for congenital IF deficiency. cDNA encoding GIF was mutated at base pair g.68 (A>G) and expressed in COS-7 cells. The apparent size, secretion rate, and sensitivity to pepsin hydrolysis of the expressed IF were similar to native IF. The allelic frequency of g.68A>G was 0.067 and 0.038 in two control populations. This sequence aberration is not the cause of the phenotype, but is associated with the genotype of congenital IF deficiency and could serve as a marker for inheritance of this disorder. Hum Mutat 23:85,91, 2004. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Gas-phase basicities for ions from bradykinin and its des-arginine analoguesJOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY (INCORP BIOLOGICAL MASS SPECTROMETRY), Issue 8 2001Nigel P. Ewing Abstract Apparent gas-phase basicities (GBapps) for [M + H]+ of bradykinin, des-Arg1 -bradykinin and des-Arg9 -bradykinin have been assigned by deprotonation reactions of [M + 2H]2+ in a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer. With a GBapp of 225.8 ± 4.2 kcal mol,1, bradykinin [M + H]+ is the most basic of the ions studied. Ions from des-Arg1 -bradykinin and des-Arg9 -bradykinin have GBapp values of 222.8 ± 4.3 kcal mol,1 and 214.9 ± 2.3 kcal mol,1, respectively. One purpose of this work was to determine a suitable reaction efficiency ,break point' for assigning GBapp values to peptide ions using the bracketing method. An efficiency value of 0.1 (i.e. approximately 10% of all collisions resulting in a deprotonation reaction) was used to assign GBapps. Support for this criterion is provided by the fact that our GBapp values for des-Arg1 -bradykinin and des-Arg9 -bradykinin are identical, within experimental error, to literature values obtained using a modified kinetic method. However, the GBapps for bradykinin ions from the two studies differ by 10.3 kcal mol,1. The reason for this is not clear, but may involve conformation differences produced by experimental conditions. The results may be influenced by salt-bridge conformers and/or by conformational changes caused by the use of a proton-bound heterodimer in the kinetic method. Factors affecting the basicities of these peptide ions are also discussed, and molecular modeling is used to provide information on protonation sites and conformations. The presence of two highly basic arginine residues on bradykinin results in its high GBapp, while the basicity of des-Arg1 -bradykinin ions is increased by the presence of two proline residues at the N-terminus. The proline residue in the second position folds the peptide chain in a manner that increases intramolecular hydrogen bonding to the protonated N-terminal amino group of the proline at the first position. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Binding of synthetic peptides by a human monoclonal IgM with an unusual combining site structureJOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION, Issue 4 2001Allen B. Edmundson Abstract Using X-ray crystallography, a human monoclonal IgM cryoglobulin (Mez) was found to have an unusual combining site topography. Analysis of the unliganded Fv at 2.6,Å resolution revealed that the HCDR3 had partitioned the active site into two compartments [Ramsland PA et al. 2000. Mol. Immunol. 37: 295,310]. The two cavities had dimensions and chemical properties that were compatible with the binding of peptides. In this study, libraries of peptides were prepared using solid-phase synthesis. Binding of the intact Mez IgM to these peptides was tested by enzyme-linked immunoassays. Screening of 400 dipeptides revealed that binding was markedly skewed toward amino acids with aromatic side-chains (Phe and Trp), especially when located in the second position. Preferential recognition of aromatic side-chains by Mez IgM was confirmed with larger peptides of three to five residues, but C-terminal positioning was not favored in these peptides. Mez IgM also showed binding propensities for acidic residues (Asp and Glu) as well as several other side-chains with different chemical properties, including His, Pro, Asn and Gln. Mez IgM recognized sets of overlapping octapeptides representing the sequences of the constant domains of human IgG1 heavy chains. These peptides represented similar stretches of polypeptide on the three-dimensional structures of all three constant domains (CH1, CH2 and CH3). Thus, Mez IgM may recognize structurally homologous regions of immunoglobulin domains, which were conserved during the evolution of the immune system. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Probing the shape of a hydrophobic pocket in the active site of , -opioid antagonistsJOURNAL OF PEPTIDE SCIENCE, Issue 7 2001Vincenzo Santagada Abstract The change of selectivity and the induction of antagonism by the insertion of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-3-carboxylic acid (Tic) in the second position of several opioid peptides have led to the interpretation of Tyr-Tic as a specific message domain for , -opioid antagonists and to the discovery of dipeptides with substantial opioid activity. Selectivity and activity increase enormously when Tyr is substituted by 2,,6,-dimethyl tyrosine (Dmt), hinting that the side chain of Dmt fits a hydrophobic cavity of the receptor very tightly and precisely. We have investigated the specificity of this fit by systematic changes of the substituents on the aromatic ring of Tyr. Mono- and disubstitutions different from 2,,6,- invariably lead to catastrophic decreases of activity. The only substitution compatible with retention of substantial antagonism is 2,-methyl. An analysis of the conformational properties of all analogues reveals that substitutions do not affect the global shape of the molecule significantly. Accordingly, it is possible to use the shape of the different side chains to map the hydrophobic cavity of the receptor. The resulting complementary image is funnel shaped. Copyright © 2001 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] His239Arg SNP of HRAD9 is associated with lung adenocarcinomaCANCER, Issue 5 2006Yoshimasa Maniwa M.D. Abstract BACKGROUND It was previously reported that a functional human (h) Rad9 protein accumulated in the nuclei of nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) cells. Those experiments, however, did not examine whether the hRad9 gene was mutated in those cells. The sequence of the HRAD9 gene in NSCLC cells was investigated. METHODS The sequence of the HRAD9 was examined in tumor and peripheral normal lung tissues obtained from 50 lung adenocarcinoma patients during surgery. The expression of its mRNA using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was also examined. RESULTS No sequence alterations were detected in the HRAD9 gene, which was found to be normally transcribed in surgically resected lung carcinoma cells. However, in eight (16.0%) cases a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) was observed at the second position of codon 239 (His/Arg heterozygous variant) of the gene. This frequency was significantly higher than that found in the normal population. CONCLUSIONS Whereas the capacity to produce a functional hRad9 protein was intact in lung adenocarcinoma cells, a nonsynonymous SNP of HRAD9 was detected that might be associated with the development of lung adenocarcinoma. Cancer 2006. © 2006 American Cancer Society. [source] Design and Synthesis of Cyclopeptide Analogues of the Potent Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor FR235222CHEMMEDCHEM, Issue 10 2007Luigi Gomez-Paloma Prof. Abstract Various structurally modified analogues of FR235222 (1), a natural tetrapeptide inhibitor of mammalian histone deacetylases, were prepared in a convergent approach. The design of the compounds was aimed to investigate the effect of structural modifications of the tetrapeptide core involved in enzyme binding in order to overcome some synthetic difficulties connected with the natural product 1. The modifications introduced could also help identify key structural features involved in the mechanism of action of these compounds. The prepared molecules were subjected to in,vitro pharmacological tests, and their potency was tested on cultured cells. Two of the components of the array were found to be more potent than the parent compound 1 and almost as efficient as trichostatin,A (TSA). These results demonstrate that it is possible to synthesize highly active cyclic tetrapeptides using commercially available amino acids (with the exception of 2-amino-8-oxodecanoic acid, Ahoda). The nature of the residue in the second position of the cyclic peptide and the stereochemistry of the Ahoda tail are important for the inhibitory activity of this class of cyclic tetrapeptide analogues. [source] Population genetic studies of Alouatta belzebul from the Amazonian and Atlantic ForestsAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 5 2008F.F. Nascimento Abstract Cytochrome b DNA sequence data (ca. 1,140,bp) of 66 Alouatta belzebul from the Amazonian and the Atlantic Forests of Brazil were used for phylogenetic reconstructions and population studies. Our sample consisted of 60 specimens from the Amazonian Forest (captured in 1984 and 1998 in Pará-PA state) and six specimens from the Atlantic Forest (Paraíba-PB state). We found 32 haplotypes, 23 in PA-1984 (with 12 present in more than one individual), 11 in PA-1998 (with two present in more than one individual), and a single haplotype in the PB sample. Animals from PA-1984 and PA-1998 shared three haplotypes while animals from Pará and Paraíba did not share any haplotype. We found 57 variable sites, consisting of 53 transitions and four transversions, with most replacements occurring at third codon position (77.19%) and less frequently at first and second positions (10.53 and 12.28%, respectively). Genetic distance between all haplotypes varied between 0 and 1.2%. Nucleotide diversity estimates between PA-1984 haplotypes and PA-1998 haplotypes were the same (,=0.01), and haplotype diversity estimates were very similar (h=0.96 and 0.93 for PA-1984 and PA-1998, respectively). Maximum parsimony, median-joining, split decomposition, and TCS showed that PA and PB haplotypes had not drastically diverged and that subsequent radiation within these regions was not apparent. No temporal structure was found between PA-1984 and PA-1998. The sum of square deviation estimate for PA-1984 equaled 0.01 (P=0.23), in agreement with a hypothetical model of sudden expansion contrary to PA-1998 whose sum of square deviation estimate (0.40; P=0.04) was not compatible with this model, although the small sample size of PA-1998 as well as the smaller area of capture could have also accounted for this result. Fu's Fs and R2 statistical neutrality tests corroborated these propositions. Lack of drastic differentiation was attributable to the once existing connection between the Atlantic and the Amazonian forests at a non-distant past. Am. J. Primatol. 70:423,431, 2008. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Population genetic studies of Alouatta caraya (Alouattinae, Primates): inferences on geographic distribution and ecologyAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 10 2007Fabrícia F. Do Nascimento Abstract Cytochrome b DNA sequence data (ca. 1,140,bp) of 44 Alouatta caraya, including 42 specimens from three localities of Brazil and two from Bolivia, were used for phylogenetic reconstructions and population studies. Seventeen haplotypes were identified, eight of which were present in more than one individual. Seven of these eight haplotypes were shared by individuals from a same locality and one by individuals from two localities. We found 26 variable sites along the entire gene, consisting of 18 transitions and eight transversions; most replacements occurring at the third codon position (65.39%) in contrast to first and second positions (26.92 and 7.69%, respectively). In the sample collected at Chapada dos Guimarães (Brazil), nucleotide and haplotype diversity estimates were ,=0.002325 and h=0.8772, respectively. Maximum parsimony analysis grouped all haplotypes in two clades, separating Bolivian haplotypes from Brazilian haplotypes, the grouping of which did not show a straightforward correspondence with geographic distribution. Median-joining and TCS network pointed to haplotypes 11 or 12 as the most likely ancestral ones. Mismatch distribution and the goodness-of-fit test (SSD estimate=0.0027; P=0.6999) indicated that the population from Chapada dos Guimarães experienced a demographic expansion, in agreement with the median-joining star-like pattern, although this finding could not be confirmed by Fu's Fs test. Am. J. Primatol. 69:1093,1104, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Mitochondrial Cytochrome b mRNA Editing in Dinoflagellates: Possible Ecological and Evolutionary Associations?THE JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2005HUAN ZHANG Abstract. To verify the hypothesis that mt mRNA editing is widespread in dinoflagellates, we analyzed cytochrome b (cob) mRNA editing for six species representing distinct ecotypes and taxonomic classes of Dinophyceae. Editing is detected in all, which is similar to the three other species studied previously in that edited sites appear to aggregate in four clusters and occur predominantly at first and second positions of codons (93%), overwhelmingly involving A,G, U,C, or C,U substitutions with a smaller number of G,C, G,A changes. Comparative analyses on editing characteristics reveal interesting trends related to phylogenetic relatedness and ecological features. Editing density (percentage of nucleotide that is affected by editing) increases from early to derived lineages. Higher editing densities also map to red tide-forming lineages. Furthermore, similarity of location of edited codons (LOE) and the type of nucleotide changes (TOE) in different lineages mirror the taxonomic affinity of the lineages. Phylogenetic trees constructed from LOE and TOE resemble those inferred from cob sequences. The results bolster our earlier hypothesis that cob editing is widespread in dinoflagellates and suggest that density, location, and type of editing may bear yet-to-be-defined evolutionary and ecological significance. [source] |