14 results match your criteria: "University of Tennessee-Oak Ridge Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences 37831.[Affiliation]"

The importance of a cluster of conserved aromatic residues of human epidermal growth factor (hEGF) to the receptor binding epitope is suggested by the interaction of His10 and Tyr13 of the A-loop with Tyr22 and Tyr29 of the N-terminal beta-sheet to form a hydrophobic surface on the hEGF protein. Indeed, Tyr13 has previously been shown to contribute a hydrophobic determinant to receptor binding. The roles of His10, Tyr22 and Tyr29 were investigated by structure-function analysis of hEGF mutant analogues containing individual replacements of each residue.

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An uncharacterized minor transient product, observed in our earlier studies of substrate turnover by the E48Q mutant of Rhodospirillum rubrum ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Lee, E. H., Harpel, M.

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Mutations at the fit1 locus affect normal pre- and post-natal development by retarding growth and reducing viability. We report mapping of the fit1 locus, by trans-complementation crosses to mice carrying deletions of the albino (c) locus in Chromosome (Chr) 7, to a subregion of the c-deletion complex within the Mod2-sh1 interval. The fit1 locus, which is currently defined by five N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)-induced mutations, was found to map in a subregion between the eed and exed loci.

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Mature Balbiani Ring (BR) granules in situ were stained with the nucleic acid specific stain, osmium ammine-B, recorded by electron spectroscopic imaging and reconstructed by electron microscope tomography to examine the three-dimensional (3-D) distribution of BR heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA). The BR2 granules contain ca. 37 kb of mRNA.

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Four residues in the carboxy-terminal domain of human epidermal growth factor (hEGF), glutamate 40, glutamine 43, arginine 45, and aspartate 46 were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis to evaluate their potential role in epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor-ligand interaction. One or more mutations were generated at each of these sites and the altered recombinant hEGF gene products were purified and evaluated by radioreceptor competition binding assay. Charge-conservative replacement of glutamate 40 with aspartate resulted in a decrease in receptor binding affinity to 30% relative to wild-type hEGF.

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Because of waxes in the vitelline membrane, the Drosophila egg is effectively impermeable to liquid water and to aqueous solutes, and consequently it cannot be cryopreserved unless it can be permeabilized. The more successful of the few published permeabilization procedures involve the removal of the chorion mechanically or by hypochlorite solution, the removal of all surrounding water by air drying or alcohol, the exposure of eggs to pure alkanes like octane or hexane for some 30 s, the removal of the alkane and the transfer of the eggs to aqueous culture medium without their desiccation, and lastly incubation of the permeabilized embryos under mineral oil. In following these procedures we opted for a somewhat different approach to applying hypochlorite, water, alcohol, and alkane; namely, eggs were placed between two Nucleopore filters, and the fluids drawn sequentially through the filters by vacuum.

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Drosophila embryos manifest unusually high sensitivity to chilling in that they are killed with increased rapidity by exposure to temperatures between 0 and -25 degrees C in the absence of ice formation. Thus, 50% of 15-h eggs succumb in 35, 4, and 1 h at 0, -9, and -15 degrees C, respectively. The sensitivity becomes substantially greater in embryos at stages of development earlier than 12 h, especially at 3 and 6 h.

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In order to study the mechanism of induction of mutations and chromosome aberrations by ionizing radiations, it is particularly useful to have available radiation-sensitive mutants. While several X-ray-sensitive rodent cell lines are available, they have been selected rather nonspecifically. It was determined that selection for resistance to the DNA replication/repair inhibitor, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C), would permit production of a set of X-ray-sensitive mutant cell lines that would be defective in the resynthesis step of excision or recombination repair.

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Male and female gametogeneses differ markedly in all mammals. While male germ cells are continuously being produced from stem cells throughout the reproductive life span, the number of female germ cells is fixed during prenatal development and, soon after birth, all of the oocytes are arrested in a modified diplotene, or dictyate, stage. Following puberty, dictyate oocytes are hormonally triggered to mature either singly or in groups, resulting in ovulation and the completion of the first meiotic division.

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The chloroplast enzyme phosphoribulokinase is reversibly deactivated by oxidation of Cys16 and Cys55 to a disulfide. Although not required for catalysis, Cys16 is an active-site residue positioned at the nucleotide-binding domain (Porter and Hartman, 1988). The hyperreactivity of Cys16 has heretofore limited further active-site characterization by chemical modification.

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Polyvalent metal ions are highly effective in inhibiting human O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase, the repair protein responsible for the removal of the promutagenic and presumably procarcinogenic adduct, O6-alkylguanine, in DNA. The sulfhydryl group-reacting metal ions (Cd2+, Zn2+, Hg2+, Pb2+) completely inhibited the reaction at concentrations of 100-500 microM while other metal ions (Al3+, Fe3+) required concentrations of 1 mM or greater for significant reduction of the reaction rate. Inhibition by the former group of metals could be reversed by dithiothreitol but not by EDTA, while the opposite was true for the second group.

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Confluent, nongrowing renal epithelial cells, LLC-PK1, have a low rate of Na+-dependent (A-system) amino acid transport. Following a brief period of amino acid and serum deprivation, but with glucose provided as an energy source, such cells respond to the tumor promoter TPA with a brief enhancement of A-system activity that returns to control levels within 10-20 min. The response is followed some 30 min later by a large and prolonged elevation of transport activity (delayed response).

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Restriction endonucleases have been used to study the involvement of specific types of DNA damages in the production of chromosome aberrations. In this study restriction endonucleases were introduced into viable CHO cells using osmolytic shock of pinocytic vesicles. We compared two cohesive-end cutters, Msp I (CCGG-2-base overlap) and Sau3A I (GATC-4-base overlap) with two blunt-end cutters, Alu I (AGCT) and Rsa I (GTAC).

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A small cadmium-binding substance (CdBS) has been observed in adult Drosophila melanogaster that were raised for their entire growth cycle on a diet that contained 0.15 mM CdCl2. Induction of CdBS was observed in strains that differed widely in their sensitivity to CdCl2.

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