Stable five- and six-coordinated silicate anions in aqueous solution. (33/2747)

Addition of aliphatic polyols to aqueous silicate solutions is shown to yield high concentrations of stable polyolate complexes containing five- or six-coordinated silicon. Coordinating polyols require at least four hydroxy groups, two of which must be in threo configuration, and coordinate to silicon via hydroxy oxygens at chain positions on either side of the threo pair. The remarkable ease by which these simple sugar-like molecules react to form hypervalent silicon complexes in aqueous solution supports a long-standing supposition that such species play a significant role in the biological uptake and transport of silicon and in mineral diagenesis.  (+info)

Nucleosomal DNA property database. (34/2747)

MOTIVATION: Chromatin structure plays the crucial role in proper gene functioning. Therefore, it is very important to investigate nucleosomal DNA properties and recognize genome nucleosome positioning sequences. Nevertheless, applying different sequence analysis methods separately is insufficient for complete nucleosomal DNA description. One of the most probable reasons for that is the weakness of nucleosome positioning signals. The present paper offers a set of methods to reveal the most important nucleosomal DNA characteristics and to show a common pattern of nucleosome site properties. RESULTS: A complex approach was used to determine conformational and physicochemical properties that are most significant for nucleosome binding site description. The integrated database of nucleosomal DNA properties is compiled. This database comprises different sections for description of DNA characteristics. Revealing significant DNA characteristics allows the classification of various samples of site sequences and the generation of programs for site recognition. AVAILABILITY: The current version of the database is available at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc. ru/system/BDNAvideo/. C-code of the recognition program may be found in the section FEATURE. WWW-available programs for testing arbitrary sequences are accessible at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc. ru/Programs/bDNA/NA_bDNA.htm/. The links to the mirror site(s) can be found at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc.ru/mgs/links/mirrors.html+ ++.  (+info)

Conformational and physicochemical DNA features specific for transcription factor binding sites. (35/2747)

MOTIVATION: A reliable recognition of transcription factor binding sites is essential for analysis of regulatory genomic sequences. The experimental data make evident an important role of DNA conformational features for site functioning. However, Internet-available tools for revealing conformational and physicochemical DNA features significant for the site functioning and subsequent use of these features for site recognition have not been developed up to now. RESULTS: We suggest an approach for revealing significant conformational and physicochemical properties of functional sites implemented in the database B-DNA-VIDEO. This database is designed to study the sets of various transcription factor binding sites, providing evidence that transcription factor binding sites are characterized by specific sets of significant conformational and physicochemical DNA properties. For a fixed site, by using the B-DNA features selected for this site recognition, the C-program recognizing this site may be generated, control tested and stored in the database B-DNA-VIDEO. Each B-DNA-VIDEO entry links to the Web-applet recognizing the site, whose significant B-DNA features are stored in this entry as the 'site recognition programs'. The pairwise linked entry-applet pairs are compiled within the B-DNA-VIDEO system, which is simultaneously the database and the program tools package applicable immediately for recognizing the sites stored in the database. Indeed, this is the novelty. Hence, B-DNA-VIDEO is the Web resource of both 'searching for static data' and 'active computation' type, that is why it was called an 'activated database'. AVAILABILITY: B-DNA-VIDEO is available at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc.ru/systems/BDNAVideo/ and the mirror site at http://www.cbil.upenn.edu/mgs/systems/c onsfreq/.  (+info)

Integrated databases and computer systems for studying eukaryotic gene expression. (36/2747)

MOTIVATION: The goal of the work was to develop a WWW-oriented computer system providing a maximal integration of informational and software resources on the regulation of gene expression and navigation through them. Rapid growth of the variety and volume of information accumulated in the databases on regulation of gene expression necessarily requires the development of computer systems for automated discovery of the knowledge that can be further used for analysis of regulatory genomic sequences. RESULTS: The GeneExpress system developed includes the following major informational and software modules: (1) Transcription Regulation (TRRD) module, which contains the databases on transcription regulatory regions of eukaryotic genes and TRRD Viewer for data visualization; (2) Site Activity Prediction (ACTIVITY), the module for analysis of functional site activity and its prediction; (3) Site Recognition module, which comprises (a) B-DNA-VIDEO system for detecting the conformational and physicochemical properties of DNA sites significant for their recognition, (b) Consensus and Weight Matrices (ConsFrec) and (c) Transcription Factor Binding Sites Recognition (TFBSR) systems for detecting conservative contextual regions of functional sites and their recognition; (4) Gene Networks (GeneNet), which contains an object-oriented database accumulating the data on gene networks and signal transduction pathways, and the Java-based Viewer for exploration and visualization of the GeneNet information; (5) mRNA Translation (Leader mRNA), designed to analyze structural and contextual properties of mRNA 5'-untranslated regions (5'-UTRs) and predict their translation efficiency; (6) other program modules designed to study the structure-function organization of regulatory genomic sequences and regulatory proteins. AVAILABILITY: GeneExpress is available at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc. ru/systems/GeneExpress/ and the links to the mirror site(s) can be found at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc.ru/mgs/links/mirrors.html+ ++.  (+info)

Identification of sequence-dependent DNA features correlating to activity of DNA sites interacting with proteins. (37/2747)

MOTIVATION: The commonly accepted statistical mechanical theory is now multiply confirmed by using the weight matrix methods successfully recognizing DNA sites binding regulatory proteins in prokaryotes. Nevertheless, the recent evaluation of weight matrix methods application for transcription factor binding site recognition in eukaryotes has unexpectedly revealed that the matrix scores correlate better to each other than to the activity of DNA sites interacting with proteins. This observation points out that molecular mechanisms of DNA/protein recognition are more complicated in eukaryotes than in prokaryotes. As the extra events in eukaryotes, the following processes may be considered: (i) competition between the proteins and nucleosome core particle for DNA sites binding these proteins and (ii) interaction between two synergetic/antagonist proteins recognizing a composed element compiled from two DNA sites binding these proteins. That is why identification of the sequence-dependent DNA features correlating with affinity magnitudes of DNA sites interacting with a protein can pinpoint the molecular event limiting this protein/DNA recognition machinery. RESULTS: An approach for predicting site activity based on its primary nucleotide sequence has been developed. The approach is realized in the computer system ACTIVITY, containing the databases on site activity and on conformational and physicochemical DNA/RNA parameters. By using the system ACTIVITY, an analysis of some sites was provided and the methods for predicting site activity were constructed. The methods developed are in good agreement with the experimental data. AVAILABILITY: The database ACTIVITY is available at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc.ru/systems/Activity/ and the mirror site, http://www.cbil.upenn.edu/mgs/systems/acti vity/.  (+info)

Unusually high standard redox potential of acrylyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA couple among enoyl-CoA/acyl-CoA couples: a reason for the distinct metabolic pathway of propionyl-CoA from longer acyl-CoAs. (38/2747)

The standard redox potential of acrylyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA couple (C(3)) was determined to be 69 mV (vs. standard hydrogen electrode) at pH 7 and 25 degrees C. This value implies that the 2, 3-dehydrogenation of propionyl-CoA is thermodynamically much more unfavorable than that of longer acyl-CoAs because the standard redox potentials of crotonyl-CoA/butyryl-CoA (C(4)), octenoyl-CoA/octanoyl-CoA (C(8)), and hexadecenoyl-CoA/palmitoyl-CoA (C(16)) are all about -10 mV. The unusually high standard redox potential of the acrylyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA couple is thought to be one of the reasons that in mammals propionyl-CoA is not metabolized by beta-oxidation as in the case of longer acyl-CoAs, but by a methylmalonyl-CoA pathway. The obvious structural difference between C(3) and C(4) (and longer) is whether an H or the C(4) atom is connected to -C(3)H=C(2)H-C(1)O-S-CoA. The molecular orbital calculations (MOPAC) for the enoyl and acyl forms of C(3) and C(4) revealed that this structural feature is the main cause for the higher standard redox potential of the C(3) couple. That is, the C(4)-C(3) bond is stabilized by the dehydrogenation to a greater degree than the H-C(3) bond.  (+info)

Enzyme dynamics and activity: time-scale dependence of dynamical transitions in glutamate dehydrogenase solution. (39/2747)

We have examined the temperature dependence of motions in a cryosolution of the enzyme glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and compared these with activity. Dynamic neutron scattering was performed with two instruments of different energy resolution, permitting the separate determination of the average dynamical mean square displacements on the sub-approximately 100 ps and sub-approximately 5 ns time scales. The results demonstrate a marked dependence on the time scale of the temperature profile of the mean square displacement. The lowest temperature at which anharmonic motion is observed is heavily dependent on the time window of the instrument used to observe the dynamics. Several dynamical transitions (inflexions of the mean squared displacement) are observed in the slower dynamics. Comparison with the temperature profile of the activity of the enzyme in the same solvent reveals dynamical transitions that have no effect on GDH function.  (+info)

TMC-66, a new endothelin converting enzyme inhibitor produced by Streptomyces sp. A5008. (40/2747)

A new endothelin converting enzyme (ECE) inhibitor, TMC-66 was isolated from the fermentation broth of Streptomyces sp. A5008. The structure of TMC-66 was elucidated by spectroscopic analyses to be a new member of benzo[a]naphthacenequinone class of antibiotics. TMC-66 had a highly selective inhibitory activity for ECE with an IC50 value of 2.9 microM. Taxonomy of the producing strain is also described.  (+info)