Four botanical extracts are toxic to the hispine beetle, Brontispa longissima, in laboratory and semi-field trials. (65/117)

 (+info)

Simultaneous detection of ricin and abrin DNA by real-time PCR (qPCR). (66/117)

 (+info)

Biocompatibility of Ricinus comunnis polymer compared to titanium implant used in artificial hearts. Experimental study in guinea pigs. (67/117)

 (+info)

New efficient DNA extraction method to access the microbiome of Ricinus communis seeds. (68/117)

 (+info)

Selection and characterization of ricin toxin A-chain mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. (69/117)

A DNA sequence encoding the A chain of ricin toxin (RTA) from the castor bean plant, Ricinus communis, was placed under GAL1 promoter control and transformed into Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Induction of expression of RTA was lethal. This lethality was the basis for a selection of mutations in RTA which inactivated the toxin. A number of mutant alleles which encoded cross-reactive material were sequenced. Eight of the first nine mutant RTAs studied showed single-amino-acid changes involving residues located in the proposed active-site cleft.  (+info)

Expression of ricin B chain in Escherichia coli. (70/117)

DNA encoding ricin B chain was fused to that encoding the E. coli OmpA signal peptide using the expression secretion vector pIN-111-ompA. When induced, E. coli cells transformed with the recombinant plasmid express ricin B chain. The recombinant product accumulates in the periplasmic space in a soluble, biologically active form.  (+info)

Molecular and immunological characterization of plastid and cytosolic pyruvate kinase isozymes from castor-oil-plant endosperm and leaf. (71/117)

1. Monospecific antiserum was raised in rabbits to homogeneous cytosolic pyruvate kinase isolated from 5-day-old germinating endosperm of the castor oil plant, Ricinus communis. An earlier study demonstrated that the purified enzyme is putatively heterotetrameric, composed of two subunits which migrate as 57-kDa and 56-kDa proteins upon sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis [Plaxton, W. C. (1988) Plant Physiol. (Bethesda) 86, 1065-1069]. Both proteins were detected on Western blots of extracts prepared under denaturing conditions from 4-8-day-old, but not 0-3-day-old, germinating-endosperm tissue. This suggests that both subunits exist in vivo, and that the large increase in pyruvate kinase activity which occurs around the fourth day of germination is due to an increase in pyruvate kinase concentration. 2. The cytosolic and plastidic pyruvate kinase isozymes (termed PKc and PKp, respectively) from castor-oil-plant developing endosperm and expanding leaf tissue were separated by anion-exchange chromatography on Q-Sepharose. The antigenic reaction of the partially purified enzyme preparations to rabbit polyclonal antibodies raised against homogeneous germinating-castor-bean PKc was tested by immunoprecipitation and Western blotting. Although developing-endosperm and leaf PKc appeared to be antigenically very similar to germinating-endosperm PKc, they differed from the heterotetrameric germinating-endosperm enzyme by being composed of a single type of subunit with a molecular mass of about 56 kDa. No cross-reactivity of the PKc antibodies was observed with either developing-endosperm or leaf PKp, nor with rabbit muscle or Bacillus stearothermophilus pyruvate kinase. Conversely, none of the castor-oil-plant pyruvate kinase preparations showed significant cross-reactivity with antibodies raised against purified yeast or rabbit muscle pyruvate kinases. 3. To investigate the structural relationship between the two germinating-endosperm-PKc subunits, each polypeptide was characterized by amino acid composition analysis and peptide mapping by CNBr fragmentation. The amino acid compositions and CNBr cleavage patterns of the two subunits were similar, but not identical, suggesting that these polypeptides are related, but distinct, proteins. Mild tryptic attack of native enzyme led to an approximate 6-kDa reduction in the apparent molecular mass of both subunits, further indicating sequence similarity between the two polypeptides. 4. Native molecular masses of the various castor-oil-plant pyruvate kinases were estimated by Superose-6 gel-filtration chromatography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  (+info)

Binding of saccharides to ricin E isolated from small castor beans. (72/117)

The binding of saccharides to ricin E isolated from small castor beans was studied by equilibrium dialysis and spectroscopy. Equilibrium dialysis data indicate that ricin E has two galactose-binding sites, a high affinity site (HA-site) and a low affinity site (LA-site). The binding of specific saccharides to ricin E induces a shift of the fluorescence spectrum to shorter wavelength by 3 nm and UV-difference spectra with a maximum at 290 nm and a negative intensity around 300 nm. The interaction of ricin E with its specific saccharides was analyzed in terms of the variation of the intensity at 320 nm in the fluorescence spectrum and the magnitude of the negative intensity at 300 nm in the UV-difference spectra as functions of saccharide concentration. The results indicate that these spectroscopic changes are representative of the binding of saccharides to the LA-site, which contains a tryptophan residue. By comparing the association constants of saccharides for ricin E with those for ricin D, isolated from the large castor beans, it was found that the HA of ricin E binds saccharides with an affinity of less than one-half that of ricin D, while the saccharide-binding abilities of the LA-site of the two ricins were about the same.  (+info)