More evidence of mercury effects in children. (17/602)

In research published last summer, scientists revealed that prenatal exposure to methylmercury, an organic form of mercury that accumulates in animal tissues, may affect the blood pressure and ability to respond to sensory stimuli in exposed children later in life. The team is now also confirming findings of mercury-related neurodevelopmental effects among the Faroese subjects by studying a cohort of Madeiran children.  (+info)

Fix L, a haemoglobin that acts as an oxygen sensor: signalling mechanism and structural basis of its homology with PAS domains. (18/602)

Fix L, which contains a haemoglobin domain homologous to the PAS family and a histidine kinase domain, forms, with Fix J, a two-component signalling complex that regulates expression of nitrogenase genes in Rhizobium. Spin transitions of its haem iron trigger stereochemical changes in and around the haem that, together with steric effects, control the activity of the kinase. Homology with the PAS family is based on a common core of about 20 structurally equivalent sites from which polar residues are excluded.  (+info)

Pituitary growth hormones: further evidence for evolutionary conservatism based on immunochemical studies. (19/602)

Immunochemical relatedness of preparations of purified somatotropins (growth hormones) of somatotropins in pituitary extracts from various vertebrate species was investigated by applying an antiserum to a purified somatotropin from a submammalian species, the snapping turtle. With the exception of monkey somatotropin, all mammalian, reptilian, and avian preparations tested showed reactions of identity or near identity by immunodiffusion studies in agar gel. Radioimmunoassay employing labeled rat somatotropin as a tracer and for standards, revealed that these same pituitary preparations gave steep inhibition slopes that were parallel or nearly parallel to each other. Purified somatotropins or somatotropins in pituitary extracts of subreptilian species, including an amphibian and existing primitive fishes, showed partial yet substantial relatedness to mammalian (ray) or reptilian (turtle) somatotropins by both immunodiffusion and radioimmunoassay. Our evidence indicates that the immunochemical relatedness of somatotropins from various vertebrate species appears to be even closer than has been suggested previously, and that a high degree of conservation of structure occurs during evolution.  (+info)

Correlation between occupancy and B factor of water molecules in protein crystal structures. (20/602)

An empirical relationship between occupancy and the atomic displacement parameter of water molecules in protein crystal structures has been found by comparing a set of well refined sperm whale myoglobin crystal structures. The relationship agrees with a series of independent structural features whose impact on water occupancy can easily be predicted as well as with other known data and is independent of the protein fold. The estimation of the water occupancy in protein crystal structures may help in understanding the physico-chemical properties of the protein-solvent interface and can allow the monitoring of the accuracy of the protein crystal structure refinement.  (+info)

Solution (1)H NMR study of the influence of distal hydrogen bonding and N terminus acetylation on the active site electronic and molecular structure of Aplysia limacina cyanomet myoglobin. (21/602)

The sea hare Aplysia limacina possesses a myoglobin in which a distal H-bond is provided by Arg E10 rather than the common His E7. Solution (1)H NMR studies of the cyanomet complexes of true wild-type (WT), recombinant wild-type (rWT), and the V(E7)H/R(E10)T and V(E7)H mutants of Aplysia Mb designed to mimic the mammalian Mb heme pocket reveal that the distal His in the mutants is rotated out of the heme pocket and is unable to provide a stabilizing H-bond to bound ligand and that WT and rWT differ both in the thermodynamics of heme orientational disorder and in heme contact shift pattern. The mean of the four heme methyl shifts is shown to serve as a sensitive indicator of variations in distal H-bonding among a set of mutant cyanomet globins. The heme pocket perturbations in rWT relative to WT were traced to the absence of the N-terminal acetyl group in rWT that participates in an H-bond to the EF corner in WT. Analysis of dipolar contacts between heme and axial His and between heme and the protein matrix reveal a small approximately 2 degrees rotation of the axial His in rWT relative to true WT and a approximately 3 degrees rotation of the heme in the double mutant relative to rWT Mb. It is demonstrated that both the direction and magnitude of the rotation of the axial His relative to the heme can be determined from the change in the pattern of the contact-dominated heme methyl shift and from the dipolar-dominated heme meso-H shift. However, only NOE data can determine whether it is the His or heme that actually rotates in the protein matrix.  (+info)

In vitro maturation and ultrastructural observation of cryopreserved minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) follicular oocytes. (22/602)

Minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) follicular oocytes were cryopreserved by a slow-step freezing procedure using ethylene glycol. The morphologically viable proportion of postthawed minke whale follicular oocytes was 39.7%. The maturity of the animals (immature and mature whales) or the presence or absence of cumulus cells (CC) did not affect the proportion of morphologically viable oocytes. Postthawed oocytes were examined for nuclear status after in vitro maturation. The presence of CC (29.1%) significantly enhanced (P < 0.05) the proportion of oocytes at metaphase I/anaphase I/telophase I stages compared to results with the absence of CC (13.5%). A total of 4 of 194 postthawed oocytes matured to the second metaphase stage after culture for 5.5 days with or without CC. The cryopreserved immature oocytes obtained from immature and mature whales were processed to examine the ultrastructure by transmission electron microscopy. Varying ultrastructural damage to the cytoplasm was observed as a result of the cryopreservation procedures. These results show that 20-30% of cryopreserved minke whale follicular oocytes can resume meiosis in vitro, but damage induced by the freezing and thawing procedures was observed.  (+info)

Molecular genetic evidence of a novel morbillivirus in a long-finned pilot whale (Globicephalus melas). (23/602)

A long-finned pilot whale with morbilliviral disease was stranded in New Jersey. An immunohistochemical stain demonstrated morbilliviral antigen. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction for morbillivirus P and N genes was positive. Novel sequences most closely related to, but distinct from, those of dolphin and porpoise morbilliviruses suggest that this virus may represent a third member of the cetacean morbillivirus group.  (+info)

Cloning, overexpression and characterization of micro-myoglobin, a minimal heme-binding fragment. (24/602)

We report the cloning and expression of micro-myoglobin, a 78-amino-acid fragment containing residues 29-105 of sperm whale myoglobin, and spanning the region from mid-helix B to mid-helix G of the globin fold. In contrast to full-length myoglobin and to mini-myoglobin (residues 32-129), the micro-myoglobin apoprotein is almost unfolded. However, circular dichroism and absorption spectroscopy data indicate that this fragment is capable of folding into a functional heme-binding unit forming a complex with the prosthetic group with characteristics similar to native myoglobin. Therefore, this case represents a new example of cofactor-assisted folding. The experimental data suggest independence between myoglobin subdomains.  (+info)