• Title/Summary/Keyword: DNA/RNA purification

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Purification, Characterization, and cDNA Cloning of Xylanase from Fungus Trichoderma Strain SY

  • Min, Shin-Young;Kim, Bong-Gyu;Lee, Chan;Hur, Hor-Gil;Ahn, Joong-Hoon
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.12 no.6
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    • pp.890-894
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    • 2002
  • A xylanase-producing Trichoderma strain was isolated from soil. Xylanase from Trichoderma strain SY was purified 21-fold to an apparent homogeneity, with a $17.4\%$ yield. The optimum pH and temperature were determined to be 5.5 and $50^{\circ}C$, respectively, and its molecular weight was 21-kDa by SDS-PAGE. The corresponding gene, named xyl, was cloned by RT-PCR. DNA blot analysis of xyl showed that this gene is present as a single copy. The amino acid sequence of the Xyl protein showed similarity to those of other xylanases derived from various fungi. mRNA of xyl was highly expressed when this fungus was grown on cellulose or xylan as a sole carbon source, but undetectable when grown on sucrose. Extracts of Escherichia coli cells expressing xyl were found to have xylanase activity. It was confirmed that xyl from this isolate encodes xylanase.

Prevalence of Salmonella Enterotoxin Gene(stn) among Clinical Strains Isolated in Korea and Regulation of stn Expression (한국에서 분리된 병원성 Salmonella 균주의 장독소 유전자(stn) 분포와 발현조절 기작)

  • 임상용;유상렬
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.28 no.6
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    • pp.316-321
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    • 2000
  • Role of enterotoxin from Salmonella in pathogenesis is not know. Enterotoxin gene from Salmonella typhimurium(stn) encodes a 29kDa toxin that has no homology to any other known enterotoxins. Expression of stn is enthanced upon contact with epithelial cell but not all strains having the stn gene express Stn, Based on PCR analysis, we found that all 36 clinical strains of Salmonella isolated in Korea tested carried the stn gene. To understand the trgulation of the stn transcription, the expression of stn was studies in vitro. RNA polymerase was purified by polymin P fraction-ation, DNA-agarose affinity chromatography, and Mono-Q ion exchange chromatography from Salmonella. The expression of stn was inhibited by cAMP·CRP complex by about 50%.

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Expression and Purification of Transmembrane Protein MerE from Mercury-Resistant Bacillus cereus

  • Amin, Aatif;Sarwar, Arslan;Saleem, Mushtaq A.;Latif, Zakia;Opella, Stanley J.
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.274-282
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    • 2019
  • Mercury-resistant ($Hg^R$) bacteria were isolated from heavy metal polluted wastewater and soil collected near to tanneries of district Kasur, Pakistan. Bacterial isolates AZ-1, AZ-2 and AZ-3 showed resistance up to $40{\mu}g/ml$ against mercuric chloride ($HgCl_2$). 16S rDNA ribotyping and phylogenetic analysis were performed for the characterization of selected isolates as Bacillus sp. AZ-1 (KT270477), Bacillus cereus AZ-2 (KT270478) and Bacillus cereus AZ-3 (KT270479). Phylogenetic relationship on the basis of merA nucleotide sequence confirmed 51-100% homology with the corresponding region of the merA gene of already reported mercury-resistant Gram-positive bacteria. The merE gene involved in the transportation of elemental mercury ($Hg^0$) via cell membrane was cloned for the first time into pHLV vector and transformed in overexpressed C43(DE3) E. coli cells. The recombinant plasmid (pHLMerE) was expressed and the native MerE protein was obtained after thrombin cleavage by size exclusion chromatography (SEC). The purification of fusion/recombinant and native protein MerE by Ni-NTA column, dialysis and fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC/SEC) involved unfolding/refolding techniques. A small-scale reservoir of wastewater containing $30{\mu}g/ml$ of $HgCl_2$ was designed to check the detoxification ability of selected strains. It resulted in 83% detoxification of mercury by B. cereus AZ-2 and B. cereus AZ-3, and 76% detoxification by Bacillus sp. AZ-1 respectively (p < 0.05).

Cloning and Expression of the Cathepsin F-like Cysteine Protease Gene in Escherichia coli and Its Characterization

  • Joo, Han-Seung;Koo, Kwang-Bon;Park, Kyun-In;Bae, Song-Hwan;Yun, Jong-Won;Chang, Chung-Soon;Choi, Jang-Won
    • Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.45 no.2
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    • pp.158-167
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    • 2007
  • In this study, we have cloned a novel cDNA encoding for a papain-family cysteine protease from the Uni-ZAP XR cDNA library of the polychaete, Periserrula leucophryna. This gene was expressed in Escherichia coli using the T7 promoter system, and the protease was characterized after partial purification. First, the partial DNA fragment (498 bp) was amplified from the total RNA via RT-PCR using degenerated primers derived from the conserved region of cysteine protease. The full-length cDNA of cysteine protease (PLCP) was prepared via the screening of the Uni-ZAP XR cDNA library using the $^{32}P-labeled$ partial DNA fragment. As a result, the PLCP gene was determined to consist of a 2591 bp nucleotide sequence (CDS: 173-1024 bp) which encodes for a 283-amino acid polypeptide, which is itself composed of an 59-residue signal sequence, a 6-residue propeptide, a 218-residue mature protein, and a long 3'-noncoding region encompassing 1564 bp. The predicted molecular weights of the preproprotein and the mature protein were calculated as 31.8 kDa and 25 kDa, respectively. The results of sequence analysis and alignment revealed a significant degree of sequence similarity with other eukaryotic cysteine proteases, including the conserved catalytic triad of the $Cys^{90},\;His^{226},\;and\;Asn^{250}$ residues which characterize the C1 family of papain-like cysteine protease. The nucleotide and amino acid sequences of the novel gene were deposited into the GenBank database under the accession numbers, AY390282 and AAR27011, respectively. The results of Northern blot analysis revealed the 2.5 kb size of the transcript and ubiquitous expression throughout the entirety of the body, head, gut, and skin, which suggested that the PLCP may be grouped within the cathepsin F-like proteases. The region encoding for the mature form of the protease was then subcloned into the pT7-7 expression vector following PCR amplification using the designed primers, including the initiation and termination codons. The recombinant cysteine proteases were generated in a range of 6.3 % to 12.5 % of the total cell proteins in the E. coli BL21(DE3) strain for 8 transformants. The results of SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis indicated that a cysteine protease of approximately 25 kDa (mature form) was generated. The optimal pH and temperature of the enzyme were determined to be approximately 9.5 and $35^{\circ}C$, respectively, thereby indicating that the cysteine protease is a member of the alkaline protease group. The evaluation of substrate specificity indicated that the purified protease was more active towards Arg-X or Lys-X and did not efficiently cleave the substrates with non-polar amino acids at the P1 site. The PLCP evidenced fibrinolytic activity on the plasminogen-free fibrin plate test.

Expression and Purification of Mutated Porcine Growth Hormone Binding Protein by Using Site-Directed Mutagenesis in E. coli (Site-Directed Mutagenesis를 이용하여 변이된 돼지 성장 호르몬 결합 단백질의 대장균 내 발현과 정제)

  • Choi, K.H.;Chung, K. S.;Lee, H.T.
    • Korean Journal of Animal Reproduction
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.381-388
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    • 2001
  • The present study was designed to obtain porcine growth hormone binding protein (pGHBP) improved biological activation as derived mutation in binding site with growth horlnone (GH). A 756 bp of fragment encoding the extracellular domain of pGHBP gene was cloned from the total RNA of porcine fat tissue by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and created mutation in positions 26 and 122 using site-directed mutagenesis method. Position 26 is one and it is near to get on five potential N-linked glycosylation sites located in the extracellular domain of porcine growth hormone receptor known to have a direct influence on combination with GH. Position 122 is known as one of conformational epitope in bovine. It was over-expressed in E. coli using pET-32(c) expression vector and precisely purified by S-protein agarose and enterokinase. In our results, we was obtained pmGHBP of 30 kDa. It suggests to study the effects of the pmGHBP on cell proliferation in vitro and growth rate in vivo after administration.

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Detection of Campylobacter jejuni in food and poultry visors using immunomagnetic separation and microtitre hybridization

  • Simard, Ronald-E.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Fisheries Technology Conference
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    • 2000.05a
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    • pp.71-73
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    • 2000
  • Campylobacter jejuni is most frequently identified cause of cause of acute diarrhoeal infections in developeed countries, exceeding rates of illness caused by both salmonella and shigilla(Skirrow, 1990 ; Lior 1994). Previous studies on campylobacter jejuni contamination of commercial broiler carcasses in u.s.(Stern, 1992). Most cases of the disease result from indirect transmission of Campylobactor from animals via milk, water and meat. In addition to Campylobactor jejuni. the closely relates species Campylobactor coli and Campylobactor lari have also been implicated as agents of gastroenteritis in humans. Campylobactor coli represented only approximately 3% of the Campylobactor isolates from patients with Campylobactor enteritis(Griffiths and Park, 1990) whereas Campylobactor coli is mainly isolated from pork(Lmmerding et al., 1988). Campylobactor jejuni has also been isolated from cases of bacteremia, appendicitis and, recently, has been associated with Guillai-Barre syndrome(Allos and Blaser, 1994; von Wulffen et al., 1994; Phillips, 1995). Studies in volunteers indicated that the infectious dose for Campylobactor jejuni is low(about 500 organisms)(Robinson, 1981). The methods traditionally used to detect Campylobactor ssp. in food require at least two days of incubation in an enrichment broth followed by plating and two days of incubation on complex culture media containing many antibiotics(Goossens and Butzler, 1992). Finnaly, several biochemical tests must be done to confirm the indentification at the species level. Therfore, sensitive and specific methods for the detection of small numbers of Campylobactor cells in food are needed. Polymerase chain reaction(PCR) assays targeting specific DNA sequences have been developed for the detection of Campylobactor(Giesendorf and Quint, 1995; Hemandex et al., 1995; Winter and Slavidk, 1995). In most cases, a short enrichment step is needed to enhance the sensitivity of the assay prior to detection by PCR as the number of bacteria in the food products is low in comparison with those found in dinical samples, and because the complex composition of food matrices can hinder the PCR and lower its sensitivity. However, these PCR systems are technically demanding to carry out and cumbersome when processing a large number of samples simutaneously. In this paper, an immunomagnetic method to concentrate Campylobactor cells present in food or clinical samples after an enrichment step is described. To detect specifically the thermophilic Campylobactor. a monoclonal antibody was adsorbed on the surface of the magnetic beads which react against a major porin of 45kDa present on the surface of the cells(Huyer et al., 1986). After this partial purification and concentration step, detection of bound cells was achieved using a simple, inexpensive microtitre plate-based hybridization system. We examined two alternative detection systems, one specific for thermophilic Campylobactor based on the detection of 23S rRNA using an immobilized DNA probe. The second system is less specific but more sensitive because of the high copy number of the rRNA present in bacterial cell($10^3-10^4$). By using specific immunomagnetic beads against thermophilic Campylobactor, it was possible to concentrate these cells from a heterogeneous media and obtain highly specific hybridization reactions with good sensitivity. There are several advantages in using microtitre plates instead of filter membranes or other matrices for hybridization techniques. Microtitre plates are much easier to handle than filter membranes during the adsorption, washing, hybridization and detection steps, and their use faciilitates the simultanuous analysis of multiple sample. Here we report on the use of a very simple detection procedure based on a monoclonal anti-RNA-DNA hybrid antibody(Fliss et al., 1999) for detection of the RNA-DNA hybrids formed in the wells.

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Comparative Interactomes of VRK1 and VRK3 with Their Distinct Roles in the Cell Cycle of Liver Cancer

  • Lee, Namgyu;Kim, Dae-Kyum;Han, Seung Hyun;Ryu, Hye Guk;Park, Sung Jin;Kim, Kyong-Tai;Choi, Kwan Yong
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.40 no.9
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    • pp.621-631
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    • 2017
  • Vaccinia-related kinase 1 (VRK1) and VRK3 are members of the VRK family of serine/threonine kinases and are principally localized in the nucleus. Despite the crucial roles of VRK1/VRK3 in physiology and disease, the molecular and functional interactions of VRK1/VRK3 are poorly understood. Here, we identified over 200 unreported VRK1/VRK3-interacting candidate proteins by affinity purification and LC-MS/MS. The networks of VRK1 and VRK3 interactomes were found to be associated with important biological processes such as the cell cycle, DNA repair, chromatin assembly, and RNA processing. Interactions of interacting proteins with VRK1/VRK3 were confirmed by biochemical assays. We also found that phosphorylations of XRCC5 were regulated by both VRK1/VRK3, and that of CCNB1 was regulated by VRK3. In liver cancer cells and tissues, VRK1/VRK3 were highly upregulated and its depletion affected cell cycle progression in the different phases. VRK3 seemed to affect S phase progression and G2 or M phase entry and exit, whereas VRK1 affects G1/S transition in the liver cancer, which could be explained by different interacting candidate proteins. Thus, this study not only provides a resource for investigating the unidentified functions of VRK1/VRK3, but also an insight into the regulatory roles of VRK1/VRK3 in biological processes.

Purification of Methioninase from Pseudomonas putida and Its Effect on the Uptake of ^11C-Methionine in Vivo. (Pseudomonas putida 유래 Methioninase의 정제 및 생체내 ^11C-Methionine 섭취에 미치는 영향)

  • 변상성;박귀근
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.377-382
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    • 2003
  • Purification of methioninase resulted in a yield of 69%, and SDS-PAGE analysis of the purified product revealed a single band of approximately 43 kDa in molecular weight. in vitro experiments with cancer cells incubated in methionine-free media demonstrated an increase in $^{11}$ C-methionine uptake to 25.8$\pm$1.1% at 6 hr, 31.8$\pm$0.8% at 24 hr, and 62.2$\pm$0.6% at 48hr, compared to controls. Treatment of the cancer cells with purified methioninase showed no decrease in survival after a 2 hr incubation with 0.01 U/ml, but survival of RR1022 cells decreased 30% after 24 to 48 hr incubation. SKOV-3 cells showed a 5% and 14% decrease in survival with 0.1 and 1 U/ml methioninase after 24 hr. After 48hr survival decreased 15% and 24% with 0.1 and 1 U/ml methioninase. Measurements of $^{11}$ C-methionine uptake in RR1022 cells demonstrated no change at 2 hr, but a 13.7$\pm$4.7% and 40.7$\pm$2.6% increase in uptake at 24 and 48 hr, respectively. SKOV-3 cells also showed no change at 2 hr, but had a 17.7$\pm$7.2% and 38.9$\pm$4.9% increase in $^{11}$ C-methionine uptake after 24 hr and 48 hr treatment with methioninase, respectively. $^{11}$ C-methionine PET imaging revealed clear visualization of both the tumors and contralateral infectious lesions. Administration of rMET appeared to result in a slight increase in tumor:nontumor contrast on $^{11}$ C-methionine PET images. Injection of purified methioninase also produced PET images where tumor uptake was higher than that of infectious lesions.

Cloning and Expression of Mammaglobin Gene (Mammaglobin 유전자 재조합 및 발현에 관한 연구)

  • 이재학
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.47-52
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    • 2004
  • In this study, I attempted to develope the expression and purification system of human mammaglobin proteins in Escherichia coli and to produce anti-human mammaglobin rabbit antibody for the detection of human mammaglobin protein in the peripheral blood of breast cancer patients. Human mammaglobin gene was cloned and sequenced from m-RNAs purified from donated breast cancer tissues using RT-PCR. The cloned gene was inserted into pET30, pET22, and pET32 plasmid. The cloned gene in pET30 yields insoluble proteins which was difficult to purify from the cells extracts. The mammaglobin gene in pET32 was strongly expressed soluble proteins which were isolated using Ni-NTA affinity chromagraphy and DEAE-ion exchange chromatography, followed by enterokinase digestion of the purified proteins. The isolated proteins had enough purity to use as a antigen for the production of anti-mammaglobin antibody in rabbits. The polyclonal antibody produced against the isolated mammaglobin showed a specificity to mammaglobin after Westernblot immuno assay. In conclusion, the isolated mammaglobin protein and the anti-mammaglobin rabbit antibody may be used for diagnosis of breast cancer as well as development of anti-breast cancer drug.

Isolation of the Protease-producing Yeast Pichia anomala CO-1 and Characterization of Its Extracellular Neutral Protease (세포 외 중성 단백질분해효소를 생산하는 Pichia anomala CO-1의 분리 동정 및 효소 특성)

  • Kim, Ji Yeon
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.29 no.10
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    • pp.1126-1135
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    • 2019
  • From a sample of bamboo byproduct, the protease-producing yeast strain CO-1 was newly isolated. Strain CO-1 is spherical to ovoid in shape and measures $3.1-4.0{\times}3.8-4.4{\mu}m$. For the growth of strain CO-1, the optimal temperature and initial pH were $30^{\circ}C$ and 4.0, respectively. The strain was able to grow in 0.0-15.0%(w/v) NaCl and 0.0-9.0%(v/v) ethanol. Based on a phylogenetic analysis of its 18S rDNA sequences, strain CO-1 was identified as Pichia anomala. The extracellular protease produced by P. anomala CO-1 was partially purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, which resulted in a 14.6-fold purification and a yield of 7.2%. The molecular mass of the protease was recorded as approximately 30 kDa via zymogram. The protease activity reached its maximum when 1.0%(w/v) CMC was used as the carbon source, 1.0%(w/v) yeast extract was used as the nitrogen source, and 0.3%(w/v) $MnSO_4$ was used as the mineral source. The protease revealed the highest activity at pH 7.0 and $30^{\circ}C$. This enzyme maintained more than 75% of its stability at a pH range of 4.0-10.0. After heating at $65^{\circ}C$ for 1 hr, the neutral protease registered at 60% of its original activity. The protease production coincided with growth and attained a maximal level during the post-exponential phase.