• Title/Summary/Keyword: secretion proteins

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Identifiaction and Molecular Size of Zine-Binding Ligands in Pancreatic/Biliary Fluid of Rats

  • Kwun, In-Sook;Donald Oberleas
    • Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.42-48
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    • 1997
  • the exocrine pancreatic secretion is an important factor in the maintenance of zinc homeostasis. The daily pancreatic secretion of zinc into the gastrointestinal tract may be two or more times the daily dietary zinc intake. The objective of this study was to examine the distribution of proteins and zinc in pancreatic/biliary fluid following intraperitoneal {TEX}${65}^Zn${/TEX} injection into dietary prepared Sprague-Dawly rats. Distribution of zinc-binding protein in Sephadex G-75 subfractions showed a peak corresponding to the high molecular weight protein standard(<66kDa) in the pancreatic/biliary fluid. Zinc also was associated with the 29~35kDa mole-cular weight proteins. These are similar in size with zinc-containing enzymes, carboxypeptidase A and car-boxypeptidase B. A more remarkable small molecular weight fraction eluted beyond the 6.5kDa standard pro-tein peak. These results show the presence of small molecular weight compound in pancreatic/biliary fluid associated with zinc . These small molecular weight compounds may serve as zinc-binding ligands for the secretion of enogenous zinc into the duodenum. These findings suggest that these lignads may dissociate zinc in the duodenum thus making it vulnerable to complexation with phytate in the upper gastrointestinal tract rendering the zinc unavailable for reabsorption.

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Secretion Capacity Limitations of the Sec Pathway in Escherichia coli

  • Mergulhao, Filipe J.M.;Monteiro, Gabriel A.
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.14 no.1
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    • pp.128-133
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    • 2004
  • The secretion capacity of two E. coli strains (JM109 and AF1000) was evaluated through the expression of two human proinsulin fusion proteins using the translocation signal sequence from Staphylococcal protein A (SpA). Although a 7 to 11-fold difference in the expression levels was attained by the use of different promoters (SpA and malK promoters) and copy-number vectors (700 and 50 copies per cell), the maximum translocation rates for all the systems were around 140,000 amino acids $cell^{-1} min^{-1}$. Moreover, the secretion capacity was found to be independent of the size of the exiting peptide and its translational rate.

Carboxypeptidase E, Identified As a Direct Interactor of Growth Hormone, Is Important for Efficient Secretion of the Hormone

  • Mizutani, Akiko;Inoko, Hidetoshi;Tanaka, Masafumi
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.39 no.10
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    • pp.756-761
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    • 2016
  • We have identified 88 interactor candidates for human growth hormone (GH) by the yeast two-hybrid assay. Among those, we focused our efforts on carboxypeptidase E (CPE), which has been thought to play a key role in sorting prohormones, such as pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), to regulated secretory vesicles. We found that CPE colocalizes with and interacts with GH in AtT20 pituitary cells. Downregulation of CPE led to decreased levels of GH secretion, consistent with involvement of CPE in GH sorting/secretion. Our binding assay in vitro with bacterially expressed proteins suggested that GH directly interacts with CPE but in a manner different from POMC.

An Engineered Outer Membrane-Defective Escherichia coli Secreting Protective Antigens against Streptococcus suis via the Twin-Arginine Translocation Pathway as a Vaccine

  • Li, Wenyu;Yin, Fan;Bu, Zixuan;Liu, Yuying;Zhang, Yongqing;Chen, Xiabing;Li, Shaowen;Li, Lu;Zhou, Rui;Huang, Qi
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.32 no.3
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    • pp.278-286
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    • 2022
  • Live bacterial vector vaccines are one of the most promising vaccine types and have the advantages of low cost, flexibility, and good safety. Meanwhile, protein secretion systems have been reported as useful tools to facilitate the release of heterologous antigen proteins from bacterial vectors. The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) system is an important protein export system that transports fully folded proteins in a signal peptide-dependent manner. In this study, we constructed a live vector vaccine using an engineered commensal Escherichia coli strain in which amiA and amiC genes were deleted, resulting in a leaky outer membrane that allows the release of periplasmic proteins to the extracellular environment. The protective antigen proteins SLY, enolase, and Sbp against Streptococcus suis were targeted to the Tat pathway by fusing a Tat signal peptide. Our results showed that by exploiting the Tat pathway and the outer membrane-defective E. coli strain, the antigen proteins were successfully secreted. The strains secreting the antigen proteins were used to vaccinate mice. After S. suis challenge, the vaccinated group showed significantly higher survival and milder clinical symptoms compared with the vector group. Further analysis showed that the mice in the vaccinated group had lower burdens of bacteria load and slighter pathological changes. Our study reports a novel live bacterial vector vaccine that uses the Tat system and provides a new alternative for developing S. suis vaccine.

Enhanced Secretion of Cell Wall Bound Enolase into Culture Medium by the sool-l Mutation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Kim, Ki-Hyun;Park, Hee-Moon
    • Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.248-252
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    • 2004
  • In order to identify the protein(s) secreted into culture medium by the sool-l/retl-l mutation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, proteins from the culture medium of cells grown at permissive (28$^{\circ}C$) and non-permissive temperatures (37$^{\circ}C$), were analyzed. Comparison of protein bands separated by SDS-PAGE identified a prominent band of 47-kDa band from a mutant grown at 37$^{\circ}C$. N-terminal amino acid sequencing of this 47-kDa protein showed high identity with enolases 1 and 2. Western blot analysis revealed that most of the cell wall-bound enolase was released into the culture medium of the mutant grown at 37$^{\circ}C$, some of which were separated as those with lower molecular weights. Our results, presented here, indicate the impairment of cell wall enolase biogenesis and assembly by the sool-l/retl-l mutation of S. cerevisiae.

Expression and Secretion of Heterologous Protein in Yeast

  • Kim, Moo-Kyum;Song, Moo-Young;Yu, Myeong-Hee;Yu, Myeong-Hee;Park, Hee-Moon;Kim, Jinmi
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.108-112
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    • 1992
  • To investigate the expression and the secretion of heterologous proteins in yeast, we constructed an yeast secretion vector and produced a human secretory protein, .alpha.-1-antitrypsin (.alpha.-1-AT), from yeast cells. The secretion vector pGAT8 was constructed by inserting the signal sequence of yeast acid phosphatase gene (PH05) into the .alpha.1-AT expression vector pGAT6 which contained .alpha.-1-AT cDNA fused to GAL10-CYC1 promotor. The .alpha.-1-AT was produced efficiently in the yeast cells transformed with plasmid pGAT8, which was onfirmed both by the .alpha.-1-AT activity assay and by the immunoblot method using .alpha.-1-AT antibody. We also showed the secretion of .alpha.-1-AT into the culture media and into the periplasmic space by immunoblot.

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Proteome Analysis of Bacillus subtilis When Overproducing Secretory Protein

  • Jang Mi;Park Byoung-Chul;Lee Do-Hee;Kho Chang-Won;Cho Sa-Yeon;Lee Baek-Rak;Park Sung-Goo
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.16 no.3
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    • pp.368-373
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    • 2006
  • Bacillus subtilis and related Bacillus species are frequently used as hosts for the mass production of recombinant proteins. Accordingly, this study examined the cellular response of B. subtilis to the overexpression of a soluble secretory protein. As such, the lichenase derived from B. cereus was overexpressed in B. subtilis, initially localized in the cytoplasm as a mature form and then secreted into the medium. Thereafter, the proteome of B. subtilis was analyzed using 2D electrophoresis and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The expression of several heat-shock proteins, such as dnaK and groEL, was increased under this condition. In addition, manganese superoxide dismutase and NADH dehydrogenase were also upregulated in the lichenase-secreting B. subtilis. Therefore, it was concluded that the transient accumulation of a secreted protein in B. subtilis before secretion acted as a stress on the cell, which in turn induced the expression of various protective proteins.

Effect of Bambusae Caulis in Liquamen on the Synthesis of Basement Membrane Proteins during Proliferation and Differentiation of 3T3-L 1 Cells (죽역이 3T3-L1 세포의 증식 및 분화시 기저영 단백질 합성에 미치는 영향)

  • Jeon Hoon
    • Journal of Physiology & Pathology in Korean Medicine
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    • v.17 no.5
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    • pp.1315-1320
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    • 2003
  • The purpose of this research was to investigate effects of Bambusae Caulis in Liquamen (BCL) on the synthesis of basement membrane proteins during proliferation and differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells. BCL has been used to relieve the cough and asthma, and remove phlegm in traditional oriental medicines. In recent years. it was studied for its antiinflammatory, antiallergenic. immune-modulating and anticarcinogenic capabilities. We have previously observed that glycyrrhizin stimulates the adipose conversion of 3T3-L1 cells. To investigate effects of BCL on the basement membrane proteins during proliferation and differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells, we have analyzed synthetic amounts of basement membrane components such as type IV collagen and BM40. BCL stimulated the synthesis and secretion of type IV collagen from both 3T3-L1 preadipocytes and adipocytes. The synthesis and secretion of BM40 was not affected by BCL. The continuous addition of BCL markedly stimulated cell growth and increased cell density. These results suggest an important role for type IV collagen in adipocyte differentiation.

Effect of a PMR1 Disruption on the Processing of Heterologous Glycoproteins Secreted in the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Kim, Moo-Woong;Ko, Su-Min;Kim, Jeong-Yoon;Sohn, Jung-Hoon;Park, Eui-Sung;Kang, Hyun-Ah;Rhee, Sang-Ki
    • Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
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    • v.5 no.4
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    • pp.234-241
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    • 2000
  • The Saccharomyces cerevisiae PMR1 gene encodes a Ca2+-ATPase localized in the Golgi. We have investigated the effects of PMR1 disruption in S. cerevisiae on the glycosylation and secretion of three heterologous glycoproteins, human ${\alpha}$1-antitrypsin (${\alpha}$1-AT), human antithrombin III (ATHIII), and Aspergillus niger glucose oxidase (GOD). The pmr1 null mutant strain secreted larger amounts of ATHIII and GOD proteins per a unit cell mass than the wild type strain. Despite a lower growth rate of the pmr1 mutant, two-fold higher level of human ATHIII was detected in the culture supernatant from the pmr1 mutant compared to that of the wild-type strain. The pmr1 mutant strain secreted ${\alpha}$1-AT and the GOD proteins mostly as core-glycosylated forms, in contrast to the hyperglycosylated proteins secreted in the wild-type strain. Furthermore, the core-glycosylated forms secreted in the pmr1 mutant migrated slightly faster on SDS-PAGE than those secreted in the mnn9 deletion mutant and the wild type strains. Analysis of the recombinant GOD with anti-${\alpha}$1,3-mannose antibody revealed that GOD secreted in the pmr1 mutant did not have terminal ${\alpha}$1,3-linked mannose unlike those secreted in the mnn9 mutant and the wild type strains. The present results indicate that the pmr1 mutant, with the super-secretion phenotype, is useful as a host system to produce recombinant glycoproteins lacking high-mannose outer chains.

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Expression of Secretion-dedicated Srb Homologue and Antifungal Activity of Bacillus lentimorbus WJ5 (Bacillus lentimorbus WJ5의 분비 전용 Srb Homologue 발현과 항진균 활성)

  • 장유신;이영근;김재성;조규성;장병일
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.39 no.3
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    • pp.135-140
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    • 2003
  • Bacillus sp. secretes high levels of extracellular enzymes into the culture medium. The signal recognition particle (SRP) and the SRP receptor play a central role in targeting pre secretory proteins to the translocase. By the analysis of the DNA microarray of B. lentimorbus WJ5, it was detected that WJ5m12, antifungal activity deficient mutant induced by gamma radiation, had a down-regulated expression of the SRP receptor gene (B. subtitis srb homologue, srbL). To determine the relationship of SRP receptor to antifungal activity, srbL of B. lentimorbus WJ5 was amplified by PCR and ligated into pQE30 vector, and then transferred into WJ5m12. The transformant, WJ5m12::srbL, recovered the antifungal activity. From the 2-DE analysis, the several presecretory proteins accumulated in the mutant cell and decreased to a level of the wild type in WJ5m12::srbL. It seems that the srbL could play an important role in the secretion of the antifungal activity related proteins of B. lentimorbus WJ5.