17 resultados para Nucleotide-sequence Analysis


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Glucagon is a 29 amino acid polypeptide hormone produced in the (alpha) cells of the pancreatic islets. The purpose of this research was to understand better the role of glucagon in the regulation of metabolic processes. As with other polypeptide hormones, the synthesis of glucagon is thought to involve a larger precursor, which is then enzymatically cleaved to the functional form. The specific research objectives were to obtain cloned copies of the messenger RNA (mRNA) for pancreatic glucagon, to determine their primary sequences, and from this coding information to deduce the amino acid sequence of the initial glucagon precursor. From this suggested preproglucagon sequence and prior information on possible proglucagon intermediate processing products, the overall objective of this research is to propose a possible pathway for the biosynthesis of pancreatic glucagon.^ Synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide probes of 14-nucleotides (14-mer) and 17-nucleotides (a 17-mer) complementary to codons specifying a unique sequence of mature glucagon were synthesized. The ('32)P-labeled-14-mer was hybridized with size-fractionated fetal bovine pancreatic poly(A('+))RNA bound to nitrocellulose. RNA fractions of (TURN)14S were found to hybridize specifically, resulting in an (TURN)10-fold enrichment for these sequences. These poly(A('+))RNAs were translated in a cell-free system and the products analyzed by gel electrophoresis. The translation products were found to be enriched for a protein of the putative size of mammalian preproglucagon ((TURN)21 kd). These enriched RNA fractions were used to construct a complementary DNA (cDNA) library is plasmid pBR322.^ Screening of duplicate colony filters with the ('32)P-labeled-17-mer and a ('32)P-labeled-17-mer-primed cDNA probe indicated 25 possible glucagon clones from 3100 colonies screened. Restriction mapping of 6 of these clones suggested that they represented a single mRNA species. Primary sequence analysis of one clone containing a 1200 base pair DNA insert revealed that it contained essentially a full-length copy of glucagon cDNA.^ Analaysis of the cDNA suggested that it encoded an initial translation product of 180 amino acids with an M(,r) = 21 kd. The first initiation codon (ATG, methionine) followed by the longest open reading frame of 540 nucleotides was preceded by a 5'-untranslated region of 90 nucleotides, and was followed by a longer 3'-untranslated region of 471 nucleotides, resulting in a total of 1101 nucleotides. . . . (Author's abstract exceeds stipulated maximum length. Discontinued here with permission of author.) UMI ^

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The basis for the recent transition of Enterococcus faecium from a primarily commensal organism to one of the leading causes of hospital-acquired infections in the United States is not yet understood. To address this, the first part of my project assessed isolates from early outbreaks in the USA and South America using sequence analysis, colony hybridizations, and minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) which showed clinical isolates possess virulence and antibiotic resistance determinants that are less abundant or lacking in community isolates. I also revealed that the level of ampicillin resistance increased over time in clinical strains. By sequencing the pbp5 gene, I demonstrated an ~5% difference in the pbp5 gene between strains with MICs <4ug/ml and those with MICs >4µg/ml, but no specific sequence changes correlated with increases in MICs within the latter group. A 3-10% nucleotide difference was also seen in three other genes analyzed, which suggested the existence of two distinct subpopulations of E. faecium. This led to the second part of my project analyzing concatenated core gene sequences, SNPs, the 16S rRNA, and phylogenetics of 21 E. faecium genomes confirming two distinct clades; a community-associated (CA) clade and hospital-associated (HA) clade. Molecular clock calculations indicate that these two clades likely diverged ~ 300,000 to > 1 million years ago, long before the modern antibiotic era. Genomic analysis also showed that, in addition to core genomic differences, HA E. faecium harbor specific accessory genetic elements that may confer selection advantages over CA E. faecium. The third part of my project discovered 6 E. faecium genes with the newly identified “WxL” domain. My analyses, using RT-PCR, western blots, patient sera, whole-cell ELISA, and immunogold electron microscopy, indicated that E. faecium WxL genes exist in operons, encode bacterial cell surface localized proteins, that WxL proteins are antigenic in humans, and are more exposed on the surface of clinical isolates versus community isolates (even though they are ubiquitous in both clades). ELISAs and BIAcore analyses also showed that proteins encoded by these operons bind several different host extracellular matrix proteins, as well as to each other, suggesting a novel cell-surface complex. In summary, my studies provide new insights into the evolution of E. faecium by showing that there are two distantly related clades; one being more successful in the hospital setting. My studies also identified operons encoding WxL proteins whose characteristics could also contribute to colonization and virulence within this species.