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1.
Am J Hum Genet ; 66(4): 1192-8, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10739751

ABSTRACT

Familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD), Dunnigan variety, is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by marked loss of subcutaneous adipose tissue from the extremities and trunk but by excess fat deposition in the head and neck. The disease is frequently associated with profound insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and diabetes. We have localized a gene for FPLD to chromosome 1q21-q23, and it has recently been proposed that nuclear lamin A/C is altered in FPLD, on the basis of a novel missense mutation (R482Q) in five Canadian probands. This gene had previously been shown to be altered in autosomal dominant Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD-AD) and in dilated cardiomyopathy and conduction-system disease. We examined 15 families with FPLD for mutations in lamin A/C. Five families harbored the R482Q alteration that segregated with the disease phenotype. Seven families harbored an R482W alteration, and one family harbored a G465D alteration. All these mutations lie within exon 8 of the lamin A/C gene-an exon that has also been shown to harbor different missense mutations that are responsible for EDMD-AD. Mutations could not be detected in lamin A/C in one FPLD family in which there was linkage to chromosome 1q21-q23. One family with atypical FPLD harbored an R582H alteration in exon 11 of lamin A. This exon does not comprise part of the lamin C coding region. All mutations in FPLD affect the globular C-terminal domain of the lamin A/C protein. In contrast, mutations responsible for dilated cardiomyopathy and conduction-system disease are observed in the rod domain of the protein. The FPLD mutations R482Q and R482W occurred on different haplotypes, indicating that they are likely to have arisen more than once.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Haplotypes/genetics , Lipodystrophy/genetics , Mutation, Missense/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Alleles , Amino Acid Sequence , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1/genetics , Cohort Studies , DNA Mutational Analysis , Exons/genetics , Female , Humans , Lamin Type A , Lamins , Lipodystrophy/physiopathology , Male , Microsatellite Repeats/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Nuclear Proteins/chemistry , Pedigree , Polymorphism, Genetic/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Alignment
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 55(10): 2517-21, 1989 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2604393

ABSTRACT

A plasmid transformation system was developed for Bacillus polymyxa ATCC 12321 and derivatives of this strain. The method utilizes a penicillin-treated-cell technique to facilitate uptake of the plasmid DNA. Low-frequency transformation (10(-6) per recipient cell) of plasmids pC194, pBD64, and pBC16 was accomplished with this method. Selection for the transformants was accomplished on both hypertonic and nonhypertonic selective media, with the highest rates of recovery occurring on a peptone-glucose-yeast extract medium containing 0.25 M sucrose. Several additional plasmids were shown to be capable of transferring their antibiotic resistance phenotypes to B. polymyxa through the use of a protoplast transformation procedure which allowed for a more efficient transfer of the plasmid DNA. However, cell walls could not be regenerated on the transformed protoplasts, and the transformants could not be subcultured from the original selective media.


Subject(s)
Bacillus/genetics , Plasmids , Transformation, Bacterial , Bacillus/drug effects , Electrophoresis, Agar Gel , Penicillin Resistance/genetics , Penicillins/pharmacology , Phenotype , Protoplasts/metabolism
3.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 55(3): 573-8, 1989 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16347865

ABSTRACT

Kluyveromyces fragilis (CBS 397) is a nonhalophilic yeast which is capable of lactose utilization from whey permeate and high glycerol production under anaerobic growth conditions. However, the optimum yields of glycerol (11.6 mg/ml of whey permeate medium) obtained in this study occurred only in the presence of 1% Na(2)SO(3) as a steering agent. The use of other concentrations of Na(2)SO(3), as well as 5% NaCl and 1% ascorbic acid, had no or detrimental effects on cell growth, lactose utilization, and glycerol production. Glycerol yields were greater in cultures grown from a light inoculum of K. fragilis than in cultures in which a resuspended mass of cells was introduced into the medium. The results of this study suggest that this strain of K. fragilis may be useful commercially in the utilization of cheese whey lactose and the concomitant production of glycerol.

4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 54(1): 168-171, 1988 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16347522

ABSTRACT

2,3-Butanediol is a feedstock chemical of potential industrial importance. It can serve as a monomer for many polymers of consumer interest that are currently supplied by the fossil fuel industry. Bacillus polymyxa can grow on inexpensive waste products of the food-processing industry and produce this glycol. This paper describes a mutant strain of B. polymyxa which displays constitutive production of catabolic alpha-acetolactate synthase, an enzyme in the 2,3-butanediol pathway which is normally produced only in the late log or stationary phase of growth. The mutant was obtained by treating the wild type with nitrosoguanidine and subjecting it to a penicillin counterselection procedure. One of the selected mutant strains produced four times as much of the glycol as the wild type and utilized approximately 25% of the energy source, compared with essentially complete utilization of the energy source by the wild type. Studies are under way to optimize the production of the glycol by the mutant.

5.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 44(1): 40-3, 1982 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6751225

ABSTRACT

Aliphatic chain compounds at least four carbons long with vicinal carbonyl groups in the 2,3 positions were detected by the Westerfeld test. Acetoin, which has one carbonyl group and an adjacent hydroxyl group, gave positive results, but methyl action (3-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-butanone) was negative, and subsequent tests supported the conclusion that acetoin is oxidized to diacetyl by alpha-naphthol during the Westerfeld test in the absence or presence of air. 2,3-Pentanedione and 2,3-heptanedione gave positive results, but equimolar concentrations of these compounds gave maximal absorbancy readings that were only 35% (2,3-pentanedione) and 31% (2,3-heptanedione) of those obtained with diacetyl or acetoin. Negative results were obtained with pyruvic acid, 2,3-butylene glycol, and carbon ring compounds (1,2-cyclohexanedione, alloxan, and 3,4-dihydroxy-3-cyclobutene-1,2-dione). alpha-Naphtho could not be replaced in the test by beta-naphthol, 1,2,3,4,-tetrahydroxy-1-naphthol, or 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroxy-1-naphthol. Creatine could not be replaced by arginine, guanidine . HCl, or guanidinoacetic acid.


Subject(s)
Acetoin/analysis , Bacteriological Techniques , Butanones/analysis , Diacetyl/analysis , Chemical Phenomena , Chemistry , Indicators and Reagents , Oxidation-Reduction , Structure-Activity Relationship
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 43(5): 1216-8, 1982 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16346020

ABSTRACT

Six microorganisms that produced acetoin or diacetyl or both from glucose were tested for the production of 2,3-butylene glycol from lactose. Bacillus polymyxa and Streptococcus faecalis gave positive results and were tested in unmodified wheys. Cottage cheese whey was unsatisfactory, but B. polymyxa produced large amounts of the glycol in sweet whey, about 60 mmol of glycol per 100 mmol of lactose utilized. Aeration and an increased ratio of surface area to volume of whey enhanced the production of glycol. 2,3-Butylene was separated from the spent whey and from acetoin and diacetyl with a Sephadex G-10 column.

10.
Appl Microbiol ; 26(5): 744-6, 1973 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4148640

ABSTRACT

Streptococcus diacetilactis was grown in a partially defined, lipoic acid-free medium containing radioactive acetate with and without addition of 0.1% unlabeled sodium pyruvate. Labeled carbon was incorporated into diacetyl, but neither the amount of diacetyl produced nor its specific activity was influenced by addition of pyruvate. Acetoin had low specific activity, indicating that it was a mixture of radioactive and nonradioactive acetoin. The specific activity of acetoin was lower when pyruvate, a precursor of unlabeled acetoin, was added to the medium, which indicated that the radioactive acetoin was produced from radioactive diacetyl by diacetyl reductase. Results substantiate condensation of acetyl-coenzyme A with hydroxyethylthiamine pyrophosphate as the in vivo mechanism for synthesis of diacetyl.


Subject(s)
Acetates/metabolism , Streptococcus/metabolism , Carbon Radioisotopes , Culture Media , Glucose/metabolism , NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Pyruvates/metabolism , Thioctic Acid/metabolism , Time Factors
11.
J Bacteriol ; 95(1): 174-80, 1968 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5636815

ABSTRACT

Pyruvate was shown to be the precursor of diacetyl and acetoin in Streptococcus diacetilactis, but dialyzed cell-free extracts of S. diacetilactis and Leuconostoc citrovorum that had been treated with anion-exchange resin to remove coenzyme A (CoA) formed only acetoin from pyruvate in the presence of thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) and Mg(++) or Mn(++) ions. The ability to produce diacetyl was restored by the addition of acetyl-CoA. Acetyl-phosphate did not replace the acetyl-CoA. Neither diacetyl nor acetoin was formed when the otherwise complete reaction system was modified by using boiled extract or by omitting the extract, pyruvate, TPP, or the metal ions. Free acetaldehyde was not involved in the biosynthesis of diacetyl or acetoin from pyruvate, dialyzed cell-free extracts of the bacteria produced only acetoin (besides CO(2)) from alpha-acetolactate, and acetoin was not involved in the biosynthesis of diacetyl. Only one of the optical isomers present in racemic alpha-acetolactate was attacked by the extracts, and there was no appreciable spontaneous decarboxylation of the alpha-acetolactate at the pH (4.5) used in experiments.


Subject(s)
Acetates/biosynthesis , Leuconostoc/metabolism , Streptococcus/metabolism , 1-Propanol/metabolism , Acetaldehyde/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes , Coenzyme A/metabolism , Lactates/metabolism , Pyruvates/metabolism , Spectrophotometry
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