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1.
Horm Metab Res ; 37(4): 231-5, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15952083

ABSTRACT

Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) are frequent in Brazil. The mechanisms of adrenal tumorigenesis remain poorly established; the R337H germline mutation in the p53 gene has previously been associated with ACTs in Brazilian children. We investigated the frequency and inheritance of R337H p53 mutation as well as genotype and phenotype correlation in 21 children and 5 adult patients with ACTs. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood cells and/or tumor tissue for sequencing exon 10 of the p53 gene. Nine sets of parents of patients with p53 mutation were also submitted to mutational analysis. Virilization was the most common clinical sign in children with or without Cushing's syndrome. Two members of the adult group showed asymptomatic adrenal incidentalomas, two showed virilization, and one presented with Cushing's syndrome. Sixteen children with ACTs had peripheral blood available, and twelve of them (75%) showed the heterozygous R337H p53 gene mutation. The R337H mutation was found in fifteen samples of the nineteen tumor specimens available (78.9%). Among the nine sets of parents of the patients with R337H mutation, eight showed the same mutation with heterozygosity in one of the parents. None of the parents showed ACTs or any other neoplasia at the time of the study. Only one adult patient with an ACT revealed the same R337H p53 germline mutation. There was no association between the presence of germline or tissue R337H p53 mutation and malignancy at diagnosis. We confirmed the high frequency of R337H p53 mutation in Brazilian children with sporadic ACTs. The R337H p53 mutation was inherited from one of the parents of the patients, and there was no association between the presence of this mutation and tumor malignancy in children. The founder effect of R337H p53 mutation and the role of environmental mutagens contributing to the geographical clustering and high prevalence of ACTs in Brazilian children remain to be established.


Subject(s)
Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms/genetics , Genes, p53/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Adult , Aged , Brazil , Child , Child, Preschool , Codon/genetics , DNA/biosynthesis , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , Exons/genetics , Female , Genotype , Humans , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , Phenotype , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
2.
J Gen Microbiol ; 118(2): 471-8, 1980 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6777455

ABSTRACT

Bacillus subtilis alternately swims smoothly and tumbles; when administered repellent it only tumbles, but later resumes normal swimming and tumbling. Repellents of B. subtilis include membrane-active agents like uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation and local anaesthetics and have previously been found to act in a fundamentally different way compared with attractants. It has been suggested previously that uncouplers act as repellents as a result of their ability to depolarize the membrane and that depolarization might effect flagellar function by causing a flux of Ca2+ into the cell. However, we found that there is no correlation between membrane depolarization and chemotaxis and no detectable flux of Ca2+ following tactic stimulation by uncouplers. Experiments with analogues of the uncoupler pentachlorophenol, all of which are weaker acids than pentachlorophenol, indicated that the anionic form of the uncoupler is the potent form and we propose that it binds to a certain membrane protein to cause release into the cytoplasm of the substance (ion, metabolite or protein) that controls tumbling frequency. Adaptation is assumed to occur when this excess is removed by active transport or metabolism.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/physiology , Chemotaxis/drug effects , Uncoupling Agents/pharmacology , Bacillus subtilis/drug effects , Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Calcium/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Oxidative Phosphorylation/drug effects
3.
J Gen Microbiol ; 115(1): 167-72, 1979 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-119030

ABSTRACT

Many sugars and derivatives were tested in the capillary assay for their attraction of Bacillus subtilis. The major attractants were 2-deoxy-D-glucose, D-fructose, gentiobiose, D-glucose, maltose, D-mannitol, D-mannose, N-acetylglucosamine, alpha-methyl-D-glucoside, beta-methyl-D-glucoside, N-acetylmannosamine, alpha-methyl-D-mannoside, D-sorbitol, L-sorbose, sucrose, trehalose and D-xylose. Only glucose chemotaxis was completely constitutive. Competition experiments were carried out to determine the specificities of chemoreceptors. There were 25 instances of no influence of two sugars on each other's taxis, 92 instances of one sugar interfering non-reciprocally with chemotaxis towards another and 49 instances of two sugars reciprocally competing. However, in most of the last instances, other sugars were identified that interfered with chemotaxis towards one member of the pair but not the other. Thus, nearly all sugars and related compounds appear to be detected by their own chemoreceptors, but many secondary interactions exist.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/physiology , Carbohydrates/pharmacology , Chemotaxis , Bacillus subtilis/drug effects , Receptors, Drug/physiology
4.
J Biol Chem ; 253(14): 4916-9, 1978 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-97283

ABSTRACT

Values of KI for nine proline analogs as inhibitors of proline chemotaxis and of proline transport were determined. Two of them inhibited transport at substantially lower concentrations than chemotaxis; two at substantially higher concentrations. Moreover, mutants, believed to be in the component that binds proline, were isolated that showed a shift of KM for transport to higher concentrations, one as much as 40-fold. However, chemotaxis was virtually unaffected. Therefore, unlike galactose chemotaxis and transport in Escherichia coli, which share the galactose-binding protein, proline chemotaxis and transport in Bacillus subtilis are independent.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Chemotaxis , Proline/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Biological Transport , Kinetics , Mutation , Species Specificity
5.
J Bacteriol ; 129(1): 156-65, 1977 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-401491

ABSTRACT

Specificities of chemoreceptors for the 20 common amino acids, toward which Bacillus subtilis shows chemotaxis, were assessed by competition ("jamming") experiments using a modification of the traditional capillary assay, called the "sensitivity capillary assay." Many amino acids were sensed by at least two chemoreceptors. All the highest affinity chemoreceptors for the amino acids were distinct, except glutamate and aspartate, which may share one chemoreceptor, and tyrosine, for which the data could not be collected due to low solubility. The data suggest the hypothesis that each amino acid-chemoreceptor complex binds to a different signaler (from each amino acid-chemoreceptor complex binds to a different signaler (from which signals travel to the flagella to modify behavior appropriately), and that many of the signalers can also bind other attractant-chemoreceptor complexes as antagonists (no signals to flagella).


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Bacillus subtilis/physiology , Chemotaxis , Receptors, Drug/physiology , Asparagine/metabolism , Glutamine/metabolism , Receptors, Drug/metabolism , Threonine/metabolism , Valine/metabolism
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