نتایج جستجو برای: xdh

تعداد نتایج: 334  

2017
Bhaskar Ganguly Tanuj Kumar Ambwani Sunil Kumar Rastogi

Milk fat is one of the most important economic traits in dairy animals. Yet, the biological machinery involved in milk fat synthesis remains poorly understood. In the present study, expression profiling of 45 genes involved in lipid biosynthesis and secretion was performed using a computational approach to identify those genes that are differentially expressed in mammary tissue. Transcript abun...

Journal: :Genetics 2008
Xiaofeng Zhou Lynn M Riddiford

Application of a high dose of juvenile hormone (JH) III or its mimics (JHM) to Drosophila at the white puparium stage causes the formation of a pupal-like abdomen with few or no short bristles. We report here that the rosy (ry) gene encoding the enzyme xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), which catalyzes the final two-step oxidation in purine catabolism, is required for this effect of JH on the epider...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Renal physiology 1998
Michael G Stockelman John N Lorenz Frost N Smith Gregory P Boivin Amrik Sahota Jay A Tischfield Peter J Stambrook

In humans, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT, EC 2.4.2.7 ) deficiency can manifest as nephrolithiasis, interstitial nephritis, and chronic renal failure. APRT catalyzes synthesis of AMP from adenine and 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate. In the absence of APRT, 2,8-dihydroxyadenine (DHA) is produced from adenine by xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) and can precipitate in the renal interstitium,...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 1991
C A Brass J Narciso J L Gollan

It has been widely proposed that conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) to its free radical-producing form, xanthine oxidase (XOD), underlies ischemic/reperfusion injury, although the relationship of this conversion to hypoxia and its physiologic control have not been defined. This study details the time course and control of this enzymatic interconversion. In a functionally intact, isolate...

2011
Ping Xu Renata Bura Sharon L. Doty

Two novel endophytic yeast strains, WP1 and PTD3, isolated from within the stems of poplar (Populus) trees, were genetically characterized with respect to their xylose metabolism genes. These two strains, belonging to the species Rhodotorula graminis and R. mucilaginosa, respectively, utilize both hexose and pentose sugars, including the common plant pentose sugar, D-xylose. The xylose reductas...

2017
Judit Ámon Rafael Fernández-Martín Eszter Bokor Antonietta Cultrone Joan M Kelly Michel Flipphi Claudio Scazzocchio Zsuzsanna Hamari

Nicotinate degradation has hitherto been elucidated only in bacteria. In the ascomycete Aspergillus nidulans, six loci, hxnS/AN9178 encoding the molybdenum cofactor-containing nicotinate hydroxylase, AN11197 encoding a Cys2/His2 zinc finger regulator HxnR, together with AN11196/hxnZ, AN11188/hxnY, AN11189/hxnP and AN9177/hxnT, are clustered and stringently co-induced by a nicotinate derivative ...

Journal: :Microbiology 2007
Seiya Watanabe Ahmed Abu Saleh Seung Pil Pack Narayana Annaluru Tsutomu Kodaki Keisuke Makino

A recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain transformed with xylose reductase (XR) and xylitol dehydrogenase (XDH) genes from Pichia stipitis (PsXR and PsXDH, respectively) has the ability to convert xylose to ethanol together with the unfavourable excretion of xylitol, which may be due to intercellular redox imbalance caused by the different coenzyme specificity between NADPH-preferring XR a...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2014
Oliver K Hauck Jana Scharnberg Nieves Medina Escobar Gerhard Wanner Patrick Giavalisco Claus-Peter Witte

Purine nucleotides can be fully catabolized by plants to recycle nutrients. We have isolated a urate oxidase (uox) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana that accumulates uric acid in all tissues, especially in the developing embryo. The mutant displays a reduced germination rate and is unable to establish autotrophic growth due to severe inhibition of cotyledon development and nutrient mobilization fr...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2001
F Rodríguez-Trelles R Tarrío F J Ayala

The neutrality theory predicts that the rate of neutral molecular evolution is constant over time, and thus that there is a molecular clock for timing evolutionary events. It has been observed that the variance of the rate of evolution is generally larger than expected according to the neutrality theory, which has raised the question of how reliable the molecular clock is or, indeed, whether th...

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