5 research outputs found
Osmotolerance and growth stimulation of transgenic tobacco cells accumulating free proline by silencing proline dehydrogenase expression with double-stranded RNA interference technique
Identification of discrepancies in grain quality and grain protein composition through avenin proteins of oat after an effort to increase protein content
Effect of salinity on osmotic adjustment, proline accumulation and possible role of ornithine-δ-aminotransferase in proline biosynthesis in Cakile maritima
Metabolite damage and its repair or pre-emption
It is increasingly evident that metabolites suffer various kinds of damage, that such damage happens in all organisms, and that cells have dedicated systems for damage repair and containment. Firstly, chemical biology is demonstrating that diverse metabolites are damaged by side-reactions of ‘promiscuous’ enzymes or by spontaneous chemical reactions, that the products are useless or toxic, and that the unchecked buildup of these products can be devastating. Secondly, genetic and genomic evidence from pro- and eukaryotes is implicating a network of novel, conserved enzymes that repair damaged metabolites or somehow pre-empt damage. Metabolite (i.e. small molecule) repair is analogous to macromolecule (DNA and protein) repair and appears from comparative genomic evidence to be equally widespread. Comparative genomics also implies that metabolite repair could be the function of many conserved protein families lacking known activities. How – and how well – cells deal with metabolite damage impacts fields ranging from medical genetics to metabolic engineering
