A Ben-Shaul. 1980. “Chemical Laser Kinetics.” In Photosensitive Chemistry, in Advances in Chemical Physics, edited by J Jortner, SA RICE, and RD LEVINE, XLVII: Pp. 55-83. New York: Wiley.
Isaac Ginsburg, J Goultchin, A Stabholtz, N Neeman, Meir Lahav, L Landstrom, and PG. Quie. 1980. “Streptococcal and staphylococcal arthritis.” Agents Actions (Inflammation Research , 7, Pp. 260-270. Abstract
Streptococcal and staphylococcal arthritis: can chronic arthritis in the human be caused by highly chemotactic degradation products generated from bacteria by leukocyte enzymes and by the deactivation of leukocytes by inflammatory exudates, polyelectrolytes, leukocyte hydrolases and by cell sensitizing agents derived from bacteria?
Two pairs of restriction enzyme isoschizomers were used to study in vivo methylation of E. coli and extrachromosomal DNA. By use of the restriction enzymes MboI (which cleaves only the unmethylated GATC sequence) and its isoschizomer Sau3A (indifferent to methylated adenine at this sequence), we found that all the GATC sites in E. coli and in extrachromosomal DNAs are symmetrically methylated on both strands. The calculated number of GATC sites in E. coli DNA can account for all its m6Ade residues. Foreign DNA, like mouse mtDNA, which is not methylated at GATC sites became fully methylated at these sequences when introduced by transfection into E. coli cells. This experiment provides the first evidence for the operation of a de novo methylation mechanism for E. coli methylases not involved in restriction modification. When the two restriction enzyme isoschizomers, EcoRII and ApyI, were used to analyze the methylation pattern of CCTAGG sequences in E. coli C and phi X174 DNA, it was found that all these sites are methylated. The number of CCTAGG sites in E. coli C DNA does not account for all m5Cyt residues.
I. A model of financial equilibrium, 412.—IL Effects of changes in the profit tax rate, 418.—III. Effects of changes in the taxation of retained earnings, 423.—IV. The nonneutrality of the corporate income tax, 427.—V. Conclusion, 430. [...]
Effect of leukocyte hydrolases on bacteria. XIII. Role played by leukocyte extracts, lysolecithin, phospholipase a2, lysozyme, cationic proteins, and detergents in the solubilization of lipids from Staphylococcus aureus and group A streptococci: relation to bactericidal and bacteriolytic reactions in inflammatory sites
The bactericidal and bacteriolytic effects of lysolecithin (LL) and egg-white lysozyme (LYZ) on Staph. aureus and group A streptococci and the solubilization of phospholipids from the bacterial membranes by these agents was studied. Low concentrations of lysolecithin (1--10 microgrames/ml) are highly bactericidal for Steph. aureus and group A streptococci, but induce neither bacteriolysis nor solubilization of a substantial amount of membrane phospholipids. On the other hand, while LL at greater than 50 micrograms/ml causes substantial lipid release, a combination of LL and LYZ is absolutely needed to solubilize lipids from streptococci. This combination is, however, not bacteriolytic for this microrganism. The solubilization of lipids from staphylococci by LL is much faster than that induced in streptococci by LL + LYZ. The solubilization of the bulk of membrane lipids from staphylococci can also be achieved by Triton X-100 and by sodium lauryl sulfate and from group A streptococci by Triton X-100 plus LYZ. A variety of other detergents (e.g., Cetavlon, sodium taurocholate, cetyl pyrdinium chloride) have no lipid-releasing properties even in the presence of LYZ. The release of lipids by LYZ (in the presence of LL) from group A streptococci is related to its enzymatic activity, on a still unknown substrate, but not to its cationic nature as this muramidase cannot be replaced by a variety of cation substances (histone, polylysin, leukocyte cationic proteins, polymyxin B, and spermidine). The release of lipids from staphylococci by LL is not inhibited by a variety of anionic and cationic polyelectrocytes (heparin, liquoid, chondroitin sulfate, DNA histone, and polylysine) which markedly inhibit the release of lipids from group A streptococci by LL and LYZ. Streptococci that had been cultivated in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of penicillin G lose their membrane phospholipids to a larger extent and by much smaller concentrations of LL and LYZ, as compared to controls, suggesting that the interference with the synthesis of the peptidoglycan increases the accessibility of the cell membrane to the lipid-releasing agents. The mechanism by which LL collaborates with LYZ in lipid release is still not known. The possible role of bacterial lipids and lyso compounds in the control of bacterial survival in inflammatory sites is briefly discussed.
Dauphin Claudine M., Epstein Claire, Dothan Moshe, Conrad Diethelm, Liebowitz Harold, Hirschfeld Yizhar, Solar Giora, Braun Eliot, Palev Samuel M., Porath Yosef, Kaplan Haya Ritter, Keln George L., Mazar Amihay, Chen Doron, Margalit Shlomo, Shiloh Yigal, Seger Joe D., Valla François R., Gilead Isaac, Bar-Yosef Ofer, Cohen Rudolph, Dever William G., Amiran Ruth, Arnon Carmela, Avner Uzzi, and Beit-Arieh Itzhaq. 1979. “NOTES AND NEWS..” Israel Exploration Journal, 3/4, Pp. 223. Publisher's Version