15 results on '"Mark O’Shea"'
Search Results
2. Clinical importance of the Mandalay spitting cobra (Naja mandalayensis) in Upper Myanmar – Bites, envenoming and ophthalmia
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Myat-Myat-Thein, Myat-Thet-Nwe, Mohammad Afzal Mahmood, David A. Warrell, Sai-Sein-Lin-Oo, Myo-Thant, Du-Wun-Moe, Chen Au Peh, Aye-Zarchi-San, Than-Aye, Mark O’Shea, Mi-Mi-Khine, Khin-Maung-Gyi, Julian White, Pyae-Phyo-Aung, Oakkar-Kyaw-Khant, and Htay-Aung
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Naja mandalayensis ,Naja ,Antivenom ,Snake Bites ,Cobra ,Myanmar ,Toxicology ,complex mixtures ,medicine ,Animals ,Naja kaouthia ,Elapidae ,computer.programming_language ,Elapid Venoms ,Endophthalmitis ,biology ,Antivenins ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Snake bites ,Spitting cobra ,business ,computer - Abstract
Examination of 18 cobras brought to three hospitals in the Mandalay Region by patients bitten or spat at by them distinguished 3 monocled cobras (Naja kaouthia) and 15 Mandalay spitting cobras (N. mandalayensis), based on their morphological characteristics. We confirm and extend the known distributions and habitats of both N. mandalayensis and N. kaouthia in Upper Myanmar. Clinical symptoms of local and systemic envenoming by N. mandalayensis are described for the first time. These included local swelling, blistering and necrosis and life-threatening systemic neurotoxicity. More information is needed about the clinical phenotype and management of bites by N. mandalayensis, the commoner of the two cobras in Upper Myanmar. Since the current cobra antivenom manufactured in Myanmar has lower pre-clinical efficacy against N. mandalayensis than N. kaouthia, there is a need for more specific antivenom therapy.
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- 2020
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3. Crotalus oreganus concolor: Envenomation Case with Venom Analysis and a Diagnostic Conundrum of Myoneurologic Symptoms
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Jeff Gee, Stephen P. Mackessy, Cara F. Smith, Mark O’Shea, Daniel E. Keyler, and Vinay Saini
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Male ,Tetany ,Antivenom ,Snake Bites ,Physiology ,Venom ,complex mixtures ,Respiratory paralysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Crotalid Venoms ,Hyperventilation ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Envenomation ,biology ,business.industry ,Crotalus ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Myalgia ,030229 sport sciences ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Treatment Outcome ,Emergency Medicine ,Concolor toxin ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
A case of midget-faded rattlesnake (Crotalus oreganus concolor) envenomation of an adult male professional herpetologist occurred in a rural setting and resulted in an array of venom induced myoneurologic symptoms. The patient experienced blurry vision, total body paresthesia, dyspnea, chest tightness, and waves of spastic muscle movements of the hands and feet that resembled tetany. It was not apparent whether these symptoms were potentially venom induced or were related to stress-induced physiologic responses. Local envenomation effects were minimal, and coagulation parameters remained within normal limits. Antivenom was not administered per patient concerns related to a history of acute allergic reactions to antivenom. Venom was collected from the Crotalus oreganus concolor responsible for the bite, and analysis revealed the presence of high levels of myotoxins (SR calcium pump antagonists) and concolor toxin, a presynaptic neurotoxin that can have myotoxic effects and cause respiratory paralysis; several serine proteinases associated with coagulopathies were also present in the venom profile.
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- 2020
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4. A new species of Stegonotus (Serpentes: Colubridae) from the remnant coastal forests of southern Timor-Leste
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Mark O’Shea, Christine M. Kaiser, Sven Mecke, and Hinrich Kaiser
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Male ,Scale (anatomy) ,Squamata ,food.ingredient ,Reptilia ,Timor-Leste ,Population ,Zoology ,Forests ,Stegonotus ,Charadriiformes ,food ,Genus ,Colubridae ,Animalia ,Animals ,education ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Labial scale ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Female - Abstract
During the first amphibian and reptile survey of Timor-Leste, we discovered a population of groundsnakes, genus Stegonotus, in the last remnant of lowland coastal forest along the country’s southern coast, which represents a new species. This sexually dimorphic species can be differentiated from all other Wallacean Stegonotus by a combination of 17-17-15 dorsals, ventrals (female 206; males 197–207), paired subcaudals (female 61; males 71–75), the “gull wing +” condition of the rostral, large squared prefrontals that each are 2.5 times the area of the internasals and two-thirds the size of the frontal, a snout-scale ratio of near 0.4 and a frontal-parietal suture ratio of ≤ 1.0, a labial scale formula of 73+4 | 94, five gulars separating the posterior genial and the anteriormost ventral, and an overall brown body coloration that lightens progressively from the vertebral scale row in a dorsal–lateral direction and features color gradients of dark brown posterior edges to lighter brown anterior edges on individual scales. The species is most similar in overall morphology to S. modestus from the central Moluccas and to S. lividus, a species known only from tiny Semau Island that lies off the western end of Timor Island, in close proximity to Kupang, the capital of the Indonesian province of East Nusa Tenggara.
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- 2021
5. A striking new species of Papuan groundsnake (Stegonotus: Colubridae) from southern Papua New Guinea, with a dichotomous key to the genus in New Guinea
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Mark O’Shea and Stephen Richards
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Colubrinae ,geography ,New Guinea ,food.ingredient ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Colubridae ,Zoology ,Color ,biology.organism_classification ,Stegonotus ,Papua New Guinea ,food ,Rivers ,Genus ,Archipelago ,Key (lock) ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ventral scales - Abstract
We describe a new species of groundsnake of the genus Stegonotus (Colubridae) from the Purari River basin in Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea. The new species can be most readily distinguished from all other New Guinean Stegonotus by its unique dorsal colour pattern which consists of a dark head and creamy-white anterior one third to two thirds of the body, grading into increasingly dense dark pigmentation on the posterior of the body and tail. It is most similar to S. iridis from the Raja Ampat Archipelago off western New Guinea, but that species has a different pattern of pigmentation dorsally, has a lower ventral scale count (198–211 vs. 229–239), and exhibits a different temporal scale arrangement. The description of S. aplini sp. nov. brings to fourteen the number of Stegonotus species described from New Guinea. A dichotomous key to described species in the New Guinea region is provided.
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- 2021
6. Carefully examining Bornean Stegonotus (Serpentes, Colubridae): the montane groundsnake population in Sabah is a new and distinct species
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Jack Lapin, Mark O’Shea, Christine M. Kaiser, and Hinrich Kaiser
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Reptilia ,Population ,Zoology ,Rainforest ,Biology ,Colubridae ,Squamata ,Animals ,Animalia ,education ,Chordata ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,education.field_of_study ,Malaysia ,Holotype ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Taxon ,Paratype ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Type locality ,Animal Distribution - Abstract
During a taxonomic revision of species in the genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854, we re-examined over 90% of all known museum specimens from this taxon. Of the five specimens available to us from the island of Borneo, three are clearly distinct from the other two. The latter are from the lowland rainforest in Sarawak, Malaysia, which includes the type locality of S. borneensis, and therefore these specimens retain that name. We here describe the other three, which include the paratype of S. borneensis, as a new species from Sabah, Malaysia. The new species can be differentiated from S. borneensis and all other species of Stegonotus by the combination of a high number of ventrals (> 210) combined with a low number of subcaudals (< 70), a short tail (indicated by a low subcaudal ratio of < 0.25), 17-17-15 dorsal scale rows, a snout-scale ratio of 1/4–1/3, the “gull wing +” condition of the rostral, the number of supralabials touching the eye, and a dorsal color pattern featuring a dark gray-brown head offset from a lighter-brown rest of the body. The number of subcaudals in the holotype of the new species is only 21% of the number of ventrals, the lowest proportion in the genus. The new species is found at elevations above 1000 m in the cool, montane habitats of the Crocker Range and around the foot of Mt. Kinabalu, Southeast Asia’s tallest mountain, from where it has been known but taxonomically unrecognized since at least the 1880s.
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- 2020
7. Corrigenda and Addenda to the Article 'The taxonomic history of Indo-Papuan groundsnakes, genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854 (Colubridae), with some taxonomic revisions and the designation of a neotype for S. parvus (Meyer, 1874)' by Kaiser et al. (2018)
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Hinrich Kaiser, Mark O’Shea, and Christine M. Kaiser
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food.ingredient ,Scope (project management) ,Colubridae ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Genealogy ,Stegonotus ,food ,Genus ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Relevant information ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Kaiser et al. (2018) recently presented a comprehensive history of snakes in the genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854 that included substantial taxonomic revisions. Given the scope and production of this work a few issues remained uncorrected during several proof stages, which we correct herein. Furthermore, after the paper was published some relevant information emerged that we do not want to leave unexposed, and which we hereby add to our discussion.
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- 2019
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8. A new species of Indo-Papuan groundsnake, genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854 (Serpentes, Colubridae), from the Bird's Head Peninsula of West Papua, Indonesia, with comments on differentiating morphological characters
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Christine M. Kaiser, Hinrich Kaiser, and Mark O’Shea
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0106 biological sciences ,Male ,Reptilia ,food.ingredient ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Stegonotus ,food ,Genus ,Squamata ,Colubridae ,Animalia ,Animals ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,Skin ,Holotype ,Species diversity ,Biodiversity ,Dorsal scales ,biology.organism_classification ,Indonesia ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Animal Distribution ,Supralabial scale - Abstract
We describe a new species of Indo-Papuan groundsnake (Stegonotus) from a single adult male specimen collected in 1953 near Kamro, a village in Maybrat Regency, West Papua, Indonesia. The specimen had been considered a member of S. batjanensis, a well-defined species from the northern Maluku Islands over 500 km to the northwest with which it shares the key characteristic of having the 3rd, 4th, and 5th supralabial scales touching the eyes. The new species can be differentiated from S. batjanensis as well as all other species of Stegonotus by having its 5th supralabial scale projecting forward from behind the eye to form a narrow contact zone with the eye. In addition, it is differentiated by the combination of the following characteristics: seven supralabials, the 3rd–5th touching the eye; eight infralabials, the 1st–4th touching the anterior genial; four scales separating the posterior genial and the first gastrostege; dorsal scales in 17 rows, diminishing to 15 posteriorly; a low number of ventrals (181 in the holotype) combined with a high number of subcaudals (105 in the holotype), the latter comprising 37% of the scales on the ventral surface, the highest proportion in the genus. The description of this species is of interest beyond adding to the species diversity of Stegonotus: it allowed us to explore additional characteristics to resolve taxonomic questions in a morphologically conservative genus, it illustrates the need for additional herpetological survey work on the Bird’s Head Peninsula, and its initial misidentification serves as a reminder of the continued relevance and importance of natural history collections as repositories for specimens and data that influence our knowledge today by reaching out from the past.
- Published
- 2019
9. The taxonomic history of Indo-Papuan groundsnakes, genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854 (Colubridae), with some taxonomic revisions and the designation of a neotype for S. parvus (Meyer, 1874)
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Christine M. Kaiser, Mark O’Shea, and Hinrich Kaiser
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geography ,Reptilia ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,food.ingredient ,biology ,Colubridae ,Zoology ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Stegonotus ,food ,Taxon ,Lycodon ,Archipelago ,Squamata ,Animals ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Type locality ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Chordata ,Nomenclature ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Since its conceptualization in 1854, 29 species of the colubrid genus Stegonotus have been recognized or described, of which 15 ( admiraltiensis , batjanensis , borneensis , cucullatus , derooijae , diehli , florensis , guentheri , iridis , heterurus , melanolabiatus , modestus , muelleri , parvus , poechi ) are still considered valid today. Original species descriptions for the members of this genus were published in Dutch, English, French, German, and Italian and, perhaps as a consequence of these polyglot origins, there has been a considerable amount of confusion over which species names should be applied to which populations of Stegonotus throughout its range across Borneo, the Philippines, Wallacea, New Guinea, Australia, and associated archipelagos. In addition, the terminology used to notate characteristics in the descriptions of these forms was not uniform and may have added to the taxonomic confusion. In this paper, we trace in detail the history of the type specimens, the species, and the synonyms currently associated with the genus Stegonotus and provide a basic, species-specific listing of their characteristics, derived from our examination of over 1500 museum specimens. Based on our data, we are able to limit the distribution of S. modestus to the islands of Ambon, Buru, and Seram in the central Moluccas of Indonesian Wallacea. We correct the type locality of S. cucullatus to the Manokwari area on the Bird’s Head Peninsula of West Papua, Indonesian New Guinea and designate a neotype for S. parvus , a species likely to be a regional endemic in the Schouten Archipelago of Cenderawasih Bay (formerly Geelvink Bay), Indonesian New Guinea. We unequivocally identify and explain the problematic localities of the type specimens of S. muelleri and Lycodon muelleri , which currently reside in the same specimen jar. We remove L. aruensis and L. lividum from the synonymy of S. modestus and recognize them as S. aruensis n. comb. and S. lividus n. comb., respectively. We remove S. keyensis and Zamenophis australis from the synonymy of S. cucullatus and recognize them as S. keyensis n. comb. and S. australis n. comb., respectively. We further remove S. reticulatus from the synonymy of S. cucullatus , S. dorsalis from the synonymy of S. diehli , and S. sutteri from the synonymy of S. florensis . We designate lectotypes for S. guentheri , S. heterurus , S. lividus , and S. reticulatus. Lastly, we introduce S. poechi , a valid species not mentioned in the scientific literature since its description in 1924. This brings the diversity in the genus Stegonotus to 22 species. We also caution that in a complex group of organisms like Stegonotus any rush to taxonomic judgment on the basis of molecular and incomplete morphological data sets may perpetuate errors and introduce incongruities. Only through the careful work of connecting type material with museum specimens and molecular data can the taxonomy and nomenclature of complex taxa be stabilized.
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- 2018
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10. An inconspicuous, conspicuous new species of Asian pipesnake, genus Cylindrophis (Reptilia: Squamata: Cylindrophiidae), from the south coast of Jawa Tengah, Java, Indonesia, and an overview of the tangled taxonomic history of C. ruffus (Laurenti, 1768)
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Max, Kieckbusch, Sven, Mecke, Lukas, Hartmann, Lisa, Ehrmantraut, Mark, O'shea, and Hinrich, Kaiser
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Male ,Species Specificity ,Indonesia ,Animals ,Female ,Snakes ,Classification ,Animal Distribution - Abstract
We describe a new species of Cylindrophis currently known only from Grabag, Purworejo Regency, Jawa Tengah Pro-vince (Central Java), Java, Indonesia. Cylindrophis subocularis sp. nov. can be distinguished from all congeners by the presence of a single, eponymous subocular scale between the 3suprd/supand 4supth/supor 4supth/supand 5supth/supsupralabial, preventing contact between the 4supth/supor 5supth/supsupralabial and the orbit, and by having the prefrontal in narrow contact with or separated from the orbit. We preface our description with a detailed account of the tangled taxonomic history of the similar and putatively wide-ranging species C. ruffus, which leads us to (1) remove the name Scytale scheuchzeri from the synonymy of C. ruffus, (2) list the taxon C. rufa var. javanica as species inquirenda, and (3) synonymize C. mirzae with C. ruffus. We provide additional evidence to confirm that the type locality of C. ruffus is Java. Cylindrophis subocularis sp. nov. is the second species of Asian pipesnake from Java.
- Published
- 2016
11. Hiding in plain sight: a new species of bent-toed gecko (Squamata: Gekkonidae: Cyrtodactylus) from West Timor, collected by Malcolm Smith in 1924
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Andrew, Kathriner, Aaron M, Bauer, Mark, O'shea, Caitlin, Sanchez, and Hinrich, Kaiser
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Male ,Indonesia ,Animal Structures ,Animals ,Body Size ,Female ,Lizards ,Organ Size ,Animal Distribution ,Ecosystem - Abstract
We describe a new species of bent-toed gecko from a single specimen initially collected in 1924 by Malcolm Smith on Timor Island in the Lesser Sunda Archipelago of Indonesia. Cyrtodactylus celatus sp. nov. is distinguished from all other congeners by the following combination of characters: small adult size; without spinose tubercles on the ventrolateral body fold and along the lateral margin of the tail; 16 longitudinal rows of tubercles at midbody; 42 ventral scales between the ventrolateral folds at midbody; no transversely enlarged, median subcaudal scales; 17 subdigital lamellae (seven basal + ten distal) under the fourth toe; no abrupt transition between postfemoral and ventral femoral scale series. The specimen is the earliest confirmed record of the genus Cyrtodactylus for Timor, and it is the first putatively endemic gecko species described from this island.
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- 2014
12. Re-examination of Hemidactylus tenkatei van Lidth de Jeude, 1895: Populations from Timor provide insight into the taxonomy of the H. brookii Gray, 1845 complex (Squamata: Gekkonidae)
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Andrew, Kathriner, Mark, O'shea, and Hinrich, Kaiser
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Male ,Indonesia ,Animal Structures ,Animals ,Body Size ,Female ,Lizards ,Organ Size ,Animal Distribution ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Recent herpetofaunal investigations in Timor-Leste revealed populations similar to Hemidactylus brookii Gray, 1845 in four of 13 districts. In order to properly identify these populations, we examined their relationships to other H. brookii-complex populations, notably those from nearby Roti Island, Indonesia (to which the name H. tenkatei van Lidth de Jeude, 1895 has been applied) and topotypic Bornean samples. We evaluated both meristic and mensural data from a set of specimens that included the type material of H. brookii and H. tenkatei, and we generated nuclear (RAG1) and mitochondrial (ND2) DNA sequence data for Timor-Leste specimens and a topotypical Bornean specimen presumed to represent H. brookii sensu stricto. Morphologically, Timorese geckos are clearly distinct from H. brookii and identical to H. tenkatei. Our molecular data show that the Bornean specimen thought to be H. brookii is genetically congruent with Timor-Leste specimens, and this specimen is therefore identified as H. tenkatei. Our data also reveal that the Burmese species H. subtriedroides Annandale, 1905 is distinct from both H. tenkatei and H. brookii. While the current data do not allow us to determine with certainty whether H. tenkatei is the oldest available name for these widespread forms, it is the only name that can be reliably applied at this time.
- Published
- 2014
13. Site-directed mutations that alter the inhibitory activity of the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1: importance of the N-terminal region between cysteine 3 and cysteine 13
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Andrew J. P. Docherty, Frances Willenbrock, John V. Reynolds, Richard A. Williamson, Gillian Murphy, Mark O'Shea, Mark I. Cockett, and Robert B. Freedman
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Protein Denaturation ,Genetic Vectors ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Mutant ,Matrix metalloproteinase ,Transfection ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cysteine ,Binding site ,Guanidine ,Site-directed mutagenesis ,Peptide sequence ,Glycoproteins ,Metalloproteinase ,Binding Sites ,Base Sequence ,Chemistry ,Metalloendopeptidases ,Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,Kinetics ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Oligodeoxyribonucleotides ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Thermodynamics ,Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 ,Multiple Myeloma - Abstract
The tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 (TIMP-1) was subjected to single-site mutations within the N-terminal three loops using an oligonucleotide-directed polymerase chain reaction method. All the histidines, and a number of other residues conserved between TIMP-1 and TIMP-2, were individually modified and the mutant TIMPs expressed in mammalian cells. Purified mutant TIMPs were shown to be correctly folded by measuring the effect of guanidine hydrochloride on intrinsic fluorescence. Kinetic analyses of mutants using a quenched fluorescent peptide substrate and the metalloproteinase PUMP indicated that mutation of His7 and Gln9 caused an increase in the apparent dissociation constant, largely due to an increase in the rate of dissociation of complexes. The data indicate that the anchored sequence between Cys 3 and Cys 13 is a key region for interaction of TIMP-1 with metalloproteinases.
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- 1992
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14. The N-terminal domain of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases retains metalloproteinase inhibitory activity
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Mark I. Cockett, Richard A. Williamson, Andrew J. P. Docherty, Annick Houbrechts, Gillian Murphy, and Mark O'Shea
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Glycosylation ,Macromolecular Substances ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Matrix metalloproteinase ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Affinity chromatography ,law ,Enzyme Stability ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,Gelatinase ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ,Glycoproteins ,Metalloproteinase ,Base Sequence ,Molecular mass ,Metalloendopeptidases ,Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,chemistry ,Recombinant DNA ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Rabbits ,Plasmacytoma - Abstract
Recombinant tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP-1) and a truncated version containing only the three N-terminal loops, delta 127-184TIMP, have been expressed in myeloma cells and purified by affinity chromatography and gel filtration. delta 127-184TIMP was found to exist as two main glycosylation variants of molecular mass 24 kD and 19.5 kDa and an unglycosylated form of 13 kDa. All forms of the truncated inhibitor were able to inhibit and form complexes with active forms of the matrix metalloproteinases, indicating that the major structural features for specific interaction with these enzymes resides in these three loops. Stable binding of delta 127-184TIMP to pro 95-kDa gelatinase was not demonstrable under the conditions for binding of full-length TIMP-1.
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- 1991
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15. Regulation of matrix metalloproteinase activity
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Thomas Crabbe, Mark O'Shea, Andrew J. P. Docherty, R V Ward, Susan J. Atkinson, James O'Connell, Gillian Murphy, and Frances Willenbrock
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Molecular Sequence Data ,Matrix metallopeptidase 12 ,Matrix metalloproteinase ,Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibitors ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,law.invention ,Extracellular matrix ,Enzyme activator ,History and Philosophy of Science ,law ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Collagenases ,Peptide sequence ,Glycoproteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Metalloendopeptidases ,Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases ,Recombinant Proteins ,Extracellular Matrix ,Enzyme Activation ,Kinetics ,Biochemistry ,Recombinant DNA ,Collagenase ,Glycoprotein ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1994
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