Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.1.1.1 (alcohol dehydrogenase)
9,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability of rat liver zinc-thionein to donate its metal to the apo-enzymes of the zinc enzymes horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, yeast aldolase, thermolysin, Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase and bovine erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase was investigated. Zinc-thionein was as good as, or better than, ZnSO(4), Zn(CH(3)CO(2))(2) or Zn(NO(3))(2) in donating its zinc to these apo-enzymes. Apo-(alcohol dehydrogenase) could not be reactivated by zinc salts or by zinc-thionein. Incubation of the other apo-enzymes with near-saturating amounts of zinc as ZnSO(4), Zn(CH(3)CO(2))(2), Zn(NO(3))(2), or zinc-thionein resulted in reactivation of the apo-enzymes. With apo-aldolase zinc-thionein gave 100% reactivation within 30min. Reactivation by ZnSO(4) and Zn(CH(3)CO(2))(2) was complete and instantaneous. Zinc-thionein was somewhat better than Zn(NO(3))(2) in completely reactivating apo-thermolysin. With apo-(alkaline phosphatase) 43% reactivation was obtained with Zn(CH(3)CO(2))(2) and 18% with zinc-thionein. With apo-(carbonic anhydrase) zinc-thionein was better than ZnSO(4), Zn(CH(3)CO(2))(2) or Zn(NO(3))(2), with a maximal reactivation of 54%. That zinc was really being transferred from zinc-thionein to apo-(carbonic anhydrase) was shown by the fact that 2,6-pyridine dicarboxylic acid and 1,10-phenanthroline had minimal effects on the reactivation of apo-(carbonic anhydrase) when added after the incubation {[apo-(carbonic anhydrase)+zinc thionein]+chelator}, but inhibited reactivation when added before the incubation {apo-(carbonic anhydrase)+[zinc-thionein+chelator]}. These observations support the idea that zinc-thionein can function in zinc homeostasis as a reservoir of zinc, releasing the metal to zinc-requiring metalloenzymes according to need.
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PMID:Reactivation in vitro of zinc-requiring apo-enzymes by rat liver zinc-thionein. 677 58

The effect of the photolytic reagent 9-azidoacridine, optionally 3H-labelled, was studied both kinetically and structurally on nine different enzymes, namely alpha-chymotrypsin, lactate dehydrogenase, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, alanine dehydrogenase, D-amino acid oxidase, ribonuclease A, alkaline phosphatase and alpha-amylase. Dark inhibition was observed in several cases. The concentration of the inhibitor ranged from 0.2 microM to 0.67 microM and demonstrated competitive kinetics with nucleotide cofactors when present. All concentrations of inhibitor showed increased inhibition on photolysis. Examination of the oligopeptides from hydrolysis of the covalently 3H-labelled derivative in conjunction with known amino acid sequence and tertiary structure established that the primary site of interaction in those cases for which the tertiary structure was available involved the active-site region. The above results in conjunction with those obtained with the structural analogues 9-aminoacridine and 9-amino-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroacridine established that this reagent acts as a molecular probe of aromatic- and, in particular, nucleotide-binding sites. This reagent provides a further additional method for studying the nucleotide cofactor domain.
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PMID:9-azidoacridine, a new photoaffinity label for nucleotide- and aromatic-binding sites in proteins. 718 53

A kinetic study is made of a system consisting of a specific enzymic cycling assay coupled to an enzymic reaction. A kinetic analysis of this system is presented, and the accumulation of chromophore involved in the cycle is seen to be parabolic, i.e. the rate of the reaction increases continuously with constant acceleration. The system is illustrated by the measurement of alkaline phosphatase activity using beta-NADP+ as substrate. The enzymes alcohol dehydrogenase and diaphorase are used to cycle beta-NAD+ in the presence of ethanol and p-Iodonitrotetrazolium Violet. During each turn of the cycle, one molecule of the tetrazolium salt is reduced to an intensely coloured formazan. A simple procedure for evaluating the kinetic parameters involved in the system and for optimizing this cycling assay is described. The method is applicable to the measurement of any enzyme, and its amplification capacity as well as the simplicity of determining kinetic parameters enable it to be employed in enzyme immunoassays to increase the magnitude of the measured response.
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PMID:Kinetic study of an enzymic cycling system coupled to an enzymic step: determination of alkaline phosphatase activity. 761 54

The single room temperature phosphorescent (RTP) residue of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH). Trp-314, and of alkaline phosphatase (AP), Trp-109, show nonexponential phosphorescence decays when the data are collected to a high degree of precision. Using the maximum entropy method (MEM) for the analysis of these decays, it is shown that AP phosphorescence decay is dominated by a single Gaussian distribution, whereas for LADH the data reveal two amplitude packets. The lifetime-normalized width of the MEM distribution for both proteins is larger than that obtained for model monoexponential chromophores (e.g., terbium in water and pyrene in cyclohexane). Experiments show that the nonexponential decay is fundamental; i.e., an intrinsic property of the pure protein. Because phosphorescence reports on the state of the emitting chromophore, such nonexponential behavior could be caused by the presence of excited state reactions. However, it is also well known that the phosphorescence lifetime of a tryptophan residue is strongly dependent on the local flexibility around the indole moiety. Hence, the nonexponential phosphorescence decay may also be caused by the presence of at least two states of different local rigidity (in the vicinity of the phosphorescing tryptophan) corresponding to different ground state conformers. The observation that in the chemically homogeneous LADH sample the phosphorescence decay kinetics depends on the excitation wavelength further supports this latter interpretation. This dependence is caused by the wavelength-selective excitation of Trp-314 in a subensemble of LADH molecules with differing hydrophobic and rigid environments. With this interpretation, the data show that interconversion of these states occurs on a time scale long compared with the phosphorescence decay (0.1-1.0 s). Further experiments reveal that with increasing temperature the distributed phosphorescence decay rates for both AP and LADH broaden, thus indicating that either 1) the number of conformational states populated at higher temperature increases or 2) the temperature differentially affects individual conformer states. The nature of the observed heterogeneous triplet state kinetics and their relationship to aspects of protein dynamics are discussed.
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PMID:Time-resolved room temperature protein phosphorescence: nonexponential decay from single emitting tryptophans. 781 33

IgG antibodies against the 2,3-di-o-acyltrehalose glycolipid of Mycobacterium tuberculosis were determined in a set of 49 sera from patients with pulmonary tuberculosis and 65 negative control subjects. We compared a conventional ELISA method using a beta-galactosidase anti-human IgG conjugate developed with ONPG, with an amplification ELISA system constituted of an anti-human IgG biotinylated conjugate, a streptavidin-alkaline phosphatase complex, and NADP as a substrate. The resulting NAD was measured by using a redox enzymatic recycling system of alcohol dehydrogenase, diaphorase and iodonitrotetrazolium as chromogen. With specificity set at 92.31% in both methods, we obtained a sensitivity of 42.86% in the conventional method and a sensitivity of 61.22% in the amplified method. We conclude that by using a more sensitive method we can detect cases that otherwise could be identified as false negatives.
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PMID:Development of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) combined with a streptavidin-biotin and enzyme amplification method to detect anti-2,3-di-o-acyltrehalose (DAT) antibodies in patients with tuberculosis. 782 39

Eleven rat genes have been assigned to rat chromosomes by use of mouse x rat somatic hybrids and/or use of linkage to known chromosome markers. Among them, the genes for the inducible nitric oxide synthase (Nos2) and for a vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor (Vipr) are potential candidates for genetic regulation of blood pressure and were localized to rat Chromosomes (Chrs) 10 and 8 respectively. Genes for gastric H,K-ATPase alpha subunit (Atp4a), Class I alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh), and aldolase C (Aldoc) were localized to Chrs 1, 2, and 10 respectively, and thus provide more DNA markers for genetic mapping of quantitative trait loci for blood pressure on those chromosomes. Genes for alkaline phosphatase (Alp1) and cardiac AE-3 Cl-/HCO3- exchanger (Ae3) were both localized to Chr 9. Genes for glutamate dehydrogenase (Glud) and gastric H,K-ATPase beta subunit (Atp4b) were localized to Chr 16. The ornithine decarboxylase (Odc) gene and ornithine decarboxylase pseudogene (Odcp) were localized to Chrs 6 and 11 respectively.
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PMID:Chromosomal assignment of 11 loci in the rat by mouse-rat somatic hybrids and linkage. 787 82

1. Endosulfan insecticide is a polychlorinated compound used for controlling a variety of insects; it is practically water-insoluble, but readily adheres to clay particles and persists in soil and water for several years. Its mode of action involves repetitive nerve-discharges positively correlated to increase in temperature. This compound is extremely toxic to most fish and can cause massive mortalities. In fish, it causes marked changes in Na and K concentrations, decrease in blood Ca(2+) and Mg levels and inhibits Na, K and Mg-dependent ATPase (in brain). 2. Bioaccumulation of endosulfan is reported for marine animals; however, freshwater animals (e.g., crayfish) accumulate it to some extent, but they lose the compound rapidly during depuration. Endosulfan is generally less toxic to aquatic invertebrates than fish. However, it causes decreases in adenylate energy charge, oxygen consumption, hemolymph amino acids, succinate dehydrogenase, heart-beat (mussel) and altered osmoregulation. 3. Generally, mammals are less susceptible to endosulfan's toxicity than aquatic animals. The majority of studies conducted on laboratory mammals can be summarized. (a) Neurotoxicity: male rats are more sensitive than females to endosulfan, which decreases brain and plasma acetylcholinesterase activity. Endosulfan I (a metabolite) causes a significant change in norepinephrine, 5-HT and GABA. (b) Renal toxicity: inhibition of MFOs activity was noticed in rats; other effects included changes in proximal convoluted tubules and necrosis of the tubular epithelium. (c) Hepatotoxicity: chemically-induced aminopyrine N-demethylase and aniline hydrolase were found in rat liver, and reduction in the glycogen level occurred. (d) Hematologic toxicity: endosulfan exposure resulted in a significant decrease in the level occurred. (d) Hematologic toxicity: endosulfan exposure resulted in a significant decrease in the erythrocyte glutathione reductase, hemoglobin amount, RBC number and mean corpuscular volume. 4. Respiratory toxicity: involved dyspnea, acute emphysema, cyanosis and hemorrhages in teh interalveolar portions of rat's lungs. 5. Biochemical: in rats, endosulfan caused increased glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity, blood glucose level, phospholipid contents of the microsomal and surfactant system, and profoundly induced the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase and cytosolic glutathione S-transferases. It also decreased significantly Na+, K+ and Mg(2+) ATPases, plasma calcium level and alkaline phosphatase in the intestinal epithelium. 6. Immunologic toxicity: rat serum antibody titer to tetanus toxin, IgG, IgM and gammaglobulins were significantly reduced. 7. Reproductive toxicity: degenerative changes in the seminiferous epithelium, induction of the rate-limiting enzyme in testosterone production (3beta-hydroxysteroid transferase and 17 beta-hydroxysteroid transferase), histological changes in reproductive organs, testicular atrophy and the occurrence of ovarian cysts were noticed in rat. Reduction in the weight of secondary sex organ was also observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Bioaccumulative potential and toxicity of endosulfan insecticide to non-target animals. 790 Sep 59

In exploring the dynamic properties of protein structure, numerous studies have focussed on the dependence of structural fluctuations on solvent viscosity, but the emerging picture is still not well defined. Exploiting the sensitivity of the phosphorescence lifetime of tryptophan to the viscosity of its environment we have used the delayed emission as an intrinsic probe of protein flexibility and investigated the effects of glycerol as a viscogenic cosolvent. The phosphorescence lifetime of alcohol dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, apoazurin and RNase T1, as a function of glycerol concentration was studied at various temperatures. Flexibility data, which refer to rather rigid sites of the globular structures, point out that, for some concentration ranges glycerol, effects on the rate of structural fluctuations of alcohol dehydrogenase and RNase T1 do not obey Kramers' a power law on solvent viscosity and emphasize that cosolvent-induced structural changes can be important, even for inner cores of the macromolecule. When the data is analyzed in terms of Kramers' model, for the temperature range 0-30 degrees C one derives frictional coefficients that are relatively large (0.6-0.7) for RNase T1, where the probe is in a flexible region near the surface of the macromolecule and much smaller, less than 0.2, for the rigid sites of the other proteins. For the latter sites the frictional coefficient rises sharply between 40 and 60 degrees C, and its value correlates weakly with molecular parameters such as the depth of burial or the rigidity of a particular site. For RNase T1, coupling to solvent viscosity increases at subzero temperatures, with the coefficient becoming as large as 1 at -20 degrees C. Temperature effects were interpreted by proposing that solvent damping of internal protein motions is particularly effective for low frequency, large amplitude, structural fluctuations yielding highly flexible conformers of the macromolecule.
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PMID:Glycerol effects on protein flexibility: a tryptophan phosphorescence study. 836 22

Two histochemical marker genes, Drosophila alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) and human placental alkaline phosphatase (ALP), were cloned into the recombinant retroviral vectors pLJ and pgag beta-actin. The resulting vectors were transfected into retroviral producer cell lines, psi CRE and psi CRIP, and stable recombinant retrovirus producers were isolated. Recombinant virus was harvested and used to transduce genes into several cell lines, singly or in conjunction with lacZ (Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase)-containing retrovirus. Cell lines were then stained using standard histochemical methods for recombinant gene expression. We found that multiple gene products could be identified in the same cell populations and in the case of ALP and beta-galactosidase, in the same cells. The resulting reagents should be useful for a variety of cell-marking studies including those involving multiple clonal analysis and developmental studies for gene therapy.
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PMID:Recombinant retroviruses containing novel reporter genes. 851 8

We examined the activities of class I and II alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes in the sera of patients with viral hepatitis using the fluorogenic substrates 4-methoxy-1-naphthaldehyde for class I and 6-methoxy-2-naphthaldehyde for class II. It was found that serum activities of class I and II alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes over the course of five weeks of hospitalisation were higher than those of controls. The greatest increase in activities was found at the onset of disease, exceeding the mean control value by about 30 fold for class I and 4 fold for class II. These activities were lower than that of aminotransferase but higher than those for lactate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltransferase. Thereafter, the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes gradually decreased, but did not reach the values of the control groups in the last period of the study. Activities of class I and II alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes correlated well with those of alanine and aspartate aminotransferase and lactate dehydrogenase in the first weeks of illness. These results clearly demonstrate that especially the activity of class I alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzyme measured by a fluorimetric method can be a useful marker of liver cell damage in the course of viral hepatitis.
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PMID:Serum class I and II alcohol dehydrogenase activity during the course of viral hepatitis. 862 59


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