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Query: EC:1.11.1.7 (
peroxidase
)
65,474
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of nafazatrom on leukocyte function in vitro and in vivo were related to its ability to salvage ischemic myocardium in an occlusion-reperfusion model of myocardial injury in the anesthetized dog. Nafazatrom (0.4-75 microM) produced dose-related inhibition in vitro of neutrophil aggregation, superoxide anion generation, arachidonic acid metabolism, and, to a lesser extent, the release of
beta-glucuronidase
. In contrast, nafazatrom (0.4-37.5 microM) did not substantially influence platelet aggregation or the platelet metabolism of arachidonic acid. In vivo nafazatrom (10 mg/kg, po) reduced infarct size from 58 +/- 3% of the risk area (mean +/- SEM, n = 9) in control dogs to 23 +/- 2% of the risk area (n = 9, P less than 0.01). Nafazatrom also reduced the incidence of accompanying arrhythmias. Nafazatrom-induced myocardial salvage was not associated with any hemodynamic changes; moreover, it was independent of platelets, since thrombocytopenia did not prevent nafazatrom from exerting a protective effect. Measurements of the neutrophil-specific
myeloperoxidase
enzyme in ischemic myocardium indicate that the smaller infarct size in dogs treated with nafazatrom is accompanied by diminished leukocyte infiltration. Thus, the ability of nafazatrom to inhibit neutrophil function in vitro and cell infiltration in vivo may underly its myocardial-protective effects.
...
PMID:Nafazatrom-induced salvage of ischemic myocardium in anesthetized dogs is mediated through inhibition of neutrophil function. 298 18
Coordinated observation of various factors in the inflammatory system and their relations shows that the levels of proamidase in granuloma pouch fluid in carrageenin-induced inflammation increase during the healing process whereas the proamidase shows (1) remarkably low values in rats injected with high doses of carrageenin, (2) low values in the earlier stages of inflammation with tissue damage (high values of fluid lipid peroxide and lactate dehydrogenase) and with phagocytosis (high values of fluid
peroxidase
and
beta-glucuronidase
), and (3) high values in the later stages where wound healing is progressing (high values of protein in plasma, fluid and granuloma pouch tissue and low values of fluid volume, fluid
peroxidase
,
beta-glucuronidase
and pouch tissue weight). In short, proamidase shows low values in the stage of tissue damage and constantly increasing values during the process of healing. Thus the measurement of proamidase, which reflects the degree of wound healing, provides an important parameter for a broad, coordinated observation of the inflammatory process, and may enable the management of inflammation.
...
PMID:Management of inflammation: proamidase as a parameter for a better understanding of inflammatory processes. 298
Chemotactic factors can cause polymorphonuclear leukocytes to release the contents of azurophilic granules, including the enzymes
beta-glucuronidase
and
myeloperoxidase
. In the presence of aqueous humor from the anterior chamber of the rabbit eye, the supernatant from stimulated leukocytes contains
beta-glucuronidase
, but
myeloperoxidase
is not detectable. Studies with aqueous humor and partially purified human
myeloperoxidase
suggest that this phenomenon is not due to a failure of enzyme release. The factor responsible for the inability to detect
MPO
in the assay system is heat-labile, dialyzable, and reversed by ascorbate oxidase. Comparable assay inhibition is produced by ascorbic acid at a concentration present in either human or rabbit aqueous humor. The ability of aqueous humor to protect against
myeloperoxidase
-induced oxidation may contribute to several diverse phenomena, including the susceptibility of the eye to Candida infection and a prolonged half-life for several inflammatory mediators in the anterior chamber.
...
PMID:Ascorbate in aqueous humor protects against myeloperoxidase-induced oxidation. 299 83
Elevated activities of
beta-D-glucuronidase
,
myeloperoxidase
, and lysozyme were found in polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) of both hypopituitary dwarfs and normal subjects after the administration of growth hormone (GH), as compared to the activities in PMNs from blood drawn immediately before the administration of GH. During in vitro incubation, GH was able to inhibit the release of lysosomal enzymes from resting PMNs. This inhibition may be one of the reasons for the elevated lysosomal enzyme activities observed in PMNs after the administration of GH. GH can also affect hexose monophosphate shunt (HMPS) activity and superoxide production by PMNs. The activity of HMPS is stimulated by GH in resting PMNs, while in PMNs incubated with zymosan the GH inhibits both HMPS and superoxide production.
...
PMID:Effect of growth hormone on the activity of some lysosomal enzymes in neutrophilic polymorphonuclear leukocytes of hypopituitary dwarfs. 299 87
Activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase,
beta-glucuronidase
, and acid phosphatase and
myeloperoxidase
was determined in neutrophils and lymphocytes of patients with cancer of the larynx and precancerous states of the larynx as well as--for comparative reasons--in patients with malignant tumors of female generation organs, breast carcinoma, cancer of the stomach and endometriosis. The main result of investigations performed was in fact that intracellular deficiency of
beta-glucuronidase
within the neutrophils characterizes patients with cancer and precancerous states of the larynx. Patients with cancer of the larynx show additionally a deficiency of neutrophil
myeloperoxidase
. Deficiency of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase occurs, in contrast, in patients with malignancies of female generation organ. Activity of
myeloperoxidase
in neutrophils from patients with gastric carcinoma is slightly elevated.
...
PMID:Enzymatic deficiencies of the immune system cells in patients with cancer of the larynx and other malignancies. 299 16
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) demonstrate altered function during acute infections and after administration of corticosteroids. We questioned whether or not such changes are due to population shifts from functionally different compartments of the granulocyte pool. Volunteers were given epinephrine to induce demargination or hydrocortisone (HC) to promote egress of PMN from the bone marrow. PMN obtained before and after drug administration were compared for adherence, chemotaxis, luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence, and total content and release of lactoferrin (LF),
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
), and
beta-glucuronidase
(beta-glu). Epinephrine induced a significant neutrophilia of mature PMN (segmented neutrophils), but there were no changes in function or granule protein content. HC induced a significant neutrophilia with segmented neutrophils and immature PMN (bands). Circulating PMN obtained 4 hr after HC administration demonstrated less adherence, increased chemiluminescence, increased
MPO
release, and decreased
MPO
content. Band neutrophils, however, were more adherent than segmented PMN and showed a similar decrease in adherence following HC in vivo. Thus alteration of PMN adherence following intravenous corticosteroids is not due to an influx of immature neutrophils. On the other hand, it is possible that
MPO
content and release and capacity for oxidative metabolism change as PMN mature.
...
PMID:Human polymorphonuclear leukocytes of the bone marrow, circulation, and marginated pool: function and granule protein content. 299 84
Platelet factor (PF4) prepared from human outdated platelets by heparinagarose affinity chromatography was confirmed to be chemotactic for human neutrophils and in a concentration-dependent fashion caused significant release of lysosomal enzymes (
myeloperoxidase
, lysozyme,
beta-glucuronidase
) from human neutrophils treated with cytochalasin B. Lysosomal enzyme release from PF4-stimulated neutrophils was rapid and reached a plateau by 1-3 min. PF4 did not cause release of the cytoplasmic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase which indicates that exocytosis of granule-containing lysosomal enzymes did not result from cytolysis. In contrast, superoxide anion generation from human neutrophils stimulated with PF4 was undetectable even at the highest PF4 concentration tested (2 X 10(-5) M). Pretreatment of neutrophils with PF4 caused significant increased adherence of neutrophils to plastic surfaces and cultured pulmonary artery endothelial cells. The concentration of PF4 that elicited neutrophil chemotaxis, lysosomal enzyme release and increased adherence is slightly higher than those concentrations found in normal human sera. However, the results suggest that PF4 may be an important mediator in neutrophil-platelet interactions and the induction of acute inflammation especially at sites of platelet microthrombi where the concentration of PF4 would be elevated.
...
PMID:In vitro effects of platelet factor 4 on normal human neutrophil functions. 300 56
Basophilic granulocytes were purified from the blood of normal individuals by successive isopyknic centrifugation and elutriation centrifugation. Starting with the leukocyte-rich fraction of 500 ml of blood, we recovered 31 to 80% (mean 51%, n = 20) of the basophils in 45 to 87% purity (mean 69%, n = 23). The contaminating cells were mainly lymphocytes. The basophils were greater than 98% vital (exclusion of ethidium bromide and hydrolysis of fluorescein diacetate). The histamine content of the basophils was 1.1 to 2 pg/cell (mean 1.6 pg/cell, n = 22). With anti-IgE, 30 to 50% of the histamine was released; with phorbol myristic acetate (PMA) or the calcium ionophore A23187, 70 to 100% of the histamine was released. Serum-opsonized zymosan (STZ) did not induce histamine release. Reactions with monoclonal antibodies revealed that the basophils expressed the C3bi receptor (CR3) and the leukocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA1), but not the gp 150,95 antigen, the C3b receptor (CR1), or the low avidity Fc gamma receptor. Basophils carry class I but not class II HLA antigens. During incubation of the basophils with serum-opsonized Staphylococcus aureus or Escherichia coli, these bacteria were neither phagocytized nor killed. STZ, PMA, A23187, or anti-IgE did not initiate an "oxidative burst" in the basophils. This was tested with oxygen consumption, cytochrome c reduction, NBT reduction, chemiluminescence, and release of hydrogen peroxide. Moreover, we did not detect cytochrome b558, superoxide dismutase, catalase, or
peroxidase
in the basophils. Of the typical granule-associated enzymes lysozyme, Vitamin B12-binding protein, and
beta-glucuronidase
, only
beta-glucuronidase
was present in the basophils in detectable amounts. This enzyme was released, together with histamine, on incubation of the cells with PMA, A23187, or anti-IgE, but not with STZ. We conclude that basophils from normal human blood are not phagocytes and are probably not involved in the oxidative defense of the host against foreign antigens.
...
PMID:Metabolic comparison between basophils and other leukocytes from human blood. 300 19
The sensitivity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMet-Leu-Phe) for chemotaxis and for lysosomal enzyme release was examined using the PMN of four primate species, human (H. sapiens), chimpanzee (P. troglodytes), rhesus monkey (M. mulatta), and cotton-headed tamarin (S. (O) oedipus). The 50 per cent effective concentrations (EC50) of fMet-Leu-Phe for chemotaxis were 2.5 X 10(-9) M in human, 10(-9) M in chimpanzee, 8 X 10(-8) M in rhesus monkey, and 3.3 X 10(-6) M in tamarin. The EC50 values of fMet-Leu-Phe for
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) release were 10(-8) M in human, 4 X 10(-8) M in chimpanzee, 4 X 10(-8) M in rhesus monkey, and 10(-6) M in tamarin and those for
beta-glucuronidase
release were 4 X 10(-9) M, 6.4 X 10(-8) M, 1.8 X 10(-7) M, and 1.6 X 10(-6) M, respectively. Thus, the sensitivity to fMet-Leu-Phe for chemotaxis was in the order: chimpanzee congruent to human greater than rhesus monkey greater than tamarin, and that for the release of lysosomal enzymes,
MPO
and
beta-glucuronidase
, was in the order: human greater than chimpanzee greater than rhesus monkey greater than tamarin. These results appear to indicate that the sensitivity to fMet-Leu-Phe increases in the order of evolution of primates toward the human, and suggest that the sensitivity of PMN in the defence function against infection also increases in the same order.
...
PMID:Differences among primates in defence against infection: sensitivity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes to fMet-Leu-Phe. 301 51
Previous studies on the fractionation of human neutrophil granules have identified two major populations:
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
)-containing azurophil, or primary, granules and
MPO
-deficient specific, or secondary, granules. Peripheral blood neutrophils from individual donors were lysed in sucrose-free media by either hypotonic shock or nitrogen cavitation. Using a novel two-gradient Percoll density centrifugation system, the granule-rich postnuclear supernatant was rapidly (ten minutes) and reproducibly resolved into 13 granule fractions (L1 through L8 and H1 through H5). Granule flotation and recentrifugation experiments on both continuous, self-generated and multiple-step gradients using individual and mixed isolated fractions demonstrated that the banding patterns were isopycnic and nonartifactual. Isolated granules were intact based on the findings that biochemical latency of several granule enzymes was greater than 95%, and thin-sectioned electron micrographs demonstrated intact granule profiles. Biochemical analyses of the granule marker proteins
MPO
,
beta-glucuronidase
, lysozyme, and lactoferrin indicated that a number of the fractions were related to the major azurophil and specific granule populations. Lactoferrin was found in ten of 13 fractions (L1 through L8, H1 to H2), whereas
MPO
was found in every fraction. Consistent with these biochemical data, all fractions exhibited varying degrees of heterogeneity based on ultrastructural morphology and cytochemistry, including diaminobenzidine (DAB) reactivity for
peroxidase
and periodate-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) staining for complex glycoconjugates. A variable but significant percentage (23% to 70%) of the granules in fractions L1 through L8 and H1 and H2 showed DAB reactivity, while about 90% of the granules in fractions H3 through H5 were
peroxidase
positive. These results demonstrated that DAB-reactive granules spanned the entire range of granule size and density. Ultrastructural PA-TCH-SP staining of isolated granule fractions revealed patterns similar to those of granules in intact neutrophils at different stages of development. Granules from human acute promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60) exhibited a surprisingly low density compared with typical azurophil granules from normal, mature neutrophils. The data suggest that both functional and maturational differences contribute to granule heterogeneity, and provide a new practical and conceptual framework for further defining the phenomenon of neutrophil granule heterogeneity.
...
PMID:High resolution of heterogeneity among human neutrophil granules: physical, biochemical, and ultrastructural properties of isolated fractions. 301 86
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