Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.11.1.7 (peroxidase)
65,474 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 60-year-old male with elevated serum AFP levels is reported. Other tumor markers apart from AFP were normal. Serum AFP did not bind to Con A or Lentil-lectin by affinity chromatography. Abdominal ultrasonography, computed tomography and endoscopic retrograded cholangiopancreatography demonstrated a tumor extending from the body to the tail of the pancreas. The tumor was strongly suggested to be an acinar cell carcinoma of the pancreas, based on the histological findings of the resected specimen. The peroxidase-antiperoxidase method showed cancer cells to be positive for AFP. In Japan, only 27 cases of pancreatic cancer with elevated serum AFP level have been reported. This is the first Japanese case of pancreatic cancer in which the binding of serum AFP to lectins was investigated.
...
PMID:Acinar cell carcinoma of the pancreas with elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein levels: a case report and a review of 28 cases reported in Japan. 128 98

Glycopeptide-containing fractions in HPLC peptide maps can be detected by a simple application of the microtiter plate-bound streptavidin-biotinylated glycopeptide-lectin method (M.-C. Shao, 1992, Anal. Biochem., 205, 77-82). To illustrate this application, the glycoproteins, ovalbumin and asialofetuin, reduced and S-alkylated with vinylpyridine, were digested with trypsin-L-1-p-tosylamino-2-phenylethylchloromethyl ketone and the tryptic peptides were fractionated by reverse-phase HPLC, monitoring for absorbance at 230 nm. Aliquots of the HPLC fractions (typically 0.2-0.5% of the total volume) were biotinylated and complexed with streptavidin in the wells of a microtiter plate, allowing the streptavidin-glycopeptide complex to adhere to the plate. Suitable lectins, such as concanavalin A, Datura stramonium agglutinin, and peanut agglutinin, all of which had been coupled to horse radish peroxidase, were added, and after thorough washing, only the wells containing streptavidin-bound glycopeptides retained the complementary lectin and gave a positive peroxidase reaction. Less than 1 pmol of glycopeptide can be detected. The demonstration that the glycopeptide detection could be inhibited either by addition of an excess of the appropriate sugar inhibitor to the different lectins or by digestion of the biotinylated glycopeptides with N-glycosidase F or O-glycosidase shows that the glycopeptide-lectin interaction is the basis for the reaction.
...
PMID:Method for the detection of glycopeptides at the picomole level in HPLC peptide maps. 128 90

Using a battery of 7 horseradish peroxidase marked lectins (WGA, RCA I, PHA, LCA, PNA, UEA I, LPA) or 2 unmarked lectins (Con A, VAA I) and HRP-marked antibodies, the binding to acinar cells with a postembedding technique on semithin sections of rat pancreatic tissue after olive-oil pancreatitis was studied light microscopically. The lectin binding of the normal healthy rat pancreatic tissue (Jonas et al. 1991) changed remarkably. Whereas the apical glycocalyx of acinar cells with the strong binding of WGA, RCA I, and PHA remained unchanged within the first 10 min of damage, the basolateral cell surface lost the typical specific binding of UEA I within the initial phase of pancreatitis just 2 min after injection of olive-oil. Con A and VAA I were found to be very reactive with the necrotic cells 60 min after administration of oil. The results were discussed in relation to the possible functions of the 2 main domains of the pancreatic acinar cell glycocalyx.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic studies of lectin binding to the glycocalyx of rat pancreatic cells. II. Light microscopic changes after induction of an olive-oil pancreatitis. 128 45

The distribution of blood group isoantigens (ABH) was studied with the specific red cell adherence test (SRCA); the red blood cells were visualized by the benzidine-peroxidase reaction. The H antigen was detected with Ulex europaeus agglutinin I lectin by direct immunoperoxidase technique. One hundred and seven bladder tumours were tested. It was found that blood group isoantigens diminished with immaturity (grade) and tumour invasiveness (T stadium). Patients with ABH blood group isoantigen deletion should be considered to be belong to a particularly high-risk group. The preservation of blood group antigens in grade II-III carcinomas may be useful in the choice of treatment (conservative or radical). In six cases in the area of squamous metaplasia of invasive carcinomas a strong false SRCA reaction was noticed detecting presumably the blood group determinants of the epidermal growth factor receptors.
...
PMID:The distribution of ABO(H) isoantigens in urinary bladder tumours. 129 82

We have identified a minor population of crypts in small intestine which do not appear to export cells to villi. These crypts can be observed in whole-mounts of small intestine prepared from C57BL/6J<-->SWR mouse aggregation chimaeras stained with a peroxidase conjugate of the lectin Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA-Px). In preparations where by chance the C57BL/6J epithelium (positive staining) forms only a minor component of the chimaera, occasional crypts occur which are isolated from larger patches of C57BL/6J epithelium and are surrounded by SWR (non-staining) epithelium. Fifty-one of 383 isolated C57BL/6J crypts (13%) did not appear to export cells to villi, although the crypt mouth is surrounded by a small patch of C57BL/6J epithelium on the intervillus gut floor.
...
PMID:Possible non-functional crypts in small intestine defined using mouse aggregation chimaeras. 130 40

The authors report a case of endocarditis caused by Candida parapsilosis. To the best of our knowledge, a case has not been described previously in Japan in the English literature. A battery of 8 peroxidase-labeled lectins was tested on sections of paraffin-embedded tissue to determine which lectin could be used in the microscopic diagnosis of C. parapsilosis. One lectin, from Archis hypoaea (PNA) was found to react with C. parapsilosis. On the other hand, C. albicans, Aspergillus, Mucor, and Cryptococcus did not react with A. hypoaea (PNA). On fluorescence microscopic study, C. parapsilosis was not fluorescent, but other fungi were fluorescent when exposed to ultraviolet illumination. Therefore, we propose new procedures for identification of C. parapsilosis in tissue sections using lectin histochemistry and fluorescence microscopy.
...
PMID:Endocarditis caused by Candida parapsilosis. 132 23

Adherence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to the cornea is a requisite step in the pathogenesis of bacteria-induced corneal disease. P. aeruginosa is capable of attaching to host epithelial cells by its pili, but there is little information regarding the epithelial receptors of this adhesin in the cornea. Using nitro-cellulose blotting of polyacrylamide gels of solubilized adult mouse corneal epithelium, four major proteins (molecular weights: 38, 42, 57, and 66 kD) and several minor proteins were identified that bound purified pili from strain PAK and its hyperpiliated mutant PAK/PR1. These proteins were identified by immunoblotting either with pilus-specific monoclonal antibodies, XLR-3 and PK 3B, or using peptide PAK 128-144 (OX). The glycosylated nature of the proteins was determined using similar gel electrophoresis of corneal epithelial proteins, blotting onto nitrocellulose, and staining the blots with lectins conjugated to either horseradish peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase. All four major pilus-binding proteins were stained with concanavalin A lectin (mannose and glucose) and either wheat germ agglutinin lectin (WGA, specific for sialic acid and N-acetylglucosamine) or succinylated WGA lectin (only N-acetylglucosamine). Staining for peanut agglutinin lectin (galactose beta(1-3) N-acetylgalactosamine) was seen for the 42-, 57-, and 66-kD proteins. The importance of the carbohydrate portions of these corneal proteins in pili binding was confirmed by preincubation of corneal epithelial blots with periodate or pili with sialic acid, both of which abolished the pili binding. These studies indicate that corneal epithelial pilus-binding proteins are glycoproteins in nature and that sialic acid may be a constituent of these pilus-specific receptors in the adult mouse corneal epithelium.
...
PMID:Corneal epithelial glycoproteins exhibit Pseudomonas aeruginosa pilus binding activity. 135 76

A strain of Balb/C mice carrying a lysosomal storage disorder exhibits metabolic and phenotypic abnormalities similar to patients with sphingomyelin-cholesterol lipidoses type II (i.e., Niemann-Pick C and D). Their foamy cells, which belong to the reticuloendothelial system, stained intensely by periodate-Schiff (PAS) reagent and were resistant to predigestion with diastase. To identify the chemical nature of the PAS-positive storage material, we applied lectin histochemistry and biochemical methods. Paraffin embedded sections, and delipidated frozen tissue sections, were treated with biotinylated lectins and localized with avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex. Araldite-embedded semithin sections were incubated with biotinylated lectins followed by avidin-gold and were enhanced with silver. By both histochemical methods the affected foamy cells stained positively as follows: Concanavalia ensiformis agglutinin, Datura stramonium agglutinin, Griffonia simplicifolia-I, Lens culinaris agglutinin, peanut agglutinin, Ricinus communis agglutinin-I, wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and succinylated-WGA. Biochemical analysis of liver extracts complemented the histochemical data and demonstrated accumulation of glycoproteins containing polylactosaminoglycans in affected mice. Our findings indicate that the storage material in NCTR-Balb/C mice is heterogeneous. The lipids that are extracted by organic solvents during the histologic preparations mask the occurrence of polylactosaminoglycan containing glycoproteins in native frozen sections.
...
PMID:Storage of glycoprotein in NCTR-Balb/C mouse. Lectin histochemistry, and biochemical studies. 136 Jul 21

Topographic distribution of terminal and intercalary carbohydrate moieties were studied using horseradish peroxidase conjugated Glycine max (GMA), Arachis hypogea (PNA), Lotus tetragonolobus (LTA), Bandirarea simplicifolia (BSA), and Dolichos biflorus (DBA) agglutinins. N-Gal NAc, alpha-D-Gal, alpha-L-Fuc, D-Gal (beta-1-3)-D-Gal NAc, and alpha-beta-D Gal NAc linked glyco-conjugates were exposed during follicular atresia in oocyte, zona pellucida and granulosa cells. Theca interna and interstitial gland tissue revealed homology in lectin binding.
...
PMID:Lectin staining studies on follicular atresia in house rat (Rattus rattus). 136 69

A novel methodology for coupling liquid-liquid extraction with affinity interaction has been developed to selectively and efficiently purify and separate glycoproteins. The basis for the separation is the selective extraction of glycoproteins from an aqueous solution into a reverse micellar organic phase by using concanavalin A (a sugar-binding lectin) as a facilitative carrier. Specifically, horseradish peroxidase (a common glycoprotein) can be bound to concanavalin A in an aqueous phase and then extracted into an AOT-isooctane organic phase with negligible loss in enzyme activity. Virtually no extraction of peroxidase occurs in the absence of concanavalin A. Electron spin resonance studies have shown that the large lectin-glycoprotein complex (96,000 daltons) resides in a nonaqueous environment within the reverse micelle, perhaps at the surfactant, water-pool interface; hence, extraction of the large complex is feasible. The facilitative extraction has been extended to selective transport of peroxidase from a mixture of peroxidase and alkaline phosphatase (a nonglycosylated protein). This results in an efficient separation strategy with a separation factor of 16.
...
PMID:Purification of glycoproteins by selective transport using concanavalin-mediated reverse micellar extraction. 137 45


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>