Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.4.1.2 (glutamate dehydrogenase)
4,380 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to provide a basis for obtaining further information concerning the host response to Helicobacter pylori urease, four assay methods for detecting urease-inhibiting activity in serum were examined. A quantitative assay, established in a COBAS BIO centrifugal fast analyzer and based on detection of the consumption of NADH by glutamate dehydrogenase stimulated by ammonia production, was considered most suitable for large-scale serological work. Serum samples from 63 children (aged 5 to 16 years), 28 of whom had seropositive H. pylori gastritis, were assayed. One of the serum samples in this latter group showed significant inhibitory activity. This serum sample was one of 13 in the seropositive group known to bind to urease antigen. It showed no inhibitory activity against Bacillus pasteurii or jack bean urease. Protein A binding and heat treatment indicated that the inhibitory activity was immunoglobulin G mediated. The patient from whom this sample was collected showed no distinctive features in his illness. The COBAS BIO analyzer-based urease inhibition assay provides a new tool for studying one aspect of the host response to H. pylori infection.
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PMID:Assay of urease-inhibiting activity in serum from children infected with Helicobacter pylori. 158 44

The urease enzyme of Campylobacter pylori was studied and compared with that of a related spiral-shaped bacterium, St1, isolated from the rodent ileum. Both bacteria possessed constitutive urease enzymes with activities up to 20-70 times that of Proteus vulgaris. This activity was retained on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. A major catalytic subunit of mol. wt 300,000 was located for all (six) strains of C. pylori subjected to SDS-PAGE whereas St1 had two active forms of mol. wts 140,000 and 150,000. Western-blot analysis indicated the presence of anti-urease antibodies in the sera of patients with C. pylori-associated gastritis. The response to C. pylori urease was not strain-specific but no cross-reactivity was detected between the C. pylori enzyme and that of St1. The very high urease activity of these bacteria is likely to be important in colonisation of the host. Possession of glutamate dehydrogenase activity by both organisms suggests that one role of the urease may be to assimilate the available urea nitrogen. Modification of the local environment to facilitate long-term colonisation is another possible function. Protection from acid is unlikely to be a primary role as the natural habitat of the organism St1 is the non-acid-secreting tissue of the small intestine.
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PMID:The urease enzymes of Campylobacter pylori and a related bacterium. 317 69