Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (
ribonuclease
)
6,589
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human blood leukocytes and platelets and mouse peritoneal macrophages emit very rapid and very intense Luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (CL) signals when treated with streptococci, staphylococci, or with zymosan, which have been preopsonized with arginine-rich histone, dextran sulfate or polyanetholesulfonate (liquoid). Liquoid alone at 10-30 micrograms/2 X 10(5) leukocytes also triggers intense CL responses in the absence of a carrier. Strong CL can also be triggered, and at the same levels, when the various polyelectrolytes are simply mixed with the bacteria or zymosan and added to the leukocyte suspensions. The CL responses induced by the polyelectrolyte-bacteria complexes greatly exceed those triggered in leukocytes by antibody-complement-coated particles. Liquoid also shows a unique property of markedly augmenting CL signals which have already been induced by other ligand-coated bacteria or zymosan particles. Streptococci and staphylococci were found to be much superior to zymosan, Gram-positive bacilli, or E. coli as carriers for the various polyelectrolytes in the CL reaction. Neither protamine sulfate, lysozyme,
myeloperoxidase
, crystalline
ribonuclease
(all cationic in nature), chondroitin sulfate, heparin, nor alginate sulfate acted as ligands for triggering CL, when used to opsonize bacteria or zymosan. The induction of CL in blood leukocytes by the various ligand-coated bacteria is markedly inhibited by azide, KCN catalase, aminotriazole, and EDTA, agents known to inhibit the production of oxygen radicals following stimulation of leukocytes by opsonized bacteria. Two children diagnosed for chronic granulomatous diseases (CGD) of childhood and an apparently healthy sister of one of the male patients completely failed to respond with CL either to the polyelectrolyte-bacteria complexes, liquoid or antibody-coated bacteria and zymosan. It is proposed that liquoid be employed for the rapid screening of defects in certain oxygen-dependent metabolic processes in both PMNs and macrophages. It is also suggested that polyelectrolytes like the ones described in this study may markedly enhance the bactericidal properties of leukocytes and macrophages towards both extracellular and intracellular microorganisms and may perhaps also augment the tumoricidal effects of activated macrophages.
...
PMID:Bacteria and zymosan opsonized with histone, dextran sulfate, and polyanetholesulfonate trigger intense chemiluminescence in human blood leukocytes and platelets and in mouse macrophages: modulation by metabolic inhibitors in relation to leukocyte-bacteria interactions in inflammatory sites. 618 6
Cross-linked dimers of
ribonuclease
, added at a concentration of 0.05 mg/ml to the culture medium of hepatoma (HTC) cells, were previously shown to inhibit intracellular degradation of
peroxidase
taken up by endocytosis. Intracellular localization showed that endocytosed
peroxidase
does not reach lysosomes in dimer-treated cells. The present study shows that preloading of lysosomes with fluorescent anti-
peroxidase
IgG, obtained by exposing HTC cells for 48 h to 0.1 mg of antibody/ml, restores intracellular degradation of endocytosed
peroxidase
. Moreover, accumulation of
peroxidase
into lysosomes, which no longer occurs in dimer-treated cells, occurs again under these conditions. We conclude that inhibition of transfer of
peroxidase
from phagosomes to lysosomes is most likely to be the alteration resulting from the exposure of the cells to
ribonuclease
dimer, rather than inhibition of fusion between phagosomes and lysosomes. The dimer of another basic protein, lysozyme added at a concentration of 0.2 mg/ml to the culture medium, is shown to induce the same type of effects as does the dimer of
ribonuclease
; the half-life of endocytosed
peroxidase
increased from 5 to 15 h after 2 h exposure of HTC cells to dimerized lysozyme. The effect of both dimers on intracellular protein processing can be reversed by addition of 100 mm-galactose to the culture medium, up to 5 h after pretreatment of the cells. The dimers of ribonuclease A or of lysozyme have thus probably the same mechanism of action. Evidence that the two dimers share the same binding sites on the cells is presented.
...
PMID:Effects of cross-linked dimers of ribonuclease A or of lysozyme on the processing of endocytosed peroxidase by hepatoma cells. 628 32
Insulin,
ribonuclease
, papain and collagen solutions saturated with nitrogen, N2O or air were irradiated with doses of 10 to 640 Gy of gamma rays. Protein solutions were also oxidized enzymatically in a system of horse-radish
peroxidase
: hydrogen peroxide. Column chromatography (Sephadex G-75 or Sephacryl S-200) of treated protein solutions revealed that they contain protein molecular aggregates. Nitrogen saturation of solution before irradiation was most favourable for radiation-induced aggregation of proteins. Fluorescence analysis of protein solutions resulted in detection of dityrosyl structures in irradiated as well as in enzymatically oxidized proteins. Concentration of dityrosine in proteins studied was determined fluorimetrically in their hydrolysates separated on BioGel P-2 column. In irradiated proteins, dityrosine was present almost exclusively in their aggregated forms. In proteins oxidized enzymatically, dityrosine was also present in fractions containing apparently unchanged protein. Mechanisms which could account for differences in the yield of dityrosine formation in radiolysis and in enzymatic oxidation of proteins are suggested.
...
PMID:Radiolytic and enzymatic dimerization of tyrosyl residues in insulin, ribonuclease, papain and collagen. 633 34
Acid-acting (pH 6-7) (presumably lysosomal)
ribonuclease
and neutral-acting (pH 7-8) calcium-dependent phospholipase A2 (presumably the enzyme releasing arachidonic acid from membrane phospholipids) were demonstrated by the
peroxidase
-antiperoxidase (PAP) immunocytochemical technique in rabbit professional phagocytes: pulmonary alveolar macrophages (AM), oil-induced peritoneal exudate macrophages (M phi) and glycogen-induced peritoneal exudate polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN). All three cell types stained positively with antisera to purified rabbit lung RNase and purified rabbit granulocyte phospholipase A2. The RNase and phospholipase A2 were also demonstrated by the PAP technique in the activated macrophages and granulocytes present in tissue sections of tuberculous (BCG) lesions. The intensity of staining of these two enzymes in individual macrophages did not change appreciably as the BCG lesions developed and regressed, but there were more macrophages rich in both enzymes when the lesions reached their peak size at 21 days. When the anti-RNase serum was fractionated by immunoabsorbent chromatography, the anti-delta RNase serum fraction stained exudate M phi and PMN better than AM; and the anti-beta RNase fraction stained AM better than M phi and PMN. Similar to isolated phagocytes, tissue granulocytes stained best with the anti-delta fraction; and activated tissue macrophages stained best with the anti-beta fraction. Thus, macrophages and granulocytes contain two types of RNase, beta and delta; and the beta RNase is associated with macrophage activation.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical demonstration of rabbit ribonuclease and phospholipase A2 by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique in professional phagocytes (pulmonary alveolar macrophages and granulocytic and mononuclear peritoneal exudate cells) and in glycol methacrylate sections of dermal tuberculous (BCG) lesions. 636 Dec 53
A pancreas-specific antigen was identified by immunologic techniques and purified from saline extract of human pancreas. The purified pancreas-specific antigen was shown to be homogeneous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under both denaturing and non-denaturing conditions. It had a molecular weight of 44000 as estimated by gel filtration or sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, and a sedimentation coefficient of 3.4 S as analyzed by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Pancreas-specific antigen possessed an isoelectric point of 4.9 and migrated to alpha-beta region upon immunoelectrophoresis. By colorimetric assay procedures, pancreas-specific antigen exhibited no enzyme activity, such as amylase, protease, esterase, lipase, acid phosphatase, alkaline phosphatase
peroxidase
, deoxyribonuclease or
ribonuclease
. Immunoreactivity of pancreas-specific antigen was sensitive to proteolytic enzymes, perchloric acid and high temperature (70 degrees C, 10 min); but insensitive to neuraminidase or beta-glucosidase. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that pancreas-specific antigen was located in acinar cells of human pancreas. In addition, a higher concentration of pancreas-specific antigen was detected in pancreatic juice than in the saline extract of pancreas. This newly identified pancreas-specific antigen, therefore, may be a useful marker protein in physiological studies of pancreas and pancreatic secretion.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a human pancreas-specific antigen. 678 69
Mannose-specific binding sites for
horseradish peroxidase (HRP)
were studied in fixed sections of various tissues by a method reported previously. Liver sinusoidal cells, mast cells of lymph nodes, and alveolar macrophages of the lung and skin fibroblasts were main cell types showing mannose-specific binding of HRP. Macrophages, fibroblasts, and mast cells in the connective tissue of other organs also showed the reaction. However, macrophages of the spleen, and cultured 3T3 cells and L-cells did not give the reaction. The specificities of the binding reaction were studied by determining the approximate concentrations of competing sugars that suppressed the specific binding of HRP. It was found that the endogenous lectins in macrophages, fibroblasts, mast cells, and liver sinusoidal cells showed similar specificities toward various carbohydrates. D-Mannose and L-fucose had the highest affinity toward the lectins (competing ability for the binding of HRP). D-Mannose-6-phosphate, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, D-glucose, D-ribose, and D-arabinose showed intermediate affinity, whereas D-xylose and D-galactose showed low affinity. Polymerized mannose in mannan and glycoproteins rich in mannose groups (invertase and
ribonuclease
B) showed much higher affinity to the binding sites than free mannose.
...
PMID:Mannose-specific binding sites for horseradish peroxidase in various cells of the rat. 683 41
Low dosages of chloramphenicol (25-50 micrograms/ml) brought about a 2-4-fold stimulation of acid phosphatase activity in 48 h-germinated cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) embryos. However, at high concentrations of chloramphenicol (100-1000 micrograms/ml), there was a progressive decline in enzyme activity. The stimulatory effect of the drug on acid phosphatase activity was relatively specific, since no significant stimulation of activities of proteinase, deoxyribonuclease,
ribonuclease
, o-diphenolase and
peroxidase
was observed in germinating cotton embryos. Chloramphenicol, however, did promote the activities of isocitric lyase and alkaline phosphatase. Sephadex G-200 chromatography of the enzyme fraction revealed high (230 000)- and low (106 000)-molecular-weight multiple forms of acid phosphatase in the chloramphenicol-treated embryos, in contrast with a single molecular form (mol.wt. 106 000) in the untreated embryos. Thus the treatment of cotton embryos with chloramphenicol induced both a qualitative and a quantitative change in the acid phosphatase activity. Chloramphenicol-stimulated acid phosphatase activity was strongly inhibited when Pi was included in the germination medium. However, the control embryos showed less pronounced inhibition of enzyme activity in presence of Pi ions.
...
PMID:Chloramphenicol stimulates acid phosphatase activity in germinating cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) embryos. 687 Aug 57
Treatment of spectrin, insulin, glucagon and
ribonuclease
with ozone results in covalent cross-linking of these proteins. This cross-linking is not reversed by treatment with dithiothreitol and thus can not be ascribed to -S-S- bond formation. A concomitant O,O'-dityrosine formation is observed by spectrofluorometric analysis of the protein and by amino acid analysis and thin-layer chromatography of hydrolyzed protein samples. It is highly probable that the observed protein cross-linking should be attributed to interpeptide O,O'-dityrosine bonds. Several authors have shown before that oxidation of proteins with horseradish
peroxidase
and H2O2 also leads to O,O'-dityrosine formation. Peroxidase-induced O,O'-dityrosine formation in galactose oxidase (d-galactose:oxygen 6-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.3.9) causes a strong increase of enzyme activity. In accordance with these observations ozone treatment of galactose oxidase also leads to O,O'-dityrosine formation with a concomitant 8-fold increase of enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Ozone-induced formation of O,O'-dityrosine cross-linked in proteins. 704 79
The cooperation of specific and nonspecific factors of humoral immunity in the regulation of granulocyte locomotion was studied. Bacterial antigens of dental plaque, immunoglobulins, lysozyme,
peroxidase
,
ribonuclease
and trypsin were found to moderately stimulate chemotaxis and granulocyte chemokinesis. Of these, the most pronounced chemotactic effect is induced by
ribonuclease
and chemokinetic one by lysozyme. The strongest chemotactic stimulus is generated during activation of complement by the classical pathway. Production of the complement chemotactic factor by the classical pathway was dramatically increased by lysozyme and decreased by
ribonuclease
and trypsin. The treatment of granulocytes with antimicrobial enzymes diminishes their susceptibility to the chemotactic factor.
...
PMID:[Cooperation of antigens, immunoglobulins, complement and antimicrobial enzymes in the regulation of blood granulocyte locomotion]. 737 68
The biochemistry, the molecular biology and the biological activity of the eosinophil granule proteins, major basic protein (MBP), eosinophil cationic protein (ECP), eosinophil-derived neurotoxin (EDN) and
eosinophil peroxidase
(
EPO
) are reviewed. MBP is present in the core of the eosinophil granule and is toxic to parasite and host cells. ECP and EDN are proteins in the matrix of the granule and share sequence similarity and
ribonuclease
activity. These two proteins can provoke the Gordon phenomenon in rabbits and are toxic to parasites.
EPO
consists of two polypeptide and is a toxin for parasite and host cells with or without H2O2. The common characteristics of these proteins are their high isoelectric points and cytotoxic activities.
...
PMID:[Biochemistry and biological activities of eosinophil granule proteins]. 768 96
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