Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (
RNase
)
16,360
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An antigen was detected in pooled human nephroblastomas using antiserum prepared in rabbits against an ethylemediaminetetra acetic acid (EDTA) extract of the tumors. This antigen was not found in normal human plasma or kidney extracts, and was not related to the ABO or Forssman blood groups. The antigen was detected in extracts of cultured nephroblastoma cells, but was not present in extracts of normal human fetal kidney cell cultures. The antigen is believed to be present at the cell surface, as cell viability was not significantly lowered during the extraction procedure. A reaction of complete identity was demonstrated by Ouchterlony double diffusion experiments with this antigen and purified bovine fetuin. The antigen was not found in extracts of human fetal spleen, thymus or kidney, nor in human fetal serum. Furthermore, the antigen does not possess determinants in common with the human alpha-fetoprotein of hepatomas, nor was it detected in human renal clear cell carcinoma. Initial characterization of the antigen showed it to be nondialysable, not sedimentable at 100,000 times g for 2 h, stable to repeated freeze-thawing and to incubation at 56 degrees C for 1 h, and water soluble over a wide pH range. The antigen was susceptible to digestion with pronase and trypsin and possibly
hyaluronidase
, but not to
ribonuclease
or neuraminidase. The protein portion is therefore of major importance to the structural integrity of this antigen. The relationship between this antigen and other abnormal materials reported previously in nephroblastoma patients is being studied.
...
PMID:A fetuin-like antigen from human nephroblastoma. 5 Feb 93
The ultrastructural study of liver tissues from 38 patients with type B viral hepatitis consistently showed the presence of hepatitis B core antigen of 21-25 nm size in the liver cell nuclei and to a lesser extent in the cytoplasm. This finding and the demonstration of the tubular form of hepatitis B surface antigen in the proliferative degranulated endoplasmic reticulum constituted the etiologic criterion for the diagnosis of the disease. The double-shelled Dane-like particles were frequently found in association with the tubular form of the surface antigen. The core particles were found in the protoplasmic processes of hepatocytes and this correlated with the immunofluorescent microscopic findings that the antigen may be shed into circulation with the protoplasm. The core antigen was found to resist digestion by various enzymes such as protease, DNase,
RNase
, phospholipase C, lipase, lysozyme, diastase, neuraminidase and
hyaluronidase
, all of which did not destroy the immunoreactivity as demonstrated by immunoelectron and immunofluorescent microscopy. Similarly, sodium dodecyl sulfate, Tween 80 and mercaptoethanol also had no effect. The formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded liver tissue sections could be treated with protease to facilitate the immunofluorescent staining for the core antigen in tissue.
...
PMID:Structural and immunoreactive characteristics of hepatitis B core antigen. 5 6
By application of electron cytochemical techniques to cerebellar tissue, the presence of proteoglycans was demonstrated at the axoplasmic matrix of mossy fiber endings. Blocks of glutaraldehyde (G) fixed mouse cerebellum were processed according to the following procedures: a) Some pieces of tissue were post-fixed in osmium tetroxide, dehydrated by ethanol and embedded in araldite. b) Other pieces were sectioned to 30 mum thick and then immersed in Alcian blue solution pH = 2.7 followed by osmium tetroxide fixation, dehydrated and embedded in araldite (GABOUL procedure). c) Parallel slices of (b) previous to Alcian blue immersion were washed and incubated in either methanol-HCl, neuraminidase,
ribonuclease
or testicular
hyaluronidase
with their respective controls. d) Other blocks of G fixed tissue without any other treatment and fixation were dehydrated and embedded in araldite. Ultrathin sections of a, b and c were doubly stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate while ultrathin sections of (d) were stained with the osmium coordination compound Os-DMEDA. The electron microscopic study revealed at the presynaptic axoplasm of mossy fiber rosettes, the presence of a GABOUL and Os-DMEDA positive electron dense material surrounding synaptic vesicles and continuous with presynaptic dense projections. This material which coincides with cytonet distribution was resistant to neuraminidase and
ribonuclease
and sensible to
hyaluronidase
and carboxymethylation. These findings permit us to conclude that the axoplasmic material of mossy fiber endings is constituted by proteoglycans in which hyaluronic acid and chondroitin 4-and/or 6-sulphate are present. The probable importance of these proteoglycans in synaptic mechanisms is also discussed.
...
PMID:Electron microscopic demonstration of hyaluronidase sensible proteoglycans at the presynaptic area in mouse cerebellar cortex. 6 92
It seems from the literature that colloidal iron (C.I.) binding sites on cell surfaces cannot be completely removed by treatment with Vibrio Colerae alpha-neuraminidase. We wondered if C.I. particles bind to negative groups other than the carboxyl groups of sialic acids. Using HeLa cells from suspension cultures and fresh human erythrocytes, we examined, with the transmission electronmicroscope, the influence of the following enzymatic and histochemical treatments on C.I. staining: alpha-neuraminidase;
hyaluronidase
;
ribonuclease
; alpha-amylase; mild methylation (MM); MM + saponification (Sap.); MM + Sap +MM; MM + Sap + alpha-neuraminidase; active methylation (AM); AM + Sap; AM + Sap + AM; AM + Sap + alpha-neuraminiadase; CH3OH (80%); Sap. It seemed from these experiments that the carboxyl groups of alpha-neuraminidase sensitive sialic acids constitute the majority of binding sites for C.I. to these particular cells. The most interesting candidates for the residual binding of C.I. are carboxyl groups of alpha-neuraminidase resistant molecules, sulfon, sulfin, and sulfate groups.
...
PMID:Cytochemistry of colloidal iron binding to the surface of Hela cells and human erythrocytes. 6 32
KCl extract from rat kidney, rat liver, and Morris hepatomas inhibited [3H]thymidine incorporation into cultured cells. Tissues came from male inbred BUF rats. The most pronounced inhibition was achieved with the kidney extract. Protein synthesis was not inhibited during a 24-hour exposure of the cells to the inhibitor. Incorporation of [3H]deoxycytidine was inhibited, as was cell growth, when the kidney KCl extract was present for several days. [3H]thymidine incorporation was inhibited almost immediately after the addition of the extract. The inhibition was reversible. Regular [3H]thymidine incorporation was restored 24 hours after removal of the inhibitor, which was neither arginase nor a thymidine-degrading enzyme. The inhibitor was stable to heat (80 degrees C for 10 min) and resistant to trypsin, pronase, DNase, and
RNase
. Exposure of the extract to proteolytic enzymes,
hyaluronidase
, and neuraminidase resulted in a loss of inhibitory activity only after extensive dialysis of the treated extract. The inhibitor appeared to be a mucoprotein in which the carbohydrate moiety may be responsible for the inhibition. The KCl extract also inhibited RNA synthesis and DNA synthesis by the de novo pathway. The inhibition of phosphorylation of thymidine, however, appeared to be the primary action of the inhibitor.
...
PMID:Inhibition of tritiated thymidine incorporation in cultured cells by rat kidney extract. 15 53
The ascites form of a chemically induced guinea pig hepatoma, line-10, was resistant to killing in vitro by xenogeneic antibody and guinea pig complement. Pretreatment of line-10 cells with certain proteolytic enzymes rendered tham susceptible to the killing action of antibody and guinea pig complement. The effects of enzyme pretreatment were dependent on enzyme concentration, temperature, and could be blocked by addition of competitive or non-competitive inhibitors. The effect of the enzyme treatment could reversed by incubating the treated cells at 37 degrees C (but not at 0 degrees C), in the absence of the enzyme. Effective enzymes included ficin, bromelain, pronase, elastase, papain, trypsin, collagenase, lipases type I and type VI, and the neuraminidase preparation isolated from Clostridium perfringens. The activity of the lipase preparations and the neuraminidase preparation isolated from Clostridium perfringens appeared to be caused by proteolytic enzyme contamination. Enzyme preparations that proved ineffecitve in rendering the line-10 cells sensitive to killing by antibody and guinea pig complement included DNase,
RNase
, beta-glucuronidase type 6A or type B10,
hyaluronidase
type V or type VI, and pectinesterase.
...
PMID:Lysis of tumor cells by antibody and complement. VI. Enhanced killing of enzyme-pretreated tumor cells. 17 70
Thirty-nine strains of gram-positive microaerophilic cocci isolated from cases of heifer and dry-cow mastitis were biochemically characterized with the API 50E and API-ZYM test kit systems, gas-liquid chromatography for analysis of end products of glucose metabolism, and anaerobic biochemical tests (L. V. Holdeman, E. P. Cato, and W. E. C. Moore, Anaerobe Laboratory Manual, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Blacksburg, 1977). Strains were screened for production of a variety of extracellular enzymes on substrate-containing agar plates and for hemolysin and coagulase production. Antibiotic susceptibility and sensitivity tests were also performed. The microaerophilic cocci displayed homogeneity with respect to the majority of the biochemical tests used; i.e., greater than or equal to 90% of the strains were consistently positive or negative in any one test and probably represent one species. All produced deoxyribonuclease,
ribonuclease
, and
hyaluronidase
, and 92% were positive for chondroitin sulfatase. Catalase and coagulase tests were negative. Greening was observed on bovine blood agar. Acetic and succinic acids were produced by all strains as the only detectable products of glucose metabolism. The strains were susceptible to penicillin G, cefoxitin, doxycycline, and chloramphenicol and were resistant to clindamycin, novobiocin, and metronidazole. Their taxonomic position remains unclear.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of unidentified microaerophilic cocci isolated from heifer and dry-cow mastitis. 39 19
During the first 10 days after peripheral deafferentation of the mouse olfactory bulb stereoselective binding of L-[3H]carnosine declines markedly. The initial phase of this decline is due to a decrease in binding site stereoselectivity, which is then followed by a loss of assayable binding sites. The specificity of inhibition of L-[3H]carnosine binding by various peptides is also altered after denervation. Competitive inhibitors of carnosine binding become less potent after denervation, while analogues which are not competitive inhibitors remain equipotent before and after denervation. Several carnosine analogues that are normally poor inhibitors become more potent after denervation. Treatment of bulb membranes with trypsin,
RNase
and
hyaluronidase
, but not DNase or collagenase, resulted in significant alterations in carnosine binding. L-, but not D-carnosine, protected the binding site from trypsin digestion, and induced additional binding in bulb membranes in a dose-and temperature-dependent fashion. Preincubation of membranes with L-carnosine also led to the induction of additional carnosine binding in membranes from cerebral cortex, cerebellum and deafferentated bulbs but not from muscle. Bulbs from newborn mice contain about one-half of the adult levels of binding and no significant sex differences in carnosine binding were detected in bulbs from adult rats. L-[3H]carnosine binding was two-fold higher in the anterior compared to the posterior portion of the bulb, but there were no significant differences in binding of opiate, GABA, alpha-adrenergic, muscarinic cholinergic, benzodiazepine of glutamic acid receptor ligands.
...
PMID:L-[3H]Carnosine binding in the olfactory bulb. II. Biochemical and biological studies. 48 25
A major cell surface protein, CSP, of chick embryo fibroblasts has been shown to constitute up to 3% of total cell protein, and to be decreased after viral transformation. Its role in normal cell behavior is not known. We have isolated CSP from chick embryo fibroblasts by extraction with 1 M urea and find that these preparations of CSP agglutinate formalinized sheep erythrocytes at protein concentrations of under 2 mug/ml. In extracts of chick embryo cells, the quantity of such hemagglutinating activity parallels that of CSP determined by electrophoresis, and both are substantially decreased in chick cells transformed by the Bryan hightiter strain of Rous sarcoma virus. Both CSP and hemagglutinating activity are progressively adsorbed onto erythrocytes and can be released by 1 M urea. An antiserum to purified CSP specifically blocks the agglutination. The agglutinating activity is destroyed by boiling or treatment with proteases. The agglutination reaction is inhibited by the chelating agents EDTA and EGTA [ethyleneglycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N'-tetraacetic acid]. Agglutination is also inhibited to a lesser degres by amino sugars and other amines, increased osmolarity, and urea. Other monosaccharides,
hyaluronidase
, DNase, and
RNase
have little or not effect on the agglutination reaction. This demonstration that CSP has an agglutinating activity that is sensitive to proteases and that requires divalent cations suggests that this molecule may play a role in cell adhesion.
...
PMID:The major cell surface glycoprotein of chick embryo fibroblasts is an agglutinin. 105 2
The enzymes from the venom of Heterometrus scaber, the indole compounds present and the toxic protein of the venom have been studied. The venom contains acid phosphatase,
ribonuclease
, 5'-nucleotidase,
hyaluronidase
, acetylcholine esterase and phospholipase. A. The indole compounds present in the venom have been identified as 5-hydroxytryptophan, tryptophan, serotonin and tryptamine, along with two unidentified indole compounds. The venom produces hyperglycaemia in sublethal doses and this has been found to be due to increased adrenaline secretion. The toxic protein of the venom has been obtained in a pure form by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, followed by fractional precipitation with acetone and chromatography over DEAE-Sephadex. The toxic fraction has been found to be homogeneous on acrylamide gel electrophoresis. It is a glycoprotein (molecular weight 15 000) containing 1.74% glucosamine, 0.87% galactosamine, 0.313% sialic acid, 3.25% fucose and 0.45% of an unidentified neutral sugar. It did not show any enzyme activities, haemolytic activity or inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase activity but it produced hyperglycaemia in sublethal doses. The toxic level (intravenous administration in rats) was found to be 0.72 mg/kg body weight.
...
PMID:Investigations on the venom of the South Indian scorpion Heterometrus scaber. 111 82
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