Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.27.4 (
ribonuclease
)
6,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Immunoenzymatic, clinical and follow up study of 3500 patients suffering from nervous forms of
epidemic parotitis
was performed. It is concluded that the adaptive humoral enzymes,
ribonuclease
and trypsin, the persistence of antigen to
epidemic parotitis
virus in CSF lymphocytes as well as the immunologic status of the patient at the disease onset play the leading role in the pathogenesis of its acute phase. It advisable to examine the factors enumerated in order to predict the clinical course of the disease. The treatment with adaptive enzymes was of great efficacy in 660 patients.
...
PMID:[Various mechanisms of the pathogenesis and etiotropic therapy of neurologic forms of epidemic parotitis]. 398 4
1. The hemagglutinating capacity, enzymic activity, and infectivity of several influenza viruses were destroyed by repeated freezing and thawing of dialyzed allantoic fluids containing them. 2. Influenza virus degraded by freezing and thawing, by treatment with 5 M urea, or by heating at 65 degrees C. still combined with homologous antibody and was demonstrable by blocking of the hemagglutination-inhibition and virus neutralization reactions. 3. After 50 cycles of freezing and thawing, much of the blocking antigen activity was not sedimented by centrifugation at 120,000 g for 2 hours, and electron microscopy showed complete disruption of the virus particles. So called soluble blocking antigen was obtained from four strains of influenza A, the Lee strain of influenza B,
mumps
, and Newcastle disease viruses. 4. Soluble blocking antigens from influenza A viruses were highly strain-specific; gave little or no reaction in complement-fixation tests; stimulated but little antibody production in rabbits and did not induce immunity in mice; caused reactivation of infective virus in neutral mixtures of homologous virus and immune serum. 5. Repeatedly frozen and thawed influenza virus preparations did not interfere with the propagation of infective virus in the allantoic sac. The blocking antigen activity they contained was precipitated by half saturated ammonium sulfate, destroyed by trypsin, chymotrypsin, or heating at 56 degrees C. for 30 minutes, but was unaffected by desoxyribonuclease or
ribonuclease
. 6. These findings are in accord with the view that soluble blocking antigen obtained from influenza virus particles on disruption by repeated freezing and thawing is protein in nature and represents the essential antigenic material of the intact virus.
...
PMID:Disruption of influenza virus; properties of degradation products of the virus particle. 1315 79