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)
A fast atom bombardment mass spectrometric protocol has been developed to determine the type of oligosaccharide chain present in glycoproteins. The procedure is based on acetolysis of the intact glycoconjugate, extraction of the peracetylated carbohydrate fragments and analysis by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry. The molecular ions present in the FAB spectra uniquely define the composition of the oligosaccharides with respect to hexose, aminohexose and sialic acid content. High mannose oligosaccharides yield a series of peracetylated hexose oligomers whereas complex-type oligosaccharides afford a series of N-acetyl-lactosamine containing species. Fucosylation is usually not detected but sialylated oligosaccharides are readily identified and the type of sialic acid is also defined. The method has been tested on three glycoproteins of known structure - fetuin,
ribonuclease
B and erythrocyte Band 3 - and on a glycoprotein of unknown structure -
alpha-galactosidase
I, an enzyme lectin from Vicia faba. The latter is shown to contain high mannose carbohydrate chains.
...
PMID:A novel mass spectrometric procedure for the rapid determination of the types of carbohydrate chains present in glycoproteins: application to alpha-galactosidase I from Vicia faba seeds. 241 21
The present study was performed to investigate the enzymatic changes in dystrophic chickens compared to those of dystrophic mice. The activities of 14 kinds of aminopeptidases, 5 kinds of endopeptidase, 4 kinds of glycosidases, phosphatase, esterase, and
ribonuclease
were measured in muscles of control and dystrophic chickens. When the enzyme activities were expressed as specific activity per unit weight of organs, only some of them were found to be significantly elevated in dystrophic chickens; e.g., alanine aminopeptidase (Ala-AP), Gly-AP and cathepsin D. On the contrary, the activities of alpha-D-glycosidase,
alpha-D-galactosidase
and alpha-D-mannosidase were significantly decreased. Muscular protein contents of dystrophic chickens also tended to be lower than those of controls. These observations offer a striking contrast with the one obtained in the study on dystrophic mice. However, when expressed as specific activity per mg protein, many enzyme activities were found to be significantly elevated suggesting an extensive abnormality of metabolism in dystrophic chickens. Among 14 kinds of aminopeptidase activities, highly significant elevations were seen especially in AP-A, AP-B, Gly-AP, Ala-AP, Ser-AP, Pro-AP, Leu-AP, Met-AP and Trp-AP. Interestingly enough, a statistical approach suggested a significant correlation between the aminopeptidase changes of dystrophic chickens with those of dystrophic mice. In addition to aminopeptidases, there were highly significant increases in the activities of cathepsin D, alpha-D-glucosidase, beta-D-galactosidase, alpha-D-mannosidase, esterase and RNase. These results indicate that the intramuscular metabolic abnormality of dystrophic chickens are generally different from but partly resembled with those of dystrophic mice.
...
PMID:Intramuscular enzyme abnormalities of dystrophic chickens compared to those of dystrophic mice. 701 13
Rupture of ACL is a common injury. While the current surgical treatments are effective, many patients still suffer from precocious osteoarthritis, and there is an increasing interest in bioengineering approaches to improve ACL repair. Bovine collagen is a material currently in use for tissue engineering of ligaments. The alpha-gal epitopes found on bovine cells are a source of immunogenic stimulus for human cells. In this study, we wished to determine if those epitopes could be removed sufficiently to mitigate an immunogenic response using either a decellularization protocol or decellularization followed by
alpha-galactosidase
treatment. Bovine ACLs were treated with Triton-X, sodium deoxycholate,
ribonuclease
, and deoxyribonuclease to remove cells. A subset of the decellularized tissues was further treated with
alpha-galactosidase
. Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were exposed to untreated, decellularized, and
alpha-galactosidase
-treated tissues, and PBMC migration and IL-6 release were measured. PBMCs were significantly more attracted to untreated ACL compared to decellularized or
alpha-galactosidase
-treated tissue, but no difference was seen between the two treatment groups. PBMCs also released significantly more IL-6 when exposed to untreated tissue compared to decellularized ACL or
alpha-galactosidase
-treated ACL, but no difference was seen between the two treatment groups. Immunohistochemistry using anti-alpha-gal antibody detected the epitopes throughout the untreated ACL, but similar areas of reaction were not seen on decellularized or
alpha-galactosidase
-treated ACL. These results suggest that our decellularization protocol minimizes the immunogenic reactions of human PBMCs to bovine ACL tissue. Therefore, decellularized bovine ACL tissue may be a safe, effective biomaterial for ACL injury treatments.
...
PMID:Decellularization of bovine anterior cruciate ligament tissues minimizes immunogenic reactions to alpha-gal epitopes by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. 2192 83