Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A phosphatidylinositol phosphodiesterase from the culture broth of Bacillus cereus, was purified to a homogeneous state as indicated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography with DEAE-cellulose and CM-Sephadex. The enzyme (molecular weight: 29000 +/- 1000) was maximally active at pH 7.2-7.5, AND NOT INFLUENCED BY EDTA, ophenanthroline, monoiodoacetate, p-chloromercuribenzoate or reduced glutathione. The enzyme specifically hydrolyzed phosphatidylinositol, but did not act on phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and sphingomyelin, under the conditions examined. The products from phosphatidylinositol of enzyme reaction were diacylglycerols and a mixture of myoinositol 1- and 1, 2-cyclic phosphates, suggesting that the enzyme was a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. The enzyme released alkaline phosphatase quantitatively from rat kidney slices. A kinetic analysis was made on the release of alkaline phosphatase. The results suggest that phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C can specifically act on plasma membrane of rat kidney slices.
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PMID:Studies on phosphatidylinositol phosphodiesterase (phospholipase C type) of Bacillus cereus. I. purification, properties and phosphatase-releasing activity. 1 Sep 86

1. The effect of lipolytic, glycolytic and proteolytic enzymes on the activities of plasma membrane enzyme activities in rat liver and kidney has been investigated by a pretreatment of tissue sections with the lytic enzymes. 2. The action of the proteolytic enzymes causes a very strong decrease of leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase activity, whereas the activities of ATP-ase, 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphatase show a lesser decrease. This indicates a different membrane anchorage of leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase as compared to that of the phosphatases. 3. Treatment with glycolytic enzymes results in a decrease of 5'-nucleotidase and ATP-ase activity, whereas liver alkaline phosphatase and leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase show an increase in activity. 4. Treatment with phospholipase C gives about the same results. The very strong decrease of 5'-nucleotidase activity indicates a great dependence on phospholipids.
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PMID:A histochemical study about the influence of lytic enzymes on plasma membrane enzyme activities in rat liver and kidney. 10 67

The conditions necessary for the secretion of phospholipase C (phosphatidylcholine cholinephosphohydrolase) by Pseudomonas aeruginosa were studied. Enzyme secretion by washed cell suspensions required a carbon source and ammonium, potassium, and calcium ions. The calcium requirement could be substituted by magnesium and strontium but not by copper, manganese, cobalt, or zinc. During growth in liquid medium, cells secreted phospholipase C during late logarithmic and early stationary phases. Secretion was repressed by the addition of inorganic phosphate but not by organic phosphates, glucose, or sodium succinate. Studies with tetracycline indicated that de novo protein synthesis was necessary for the secretion of phospholipase C and that the exoenzyme was not released from a preformed periplasmic pool. Similarly, extraction of actively secreting cells with 0.2 M MgCl2 at pH 8.4 solubilized large quantities of the periplasmic enzyme alkaline phosphatase but insignificant amounts of phospholipase C. Bacteria continued to secrete enzyme for nearly 45 min after the addition of inorganic phosphate or rifampin.
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PMID:Secretion of phospholipase C by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 11 87

1. Pretreatment of frozon cryostat sections with formaldehyde or calcium ions inhibits diffusion of the plasma membrane enzymes 5' nucleotidase, ATP-ase and alkaline phosphatase during incubation. 2. Treatment of fixed sections with different kinds of buffer at 37 degrees C induces diffusion of enzyme activity from the plasma membrane to other sites of the section and into the incubation medium. This buffer influence depends on temperature: at 4 degrees C only a slight diffusion occurs. Addition of phospholipase C, digitonin or taurocholate to the buffer opposes the buffer effect. 3. Pretreatment of frozen cryostat sections with a mixture of equal parts of chloroform and acetone give a good fixation of the plasma membrane enzymes 5'-nucleotidase, ATP-ase, alkaline phosphate and leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase. During this treatment the different kinds of lipids present in the membrane are ex-racted equally. After this fixation buffer treatment does not cause a visible diffusion of enzyme activity in the section. Only a slight diffusion (1 till 7 percent) into the buffer solution takes place. 4. The mentioned treatments open up possibilities to get insight into the membrane anchorage of plasma membrane enzymes.
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PMID:Influence of fixation and buffer treatment on the release of enzymes from the plasma membrane. 14 99

The disruption of the molecular organization of the plasma membrane of leukocytes by phagocytosable particles, or by agents such as surfactants, antibodies, phospholipase C, fatty acids and chemotactic factors, leads to a stimulation of the phagocyte oxidative metabolism. Concanavalin A (Con A) has been used as a tool to study the mechanism of this metabolic regulation. The binding of Con A to the surface of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) or macrophages produces a rapid enhancement of oxygen uptake and glucose oxidation through the hexose monophosphate pathway (HMP). This is explained by an activation of the granular NADPH oxidase, the key enzyme in the metabolic stimulation. The effect of Con A is not due to endocytosed lectin, since Con A covalently coupled to large sepharose beads still acts as stimulant. The metabolic changes caused by Con A are reversible. If, after the onset of stimulation, sugars with high affinity for Con A are added to the leukocyte suspension, the activity of granular NADPH oxidase and the rate of respiration and glucose oxidation return to their resting values. The metabolic burst, while partially supressed by treatment of PMNL with iodoacetate, sodium flouride and cytochalasin B, is slightly increased by colchicine. Con A induces a selective release of granular enzymes (beta-glucuronidase, peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase) from PMNL, whereas no leakage of cytoplasmic enzymes is observed. The enzyme release is inhibited by iodoacetate and by drugs known to increase cell levels of cyclic AMP. Based on a current view of the mode of interaction between Con A and cell surfaces, a model of the metabolic disruption of leukocytes is presented.
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PMID:Concanavalin A as a probe for studying the mechanism of metabolic stimulation of leukocytes. 16 45

The release of plasma membrane ecto-enzymes by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Staphylococcus aureus was investigated. There was no effect on L-leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase, alkaline phosphodeisterase I and Ca2+- or MG2+-ATPase, but substantial proportions of the alkaline phosphatase and 5-nucleotidase were released. There was no simultaneous release of phospholipid and the solubilized enzymes were not exluded from Sepharose 6-B. It was therefore concluded that release was not a secondary consequence of membrane vesiculation but occurred as a result of the disruption of specific interactions involving the phosphatidylinositol molecule.
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PMID:Specific release of plasma membrane enzymes by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. 20 48

Purified phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Staphylococcus aureus released a substantial proportion of the total alkaline phosphatase activity from a wide range of tissues from several mammalian species. Co-purification of the phospholipase C and alkaline phosphatase-releasing activities and the inhibition of both these activities by iso-osmotic salt solutions suggested that the releasing effect was unlikely to be due to a contaminant.
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PMID:Release of alkaline phosphatase from membranes by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. 58 58

A subcellular fractionation method to isolate simultaneously apical and basolateral plasma membrane fractions from the human adenocarcinoma cell line Caco-2, grown on filter supports, is described. The method employs sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation and differential precipitation. The apical membrane fraction was enriched 14-fold in sucrase-isomaltase and 21-fold in 5'-nucleotidase compared with the homogenate. The basolateral membrane fraction was enriched 20-fold relative to the homogenate in K(+)-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase. Alkaline phosphatase was enriched 15-fold in the apical membrane fraction and 3-fold in the basolateral membrane fraction. Analytical density-gradient centrifugation showed that this enzyme was a true constituent of both fractions, and experiments measuring alkaline phosphatase release following treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C showed that in both membrane fractions the enzyme was glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-linked. There was very little contamination of either membrane fraction by marker enzymes of the Golgi complex, mitochondria or lysosomes. Both membrane fractions were greater than 10-fold purified with respect to the endoplasmic reticulum marker enzyme alpha-glucosidase. Protein composition analysis of purified plasma membrane fractions together with domain-specific cell surface biotinylation experiments revealed the presence of both common and unique integral membrane proteins in each plasma membrane domain. The post-synthetic transport of endogenous integral plasma membrane proteins was examined using the devised subcellular fractionation procedure in conjunction with pulse-chase labelling experiments and immunoprecipitation. Five common integral membrane proteins immunoprecipitated by an antiserum raised against a detergent extract of the apical plasma membrane fraction were delivered with the same time course to each cell-surface domain.
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PMID:The post-synthetic sorting of endogenous membrane proteins examined by the simultaneous purification of apical and basolateral plasma membrane fractions from Caco-2 cells. 131 18

IL-8 is a neutrophil-specific chemoattractant and cellular activator which exists in at least three forms, 69, 72, and 77 amino acids. The predominant monocyte product has 72 amino acids, whereas endothelial cells secrete the 77-amino acid form. The 72-amino acid form has been shown to increase intracellular calcium in neutrophils, but the exact biochemical pathways involved in stimulation of these cells is unknown. N-formyl peptide chemoattractants in neutrophils stimulate the formation of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), a reservoir for second messenger molecules and regulator of actin assembly through its association with the actin-binding proteins, profilin, and gelsolin. The present study examined whether IL-8 altered the enzyme which synthesizes PIP2, phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP) kinase. Incubation of intact neutrophils with 10 nM IL-8 caused approximately a twofold increase in the activity of the enzyme. All forms of IL-8 stimulated PIP kinase activity in concentrations ranging from 1 to 50 nM, and the dose-response curves exactly correlated with the order of potency of these cytokines for interacting with the IL-8R on the surface of neutrophils. Lineweaver-Burk analysis of the kinetics of PIP kinase assayed in the presence of 0.03 to 0.7 mM ATP showed that 10 nM IL-8 increased the Vmax of the enzyme 38 to 70.5%, with no significant change in the apparent Km for ATP or for PIP. The stimulation of PIP kinase activity could not be explained by decreased degradation of PIP2 by phospholipase C or phosphomonoesterase activity in the membranes isolated from cells treated with IL-8 or by a decrease in the degradation of ATP. The microfilament disrupter, cytochalasin b, inhibited IL-8 induced stimulation of PIP kinase. These findings demonstrate that all forms of IL-8 stimulate PIP kinase in human neutrophils. This event may provide molecular signals to these cells that are necessary to maintain or change the state of microfilament assembly during cellular activation.
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PMID:IL-8 stimulates phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate kinase in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 131 31

PGD2 stimulated DNA synthesis and decreased alkaline phosphatase activity dose-dependently between 10 nM and 10 microM in osteoblast-like MC3T3-E1 cells. PGD2 had little effect on cAMP production, but caused very rapid enhancement of phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis dose-dependently between 10 nM and 10 microM. The formation of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) induced by PGD2 reached the peak within 1 min and decreased thereafter, which is more rapid than that induced by PGE2 or PGF2 alpha and both PGE2 and PGF2 alpha affected PGD2-induced IP3 formation additively. Pertussis toxin (PTX) inhibited both PGD2-induced formation of inositol phosphates and DNA synthesis. The degree of these PTX (1 micrograms/ml)-induced inhibitions was similar. In addition, neomycin, a phospholipase C inhibitor, inhibited PGD2-induced DNA synthesis as well as the formation of IP3, and the patterns of both inhibitions were similar. In the cell membranes, PTX-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a 40-kDa protein was significantly attenuated by pretreatment of PGD2. Time course of the attenuation of PTX-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation by PGD2 was apparently different from that by PGE2 or PGF2 alpha. These results indicate that PGD2 activates PTX-sensitive GTP-binding protein independently from PGE2 or PGF2 alpha and stimulates PI hydrolysis resulting in proliferation of osteoblast-like cells.
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PMID:Proliferative effect of PGD2 on osteoblast-like cells; independent activation of pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein from PGE2 or PGF2 alpha. 131 47


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