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Enzyme
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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)
BOT-2 cells (human breast tumor origin) have an impaired ability to utilize exogenous thymidine. Previous studies revealed this deficiency to be the permeation event rather than phosphorylation, since the cells have active thymidine kinase. Chromosome-mediated gene transfer was used to transfer genetic information in the form of metaphase chromosomes, from HeLa-65 cells to the BOT-2 cells, correcting the permease deficiency. Poly-L-
ornithine
or lipochromes were used for facilitation of chromosome uptake. After selection on HAT medium, transferant clones were isolated at a frequency of 4 x 10(-5) and 1 x 10(-5), respectively. Transferants MGP-1 and MGL-1 are stable after 18 months and have been characterized on the bases of purine and pyrimidine nucleoside uptake, relative thymidine kinase activities,
alkaline phosphatase
activities, and hydrocortisone-induced
alkaline phosphatase
activity. MGP-1 demonstrates positive thymidine uptake and incorporates radiolabeled thymidine into DNA. MGL-1 remains thymidine transport-deficient and surveys on HAT by increasing endogenous dihydrofolate reductase activity. Alkaline phosphatase activity in MGL-1 is similar to HeLa-65, 2% of that in BOT-2, and in addition, is inducible 25-30-fold by 3 micro M hydrocortisone. We have separated, genetically, a thymidine permease function from phosphorylation in cells of human origin and have transferred genetic information for the regulation of
alkaline phosphatase
.
...
PMID:Alteration of human breast tumor cell membrane functions by chromosome-mediated gene transfer. 23 36
Serum gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP), isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICD),
ornithine
carbamoyl transferase (OCT), alanine aminotransferase (AlT), aspartate aminotransferase (AsT), and
alkaline phosphatase
(
ALP
) activities were assayed in 67 alcoholics and 40 drug dependent patients. Bilirubin, total protein, albumin, and globulin were also measured. GGTP elevation was observed in 48% of alcoholics and in 50% of drug dependents. The incidences of elevated levels of other enzymes were: ICD 39 and 38-7%; OCT 23-7 and 36-1%; AlT 30 and 33%; AsT 24-2 and 21-7%;
ALP
10-4 and 5% respectively. Measurement of GGTP is thus more useful as a screening test for involvement of the liver in alcoholics and drug dependent patients than that of the other enzymes.
...
PMID:Serum enzyme levels in alcoholism and drug dependency. 23 23
Admission serum triiodothyronine (T3) values in 124 patients hospitalized for alcoholic liver disease were correlated with clinical and laboratory indices of liver function and commonly used determinants of thyroid function. Patients with low admission serum T3 levels had significant alterations in serum albumin, bilirubin, prothrombin time, and
alkaline phosphatase
associated with clinical signs of portal hypertension and collateral circulation, with little difference in serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, serum gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, or serum
ornithine
carbamyl transferase. This group also had a significant decrease in free T3 index despite an increase in T3 uptake; the slight reduction in total thyroxine (T4) was associated with an increase in free T4 index and no change in serum thyrotropin (TSH). For patients with alcoholic liver disease, low admission serum T3 and free T3 index values when accompanied by normal serum T4, free T4 index, and TSH levels appear to be indicative of severe liver dysfunction and increased mortality risk.
...
PMID:Serum triiodothyronine and other clinical and laboratory indices of alcoholic liver disease. 46 36
Twenty calves were infected with 1000 metacercariae of Fasciola hepatica, the activities of 10 enzymes in plasma or serum were assayed and concentrations in serum of proteins, urea and bilirubin were determined. These values were compared with control data obtained from 14 uninfected calves. Aspartate aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase, sorbitol dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
ornithine
carbamoyl transferase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activities increased in infected calves. Total serum protein increased, albumin decreased, globulin increased and the albumin/globulin ratio was decreased in infected calves. Plasma alanine aminotransferase, leucine aminopeptidase,
alkaline phosphatase
and cholinesterase activities and serum concentration of urea and bilirubin were unaffected. It was concluded that glutamate dehydrogenase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase were the most sensitive indicators of liver cell damage in fascioliasis.
...
PMID:Biochemical indicators of liver injury in calves with experimental fascioliasis. 83 11
Escherichia coli transports lysine by two distinct systems, one of which is specific for lysine (LysP) and the other of which is inhibited by arginine
ornithine
. The activity of the lysine-specific system increases with growth in acidic medium, anaerobiosis, and high concentrations of lysine. It is inhibited by the lysine analog S-(beta-aminoethyl)-L-cysteine (thiosine). Thiosine-resistant (Tsr) mutants were isolated by using transpositional mutagenesis with TnphoA. A Tsr mutant expressing
alkaline phosphatase
activity in intact cells was found to lack lysine-specific transport. This lysP mutation was mapped to about 46.5 min on the E. coli chromosome. The lysP-phoA fusion was cloned and used as a probe to clone the wild-type lysP gene. The nucleotide sequence of the 2.7-kb BamHI fragment was determined. An open reading frame from nucleotides 522 to 1989 was observed. The translation product of this open reading frame is predicted to be a hydrophobic protein of 489 residues. The lysP gene product exhibits sequence similarity to a family of amino acid transport proteins found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, including the aromatic amino acid permease of E. coli (aroP) and the arginine permease of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (CAN1). Cells carrying a plasmid with the lysP gene exhibited a 10- to 20-fold increase in the rate of lysine uptake above wild-type levels. These results demonstrate that the lysP gene encodes the lysine-specific permease.
...
PMID:The lysP gene encodes the lysine-specific permease. 131 32
The effects of 2 liquid formula diets differing in protein source were evaluated in orphan foals. The response of 7 foals fed a diet containing casein as the protein source, and 6 foals fed a diet containing a combination of whey and casein, was compared with the response in a reference group of 8 mare-raised foals. Orphaned foals were fed 150 kcal/kg of body weight/d, divided into 6 equal feedings of 25 kcal/kg. Formula intake was comparable among the experimental groups, and foals fed the liquid formula diet grew as well as mare-raised foals. There was no difference among groups in mean daily body weight gain, wither height, heart girth, body temperature, pulse, respiration rate, capillary refill time, or skin tenting. Insulin and blood glucose concentrations increased in both groups of foals fed formula diets, returning to prefeeding values within 4 hours. Differences among groups were found for serum
alkaline phosphatase
, alanine transaminase, cholesterol, creatinine, and glucose values; all other serum chemical values were comparable among groups. Plasma amino acid determinations revealed that arginine and
ornithine
were significantly lower in foals in both experimental groups than in reference foals, suggesting that arginine may have been the limiting amino acid in these diets. Diarrhea developed in foals in all treatment groups, but in most cases was self-limiting. These results suggest that the protein source of liquid formula diets may be less important in foals than in infants.
...
PMID:Effect of protein source in liquid formula diets on food intake, physiologic values, and growth of equine neonates. 145 45
Due to the ubiquitous presence of p-xylene in air and the existing uncertainty regarding its hepatotoxic potential, we examined the effect of acute and short-term exposure to inhaled p-xylene on the liver. Male F-344 rats were exposed to 0 or to 1600 ppm p-xylene, 6 h/d, for 1 or 3 d. Exposure to inhaled p-xylene caused no histopathological evidence of hepatic damage and had little or no effect on the serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase,
ornithine
carbamyl transferase,
alkaline phosphatase
, and total bilirubin. Exposure to p-xylene for 1 or 3 d resulted in an increase in relative liver weight on d 1 post-exposure. The concentration of hepatic cytochrome P-450 was increased by both p-xylene exposure regimens on d 1 postexposure and had returned to control levels by d 3 following the single p-xylene exposure and by d 2 following the 3-d exposure. These observations provide consistent evidence that acute and short-term exposure to 1600 ppm p-xylene by inhalation did not produce overt hepatotoxicity but resulted in a significant increase in the concentration of hepatic cytochrome P-450, the principal enzyme system involved in the metabolic biotransformation of xenobiotics.
...
PMID:Assessment of the hepatotoxicity of acute and short-term exposure to inhaled p-xylene in F-344 rats. 200 13
To study the role of the polyamines putrescine, spermidine and spermine and of the enzymes controlling their synthesis (ornithine decarboxylase; ODC) and degradation (diamine oxidase; DAO) along the villus:crypt axis at the crucial early stage of the ileal adaptive response to jejunectomy, we measured polyamine concentrations and the activities of ODC, DAO and
alkaline phosphatase
(a marker of enterocyte maturity) in epithelial cells isolated by the Weiser technique from villus tips, mid villi, lower villi and crypts 4 days after surgery in transected control (TRC) and jejunectomised rats untreated or given the specific ODC blocker, alpha-difluoromethyl
ornithine
(DFMO, 2% in drinking water beginning 3 days before surgery). In the TRCs, there was a diminishing villus tip-to-crypt gradient not only in
alkaline phosphatase
but also in ODC and DAO activities. After jejunectomy, there were up to 93% increases in mean enterocyte ODC activity when compared with the corresponding cell fractions from the TRCs, but in both the control and jejunectomised rats, DFMO treatment markedly inhibited ODC activity (p less than 0.05-0.01) and reduced spermidine and particularly putrescine concentrations (p less than 0.005-0.001) in all four cell fractions. Only 4 days post-operation, jejunectomy stimulated a significant increase in ileal wet weight but DFMO treatment completely prevented this adaptive response and significantly reduced segmental intestinal weight (mg/cm) in the TRCs. These results (i) extend our knowledge of polyamines and related enzymes along the villus:crypt gradient in the normal intestine, (ii) provides the first data on these variables after resection, and (iii) lend further support to the hypothesis that changes in enterocyte ODC activity and in putrescine and spermidine concentrations play an important role in initiating the ileal adaptive response to proximal small bowel resection in the rat.
...
PMID:Role of polyamines in the early adaptive response to jejunectomy in the rat: effect of DFMO on the ileal villus:crypt axis. 212 63
Diets containing 0.8, 2.53 and 8.0% field variety morning glory seed were fed to male and female rats (20 per group) in a 90-day subchronic feeding study. Gross clinical observations, body weight, and feed and water intake were recorded weekly. At 90 days, all surviving rats were autopsied, organs were weighed, and blood chemistry analyses, haematology, and bone-marrow evaluation for evidence of clastogenic effects were performed. Tissues from control (0% seed) and high-dose (8.0% seed) rats were examined histologically. Effects of morning glory seed were noted mainly in the high-dose group of both sexes. These included increases in mortality, feed consumption (on a body-weight basis), water consumption, serum
alkaline phosphatase
and potassium, white blood cell count, and brain and liver weights (as a percentage of body weight); body-weight gain and serum glucose were decreased. Significant changes seen in high-dose females alone were: increased haemoglobin, serum constituents (urea nitrogen, glutamic-pyruvic transaminase, glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, and
ornithine
carbamyl transferase), and organ weights (heart, kidney, spleen and pancreas as a percentage of body weight), and decreases in serum albumin, total protein, albumin:globulin ratio, and calcium. Significant changes occurring in high-dose males alone were: increased testicular weight (as a percentage of body weight), increased serum phosphorus, and decreased serum cholesterol. Liver degeneration in the high-dose females was greater than that in the controls. Mortality at 8.0% seed in the diet was 40% in males and 10% in females. At 0.8% seed, the only parameter that differed significantly from that of the controls was a final body-weight reduction in females without a corresponding reduction in feed consumption.
...
PMID:Toxicological evaluation of morning glory seed: subchronic 90-day feeding study. 224 29
Elevated levels of serum enzymes are frequently associated not only with alcohol-related organ damage but also with excessive alcohol consumption and alcoholism without significant tissue injury. However, both in the early detection of alcoholism as well as also in the diagnosis of alcohol-related diseases the sensitivities and specificities of these enzyme markers vary considerably. They may be influenced by nonalcohol-related diseases, enzyme-inducing drugs, nutritional factors, metabolic disorders, age, smoking, etc. Consequently, we have neither a single laboratory test--enzyme marker--nor a test combination that is reliable enough for the exact diagnosis between alcohol- and nonalcohol-related organ damage. In most cases it is possible to determine the tissue from which the elevated enzyme is derived, but only occasionally enzyme changes reflect the quantity of the tissue injury. Gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) is the most widely used laboratory marker of alcoholism and heavy drinking, detecting 34-85% of problem drinkers and alcoholics. However, the unspecificity of increased serum GGT limits its use for general screening purposes. Its value in the follow-up of various treatment programs, however, is well established. An elevated level of serum aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT) and alanine aminotransferase (ALAT) in an alcoholic or a heavy consumer indicates alcohol-induced organ damage. The use of test combinations significantly improves the information received with single serum enzyme determinations. An ASAT/ALAT ratio greater than 1.5 can be considered as highly suggestive for the alcoholic etiology of the liver injury. Still better discrimination between alcoholic and nonalcoholic origin of the liver disease may be achieved by the determination of the ratio of GGT to
alkaline phosphatase
. If this ratio exceeds 1.4 the specificity of the finding in favor for alcoholic liver injury is 78%. The determination of the mitochondrial isoenzyme of ASAT also improves the diagnostic value of ASAT determination. The ratio of mitochondrial isoenzyme to total over 4 is highly suggestive for alcohol-related liver injury. In general, however, the determination of serum activities of other enzymes such as
ornithine
carbamyl transferase, lactate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, sorbitol dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, guanase, aldolase,
alkaline phosphatase
or glutathione S-transferase do not significantly improve the diagnostic information obtained with more conventional laboratory markers of liver injury.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Use of enzymes for the diagnosis of alcohol-related organ damage. 243 6
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