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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)
Using immunoblot studies, detailed antibody patterns were performed with the sera of 10 yellow jacket allergic patients undergoing specific immunotherapy with a yellow jacket venom SQ-depot extract (ALK, Denmark). Five males and five females (age range 10-65, mean 48 years) were investigated. All patients had a history of systemic reactions after an insect sting and a positive skin-prick test at a dose of at least 100 micrograms/ml yellow jacket venom. Yellow jacket venom (ALK) was separated on a 7.5-20%
SDS
-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose (NC), and then the NC-strips were incubated with the patients' sera. For detection of IgE, IgG, IgG1 and IgG4, an
alkaline phosphatase
linked 2nd antibody was used. Prior to immunotherapy, a strong IgE binding was detected at 25 kD in nine of 10 patients, representing Antigen-5 (Ag-5) as major allergen. Reactivity to this antigen was also present with the other immunoglobulin classes, although not as marked. In addition, a second frequent IgG and IgG1-binding band was seen at 35 kD (phospholipase A). Only weak or no binding to this band was found with IgE and IgG4. Binding to hyaluronidase (43 kD) was seen only in three cases. During immunotherapy, a significant increase in IgG and particularly IgG4 staining was found with Ag-5, whereas hyaluronidase induces mainly an IgG1 response and phospholipase A showed only a weak IgG response. In addition, the formation of new IgG4 binding to proteins in the region of about 70-90 kD was found in most patients. The dose necessary for the induction of this antibody formation was greater than or equal to 150.00 SQ yellow jacket venom.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:IgE, IgG, IgG1 and IgG4 patterns in yellow jacket allergic patients during immunotherapy with a venom depot extract. 157 21
The synthesis of two biotinylated affinity labels for chymotrypsin and trypsin-like serine proteinases is described, along with their kinetic characterization and application to the detection of these proteinases after PAGE and Western blotting. Thus the chloromethane analogues biotinylphenylalanylchloromethane (Bio-Phe-CH2Cl; reagent 1) and biotinylarginylchloromethane (Bio-Arg-CH2Cl, reagent 2), have been shown to be potent active-site-directed inactivators of chymotrypsin and trypsin respectively. The apparent overall second-order rate constants (kobs./[I]) for the inactivation of chymotrypsin and trypsin by reagent 1 (approximately 4.9 x 10(3) M-1.min-1) and reagent 2 (approximately 1.0 x 10(5) M-1.min-1) respectively are comparable with those obtained by other workers with simple urethane-protected analogues and demonstrates that the presence of the bulky biotinyl moiety is compatible with inhibitor effectiveness. Samples of chymotrypsin and trypsin that have been inactivated by reagents 1 and 2 respectively and which have been subjected to
SDS
/PAGE and Western blotting can be revealed with a streptavidin/
alkaline phosphatase
label. We can presently detect down to 20 ng of inactivated proteinase by using this system. The utility of the arginine derivative for the detection of the plasma trypsin-like proteinases plasmin and thrombin has also been demonstrated, thus holding out the possibility that this reagent may find general application as an active-site-directed label for this class of proteinase.
...
PMID:The synthesis, kinetic characterization and application of biotinylated aminoacylchloromethanes for the detection of chymotrypsin and trypsin-like serine proteinases. 157 91
In this report we demonstrate how the recently developed biotinylated affinity label biotinyl-Phe-Ala-diazomethane (Bio-Phe-Ala-CHN2) [Cullen, McGinty, Walker, Nelson, Halliday, Bailie & Kay (1990) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 18, 315-316; Walker, Cullen, Kay, Halliday, McGinty & Nelson (1992) Biochem. J. 283, 449-453] can be used for the detection of a precursor form of a cathepsin B-like enzyme produced by breast-tumour cells in culture. Thus the cell lines MDA-MB-436, ZR-75-1 and T47-D produce a soluble protein that can be allowed to react with the biotinylated affinity label to yield an
SDS
-resistant complex; this can be revealed with a streptavidin/
alkaline phosphatase
label after PAGE and Western blotting. This protein (molecular mass 47 kDa) can also be detected by immunoblotting using sheep anti-(cathepsin B) antibodies in conjunction with a donkey anti-sheep IgG label. None of the cell lines studied produced any mature cathepsin B-like activity, as gauged by the lack of turnover of the fluorogenic substrate benzyloxycarbonyl-Arg-Arg-4-methylcoumarin-7-ylamide (Cbz-Arg-Arg-NH-Mec). However, treatment of medium samples with pepsin resulted in the generation of such activity. When the pepsin-catalysed activation step was analysed by
SDS
/PAGE, the protein of 47 kDa was completely converted into two species of very similar molecular masses of 30.5 kDa and 29 kDa. Both these proteins can incorporate the biotinylated probe and, in common with the 47 kD species, they can be detected with the streptavidin/
alkaline phosphatase
label and immunoblotting. We propose that the 47 kD form is the pepsin-activable proform of these lower-molecular-mass species. The release of the proform from the oestrogen-receptor (ER)-positive breast-tumour cell lines ZR-75-1 and T47-D is stimulated 5-10-fold when these cells are grown in medium containing epidermal growth factor (EGF) at a concentration of 10 ng/ml. In contrast, there is no modulation in the amount of proform released by the ER-negative cell line MDA-MB-436, over a range of EGF concentrations from 0 to 100 ng/ml.
...
PMID:The application of a novel biotinylated affinity label for the detection of a cathepsin B-like precursor produced by breast-tumour cells in culture. 157 92
1. The biological properties of nine venom samples from six taxa of Micrurus were investigated. The venoms exhibited low protease, phosphodiesterase and 5'-nucleotidase activities, moderate to strong phospholipase A and hyaluronidase activities, variable L-amino acid oxidase activity and were devoid of arginine ester hydrolase and thrombin-like activities. Some venom samples exhibited strong acetylcholinesterase activity. Venoms of M. c. dumerili and M. frontalis exhibited exceptionally high
alkaline phosphomonoesterase
activity while two of the M. f. fulvius venom samples tested exhibited strong hemorrhagic activity in mice. 2. The polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic patterns of the venoms indicate that most of the Micrurus venom proteins are basic proteins. All Micrurus venoms tested exhibited similar
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic patterns, with an intense low mol. wt protein band. 3. The Micrurus venoms appear to exhibit biological properties similar to other elapid venoms found in Asia and Africa. There are, however, no common characteristics in the biological properties of the venoms examined at the generic level.
...
PMID:The biological properties of venoms of some American coral snakes (Genus micrurus). 158 85
The common hookworm (Ancylostoma ceylanicum) infection of humans was studied in golden hamsters model system. Significant biochemical modulations were observed in hamster jejunal brush border membrane (BBM), the primary site of infection. Analysis of BBM at the peak of infection (3-weeks) revealed a marked decrease in the activities of sucrase, lactase and maltase, while activities of
alkaline phosphatase
, (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase were increased. Kinetic studies conducted with maltase, a superficially localised enzyme of jejunal BBM, revealed loss of enzyme active site during the infection. Among other constituents, the levels of cholesterol and triglycerides were significantly decreased with slight increase in phospholipid content in the infected animals. The hookworm infection also caused a decline in total hexose content indicating an altered membrane glycocalyx. Conversely, there was significant enhancement of hydroxyproline and sialic acid contents.
SDS
-PAGE analysis showed an enhancement in both low and high molecular weight proteins in jejunal BBM preparations of the infected group. Gel electrophoresis of glycoproteins further revealed the appearance of two additional peaks in the low molecular weight region and concomitant disappearance of a peak in the high molecular weight region. These results strongly support the view that the hookworm infection causes severe damage not to the site of attachment alone but also to the entire cell lining of the jejunum and therefore could influence overall digestion and absorption.
...
PMID:Biochemical analysis of jejunal brush border membrane of golden hamster: pathogenic modulations due to ancylostomiasis. 159 19
A putative reservoir of functional plasma membrane proteins, the secretory vesicle identified by latent
alkaline phosphatase
and tetranectin, has previously been demonstrated based on indirect evidence (Borregaard, N., Miller, L. J., and Springer, T. A. (1987) Science 237, 1204-1206; Borregaard, N., Christensen, L., Bjerrum, O. W., Birgens, H. S., and Clemmesen, I. (1990) J. Clin. Invest. 85, 408-416). Difficulties in separating plasma membranes from this entity by density gradient centrifugation has prohibited discriminative dynamic and quantitative studies of secretory vesicles and plasma membranes. By combining density centrifugation with free flow electrophoresis we overcame this obstacle. Freshly prepared unperturbed human neutrophils were subjected to nitrogen cavitation followed by density centrifugation on Percoll gradients. Light membrane fractions containing plasma membranes and secretory vesicles were applied to high voltage free flow electrophoresis on an Elphor VaP 22. Plasma membrane vesicles, identified by HLA class I antigen mixed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Bjerrum, O. W., and Borregaard, N. (1990) Scand. J. Immunol. 31, 305-313) and 125I applied to cells before cavitation, were clearly separated from secretory vesicles. Electron microscopy revealed a morphology typical of plasma membranes in the former fraction and a population of vesicles with markedly different appearance in the latter.
Sodium dodecyl sulfate
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profiles demonstrated distinct differences in protein patterns between the two fractions. Superoxide generating capacity induced by sodium dodecyl sulfate and cytosol, an entity traditionally ascribed to the plasma membrane, was largely confined to fractions containing secretory vesicles. Thus, the majority of membrane-bound NADPH oxidase components of light membranes of human neutrophils colocalize with secretory vesicles.
...
PMID:Separation of human neutrophil plasma membrane from intracellular vesicles containing alkaline phosphatase and NADPH oxidase activity by free flow electrophoresis. 163 31
Phytase (myo-inositol hexakisphosphate phosphohydrolase; EC 3.1.3.8 or 3.1.3.26) was purified from rat intestinal mucosa. The purified enzyme preparation exhibited two protein bands on
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with estimated molecular masses of 70 kDa and 90 kDa. Rabbit antisera prepared against the 90K subunit cross-reacted with the 70K subunit on immunoblotting. The peptide maps of the 70K and 90K subunits were similar, and the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two subunit proteins were almost identical. Treatments to remove sugar moieties from the proteins showed that the two subunit proteins had different oligosaccharide chains, although the difference in their molecular masses was not due to the difference in their oligosaccharide compositions. The purified enzyme also showed activity of
alkaline phosphatase
(orthophosphoric monoester phosphohydrolase;
EC 3.1.3.1
), but the properties of the two enzyme activities were different; the optimum pH for phytase activity was 7.5, while that for
alkaline phosphatase
was 10.4. Phytase activity did not necessarily require divalent cations, while Mg2+ was essential for
alkaline phosphatase
activity. Phenylalanine, a specific inhibitor of intestine-type
alkaline phosphatase
had no effect on the phytase activity.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of phytase from rat intestinal mucosa. 165 10
Extracellular, membrane-bound vesicles are widely regarded to be the initial site of calcification in a variety of tissues under normal and pathological conditions. Alkaline phosphatase is believed to play a vital role in this process by hydrolysing ester phosphates or mineral inhibitors, e.g. inorganic phosphates. In the present study, matrix vesicles from normal and rachitic rat growth plates were compared with regard to specific activity of
alkaline phosphatase
, total vesicle protein and ultrastructural distribution of
alkaline phosphatase
activity. Matrix vesicles were released from normal or rachitic growth plates by collagenase digestion and isolated by differential centrifugation. Enzyme cytochemical localization involving a cerium capture method was performed on vesicles collected by vacuum filtration on Millipore filters.
SDS
gels and Western blots on fractions of both normal and rachitic matrix vesicles showed major proteins to be almost identical and confirmed the presence of
alkaline phosphatase
in both. Total matrix vesicle protein ((mg total matrix vesicle protein/rat) x 10(2)) per rat was significantly greater for the rachitic animals (9.0 +/- 2.0 vs. 4.0 +/- 1.0), P less than 0.0001. Alkaline phosphatase specific activity (units
alkaline phosphatase
/mg vesicle protein) in the rachitic and normal matrix vesicles was 25.29 +/- 9.36 and 18.78 +/- 3.37, respectively (0.05 less than P less than 0.1). Electron dense cerium phosphate deposits were localized to the outer membrane surface of matrix vesicles derived from both types of rats. This data, the first to quantify the relationship between rickets, matrix vesicle protein and
alkaline phosphatase
specific activity, suggests that matrix vesicles from rachitic and normal rats have biochemical and morphological similarity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increased matrix vesicle protein in rachitic rat epiphyseal growth plates. 165 31
1. This experiment was designed to study the effects of fasting and enforced exercise on the physiological, biochemical and physical characteristics of duck muscle. 2. Sixty 75-d-old male ducks weighing 3.0 +/- 0.2 kg were assigned to three treatments: a control, and an 8 and 24 h fast plus enforced exercise for 10 min. The ducks were then sacrificed and the carcass stored at 4 degrees C for 24 h. 3. Although the pH and serum lactate contents gradually increased with fasting time the responses were not significant. The ultimate pH was elevated and the lactate of breast and thigh muscles was lower in stressed birds. 4. The activity of lactic dehydrogenase was significantly increased by the stress, and the activities of creatine phosphokinase and
alkaline phosphatase
were also increased slightly. However, no effect was found on the ATPase activity of the myofibrillar protein of either breast or thigh muscle as a result of the stress. The ATPase activity of myofibrillar protein of breast muscle significantly increased with storage time. 5. The extractability of myofibrillar protein increased with storage time for all treatments. The
SDS
-PAGE patterns of myofibrillar proteins were also studied. 6. Consequently DFD-like muscle was observed in the breast and thigh muscles of ducks which had been stressed.
...
PMID:Effect of stresses before slaughter on changes to the physiological, biochemical and physical characteristics of duck muscle. 166 82
1. The biological properties of twelve samples of venoms from all four species of Dendroaspis (mamba) were investigated. 2. Dendroaspis venoms generally exhibited very low levels of protease, phosphodiesterase and
alkaline phosphomonoesterase
; low to moderately low level of 5'-nucleotidase and very high hyaluronidase activities, but were devoid of L-amino acid oxidase, phospholipase A, acetylcholinesterase and arginine ester hydrolase activities. The unusual feature in venom enzyme content can be used to distinguish Dendroaspis venoms from other snake venoms. 3. All Dendroaspis venoms did not exhibit hemorrhagic or procoagulant activity. Some Dendroaspis venoms, however, exhibited strong anticoagulant activity. The intravenous median lethal dose of the venoms ranged from 0.5 microgram/g mouse to 4.2 micrograms/g mouse. 4. Venom biological activities are not very useful for the differentiation of the Dendroaspis species. The four Dendroaspis venoms, however, can be differentiated by their venom
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic patterns.
...
PMID:A comparative study of the biological properties of Dendroaspis (mamba) snake venoms. 168 21
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