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)

3'-Azido-2',3'-dideoxyuridine (AzdU, CS-87) is a potent inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus replication in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with limited toxicity for human bone marrow cells (BMC). In the present study, metabolism of AzdU was investigated in human PBMC and BMC after exposure of cells to 2 or 10 microM [3H]AzdU. 3'-Azido-2',3'-dideoxyuridine-5'-monophosphate (AzdU-MP) was the predominant metabolite, representing approximately 55 to 65% of intracellular radioactivity in both PBMC and BMC at all times. The AzdU-5'-diphosphate and -5'-triphosphate intracellular levels were 10- to 100-fold lower than the AzdU-MP levels and, of note, AzdU-5'-triphosphate was not detected in human BMC. Using anion exchange chromatography, a new peak of radioactivity, distinct from any known anabolites, was detected. This chromatographic peak was found to be resistant to alkaline phosphatase but was hydrolyzed by 5'-phosphodiesterase, yielding AzdU-MP. Incubation of [3H]AzdU and D-[1-14C]glucose in PBMC and BMC produced a double-labeled peak with the same retention time as the anabolite, suggesting formation of a hexose derivative of AzdU. A novel high performance liquid chromatography method was developed that allowed for the separation of nucleosides, nucleotides, and carbohydrate derivatives thereof. Using this highly specific method, the putative AzdU-hexose actually was separated into two chromatographic peaks. These novel metabolites were identified as 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxyuridine-5'-O-diphosphoglucose and 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxyuridine-5'-O-diphospho-N-acetylglucosamine. Following 48 hr of incubation with [3H] AzdU, as much as 20 and 30% of these AzdU metabolites accumulated in PBMC and BMC, respectively. When AzdU was removed from the cell cultures, intracellular AzdU diphosphohexose concentrations decayed in a monophasic manner, with an elimination half-life of 14.3 hr. By 48 hr, levels of 0.3 pmol/10(6) cells were still detected, reflecting a gradual anabolism of these metabolites. Elimination of AzdU-MP and AzdU-5'-diphosphate was characterized by a two-phase process, with a short initial half-life of 0.83 and 0.24 hr and a long terminal half-life of 14.10 and 8.24 hr, respectively. Similar diphosphohexoses of deoxyuridine (dUrd) were also detected in human PBMC and BMC after exposure to [3H]dUrd, suggesting that dUrd derivatives are metabolized in a similar manner. In summary, the discovery of novel metabolic pathways for dUrd analogs demonstrates that AzdU has unique metabolic features that may contribute to the low toxicity of this anti-HIV agent in human BMC and also affect its mechanism of action.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Cellular metabolism of 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxyuridine with formation of 5'-O-diphosphohexose derivatives by previously unrecognized metabolic pathways for 2'-deoxyuridine analogs. 225 Jun 66

Milk samples (186) were obtained at various stages of lactation from 27 common brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). Qualitative and quantitative changes in the milk carbohydrates during early and mid-lactation were similar to those previously seen in other marsupials; the principal carbohydrate was lactose early in lactation and higher oligosaccharides in mid-lactation, and the hexose concentration reached a peak during mid-lactation. However, the late-lactation milk was unusual in that the carbohydrate was mainly lactose and its concentration remained relatively high (3.5 to 5.5%). In contrast to earlier findings on the milk of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii), little or no nucleotide pyrophosphatase, beta-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase activities were detected late in lactation.
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PMID:Changes in milk carbohydrates during lactation in the common brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia:Phalangeridae). 256 94

Three clones of the pig kidney cell line LLC-PK1 were isolated and characterized with regard to morphology, growth, proximal tubule enzyme activity, sugar uptake capacity, and hormone and drug responsiveness in a defined medium. Clone N4 was similar in morphology to the wild type (WT), whereas clone F8 showed loose attachment to the substrate, formed large, sweeping domes, and had an elongated desmosome junction between cells. The third clone, F2, did not form domes and showed a marked reduction in growth rate. Cultures of WT, N4, and F8 had higher specific activities of the enzyme alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase at confluence relative to growing cells; however, there was no evidence of an increase in activity of either enzyme at confluence in F2. Phlorizin-sensitive alpha-methyl-D-glucoside uptake and cytochalasin B-sensitive 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake were measured in confluent cultures grown on porous filter supports. None of the clones lacked either of the hexose transport systems, although quantitative differences were evident. N4 cells grown in a defined medium in 96-well culture plates were tested in situ for their enzyme responses to differentiation inducers, tumor promoters, and hormones. Alkaline phosphatase activity was significantly increased at confluence by serum, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and vasopressin (AVP), and was decreased by tetradecanoylphorbol acetate (TPA) and epinephrine (EPI). Glutamyl transpeptidase activity was decreased at confluence by serum, TPA, and EPI. Similar tests on alpha-methyl-D-glucoside uptake showed that serum, TPA, PTH, and AVP had no significant effect on phlorizin-sensitive uptake; however, calcitonin increased uptake by 84% (n = 18). It was concluded that LLC-PK1 clones maintained in a defined medium are useful models for studying renal cell function.
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PMID:Growth, enzyme activity, sugar transport, and hormone supplement responses in cells cloned from a pig kidney cell line LLC-PK1. 256 38

The JTC-12 cell, an established cell line derived from a normal monkey kidney, was studied in an attempt to characterize the epithelial qualities. Phase contrast microscopy showed dome formation in confluent monolayers and electron microscopic examinations revealed the presence of numerous microvilli on the apical membranes and desmosome between cells. Sonicated cells showed activities of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, leucine aminopeptidase, alkaline phosphatase, and trehalase, marker enzymes of renal proximal epithelium. Alkaline phosphatase activity exhibited the characteristics of a renal type isozyme. Furthermore, confluent JTC-12 monolayers exhibited Na+-dependent transport of hexose, amino acid as well as inorganic phosphate. These findings indicate that JTC-12 cells in monolayer culture maintain ultrastructural, biochemical, and physiological properties of renal proximal epithelial cells. This cell line will be useful for further studies on cellular functions of renal proximal epithelium.
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PMID:Differentiated properties characteristic of renal proximal epithelium in a cell line derived from a normal monkey kidney (JTC-12). 286 48

Previous studies with neutrophils from newborn infants compared to neutrophils from healthy adults have documented increased respiratory burst activity including enhanced superoxide anion (O2-) production, nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction, and hexose monophosphate shunt activity. To investigate the biochemical basis for these observations, we examined oxidative metabolism in membrane-rich fractions of neutrophils. Neutrophils from cord blood of vaginally delivered term infants or healthy adults were disrupted by nitrogen cavitation and subcellular fractions collected on discontinuous sucrose density gradients. Subcellular fractions of newborn neutrophils separated in a fashion identical with samples from healthy adults. Activity of alkaline phosphatase, a plasma membrane marker, was increased 4- to 5-fold in disrupted cells free from nuclei (postnuclear supernatant) as well as plasma membrane fractions from newborn samples compared to those from healthy adults. Content of lactoferrin, a specific granule marker, was decreased in postnuclear supernatants but equivalent in specific granule fractions of newborn cells compared to those from adults. No differences were noted in myeloperoxidase content of postnuclear supernatants or any other subcellular fraction. Plasma membrane fractions from phorbol myristate acetate-stimulated cord blood neutrophils made significantly more O2- than samples from adults (newborn 32.9 +/- 8.1 nmol O2-/min/mg protein mean +/- SEM, n = 3 versus adult 10.8 +/- 4.2, n = 3; p less than 0.05). Plasma membrane-rich fractions were also collected by the technique of differential centrifugation and kinetic parameters of the NADPH-dependent oxidase enzyme(s) were measured for vaginally delivered newborn and adult samples.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Increased activity of the respiratory burst in cord blood neutrophils: kinetics of the NADPH oxidase enzyme system in subcellular fractions. 302 58

Surface-active material (SF) was isolated from human lung lavage fluid collected at autopsy employing differential and sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The isolated material showed well-defined electron microscopic structure, consisting of clearly preserved, closely packed vesicles with limiting membranes and inclusion bodies. It showed a very high degree of alkaline phosphatase specific activity and was devoid of other subcellular contaminants. The isolated material also showed a high phospholipid/protein ratio and increasing surface activity when monitored at different stages of purification. It contained 68.5% phosphatidylcholine, 11.5% phosphatidylglycerol and relatively smaller amounts of phosphatidylethanolamine and other individual phospholipid (PL) classes. In addition, cholesterol, unesterified fatty acids, triacylglycerols and other neutral lipids were found. Saturated fatty acids, particularly palmitic acid (16:0), predominated in the major PL fractions. However, various fatty acids of which oleic acid (18:1) constituted a large proportion also are present. Chemical analysis of the material showed that besides lipids and proteins, nucleic acids, sialic acid, hexose, amino sugars, nitrogen and phosphorus were present. The delipidated material showed the presence of three to four proteins as characterized by sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and gel permeation chromatography on Sephadex G-200 resolved two well-separated peaks. The first fraction contained serum-associated 68 kDa protein, while the second fraction had two apoproteins with molecular weights of 34 kDa and 10 kDa. These two proteins were associated with the SF and they, as well as the whole surface-active material, strongly reacted with the antibody directed against the whole SF in a double-diffusion immunoprecipitation assay.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Isolation and chemical composition of surface-active material from human lung lavage. 317 85

Changes in carbohydrate metabolism were studied in midgut gland, muscle, and gill tissues of marine prawn Penaeus indicus exposed to a sublethal concentration (0.3 ppm) of phosphamidon. A significant decrease in glycogen and pyruvate and an increase in lactate content were observed in all phosphamidon-exposed prawn tissues after 96 hr. An increase in phosphorylase a and aldolase activity levels suggested the increased formation of triose sugars during phosphamidon toxicity. LDH activity was considerably decreased and an increment in lactate content was observed which indicates reduced mobilization of pyruvate into the citric acid cycle. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity was considerably increased, suggesting the enhanced oxidation of glucose in the hexose monophosphate shunt pathway. Krebs cycle enzymes such as NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, and malate dehydrogenase were found to be decreased, suggesting the impairment in mitochondrial oxidative metabolism due to the acute toxic impact of phosphamidon. Cytochrome-c oxidase and Mg2+ ATPase activity levels were also decreased considerably, suggesting impaired energy synthesis and breakdown during phosphamidon toxicity, as a result of reduced oxidation of glucose aerobically. The increase in acid and alkaline phosphatase activities indicates the enhanced breakdown of phosphate to release energy in view of inhibiton or impairment in the ATPase system during phosphamidon-induced stress. These results suggest that phosphamidon has a profound effect on the oxidative metabolism of prawn which results in the triggering of compensatory metabolic pathways for survivability.
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PMID:Modulation of carbohydrate metabolism in the selected tissues of marine prawn, Penaeus indicus (H. Milne Edwards), under phosphamidon-induced stress. 337 38

Cytochemical studies of Escherichia coli at the light and electron microscopic levels have revealed alkaline phosphatase, hexose monophosphatase, and cyclic phosphodiesterase reaction products in the periplasmic space and at the cell surface. In preparations for both light and electron microscopy, reaction product filled polar caplike enlargements of the periplasmic space, such as those described in plasmolyzed cells, indicating significant terminal concentrations of these enzymes; dense substance was often seen within these polar caps in morphological specimens. Staining of the bacterial surface was commonly encountered, but could represent artifactual accumulation of precipitate along the cell wall. Alkaline phosphatase was demonstrated with several substrates (ethanolamine phosphate, glycerophosphate, p-nitrophenylphosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate) over a wide pH range in a bacterial strain (C-90) known to be constitutive for this enzyme, whereas strains deficient in this enzyme (U-7, repressed K-37), showed no activity with these substrates. Hexose monophosphatase and cyclic phosphodiesterase activities were characterized by reaction-product deposition with specific substrates at acid or neutral, but not at alkaline, pH in strains of E. coli lacking alkaline phosphatase (U-7 and repressed K-37). Fixation in Formalin or the use of calcium as a capture reagent seemed to interfere with periplasmic staining in cells prepared for electron microscopy. Formalin fixation had little effect on biochemical assays of the phosphatase activity of intact cells in suspension, but partially reduced the activity evident in sonically treated extracts or in suspensions of dispersed cryostat sections. Glutaraldehyde treatment impaired enzyme activity more drastically.
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PMID:Cytochemical localization of certain phosphatases in Escherichia coli. 431 24

A number of "surface" enzymes of Escherichia coli (i.e., among those selectively released by osmotic shock) all displayed higher specific activities in extracts of minicells than in extracts of typical rod forms; these enzymes included alkaline phosphatase, cyclic phosphodiesterase, acid hexose monophosphatase, 5'-nucleotidase, and ribonuclease I. In addition, alkaline phosphatase, cyclic phosphodiesterase, and acid hexose monophosphatase were cytochemically localized to regions of minicell periplasm that resembled reactive polar enlargements of the periplasm in rod forms. In contrast, a number of "internal" cytoplasmic enzymes (inorganic pyrophosphatase, beta-galactosidase, glutamine synthetase, polynucleotide phosphorylase, and ribonuclease II) showed elevated or similar specific activities in extracts of rod forms versus extracts of minicells. A specific heat-labile inhibitor for 5'-nucleotidase, known to occur in the cytoplasm, also showed no enrichment in minicells. These findings indicate that the "surface" enzymes are segregated in vivo into the terminal minicell buds, possibly because these enzymes are concentrated in the polar enlargements of the periplasm in typical rod forms.
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PMID:Biochemical and cytochemical evidence for the polar concentration of periplasmic enzymes in a "minicell" strain of Escherichia coli. 431 25

Mutants of Escherichia coli have been selected for the absence of 5'-nucleotidase (uridine diphosphate-sugar hydrolase) and 3'-nucleotidase (2',3'-cyclic phophodiesterase). Mutants selected for the absence of 5'-nucleotidase are of two kinds: those that lack detectable activity for the enzyme (Ush(-)), and those that possess activity when cell extracts are assayed, but not when intact cells are assayed (cryptic; Crp(-)). The latter class is probably identical to a type of mutant previously reported by Ward and Glaser. When mutants are selected for the absence of 3'-nucleotidase, Crp(-)mutants are also obtained. Thus far, however, mutants totally lacking this enzyme have not been found. The location on the genetic map of one ush mutation is at position 11 min and that of one crp mutation at approximately 67 min. In the crp mutant, 5'-nucleotidase and 3'-nucleotidase remain located in the periplasm. This mutant is also cryptic for alkaline phosphatase but not for acid hexose phosphatase. Treatment of cells with ethylenediamine-tetraacetate substantially alleviated crypticity. These data are discussed in terms of the organization of periplasmic enzymes and of the outer membrane as a permeability barrier.
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PMID:Mutants of Escherichia coli K-12 "cryptic," or deficient in 5'-nucleotidase (uridine diphosphate-sugar hydrolase) and 3'-nucleotidase (cyclic phosphodiesterase) activity. 435 92


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