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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)
Sarcoidosis, once thought to be a variant of tuberculosis, is currently listed as a disease of unknown etiology. The present study was initiated by unpublished observations that Schaumann bodies-the laminated inclusions often encountered in sarcoid granulomas-cross-reacted with commercial polyclonal antibodies to Mycobacterium bovis, Mycobacterium duvalii and Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. Given the broad cross-reactivity of many mycobacterial antigens, those findings lacked specificity but warranted in depth probing of the immunoprofile of the bodies, particularly for specific mycobacterial antigens.
Formalin
-fixed tissue from eight patients with an established diagnosis of sarcoidosis was studied with panels of antibodies against both common cytoplasmic proteins and various mycobacterial antigens, using a labeled streptavidin-biotin-
alkaline phosphatase
technique. Our findings indicate that Schaumann bodies are indeed residual bodies of heterophagic mycobacterial derivation. They immunostained intensely for the lysosomal proteins muramidase and CD68, variably for some cytoskeletal proteins (tubulin, desmin, vimentin) and not at all for cytokeratin, muscle actin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin and ferritin. Both cross-reactive and species specific antigenic determinants of M. tuberculosis complex were shown to be present. Affinity absorption with killed intact bacilli H37 Rv resulted in virtually equal loss of binding by all polyclonal antimycobacterial antibodies to cross-reactive ligands in Schaumann bodies. In addition, the bodies were clearly labeled with the monoclonal antibodies TB68 and TB71, known to recognize species specific epitopes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. Although obtained on a small number of cases, our findings uphold Schaumann's original postulate that the laminated calcific inclusions represent remnants of "transformed tubercle bacilli".
...
PMID:Cross-reactive and species specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens in the immunoprofile of Schaumann bodies: a major clue to the etiology of sarcoidosis. 872 Apr 56
We report a novel strategy, called end-product (EP) amplification, capable of enhancing the sensitivity of immunohistochemical procedures by about an order of magnitude or more. The strategy employs an antibody (anti-EP) to the product generated by the action of horseradish peroxidase on 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB), and can be extended to the products of other enzymes as well, e.g.,
alkaline phosphatase
. Amplification is the consequence of the ability of anti-EP to detect the multiplicity of product moelcules resulting from the turnover of substrate by a single enzyme molecule. The subsequent detection of anti-EP was by biotinylated goat anti-rabbit antibody, followed by avidin-peroxidase and DAB or by avidin-
alkaline phosphatase
and Vector Red. Further amplification can be accomplished by repeated cycles of the protocol. Anti-EP was produced by immunization with a bovine serum albumin (BSA) conjugate of a soluble polymer of DAB, prepared by a carefully controlled reaction of DAB with horseradish peroxidase and hydrogen peroxide. Coupling to BSA (and to RSA) was accomplished with glutaraldehyde. The titer of anti-EP was established by ELISA.
Formalin
-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of five cases of Hodgkin's disease and five tonsils with follicular hyperplasia were immunolabeled for the following lymphoid markers: CD3, CD20, CD30, CD45RA, and CD68. EP amplification with anti-EP was also applied to cases of CMV pneumonia and cerebral toxoplasmosis to determine whether this procedure could improve detection of the infectious agents. Immunolabeling of the primary antibody was performed by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase technique with DAB as the reaction substrate. The specificity of EP amplification was tested by demonstrating binding of anti-EP with Vector Red with the generation of a fluorescence end-point. There was complete congruence in the distribution of the DAB signal and the red immunofluorescence representing EP amplification. The intensity of the DAB signal was increased as much as 16-fold by EP amplification, making possible a reduction in the amount of the primary antibody by as much as 85-90%. Sensitivity also increased with respect to weakly expressed antigens and low concentrations of infectious agents.
...
PMID:A strategy for immunohistochemical signal enhancement by end-product amplification. 875 54
Adhesion molecules such as P-selectin are potential markers for evaluating platelet activation and studying the role of cell-cell interactions in numerous biological processes related to hemostasis and inflammation. The expression of P-selectin and related molecules has previously been quantified with different techniques. As an alternative to the most common method. flow cytometry, we have developed a useful ELISA method to simultaneously analyse 96 samples for platelet expression of P-selectin. Samples may be stored for at least 7 days at 4 degrees C prior to analysis. The method is simple, reproducible, flexible and requires only standard equipment. Washed platelets (WP) from healthy male volunteers, at a concentration of 1 x 10(7)/microtiter plate well, were stimulated with various known platelet activators and fixed with 0.1%
formaldehyde
for 10 min. The fixed WP were centrifuged to form a confluent layer in the wells and then incubated with optimal dilutions of primary antibodies (1/2000) directed against P-selectin, CD41, CD9 and secondary antibodies conjugated with
alkaline phosphatase
. Our results show that P-selectin expression on WP increases significantly upon stimulation with thrombin (0.1-1.0 U/ml), ADP (10 microM) and epinephrine (100 microM). The induction of P-selectin expression by thrombin is fast and has different kinetics depending on the concentration of the agonist. Prior incubation with the nitric oxide donor SNAP (10 microM) inhibits the up-regulation of P-selectin induced by sub-maximal concentrations of thrombin (p < 0.05). This ELISA is suitable for studying the expression and regulation of P-selectin and other surface molecules on human platelets in various pathological states.
...
PMID:Modulation of P-selectin expression on isolated human platelets by an NO donor assessed by a novel ELISA application. 900 52
Neutral buffered formalin (NBF) (4% neutral buffered
formaldehyde
) has been advocated by most investigators as the primary fixative of choice for in situ hybridization (ISH), and specific anecdotal cautions interdicting the use of precipitating fixatives, which otherwise may offer certain advantages such as superior nuclear detail, are common. Few systematic studies addressing ISH fixation conditions have been published. We reasoned that heavy metals present in some precipitating fixatives may compromise duplex formation during ISH. Cell lines containing known viral gene content (CaSki, 200 to 600 human papilloma virus 16 copies/cell, and SiHa, 1 to 2 human papilloma virus 16 copies/cell) and two negative cell lines (K562 and MOLT 4) were expanded to >10(10) and pellets fixed in NBF, zinc formalin, B5, and Bouin's and Hollande's solutions, and subjected to DNA ISH using biotinylated genomic probes. Ten tissue biopsies fixed in both Hollande's and NBF solutions were also evaluated for human papilloma virus content using DNA ISH. Additionally, 17 cases of Hodgkin's disease fixed in B5 and formalin were compared for Epstein-Barr encoded RNA detection using RNA ISH with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled oligonucleotides. Catalyzed reporter deposition combined with Streptavidin-Nanogold staining and silver acetate autometallography (Catalyzed reporter deposition-Ng-autometallography ISH) and a conventional indirect
alkaline phosphatase
method were used for detection for both DNA and RNA. Contaminating heavy metals entrapped in fixed tissues were removed by two exposures to Lugol's iodine. Results for both DNA and RNA ISH comparing B5 and NBF fixatives were virtually identical. Hollande's, Bouin's, B5, and zinc formalin fixed tissue showed results indistinguishable from NBF fixed tissue in DNA ISH. Precipitating fixatives such as B5 and Hollande's solution may be used for DNA and RNA ISH under appropriate conditions.
...
PMID:Fixation conditions for DNA and RNA in situ hybridization: a reassessment of molecular morphology dogma. 942 21
An acid phosphatase from a heavy-metal-accumulating strain of a Citrobacter sp. was resolved into two forms on the basis of their nonbinding (phosphatase I) or binding (phosphatase II) behaviour on the cation-exchange resin SP-Sephadex C50. Both holoenzymes had a molecular mass of 103-108 kDa as determined by Superose Q-6 column chromatography in the presence of 150 mM KCl and a subunit molecular mass of 27 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE; the enzyme was tetrameric. Both enzymes had a pI approximately 9.0 and were immunologically cross-reactive. There were minor differences in amino acid composition and in peptide maps following tryptic digest. The pH optimum for phosphatases I and II was 5.5 and 6.25, respectively; phosphatase II alone retained activity at pH values up to 9.0. Phosphatase I was more resistant to mechanical shear, gamma-irradiation, high temperature, and toxins (F- and
formaldehyde
). Glycerol increased the thermostability of both enzymes, particularly the more thermosensitive phosphatase II. Phosphatase II had a lower Km and a lower Vmax for glycerol 2-phosphate hydrolysis. The production of enzyme isoforms is a phenomenon similar to that described previously for the
alkaline phosphatase
of Escherichia coli, where the isoforms relate to precursive and final processed forms of the enzyme. Acid phosphatase is physiologically distinct, with a role that is still obscure but that may relate to cellular stress responses.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of acid-type phosphatases from a heavy-metal-accumulating Citrobacter sp. 944 88
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a chronic cholestatic liver disease of unknown aetiology. Recent studies have shown that genetic factors and both cellular and humoral immunological abnormalities are important in the pathogenesis of PSC. The most prominent autoantibodies in PSC are anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA). The autoepitopes of ANCA in PSC are not well defined. The aim of this study was to identify corresponding ANCA autoantigens in patients with PSC. A biochemical approach with enrichment and partial purification of soluble neutrophil proteins, detection of autoantibodies by Western blot and partial amino acid sequencing were used. Two new autoantigen/autoantibody systems in patients with PSC were detected: catalase and alpha-enolase. The presence of catalase autoantibodies in 9/15 (60%) and alpha-enolase autoantibodies in 4/15 (27%) was confirmed by ELISA and Western blot. Furthermore, we showed immunoreactions of PSC sera with human biliary epithelial cells, showed the reduction of fluorescence in anti-catalase absorption experiments and observed partial co-localization of anti-catalase antibodies and PSC sera in double-staining experiments on biliary epithelial cells. The anti-catalase antibody-positive PSC patients had a more severe course of disease with a significantly higher
alkaline phosphatase
compared with the anti-catalase-negative PSC patients (P < 0.06). All ulcerative colitis control sera were anti-catalase antibody-negative. The identified antigens catalase and alpha-enolase can partly explain the ANCA fluorescence on ethanol-fixed and
formaldehyde
-fixed granulocytes in patients with PSC. Catalase is an important anti-oxidant enzyme and prevents cell damage from highly reactive oxygen-derived free radicals. Catalase autoantibodies might play a pathogenic role in patients with PSC. Our findings support the hypothesis that oxidative stress is one of the pathogenic mechanisms in patients with PSC.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of autoantibodies against catalase and alpha-enolase in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis. 964 23
During postnatal development, the formation of new blood vessels is possible only through angiogenesis. The initial growth of solid neoplasms, including childhood brain tumors, during the genetically determined stages of carcinogenesis, even at clinically undetectable sizes (a few mm3), depends upon the continuous formation of new blood capillaries [i.e. neovascularization (NV)/neoplasm-related angiogenesis (NRA)]. The generation of a malignant, invasive cellular immunophenotype (CIP) and distant metastases are also NRA-dependent processes. Endothelial cells undergo rapid proliferation during brain tumor related angiogenesis. Human endoglin (CD105/EDG), is a homodimeric cell surface component of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) type I receptor complex and is also a proliferation-associated antigen (PAA) expressed at high density on endothelial cells.
Formalin
fixed, paraffin-wax embedded (3-5 microns thick), as well as frozen tissue sections (6 microns thick) of 62 childhood brain tumors [34 medulloblastomas (MEDs) and 28 astrocytomas (ASTRs)], were employed for the assessment of EDG expression. Both an indirect, four-step,
alkaline phosphatase
(AP) conjugated, biotin-streptavidin based (or a diamino-benzidine [DAB]) conjugated immunoperoxidase antigen detection technique were employed, utilizing the SN6h anti-EDG monoclonal antibody (DAKO Corp.). Another antigen detection method, based on the Histogold (Zymed) reaction was also employed using the same antibody on formalin fixed, paraffin-wax embedded tissues. Strong expression (A; +3 to +4) of EDG on endothelial cells and demonstrated in all 62 childhood brain tumor cases. The most striking feature of the newly formed tumor-related capillaries was the presence of a markedly enlarged perivascular space. Blood vessels in several normal human tissues (cortex, cerebellum, thymus, tonsil, spleen, lymph node, skin) used as control tissues contained significantly lower levels of EDG (B and mostly C; +/- to +), in accordance with the extremely slow turnover rate of normal endothelial cells. A close apposition between the capillaries and the adjacent parenchyma was also observed. Brain tumors, especially glioblastoma, are among the most vascularized human neoplasms, and thus are candidates for antiangiogenic therapy. VEGF/PF-R1 (flt-1) and VEGF/PF-R2 (flk-1) are formed de novo in a glioma progression-dependent manner. Further studies should substantiate the importance of EDG in the earliest possible detection, diagnosis and NRA inhibition-based treatment of mammalian solid neoplasms, especially childhood brain tumors.
...
PMID:Upregulation of endoglin (CD105) expression during childhood brain tumor-related angiogenesis. Anti-angiogenic therapy. 967 60
The commencement of the complex process of carcinogenesis, and subsequent, rapid tumor growth and progression of mammalian neoplasms, including malignant melanomas, depends upon the continuous de novo formation of capillaries [i.e. neovascularization (NV)/neoplasm-related angiogenesis (NRA)]. The generation of a dedifferentiated, malignant, highly invasive cellular immunophenotype (CIP) and distant metastases, as aspects of constant neoplastic progression, are also NRA-dependent processes. Endothelial cells undergo rapid proliferation during malignant melanoma (MM) related angiogenesis. Human endoglin (CD105/EDG), is a homodimeric cell surface component of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) type I receptor complex and is also a proliferation-associated antigen (PAA) expressed at high density on endothelial cells.
Formalin
fixed, paraffin-wax embedded, tissue sections (3-5 microns thick) of 25 MMs were employed for the assessment of EDG expression. An indirect, four-step,
alkaline phosphatase
(AP) (or diamino-benzidine [DAB]) conjugated, biotin-streptavidin based, antigen detection technique, employing the SN6h anti-EDG monoclonal antibody was conducted. Zymed's Histogold System was also utilized for immunocytological antigen detection. Strong expression (A; +3 to +4) of EDG on endothelial cells was demonstrated in all MM cases. The most striking feature of the newly formed neoplasm-related capillaries was the presence of an enlarged perivascular space. Blood vessels in several normal human tissues (cortex, cerebellum, thymus, tonsil, spleen, lymph node, skin) used as control tissues contained significantly lower levels of EDG (B and mostly C; +/- to +), in accordance with the extremely slow turnover rate of normal endothelial cells. Furthermore, a close apposition between the capillaries and the adjacent parenchyma was observed in these normal controls. MMs, like most mammalian neoplasms, are characterized by extensive neovascularization, and thus are candidates for anti-angiogenic therapy. Further studies should substantiate the importance of EDG expression in the earliest possible detection, diagnosis and NRA inhibition-based treatment of solid tumors, including MMs. The importance of TGF-beta in all of the various aspects of neoplastic transformation, as well as malignant disease progression should also be studied more extensively in the future.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical detection of endoglin is indicative of angiogenesis in malignant melanoma. 970 32
The commencement of the complex process of carcinogenesis, and subsequent, rapid tumor growth and progression of mammalian neoplasms, including breast carcinomas (BCs), depends upon the continuous de novo formation of capillaries [i.e. neovascularization (NV)/neoplasm-related angiogenesis (NRA)]. The generation of a malignant, invasive cellular immunophenotype (CIP) and distant metastases, as aspects of tumor progression, are also NRA-dependent processes. Endothelial cells undergo rapid proliferation during mammary carcinoma-related angiogenesis. Human endoglin (CD105/EDG), is a homodimeric cell surface component of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) type I receptor complex and is also a proliferation-associated antigen (PM) expressed at high density on endothelial cells.
Formalin
fixed, paraffin-wax embedded, tissue sections (3-5 microns thick) of 15 BCs were employed for the assessment of EDG expression. An indirect, four-step,
alkaline phosphatase
(AP) (or diamino-benzidine [DAB]) conjugated, biotin-streptavidin based, antigen detection technique, employing the SN6h anti-EDG monoclonal antibody was conducted. Zymed's Histogold System was also utilized for immunocytological antigen detection. Strong expression (A; ++ + to ++ ++) of EDG on endothelial cells was demonstrated in all 15 BC cases. The most striking feature of the newly formed neoplasm-related capillaries was the presence of an enlarged perivascular space. Blood vessels in several normal human tissues (cortex, cerebellum, thymus, tonsil, spleen, lymph node, skin) used as control tissues contained significantly lower levels of EDG (B and mostly C; +/- to +), in accordance with the extremely slow turnover rate of normal endothelial cells. Furthermore, a close apposition between the capillaries and the adjacent parenchyma was observed in these normal controls. BCs, as most mammalian neoplasms, are characterized by extensive neovascularization and thus are candidates for anti-angiogenic therapy. Further studies should substantiate the importance of EDG expression in the earliest possible detection, diagnosis and NRA inhibition-based treatment of solid tumors, including BCs.
...
PMID:Over-expression of endoglin (CD105): a marker of breast carcinoma-induced neo-vascularization. 985 49
During February and March of 1998, 12 sudden deaths were reported among residents of a high-Andean community in Ecuador. All 12 fatalities were members of the same extended family and some had apparent exposure to sick guinea-pigs. Following an initial investigation by public health officials, an additional death was reported in a nearby community in April, also associated with exposure to sick guinea-pigs. Blood samples from humans, dogs, and a rodent were tested for antibody to the F1 antigen of Yersinia pestis by passive haemagglutination assay. Tissue from rodents was subjected to direct fluorescent antibody staining using fluorescein-labelled monoclonal antibody to Y. pestis F1 antigen.
Formalin
-fixed specimens from the 2 autopsies were evaluated using a 2-step
alkaline phosphatase
immunoassay with a monoclonal antibody to Y. pestis F1 antigen, and tissues that had not been embedded in paraffin were tested for the presence of DNA encoding the F1 structural antigen by polymerase chain reaction. Serological evaluation of close contacts of the fatalities revealed positive titres to F1 antigen of Y. pestis, the aetiological agent of plague, in 3 contacts from the first community and 1 from the second. Immunohistochemical staining of tissues collected from 2 of the fatalities provided evidence that both had pneumonic plague. Five of 14 dogs found in the communities were seropositive for plague antibody, providing evidence of a recent epizootic plague in the area.
...
PMID:An outbreak of plague including cases with probable pneumonic infection, Ecuador, 1998. 1112 40
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