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)

We present a case of unknown fever and abnormal liver functions which developed during the course of pain management for herpes zoster with repeated epidural blocks with 0.5% lidocaine 10 ml. The patient was a 67 year old woman. At her first admission to dermatology, there were no abnormal findings in her blood examinations. She complained of severe pain from herpes zoster. She was admitted to the pain clinic. She received thoracic epidural blocks with 0.5% lidocaine 10 ml repeatedly three or four times a week. Two weeks later, she developed general fatigue, appetite loss, nausea and a high fever. Blood examinations revealed the elevation of glutamic oxalacetic transaminase (GOT), glutamic pyruvic transaminase (GPT), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and gamma glutamyltrans peptidase (gamma-GTP), C reactive protein (CRP), and blood sedimentation rate (BSR). Many examinations including abdominal and thoracic computer tomography and abdominal echograph could not reveal the cause of high fever and abnormal blood examinations. We continued the thoracic epidural block for her herpes zoster pain. GOT, GPT, ALP, and gamma-GTP gradually went down to normal values in next two weeks, though fever still persisted. At this time, lymphocyte cell simulation test with 0.5 % lidocaine was positive and eosinophylic cell had increased to 5%. After ceasing the epidural block, fever resolved and blood examinations returned to normal values. These findings suggest strongly that 0.5% lidocaine induced fever and hepatitis.
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PMID:[Unknown fever and abnormal liver functions after repeated epidural blocks with lidocaine for management of herpes zoster pain]. 818 88

ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs) are approximately 20-kDa guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, which, like other members of the ras superfamily, are activated by exchanging bound GDP for GTP and inactivated through hydrolysis of the gamma-phosphate of bound GTP to form GDP in a highly regulated cycle. ARF 6, a class III ARF, was expressed in Escherichia coli with its amino terminus fused to maltose-binding protein. Following release from maltose-binding protein, recombinant ARF 6 (rARF 6) exhibited maximal activity with or without GTP. Such constitutive activation was due to the predominance of ARF-GTP over ARF-GDP, as demonstrated by nucleotide analysis. rARF 6 expressed in E. coli without amino-terminal extension was bound primarily to GDP and exhibited typical GTP-dependent activity. After release from maltose-binding protein, rARF 6-GTP was stable; only a fraction of the nucleotide was removed using EDTA, whereas urea denaturation restored complete GTP dependence. [alpha-32P]GTP bound to rARF 6 was in part protected from hydrolysis by alkaline phosphatase and resulted in the formation of [alpha-32P]GTP, -GDP, and -GMP, whereas unbound nucleotide was completely hydrolyzed to guanosine. Thus, amino-terminal extension of rARF 6, by maltose-binding protein, promoted the formation of a constitutively activated GTP-bound species. By analysis of this species, we confirmed that rARF 6 lacks the intrinsic ability to hydrolyze bound GTP and speculate that maltose-binding protein may inhibit hydrolysis by extrinsic factors.
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PMID:Isolation of recombinant ADP-ribosylation factor 6, an approximately 20-kDa guanine nucleotide-binding protein, in an activated GTP-bound state. 819 4

The most characteristic brain lesion of Alzheimer disease is the accumulation of paired helical filaments (PHF) in the affected neurons. Based on solubility in detergents there are two general populations of PHF, the readily soluble (PHF I) and the sparingly soluble (PHF II) types. The major polypeptides of PHF are the microtubule associated protein tau. Tau in PHF is present in abnormally phosphorylated forms. In addition to the PHF, the abnormal tau is also present in unpolymerized form in the AD brain. Small amounts of ubiquitin (%) are associated with PHF II but neither with PHF I nor with the unpolymerized abnormally phosphorylated tau in AD brain. Furthermore, the pretangle neurons can readily be immunolabeled for abnormally phosphorylated tau but not for ubiquitin. The level of tau in neocortex is several-fold higher than in AD aged control cases, but this increase is in the form of the abnormally phosphorylated protein. The microtubule associated proteins from AD brain do not promote the assembly of microtubules in vitro, whereas the in vitro dephosphorylated PHF polypeptides stimulate the binding of GTP to the exchangeable site of tubulin and the assembly of microtubules. In vitro the phosphate groups in PHF are less accessible than those of tau to alkaline phosphatase. It is suggested that a defect in the protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation system leads to hyperphosphory-lation of tau. The altered tau contributes to a microtubule assembly defect and consequently compromises the axoplasmic flow and leads to neuronal degeneration.
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PMID:Molecular pathology of Alzheimer neurofibrillary degeneration. 831 68

Interleukin-8 (IL-8) is a polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) chemoattractant and activator which mediates its effects through specific cell-surface receptors. Indirect evidence indicates that guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (G proteins) are necessary for transmembrane signaling. The present study characterizes IL-8 receptors in isolated PMN membrane fractions and shows direct regulation of these receptors by guanine nucleotides. The binding of [125I]IL-8 to subcellular fractions of PMNs showed specific binding in a low-density membrane fraction containing alkaline phosphatase, but not in primary or secondary granules. The binding of [125I]IL-8 was rapid and reversible. The equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) of the receptor ranged from 5.0-12.4 nM and there were 1.58-5.90 . 10(10) receptors/mg protein. The dose-response curves for the competitive binding of three different forms of IL-8 to the receptor labeled by [125I]IL-8 corresponded with their ability to produce chemotaxis and granule exocytosis in PMNs. Treatment of membranes with the nonhydrolyzable analogs of GTP, GMP-PNP and GTP gamma S, inhibited the binding of [125I]IL-8. GMP-PNP decreased the affinity of the IL-8 receptor by approx. 2-fold without altering the total receptor number. These findings demonstrate that IL-8 receptors in PMN membranes are of high affinity and are convertible to a low-affinity state in the presence of guanine nucleotides, suggesting a direct role for G proteins in transmembrane signaling by this cytokine.
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PMID:Characterization of interleukin-8 receptors in human neutrophil membranes: regulation by guanine nucleotides. 832 78

The individual and combined influences of three industrial solvents (namely xylene, toluene, and methanol) on certain parameters of liver function in laboratory rats have been studied. Although individual treatments with all three solvents elevated activities of serum enzymes (i.e., GOT, GTP, and alkaline phosphatase), and did manifest hyperbilirubinemia, nevertheless metabolic interaction occurring after their combined treatment suggested a weak antagonistic mechanism. This assumption has been supported by the fact that the detoxification ability of the liver, as indicated by the formation of hippuric acid, improved after the combined treatment.
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PMID:Liver function in rats treated individually and with a combination of xylene, toluene and methanol. 836 87

Using AMP deaminase (AMP aminohydrolase; EC 3.5.4.6) purified from rabbit left-ventricular heart tissue, we report direct investigation of the potential for cardiac AMP deaminase activity to be regulated by kinase-mediated phosphorylation. Rabbit heart AMP deaminase served as a substrate for Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C; PKC) exclusively; no other mammalian protein kinase phosphorylated the enzyme. PKC-dependent AMP deaminase phosphorylation was rapid, linear with respect to time and the concentrations of PKC and AMP deaminase in the reaction, and inhibitable by staurosporine. Upon phosphorylation, the apparent Km of cardiac AMP deaminase decreased from 5.6 mM to 1.2 mM, without effect on the Vmax. Whether phosphorylated or not, rabbit heart AMP deaminase was inhibited by 1.0 mM GTP, which decreased the Vmax. by approximately 50% in each case. PKC-dependent phosphorylation of cardiac AMP deaminase did not alter the enzyme's allosterism toward millimolar ATP or ADP: both nucleotides at 1.0 mM concentration decreased the apparent Km to approximately 0.5 mM. Treatment of cardiac phospho-AMP deaminase with either the protein phosphatase calcineurin or alkaline phosphatase generated a dephosphorylated form which displayed molecular and kinetic properties identical with those of the originally isolated enzyme. These data raise the possibility that a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation mechanism may regulate flux through AMP deaminase in the heart under pathological conditions, such as myocardial ischaemia, characterized by PKC activation and adenylate depletion.
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PMID:Modulation of mammalian cardiac AMP deaminase by protein kinase C-mediated phosphorylation. 838 71

After direct photoaffinity cross-linking of [3H]GTP to the beta-subunit of tubulin, followed by tryptic digestion and alkaline phosphatase treatment, we employed cis-diol-specific boronate gel chromatography and reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography to purify a peptide containing most of the covalently bound radioactivity. The sequence of this peptide corresponded to that of residues 3-19 of beta-tubulin. Residue 10 of the peptide, which is Cys-12 in beta-tubulin, could not be identified. The fast atom bombardment mass spectrum of this peptide showed the presence of a predominant species with a molecular mass of 2022 kDa (2021 kDa for the 12C variant), which is 255 Da greater than the molecular mass of the peptide. Fast atom bombardment collision-activated decomposition mass spectrometry analysis produced fragments which are consistent with the beta(3-19) peptide but having a unit of mass of 358 at position 12. Thermolysin digestion of the tryptic peptide restricted the cross-linking site to the 9-amino acid sequence, I(L)QAGQXGNQ. The molecular mass of this peptide was 1174 kDa, which is equal to the mass of the beta(7-15) peptide containing an extra group of mass 255. To explain the molecular masses of the two labeled peptides, which are 26 atomic mass units less than expected, a mechanism of photolabeling is proposed that involves opening of the guanine ring and loss of the C-6 carbonyl function as CO2.
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PMID:Exchangeable GTP binding site of beta-tubulin. Identification of cysteine 12 as the major site of cross-linking by direct photoaffinity labeling. 841 20

Nerve growth factor can stimulate incorporation of 2'-deoxy-GTP into the non-exchangeable nucleotide sites in tubulin and cytoskeletal microtubules of PC12 pheochromocytoma cells and embryonic chick dorsal root ganglion neurons [J. M. Angelastro and D. L. Purich (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 25685-25689]. We replaced and hydrolyzed exchangeable-site GTP and GDP in adult bovine brain tubulin by incubation with the non-hydrolyzable nucleotide analogue 5'-guanylyl-methylenediphosphonate and alkaline phosphatase, thereby allowing us to analyze the non-exchangeable guanine nucleotides for GTP and dGTP. HPLC analysis reveals no evidence of dGTP in adult tubulin, suggesting further that the appearance of dGTP in tubulin and microtubules may be a characteristic of recently dividing neurons in response to nerve growth factor.
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PMID:Absence of 2'-deoxy-GTP in adult brain tubulin. 847 29

Neuronal protein synthesis is severely depressed following stress such as heat-shock, hypoxia, and hypoglycemia. Following reversible cerebral ischemia, protein synthesis is transiently inhibited in ischemia-resistant areas, but persistently depressed in vulnerable brain regions. Eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2) activity, that is, the formation of the ternary complex eIF-2.GTP.initiator 35S-Met-tRNA, a rate-limiting step in the initiation of cellular protein synthesis, was studied in the rat brain during and following 15 min of transient global cerebral ischemia. At 30 min and 1 hr of reperfusion, a general decrease of eIF-2 activity by approximately 50% was seen in the postmitochondrial supernatant (PMS). In the relatively resistant neocortex and CA3 region of the hippocampus, the eIF-2 activity returns to control levels at 6 hr of reperfusion, but remains depressed in the vulnerable striatum and the CA1 region. Similarly, the activity of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF), which catalyzes the exchange of GTP for GDP bound to eIF-2, a crucial step for the continued formation of the ternary complex, is transiently reduced in neocortex but persistently depressed in striatum. The postischemic decrease in eIF-2 activity is further attenuated by agarose-bound alkaline phosphatase, and mixing experiments revealed that a vanadate-sensitive phosphatase may be responsible for the depression. Addition of partially purified GEF to PMS from postischemic neocortex restored eIF-2 activity to control levels. We conclude that ischemia alters the balance between phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions, leading to an inhibition of GEF and a depression of ternary complex formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Stress-induced inhibition of protein synthesis initiation: modulation of initiation factor 2 and guanine nucleotide exchange factor activities following transient cerebral ischemia in the rat. 847 77

The nonhydrolyzable GTP analogue GTP-gamma-S was capable of stimulating in vitro phosphorylation of polyphosphoinositides in isolated nuclei prepared from mouse erythroleukemia cells. On the contrary, GDP-beta-S was ineffective. The stimulation was not detectable when nuclei were prepared from erythroleukemia cells induced to differentiate by exposure to dimethyl sulfoxide. Both nuclear phosphomonoesterase and phospholipase C activities were not influenced by GTP-gamma-S. Our results point to the likelihood that nuclear phosphoinositide kinases might be regulated by a GTP-binding protein.
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PMID:Stimulation of nuclear polyphosphoinositide synthesis by GTP-gamma-S: a potential regulatory role for nuclear GTP-binding proteins. 857 28


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