Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two women had multiple subcutaneous nodules that showed features of multicentric reticulohistiocytosis (MR). Neither had joint symptoms. Both had a raised erythrocyte sedimentation rate, an immunoglobulin G paraproteinemia, and raised levels of nonhepatic serum alkaline phosphatase. The skin lesions have been followed up, using light and electron microscopy, immunoperoxidase, and histochemical methods. The material in the giant cells stained positively for gamma heavy chain determinants: the light chain type in each case was that of the paraprotein. An attempt to reproduce the skin lesions in one patient by intradermal injection of her paraprotein failed.
...
PMID:Atypical multicentric reticulohistiocytosis with paraproteinemia. 93 99

The active-site topology of smooth muscle myosin has been investigated by direct photoaffinity-labeling studies with [3H]ADP. Addition of vanadate (Vi) and Co2+ enabled [3H]ADP to be stably trapped at the active site (t1/2 greater than 5 days at 0 degrees C). The extraordinary stability of the myosin.Co2+.[3H]ADP.Vi complex allowed it to be purified free of excess [3H]ADP before irradiation began and ensured that only active-site residues became labeled. Following UV irradiation, approximately 10% of the trapped [3H]ADP became covalently attached at the active site. All of the [3H]ADP incorporated into the 200-kDa heavy chain, confirming earlier results using untrapped [alpha-32P]ATP [Maruta, H., & Korn, E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 499-502]. After extensive trypsin digestion of labeled subfragment 1, HPLC separation methods combined with alkaline phosphatase treatment allowed two labeled peptides to be isolated. Sequence analysis of both labeled peptides indicated that Glu-185 was the labeled residue. Since Glu-185 has been previously identified as a residue at the active site of smooth myosin using [3H]UDP as a photolabel [Garabedian, T. E., & Yount, R. G. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 22547-22553], these results provide further evidence that Glu-185, located immediately adjacent to the glycine-rich loop, is located in the purine binding pocket of the active site of smooth muscle myosin.
...
PMID:Direct photoaffinity labeling of gizzard myosin with vanadate-trapped adenosine diphosphate. 193 44

The active site of chicken gizzard myosin was labeled by direct photoaffinity labeling with [3H]UDP. [3H] UDP was stably trapped at the active site by addition of vanadate (Vi) and Co2+. The extraordinary stability of the myosin.Co2+.[3H]UDP.Vi complex (t1/2 greater than 5 days at 0 degrees C) allowed it to be purified free of extraneous [3H]UDP before irradiation began. Upon UV irradiation, greater than 60% of the trapped [3H]UDP was photoincorporated into the active site. Only the 200-kDa heavy chain was labeled, confirming earlier results (Maruta, H., and Korn, E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 499-502) using [3H]UTP. Extensive tryptic digestion of photolabeled myosin subfragment 1 followed by high performance liquid chromatography separations and removal of nucleotide phosphates by treatment with alkaline phosphatase allowed two labeled peptides to be isolated. Sequencing of the labeled peptides and radioactive counting showed that Glu185 was the residue labeled. Since UDP is a "zero-length" cross-linker, Glu185 is located at the purine-binding pocket of the active site of smooth myosin and adjacent to the glycine-rich loop which binds the polyphosphate portion of ATP. This Glu residue is conserved in smooth and nonmuscle myosins and is the same residue identified previously by [3H]UTP photolabeling in Acanthamoeba myosin II (Atkinson, M. A., Robinson, E. A., Appella, E., and Korn, E. D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1844-1848).
...
PMID:Direct photoaffinity labeling of gizzard myosin with [3H]uridine diphosphate places Glu185 of the heavy chain at the active site. 197 81

This study introduces a simple, reproducible assay for HLA class I antigen using antibodies against beta 2-microglobulin and the heavy chain on HLA. The sandwich technique was named mixed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (MELISA), and was designed for identification of plasma membranes in neutrophil subcellular fractions. The subcellular localization of HLA was identical to that of other plasma membrane markers, [3H]concanavalin A and detergent-independent alkaline phosphatase, and was unchanged by stimulation of cells by weak and strong secretagogues. In addition to the presence as part of the HLA complex in the plasma membrane uncomplexed beta 2-microglobulin is present in the specific granules of neutrophils. However, the release of beta 2-microglobulin from intact neutrophils stimulated with formyl-methionylleucylphenylalanine was much higher than could be explained by exocytosis of specific granules. Subcellular fractionation studies demonstrated that beta 2-microglobulin is localized in fractions characterized by latent alkaline phosphatase and released from this novel secretory compartment in response to stimulation with formyl-methionylleucylphenylalanine.
...
PMID:Mixed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (MELISA) for HLA class I antigen: a plasma membrane marker. 218 25

We have developed sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) which measure mouse serum heavy chain immunoglobulin isotypes in nanograms per milliliter. In each case the specific isotypic Ig is sandwiched between an isotype-specific antibody used for coating and another isotype-specific antibody coupled to biotin for detection (with alkaline phosphatase coupled to avidin). These methods are simple to perform, specific for each isotype, reproducible with an average coefficient of variation of 5% for IgG1, 3% for IgG2a, 7% for IgG2b, 10% for IgG3, 3% for IgA and 7% for IgM, and at least 100 times more sensitive than radial immunodiffusion. The assays have been used to determine the absolute concentrations of mouse serum heavy chain Ig isotypes.
...
PMID:Indirect double sandwich ELISA for the specific and quantitative measurement of mouse IgM, IgA and IgG subclasses. 249 68

An enzyme-linked direct antiglobulin test (DAGT) for assessing erythrocyte-bound IgG, IgM and IgA is described. The test is carried out in microtitre plates using heavy chain-specific, alkaline phosphatase-linked, goat anti-human globulin reagents with p-nitrophenyl phosphate as substrate. Results are expressed in optical density (OD) units per 3.6 X 10(7) red cells. The method is reproducible, with coefficients of variation of 0.056, 0.093 and 0.087 for IgG, IgM and IgA respectively. The linear relationship between the amount of red cell-bound antibody and the OD reading for each immunoglobulin class shows that the method is suitable for quantitative studies. Healthy individuals were found to have small amounts of immunoglobulin bound to their red cells with mean values of 0.251, 0.087 and 0.128 OD units per 3.6 X 10(7) red cells for IgG, IgM and IgA respectively; there was no difference between male and female subjects. In the clinical situation, the enzyme-linked DAGT was considered to show significantly increased amounts of cell-bound immunoglobulin when the results were more than three standard deviations above the mean and the quantitative results permitted an accurate assessment of the progress and response to treatment of patients with autoimmune haemolysis.
...
PMID:An enzyme-linked direct antiglobulin test for assessing erythrocyte bound immunoglobulins. 333 50

Isolated human syncytiotrophoblast microvillous plasma membranes (StMPM) have been examined by electron microscopy, SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), two-dimensional PAGE (2D-PAGE), and immunoblots. Electron microscopy of StMPM pellets revealed populations of membrane-bounded vesicles that disrupted after treatment with the chaotrope 3M KCl for 16 hr; with increasing molarity of another chaotrope (NH4SCN), the vesicles became smaller and more homogeneous. NH4SCN treatment resulted in significant reduction on SDS and 2D-PAGE analysis of only one protein at 80kd, shown by immunoblotting to be transferrin; 3M KCl had little effect and appeared to be a poor chaotrope. Chromogenic silver staining of SDS-PAGE gels demonstrated over 50 StMPM-associated discrete protein components. Immunoblotting revealed transferrin (80kd), albumin (65kd), IgG heavy chain (56kd), and Gc protein (56kd). Alpha-2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) was identified at 180kd and 95kd; the smaller component may be a proteolytic derivative indicating alpha 2M binding to a trophoblast surface protease. Numerous discrete protein dots, and groups of dots characteristic of charge heterogeneity of individual proteins, were observed on high resolution 2D-PAGE. The most intensely stained proteins were transferrin (80kd), albumin (65kd), placental-type alkaline phosphatase (66kd), and actin (46kd). This 2D-PAGE technique is a superior method for analyzing the trophoblast membrane proteins, and the system described will enable systematic mapping of these components.
...
PMID:Biochemical studies of human placental microvillous plasma membrane proteins. 403 72

Myosin purified from a murine myeloid leukaemia cell line (M1) that had been incubated with [32P]orthophosphate incorporated 32P into the heavy, but not the light, chain. When the heavy chain was dephosphorylated by bacterial alkaline phosphatase, myosin that had low actin-activated ATPase activity gained higher activity only in the presence of the light-chain kinase. In the absence of the light-chain kinase, however, the Mg2+-stimulated ATPase activity of myosin was not activated by actin, regardless of phosphatase treatment. These results indicate that the activity of M1 myosin ATPase is regulated by phosphorylation of both the light and heavy chains. A scheme for this regulation by phosphorylation is presented and discussed.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of the myosin heavy chain. Its effect on actin-activated Mg2+-stimulated ATPase in leukaemic myeloblasts. 613 30

Human placental cell suspensions prepared by trypsin digestion were analyzed with several monoclonal antibodies on a multiparameter fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS). Five distinct cell populations were isolated on the basis of size and quantitative differences in the coordinate expression of cell surface antigens detected by monoclonal antibodies against an HLA-A,B,C monomorphic determinant (MB40.5) and against human trophoblasts (anti-Trop-2). By FACS analysis and after sorting we clearly identified the major cell population as cytotrophoblasts based on several independent criteria, including presence of trophoblast-specific surface antigens, Trop-1, and Trop-2; absence of all HLA class I, class II, and beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) antigens; absence of the pan-leucocyte and monocyte antigens, HLe1 and LeuM1, respectively; presence of Y-chromatin in a male placenta; presence of placental and not liver alkaline phosphatase; and a large, mononuclear morphology. These procedures provide a reproducible method for obtaining highly purified human cytotrophoblast populations for further studies. We measured by molecular hybridization (RNA or Northern blots) the HLA-A,B,C and beta 2m mRNA in total RNA extracted from sorted cytotrophoblasts. We find that normal human cytotrophoblasts have extremely small amounts of HLA-A,B,C mRNA: approximately 300 times less than that in the lymphoid cell line LCL-721 or normal lymphocytes. In contrast, they have approximately 11% the level of beta 2m mRNA present in LCL-721 cells. Thus, HLA-A,B,C antigen expression on human cytotrophoblasts is limited by the level of HLA heavy chain mRNA.
...
PMID:Transcriptional control of HLA-A,B,C antigen in human placental cytotrophoblast isolated using trophoblast- and HLA-specific monoclonal antibodies and the fluorescence-activated cell sorter. 620 84

The synthetic phosphohexapeptides Arg-Arg-Ala-Thr(35P)-Val-Ala and Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser(32P)-Val-Ala, phosphorylated by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase and differing only in the nature of the phosphorylated residue, have been used as substrates of a partially purified rat liver protein phosphatase-T, distinct from the multifunctional protein phosphatase-1. While the phosphothreonyl hexapeptide is readily dephosphorylated (exhibiting a Km = 15 microM), the phosphoseryl one is almost unaffected. Such a behavior is not shared by protein phosphatase-1, calf intestine alkaline phosphatase, and potato acid phosphatase, all of which are more active on the phosphoseryl hexapeptide. The NH2-terminal basic residues critical for cAMP-dependent phosphorylation are not required in the dephosphorylation reaction, as both Arg can be removed without impairing the efficiency of protein phosphatase-T toward the phosphothreonyl peptide. On the other hand, the replacement of 2 Pro for the Ala and Val flanking Thr(32P), to give a new phosphohexapeptide reproducing the phosphorylated site of protein phosphatase inhibitor-1, prevents the protein phosphatase-T activity. Moreover, IgG heavy chain 32P labeled in tyrosine is not affected by protein phosphatase-T, while it is dephosphorylated by alkaline phosphatase. These results would indicate that protein phosphatase(s)-T represent a distinct class of protein phosphatases specifically involved in the dephosphorylation of phosphothreonyl residues fulfilling definite structural requirements.
...
PMID:Dephosphorylation of synthetic phosphopeptides by protein phosphatase-T, a phosphothreonyl protein phosphatase. 628 35


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>