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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.5 (
5'-nucleotidase
)
3,167
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of the phenothiazine, Stelazine, on Hymenolepis diminuta were investigated. The cestode was incubated for 10 min at 37 degrees C with 1 mM trifluoperazine, in the presence and absence of
Ca2+
. Assay of brush border enzymes showed that drug treatment lowered the activities of alkaline phosphatase,
Ca2+
-ATP'ase,
5'-nucleotidase
and type 1 phosphodiesterase. This occurred in parallel with a significant reduction in tegumental protein. Under these conditions gross changes in ultrastructural appearance and cellular organization were observed. There was a lack of ordered microtriches and the distal cytoplasm was absent. Glycogen granules were scattered throughout the cytoplasm within the subtegumental layer. The connective tissue also appeared to be in some disarray. The effects of Stelazine appeared to be dependent on time and were significantly increased when
Ca2+
was included in the incubation medium. Incubation with the less hydrophobic phenothiazine trifluoperazine sulphoxide had minimal effect on the integrity of the cestode. The results reported here support the premise that certain phenothiazines may be considered as potential cestocidal agents.
...
PMID:Biochemical and ultrastructural investigation of the effect of Stelazine (trifluoperazine) on Hymenolepis diminuta (Cestoda). 302 50
Ectoenzyme release from porcine intestinal brush border membranes by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C of Bacillus thuringiensis was studied. Alkaline phosphodiesterase I, alkaline phosphatase and
5'-nucleotidase
were released from both slices and brush border membranes. The pattern of alkaline phosphodiesterase I release was the same as that of alkaline phosphatase. The release of alkaline phosphodiesterase I induced by phospholipase C was dependent on, or proportional to, the reaction time and the concentration of phospholipase C. The Arrhenius plot for phosphodiesterase I release showed a single break at 30 degrees C for brush border membranes. Only 40% of alkaline phosphodiesterase I present in the brush border membranes were solubilized by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C treatment. The data indicate the presence of two forms of phosphodiesterase I, which are different in their sensitivity to phospholipase C. The released alkaline phosphodiesterase I had a molecular weight of 240,000 and was activated by Mg2+ and
Ca2+
, but strongly inhibited by EDTA.
...
PMID:Alkaline phosphodiesterase I release from eucaryotic plasma membranes by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. II. The release from brush border membranes of porcine intestine. 302
To investigate whether slow
Ca2+
channel blockers protect against development of changes in properties of the sarcolemma and in the tissue ultrastructure during myocardial ischemia, nifedipine was administered prior to occlusion (up to 3 hours) of the left anterior descending coronary artery in anesthetized pigs. Intravenous doses which reduced arterial blood pressure by 20-25%, had no effect on the time-dependent reduction of
Ca2+
-calmodulin and cyclic AMP-dependent 32P incorporation into sarcolemmal phospholamban-like protein. Nifedipine blocked the reduction in the activity of sarcolemmal
5'-nucleotidase
. Nifedipine had no significant effect on the long-chain fatty acylcarnitine accumulation in sarcolemma. A marked delay in the appearance of ultrastructural indicators of irreversible tissue injury in subepicardial myocardium was observed, when nifedipine was infused. Particularly the reduced appearance of electron-dense bodies in mitochondria suggested a reducing effect of nifedipine on cellular net gain of
Ca2+
. Apparently, ischemia-induced loss of the ability of the proteinkinases to incorporate phosphate into sarcolemmal phospholamban-like protein is not a process secondary to
Ca2+
overload of the myocardium. The involvement of accumulation of long-chain fatty acylcarnitine within the sarcolemma may also be excluded. The membrane defect as indicated by a change in phosphorylation-mediated control of
Ca2+
transport may itself be associated with the development of ischemia (-reperfusion)-induced
Ca2+
overload.
...
PMID:The effect of nifedipine on ischemia-induced changes in the biochemical properties of isolated sarcolemmal vesicles and the ultrastructure of myocardium. 303 May 20
Cholesteryl esterase activities were determined in homogenates of rat heart (ventricles), isolated,
calcium
-tolerant, cardiac myocytes and aortic tissue and were compared with acid and neutral triglyceride lipase activities in these fractions. Using cholesteryl oleate/phosphatidylcholine/taurocholate emulsions and digitonin pretreatment of the enzyme fractions, acid and neutral cholesteryl esterase activities were measured in all tissue preparations. In contrast to the acid and neutral triglyceridase and acid cholesteryl esterase activity, the neutral cholesteryl esterase activity was subject to substrate inhibition. Upon isolation of cardiac myocytes, and in contrast with the recovery of neutral triglyceride lipase activity, only a small portion of the neutral cholesteryl esterase (6%) was recovered, suggesting that nonmyocyte neutral cholesteryl esterase activity markedly contributes to the relatively high activity detectable in whole ventricular homogenates. The recovery of large amounts of neutral cholesteryl esterase activity in the supernatant of collagenase-digested heart tissue, obtained during the isolation of myocytes, which is also markedly enriched in activities of two endothelial marker enzymes (
5'-nucleotidase
and angiotensine-converting enzyme) may indicate the predominant contribution of neutral cholesteryl esterase activity from coronary endothelial cells to this activity detectable in ventricular homogenates. Relative to the activity in ventricular and myocyte homogenates, aorta homogenates possessed the highest specific neutral cholesteryl esterase activity. We propose that in addition to coronary endothelium, smooth muscle cells also contribute to the neutral cholesteryl esterase activity in ventricular homogenates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cholesteryl esterase activities in ventricles, isolated heart cells and aorta of the rat. 303 10
The effect upon human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) binding of a 90-min incubation of plasma membranes prepared from the corpora lutea of control and prostaglandin F2 alpha injected rats was studied. After incubation for 90 min with 1 mM CaCl2 at 40 degrees C, single point hCG binding assays at room temperature revealed a significant decrease in the degree of binding of approximately 50% in membrane samples prepared from regressed corpora lutea. The binding decrease in regressed samples did not occur if the incubation temperature was reduced to 35 degrees C or if
calcium
ion was replaced with magnesium. Scatchard analyses indicated that the decrease in binding capacity was the result of a loss of gonadotropin receptors rather than an affinity shift. Specific activities of two membrane-bound enzymes (Na+-K+ ATPase,
5'-nucleotidase
) did not change in a correlative fashion during the incubation. In previous studies the same in vitro conditions caused a substantial and significant decrease in membrane fluidity, as determined by fluorescence polarization. Thus it appears that the membrane rigidification is of a specific nature and interferes with gonadotropin binding during luteolysis.
...
PMID:Impairment of gonadotropin binding occurs during membrane rigidification in plasma membrane samples prepared from regressed rat corpora lutea. 316 13
Muscle biopsies from six horses with clinical histories of muscle atrophy, muscle tremors, myopathic symptoms, unsteadiness of pelvic limbs and progressive ataxia were examined. Muscle biopsies were studied with enzyme histochemical techniques to evaluate the diagnostic values of these methods in cases suspected of suffering from neuromuscular disorders. Hypertrophy, atrophy, fibre splitting, waxy degeneration, phagocytosis and necrosis were seen in haematoxylin eosin stained sections of the different cases. Fibre type predominance and fibre type grouping were seen in the
calcium
ion stimulated myosine ATP-ase (Ca-ATP-ase) stained sections of some cases. 'Moth-eaten fibres' were demonstrated in three cases by staining with NADH: nitro blue tetrazolium oxidoreductase (NADH-TR), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), NADH dependent malate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase and by lactate dehydrogenase. The catabolic enzymes, acid phosphatase (ACP) and
5'-nucleotidase
were active in cases with fibre phagocytosis. The oxidative part of the pentose phosphate pathway in myopathic tissue seemed to be important in three cases, demonstrated by the increased activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGDH). The important feature of diseased horse muscle was that the pathohistochemical changes were exactly the same as in diseased skeletal muscles of humans. The application of tissue saving enzyme histochemical techniques can be recommended in the study of muscle tissue from horses suffering from suspected neuromuscular disorders.
...
PMID:Enzyme histochemistry on muscle biopsies as an aid in the diagnosis of diseases of the equine neuromuscular system: a study of six cases. 336 6
An enzyme activity capable of degrading the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol membrane anchor of cell-surface proteins has previously been reported in a number of mammalian tissues. The experiments reported here demonstrate that this anchor-degrading activity is also abundant in mammalian plasma. The activity was inhibited by EGTA or 1,10-phenanthroline. It was capable of removing the anchor from alkaline phosphatase,
5'-nucleotidase
, and variant surface glycoprotein but had little or not activity toward phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidic acid was the only 3H-labeled product when this enzyme hydrolyzed [3H]myristate-labeled variant surface glycoprotein. It could be distinguished from the
Ca2+
-dependent inositol phospholipid-specific phospholipase C activity in several rat tissues on the basis of its molecular size and its sensitivity to 1,10-phenanthroline. The data therefore suggest that this activity is due to a phospholipase D with specificity for glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol structures. Although the precise physiological function of this anchor-specific phospholipase D remains to be determined, these findings indicate that it could play an important role in regulating the expression and release of cell-surface proteins in vivo.
...
PMID:A phospholipase D specific for the phosphatidylinositol anchor of cell-surface proteins is abundant in plasma. 342 94
A membrane fraction enriched in plasma membrane marker enzymes K+-dependent p-nitrophenyl phosphatase,
5'-nucleotidase
and alkaline phosphatase was prepared from rat parotid glands using Percoll self-forming gradient. This fraction contained an ATP-dependent CA2+ transport system which was distinct from those located on the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria of parotid glands. The Km for ATP was 0.57 +/- 0.07 mM (n = 3). Nucleotides other than ATP such as ADP, AMP, GTP, CTP, UTP or ITP were unable to support significant
Ca2+
uptake. ATP-dependent
Ca2+
uptake displayed sigmoidal kinetics with respect to free
Ca2+
concentration with a Hill coefficient of 2.02. The K0.5 for
Ca2+
was 44 +/- 3.1 nM (n = 3) and the average Vmax was 13.5 +/- 1.1 nmol/min per mg of protein. The pH optimum was 7.2. Trifluorperazine inhibited
Ca2+
transport with half maximal inhibition observed at 30.8 microM. Complete inhibition was observed at 70 microM trifluorperazine. Exogenous calmodulin however had no effect on the rate of transport. Na+ and K+ ions activated
Ca2+
transport at 20 to 30 mM ion concentrations. Higher concentrations of Na+ or K+ were inhibitory.
...
PMID:Characterisation of an ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport system in a plasma membrane enriched fraction from rat parotid. 345 46
Plasma membrane vesicles isolated from rat liver exhibited an azide-insensitive Mg2+-ATP-dependent
Ca2+
pump which accumulated
Ca2+
at a rate of 5.1 +/- 0.5 nmol of
calcium
/mg of protein/min and reached a total accumulation of 33.2 +/- 2.6 nmol of
calcium
/mg of protein in 20 microM
Ca2+
at 37 degrees C. Equiosmotic addition of 50 mM Na+ resulted in a loss of accumulated
calcium
. Measurement of Mg2+-ATP-dependent
Ca2+
uptake in the presence of 50 mM Na+ revealed no effect of Na+ on the initial rate of
Ca2+
uptake, but a decrease in the total accumulation. The half-maximal effect of Na+ on
Ca2+
accumulation was achieved at 14 mM. The
Ca2+
efflux rate constant in the absence of Na+ was 0.16 +/- 0.01 min-1, whereas the efflux rate constant in the presence of 50 mM Na+ was 0.25 +/- 0.02 min-1. Liver homogenate sedimentation fractions from 1,500 to 105,000 X g were assayed for azide-insensitive Mg2+-ATP-dependent
Ca2+
accumulation. Na+-sensitive
Ca2+
uptake activity was found to specifically co-sediment with the plasma membrane-associated enzymes,
5'-nucleotidase
and Na+/K+-ATPase, whereas Na+-insensitive
Ca2+
uptake was found to co-sediment with the endoplasmic reticulum-associated enzyme, glucose-6-phosphatase. The plasma membrane
Ca2+
pump was also distinguished from the endoplasmic reticulum
Ca2+
pump by its sensitivity to inhibition by vanadate. Half-maximal inhibition of plasma membrane
Ca2+
uptake occurred at 0.8 microM VO4(3-), whereas half-maximal inhibition of microsomal
Ca2+
uptake occurred at 40 microM.
...
PMID:Liver plasma membrane calcium transport. Evidence for a Na+-dependent Ca2+ flux. 348 13
Specific binding of tritiated quinuclidinyl benzilate (3H-QNB) to surface membrane muscarinic receptors was utilized to identify plasma membrane (PM) fractions from smooth muscle of the rabbit urinary bladder. Accumulation of 3H-QNB in the PM fraction was 4-5-fold higher than that in fractions of endoplasmic reticulum (EM) or mitochondria (M). A similar pattern of distribution was found for
5'-nucleotidase
. 3H-QNB binding therefore appears to be a suitable marker for plasma membrane of the urinary bladder. Data on ATP-dependent
calcium
uptake by PM and ER fractions showed that oxalate highly potentiated
calcium
uptake by both fractions and consequently this feature cannot be used to identify ER fractions specifically.
...
PMID:Use of 3H-QNB in the isolation of plasma membrane from smooth muscle of the urinary bladder: effect of oxalate on calcium uptake by the membrane fractions. 372 Sep 12
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