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Query: EC:3.1.4.3 (
phospholipase C
)
18,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fibroblasts cultured from patients with various forms of neuronal
ceroid-lipofuscinosis
(NCL; Batten disease) showed variably decreasing cathepsin B activity with increasing passage number and months in culture in the presence of fetal calf serum. Cathepsin H activity and that of a wide range of lysosomal hydrolases was unaffected by these conditions. Cathepsin B activity was assayed either colorimetrically (N alpha-benzoyl-DL-Arg-beta-naphthylamide; BANA), fluorimetrically (Z-Arg-Arg-methylcoumarin), or autoradiographically, following NaDodSO4-12.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ([125]Tyr-Ala-Lys-Arg-CH2Cl) and was found to be lysosomal in localization. Fractionation of disrupted fibroblasts on a Percoll gradient showed evidence of abnormally buoyant lysosomes in some NCL patients, and these tended to be low in cathepsin B but rich in other lysosomal hydrolases. Our data do not support a primary defect in cathepsin B as the basic defect in NCL. However, a possible explanation for various studies implicating a protease defect in NCL is that cathepsin B was highly sensitive to inactivation by peroxides and aldehydes. Thus hydrogen peroxide (0.3 mM) or 4-hydroxynonenal (1 nM) inactivated cathepsin B without inhibiting cathepsin H or lysosomal hydrolases such as alpha-L-fucosidase. Since peroxides and 4-hydroxynonenal have been shown to accumulate in NCL tissue (despite apparently normal peroxidase activity), we tested the possibility of a defect in the removal of peroxidized lipids from phospholipids as the primary defect in NCL. The nociceptive peptide bradykinin (BK) normally initiates a cascade involving receptor-mediated
phospholipase C
activation and release of arachidonate and prostanoids from cultured skin fibroblasts. Release of [3H]arachidonate by BK was deficient in NCL fibroblasts, suggesting that the primary defect in NCL could involve the deficiency of a specific phospholipase A2 activity.
...
PMID:Abnormal cathepsin B activity in Batten disease. 314 18
Radioactive phosphatidyl choline substrates specifically labeled in the one position or two position fatty acid were used to establish conditions for the detection of acidic phospholipase A1, A2 and C activities in extracts of cultured human fibroblasts. Maximal activity was detected at a pH of 3.0, 4.0 and 5.0 respectively, suggesting that the enzymes are of lysosomal origin. None of the activities were stimulated or inhibited markedly by Ca2+ or EDTA. The A1 and A2 activities, but not the C activity, were inactivated by the sulfhydryl reactive Ellman reagent. All three enzyme activities were in the normal range for cultured fibroblasts which were deficient in acid lipase, indicating that these activities are not attributable to the acid lipase gene product. Phospholipase A activity was deficient in fibroblast extracts from patients with Niemann-Pick disease, types A, B and C. These data suggest either identity or a genetic relationship between sphingomyelinase and
phospholipase C
. The activities examined were within the normal range in fibroblasts from patients with
neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis
, sea blue histiocyte disease and selected uncharacterized degenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Acidic phospholipases in cultured human fibroblasts: deficiency of phospholipase C in Niemann-Pick disease. 678 96