Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.6.1 (sulfatase)
3,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A sulfatase acting upon chondroitin sulfate polymers, free of beta-glucuronidase and beta-N-acetylhexosaminidases, was isolated from extracts of the mollusc Anomalocardia brasiliana. The enzyme totally desulfates both chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfates without concomitant depolymerization of the compounds. It has no activity upon heparan sulfate, heparin, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate disaccharides. It shows a pH of 5.0 and a temperature of 37 degrees C for optimum activity with a Km of 4 x 10(-5) M. The sulfatase is inhibited by sulfate and phosphate ions and HgCl2. The latter inhibition is reverted by sodium tetrathionate. Contrary to the sulfatases described so far the enzyme is activated by the lactone of D-saccharic acid when in the presence of beta-glucuronidase and beta-N-acetylgalactosaminidase. Several experiments indicate that the sulfatase is the first enzyme in the sequential degradation of chondroitin sulfate in the mollusc. This differs from the pathway of degradation of this compound in vertebrates and bacteria.
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PMID:Sequential degradation of chondroitin sulfate in molluscs. Desulfation of chondroitin sulfate without prior depolymerization by a novel sulfatase from Anomalocardia brasiliana. 212 69

Two monoclonal antibodies (10C10 and 4D5) have been developed from the spleen cells of Balb/c mice immunized with 6-aminobenzo[a]pyrene covalently coupled to bovine serum albumin. These antibodies have been used in an immunoassay for the detection of benzo[a]pyrene and its metabolites in mouse urine. The antibodies were characterized in terms of sensitivity and specificity by competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). With both antibodies, 50% inhibition of antibody binding is at 4 pmol of BP. The antibodies also cross-react with a number of BP metabolites as well as with several other polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) including pyrene, 1-aminopyrene, and 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene but with different sensitivities. These results suggest that this assay will detect multiple PAH metabolites in urine. To test the assay on biological samples, mice were treated with [3H]BP, and urine was collected and digested with beta-glucuronidase and aryl sulfatase. Several methods were used to isolate BP and its metabolites from the urine, including ethyl acetate extraction, Sep-pak C18 cartridge chromatography, XAD2 resin chromatography, and immunoaffinity chromatography with antibody 4D5. Analysis of the urine extracts with antibody 4D5 gave 50% inhibition at 12-15 pmol of metabolites. Thus, quantitation of metabolites in this sample by competitive ELISA against a standard curve of BP would have underestimated actual metabolite levels by about 70%. This assay will be applied to the analysis of urines from individuals with environmental or occupational exposure. Since humans are usually exposed to BP in complex mixtures of PAHs, multiple metabolites may be present in the urine, making absolute quantitation difficult. This assay should thus serve as a general indicator of exposure to this class of chemicals.
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PMID:Immunologic methods for the detection of benzo[a]pyrene metabolites in urine. 213 77

Triggering of eosinophil secretory and cytotoxic functions by stimulation of the IgG and IgE FcR is thought to have major importance in the pathophysiology of tissue eosinophilia. We studied the ability of human rIL-4 to regulate this triggering event in human eosinophils. At doses ranging from 0.1 to 10 pg/ml, IL-4 suppressed eosinophil secretion of beta-glucuronidase and arylsulfatase by up to 65% after stimulation with IgG-coated Sepharose beads. This effect required prolonged preincubation (16 h) of eosinophils with IL-4; no effect was detected after 1 h preincubation. Enzyme secretion stimulated by IgE-coated beads was not affected. Further, IL-4 (after 16 h preincubation), suppressed eosinophil antibody-dependent killing of schistosomula (Schistosoma mansoni) targets by 24 to 39% in four experiments (p less than 0.05). Flow microfluorimetry analysis showed that IL-4 reduced the expression of IgG FcR, but not IgE FcR, suggesting that this mechanism underlies the suppression of IgG-mediated secretion. Taken collectively, these results demonstrate a mechanism for T lymphocyte suppression of IgG-stimulated eosinophil functions via IL-4.
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PMID:Inhibition of IgG-triggered human eosinophil function by IL-4. 213 96

Milk and plasma levels of zearalenone (ZEN), alpha-zearalenol (alpha-ZEL), beta-zearalenol (beta-ZEL) and conjugated metabolites were determined after feeding lactating cows with ZEN. In those instances where ZEN and alpha- and beta-ZEL were detected in milk or plasma, they occurred only as conjugates hydrolysable by treatment with a mixture of beta-glucuronidase and aryl sulfatase. With studies where 50 or 165 mg was fed daily to three cows for 21 day periods, neither dosage showed the presence of ZEN or metabolites in either milk or plasma (detection limits: milk, 0.5 ng/ml, ZEN, alpha-ZEL; 1.5 ng/ml, beta-ZEL; plasma, 2-3 times higher). A dose of 544.5 mg zearalenone per day given to a single cow for 21 days yielded maximum concentrations of only 2.5 ng ZEN/ml and 3.0 ng alpha-ZEL/ml in the milk. In plasma, up to 3 ng ZEN/ml could be detected during the initial 4 days of treatment. At a dose of 1.8 g of zearalenone given over a one day feeding period, maximum milk levels of 4.0 ng ZEN/ml, 1.5 ng alpha-ZEL/ml, and 4.1 ng beta-ZEL/ml were observed during the initial 2 days; corresponding maximum levels after a one day dose of 6.0 g zearalenone were 6.1, 4.0 and 6.6 ng/ml milk on days 2-3. In plasma, peak ZEN concentrations (9 and 13 ng/ml at the lower and higher one-day doses, respectively) occurred 12 hr after initial dosing, and declined to negligible levels by days 5-7. Neither alpha- nor beta-ZEL were detected in plasma. Since measurable levels required very high oral doses of ZEN, milk would not normally pose a human health hazard as a result of feeding rations containing ZEN to lactating dairy cows.
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PMID:Minimal transmission of zearalenone to milk of dairy cows. 214 Mar 83

We briefly review some biochemical aspects of benign breast disease (BBD), mainly focusing on free and conjugate estrogen content of breast cyst fluid (BCF), also in relation to cyst type. Evidence is reported that high K(+)-type I-cysts clearly associate with low Cl- levels and accumulate significantly higher quantities of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHAS) and estrone-3-sulfate (E1S). In spite of the limited number of cases, both increasing DHAS and E1S levels correlate with the increment of K+ to Na+ ratio. A positive correlation was also found between DHAS and E1S. Using electrochemical detection (ECD) on-line to high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in the reverse phase mode, we also studied the free estrogen profile. We observed that in type I BCF there are significantly increased amounts of free estrone (E1). The E1S to E1 ratio was significantly different in the two cyst subpopulations; again, a positive correlation was found between free and sulfated E1 (r = 0.820, p less than 10(-6). This last, together with other experimental observations, allows us to hypothesize that in BCF a main pathway of steroids should be E1S----E1. Besides, high specific activity of sulfatase, as well as beta-glucuronidase enzymes, has been demonstrated for BBD. Preliminary information is also reported concerning the BCF pattern of free estrogens, including the highly polar ones, i.e., catecholestrogens (CCE) and the parent methoxy (MeO) conjugates, which represent, in BCF, a predominant portion of all free estrogens. Both CCE levels and ratios appear unevenly distributed in the two different cyst types. In addition, some BCFs show very high concentrations of 16 alpha-OH-E1. Further studies are needed to answer the main question: whether estrogen patterns could represent additive parameters to further categorize breast cystic disease (BCD) or whether they are of minor interest to determine patients' risk of developing breast cancer.
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PMID:Steroid patterns of benign breast disease. 214 55

Following analysis by reversed-phase HPLC, a previously uncharacterized metabolite of 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) was found in the urine of A/J mice treated with NNK. Treatment with beta-glucuronidase converted the metabolite to a peak that co-eluted with 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL). Treatment with sulfatase or beta-glucuronidase plus saccharic acid 1,4-lactone did not change the retention time of the metabolite. These data suggested that the unknown metabolite was a glucuronic acid conjugate of NNAL. Upon isolation and purification of larger quantities of the metabolite from the urine of A/J mice, CD-1 mice and F344 rats, 1H and 13C NMR and MS confirmed that the unknown metabolite was 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butyl beta-D-glucopyranosiduronic acid (NNAL Glu). To determine the quantitative relationship between NNK dose and NNAL Glu production and to compare the importance of glucuronidation relative to other metabolic pathways, [5-3H]NNK was administered to F344 rats and A/J mice at doses of 500-0.005 mumol/kg. At 500 mumol/kg, NNAL Glu accounted for 22% of the total urinary excretion of NNK in A/J mice, and for 8% in F344 rats 48 h after dosing. The proportions of excreted glucuronide and NNAL decreased with diminishing doses of NNK, yielding undetectable levels of each metabolite in both mice and rats at a dose of 0.005 mumol/kg NNK. Since substantial amounts of metabolites formed via alpha-hydroxylation and N-oxidation pathways were observed at the lower doses of NNK, these data demonstrate that NNAL glucuronidation is a quantitatively unimportant metabolic pathway at low doses of NNK.
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PMID:Characterization of a glucuronide metabolite of 4-(methyl-nitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) and its dose-dependent excretion in the urine of mice and rats. 220 95

The metabolism of scopolamine and glycopyrrolate was studied in 11 healthy parturients undergoing cesarean section. After a single intramuscular injection of scopolamine (5 micrograms/kg, n = 7) or glycopyrrolate (6 micrograms/kg, n = 4), the concentrations of the drugs in the urine were determined up to 8-12 h using a radioreceptor assay. This assay measures scopolamine and glycopyrrolate with their possible active metabolites. The effect of beta-glucuronidase and sulfatase incubation on the drug concentrations was also studied. The concentrations of scopolamine and/or its active metabolites were on the average 7 times higher after incubation indicating that beta-glucuronide or sulfate conjugation is an important metabolic pathway for scopolamine. On the contrary, the glycopyrrolate concentrations increased only slightly between 1 and 3 hours after the drug injection. Thus, beta-glucuronide or sulfate conjugation plays only a minor part in the metabolism of glycopyrrolate.
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PMID:beta-Glucuronide and sulfate conjugation of scopolamine and glycopyrrolate. 227 10

The metabolism of [3H]benzo[a]pyrene (BP) and (-)-trans-[14C]7,8-dihydroxy-7,8-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BP-7,8-diol) was studied in freshly isolated hepatocytes of the wild benthic fish, brown bullhead (Ictalurus nebulosus). Bullhead hepatocytes incubated with 40 microM [3H]BP for 1 h metabolized BP to water soluble metabolites which were separated on silica gel t.l.c. plates to reveal conjugates with glucuronic acid, glutathione, and sulfate (51%, 14% and 4% of total metabolites, respectively). Additional metabolites that were extractable with ethyl acetate were separated by reversed phase HPLC to reveal only two major metabolites: BP-9,10-dihydrodiol and BP-7,8-diol (13% and 2.6% of total metabolites, respectively). Hepatocytes isolated from individual fish displayed an 11-fold variability in the rates at which they metabolized BP (756 +/- 167 pmol x mg dry wt-1 x h-1), which correlated negatively (r = -0.7, P less than 0.01) with an 18-fold variability in the glycogen content of the cells. Hepatocytes isolated from the same fish, in parallel incubations under the same optimum conditions, metabolized BP-7,8-diol 4.5-fold faster than they metabolized BP. The variability in the rate of BP-7,8-diol metabolism was about 7-fold. Major metabolites included glutathione conjugates, glucuronides and sulfates (35%, 25% and 30% of total metabolites, respectively). These conjugates, like those formed from BP, were degradable with gamma-glutamyltransferase, beta-glucuronidase and arylsulfatase, respectively. Ethyl acetate extractable metabolites were predominantly isomeric benzo-ring tetrahydrotetrols (9% of total metabolites). In summary, this study indicates that during short-term incubations bull-head hepatocytes metabolize BP and BP-7,8-diol primarily to conjugated derivatives. The usefulness of thin-layer chromatography for the convenient determination of the rate of BP-7,8-diol metabolism is demonstrated.
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PMID:Metabolism of benzo[a]pyrene and (-)-trans-benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-dihydrodiol by freshly isolated hepatocytes of brown bullheads. 232 50

Kinetic studies of the histochemical and histoenzymatic behavior of rabbit pancreatic parenchymas were performed 5, 30 and 90 days after Wirsung duct ligation. In control pancreas, some enzyme activities (EA) were more prominent in Langerhans islets [glucose-6-phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (DH), isocitrate DH, glycerol-3-phosphate DH, NADPH DH], others were strongly marked in acini and ducts (alkaline phosphatase, beta-glucuronidase, acid esterase aryl-sulfatase). Histochemical and enzyme abnormalities observed in experimental rabbits reflect the post-ligation degenerative and reactive processes in both exocrine and endocrine pancreas: (1) the decrease in Krebs cycle and pentose pathway linked EA and the increased lysosomal and acid phosphatase EA reflect early (day 5) degeneration and necrosis of islets and acini (day 30); (2) proliferative processes in developed ductal epithelia are shown by an increase in both glycolytic and lysosomal EA (days 30 and 90); (3) connective tissue neogenesis and interstitial fibrosis occurred as shown by activated beta-glucuronidase, aryl-sulfatase, alkaline phosphatase and increased ribonucleoproteins and glycoaminoglycans contents (day 30); (4) on day 90, the neoformed cell clusters presenting glucose-6-phosphatase positivity (B-cell marker) are seen in the pancreas remnant. At the same time, blood insulin level increases correlated with a decrease of hyperglycemia.
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PMID:Cell features in pancreas of prediabetic and diabetic rabbits after Wirsung duct ligation. Histochemical and histoenzymatic studies. 233 24

After oral administration of gomisin A (1) to rats, the bile and urine were collected and treated with beta-glucuronidase and arylsulfatase. Seven metabolites, met B (2), met A-III (3), met E (4), met D (5), met F (6), met G (7), and met H (8) were isolated from the bile treated with the enzymes. Eight metabolites 2-8, and met A-II (9) were isolated from the urine treated with the enzymes. A major metabolite 2, and two minor metabolites 3 and 9 were identified as met B, met A-III, and met A-II, respectively, which are oxidative products of 1 formed by rat liver S9 mix. The structures of five new metabolites 4-7, and 8 were determined on the basis of chemical and spectral studies.
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PMID:Studies on the metabolism of gomisin A (TJN-101). II. Structure determination of biliary and urinary metabolites in rat. 233 37


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