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

Male Wistar rats received a low-protein (4.5% protein) diet during 30 days, and T-2-toxin was administered to them through a gastric tube, in a dose of 0.54 mg/kg, during 15 days. The results obtained showed activation of hepatic lysosomal enzymes (sulfatase A and B aryl and beta-glucosidase) and alkaline phosphatase, and to an essential suppression of enzymatic activity of peroxisomes - catalase, glycolate oxidase and D-amino acid oxidase. A sharp aggravation of the intoxication symptoms and pronounced intensification of changes in enzymatic activity in the liver, spleen, thymus and blood serum were recorded in the animals given T-2 toxin simultaneously with the low-protein diet.
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PMID:[Enzyme parameters in the evaluation of the combined effects of protein deficiency and T-2 mycotoxin]. 289 95

The mechanism by which various chemicals induce renal cystic disease is unknown. To examine the early events in cystogenesis the ultrastructure and biochemistry of liver and kidney were analyzed after the administration of a chemical that induces renal cyst formation. Special emphasis was placed on examining potential mechanisms that would account for the observed loss of extracellular proteoglycans. Renal cystic disease was chemically induced in rats by feeding 2-amino-4,5-diphenylthiazole (DPT) for up to 4 weeks. After 4 days of feeding, DPT had induced a 4-fold increase in total urine output relative to diet-restricted control groups. Both groups maintained, but did not gain, weight during the feeding schedule. Cyst formation was localized to the medullary collecting tubules. Relative to diet-restricted controls, rats fed DPT exhibited diminished renal and hepatic catalase activity, but elevated activity for UDP-glucuronosyltransferase. Medulla showed an increase in the specific activities of the enzymes galactosyltransferase and sulfatase B. These enzymological findings correlated with ultrastructural observations of a loss of peroxisomes, proliferation of endoplasmic reticulum and enlargement of the golgi apparatus. Serum and urinary levels of inorganic sulfate were significantly increased in DPT-fed rats relative to controls. Tissue levels of UDP-glucuronic acid and adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate were not depressed by DPT feeding. Thus, DPT-induced cyst formation and loss of staining for glycosaminoglycans does not involve gross depletions of UDP-glucuronic acid and adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate, mutual cosubstrates for Phase II drug conjugation reactions and glycosaminoglycan synthesis.
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PMID:Diphenylthiazole-induced changes in renal ultrastructure and enzymology: toxicologic mechanisms in polycystic kidney disease? 311 18

Mycobacterium smegmatis is a rapidly growing environmental species not considered a human pathogen. We identified 22 human isolates of M. smegmatis from Australia and the southern United States: 19 were from skin or soft-tissue infections, and none were from urine or the male genital tract. These isolates closely resembled Mycobacterium fortuitum, except for a negative three-day arylsulfatase test; growth at 43-45 C; a low semiquantitative catalase test; and, in 50% of isolates, a late-developing, yellow-to-orange pigment. The isolates were biochemically identical to four reference strains and the type strain of M. smegmatis. Isolates were resistant to isoniazid and rifampin but susceptible to ethambutol, doxycycline, sulfamethoxazole, ciprofloxacin, imipenem, and amikacin. Eleven patients treated on the basis of in vitro susceptibility tests responded well to therapy. The similarity of M. smegmatis to M. fortuitum and the failure to recognize that the former is an environmental species may have contributed to previous failures to recognize it as a human pathogen.
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PMID:Human disease due to Mycobacterium smegmatis. 339 20

Cat leprosy bacilli passaged in mice could be isolated on 1% Ogawa yolk medium. The isolated cat leprosy bacilli which were cultivated successively four times on 1% Ogawa yolk medium produced a leproma in mice. All characteristics of the isolated cat leprosy bacillus were the same as isolated murine leprosy bacillus, as follows: slow grower, light yellowish-white rough colony, production of much coproporphyrin on the medium, heat-resistant catalase negative, heat-resistant phosphatase negative, arylsulfatase negative, niacin negative, hydrolysis of Tween 80 negative, urease negative, nicotinamidase positive, pyrazinamidase positive, cytochrome b1 at 560 nm positive, cytochrome a2 at 630 nm positive, and cytochrome c at 550 nm negative. Cats are susceptible to both cat and murine leprosy bacilli; the bacilli produced a leproma in a newborn cat at 3 to 4 months and in an adult cat at 2 months after inoculation. Many globi of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) were observed in the histopathological sections and the smear preparations of the newborn cat's lepromas, especially in the necrotic areas of the lepromas. Many AFB and polymorphonuclear leukocytes were seen in the histopathological sections and the smear preparations of the adult cat's lepromas. These lepromas formed ulcers by autolysis and healed or absorbed without ulcer formation over the course of months. Large lepromas remained for a long time without ulcer formation and caseation in some cats. Secondary infections with cat and murine leprosy bacilli were done respectively to the right and left femoral subcutaneous regions of newborn cats carrying primary lepromas. After one month, granulomas in which many AFB were observed were produced in both infection sites. Cats are susceptible to infection with cat and murine leprosy bacilli; however, the bacilli did not invade progressively to internal organs or other subcutaneous areas. Cat leprosy bacilli which were passaged in the mouse are identical to murine leprosy bacilli.
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PMID:Identification of cat leprosy bacillus grown in mice. 354 48

Biochemical activities of 20 wild-type strains and of 2 laboratory strains of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis were evaluated. Biochemical activities evaluated were growth at 30 C, 37 C, and 42 C; production of urease, niacin, pyrazinamidase, arylsulfatase, and catalase; hydrolyzation of Tween 80; reduction of nitrate and tellurite; and growth in 5% NaCl. Antimicrobial susceptibility to thiophene-2-carboxylic acid hydrazide (10 micrograms/ml), neotetrazolium chloride (1:40,000), streptomycin (2 micrograms/ml), rifampin (0.25 micrograms/ml), and isoniazid (10 micrograms/ml) also was determined. Generally, M paratuberculosis was biochemically inactive, with only a few strains producing pyrazinamidase and maintaining catalase activity after heating. All strains grew optimally at 37 C, grew slightly at 30 C, and did not grow at 42 C. Wild-type strains did not grow in the presence of neotetrazolium chloride, streptomycin, and rifampin, and grew in the presence of thiophene-2-carboxylic acid hydrazide and isoniazid. Although biochemical evaluation can be used as an aid in the identification of M paratuberculosis, growth rate, and mycobactin dependency remain major criteria for positive identification.
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PMID:Biochemical characteristics of various strains of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. 374 Jun 13

Benzoyl- and isopentenoyl phosphoric triamides (BPA and IPA) strongly inhibited urease activities from jack bean, soybean, watermelon seed, Proteus mirabilis, P. rettgeri, P. vulgaris, Mycobacterium smegmatis, and Ureaplasma urealyticum. Their I50 values (the final concentration causing 50% inhibition), independent of enzyme source, were 2-21 nM, which are about 1,000-fold lower than that of caprylohydroxamic acid, one of the most potent urease inhibitors. ATP-urea amidolyase activity was inhibited 50% by BPA at a higher concentration of 0.28 mM, but was not affected by IPA even at 1.3 mM. Thirteen kinds of hydrolases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, thermolysin, leucine aminopeptidase, papain, lipase, alpha-amylase, glucuronidase, asparaginase, arylsulfatase, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, and true cholinesterase), two oxidoreductases (catalase and alcohol dehydrogenase), three transferases (glutamic-oxaloacetic aminotransferase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and arylsulfotransferase) and two kinases (pyruvate kinase and creatine kinase) were not affected at all even at 1 mM BPA and IPA. Exceptionally, pseudo-cholinesterase from human serum was inhibited by BPA and IPA, whose I50 values were 70 nM and 10 muM, respectively, using acetylthiocholine as a substrate. These values increased to 0.55 muM and 54 muM, respectively, when acetylcholine was used as a substrate. These results show that N-acylphosphoric triamides potently and specifically inhibit urease activity at concentrations of nM order.
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PMID:Specific inhibition of urease by N-acylphosphoric triamides. 384 42

The isolation of plasma membrane from human peripheral blood monocytes is described. Monocytes were isolated by centrifugal elutriation, to eliminate an adherence step, thus minimizing functional and surface antigenic alterations to the cells. Monocytes were surface-labelled with a radiolabelled monoclonal antibody, 125I-WVH-1, and then disrupted by nitrogen cavitation. Membranes were separated according to equilibrium buoyant density by isopycnic centrifugation on a sucrose gradient. The subcellular membranes were localized using marker enzymes for the plasma membrane, 5'-nucleotidase and leucine 2-naphthylamidase (leucine aminopeptidase), and for intracellular membranes: galactosyltransferase (Golgi), arylsulfatase C (endoplasmic reticulum), monoamine oxidase (mitochondria), catalase (peroxisomes), beta-hexosaminidase and beta-glucuronidase (lysosomal vesicles) and lactate dehydrogenase (cytosol). The monoclonal antibody 125I-WVH-1 was shown to label the plasma membrane, as judged by known markers, and represents a highly specific trace label, applicable to the use of plasma membrane as an immunogen for monoclonal antibody production. The NAD-splitting enzyme, NAD+ nucleosidase, was detected and its presence on the plasma membrane was demonstrated. The subcellular localization of non-specific esterase in human mononuclear phagocytes is controversial. No evidence was found for alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase activity on the plasma membrane or in lysosomal vesicles. However, a membrane-bound esterase in fractions with properties similar to the smooth endoplasmic reticulum was detected.
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PMID:Isolation of plasma membrane from human blood monocytes. Subcellular fractionation and marker distribution. 397 89

Using electron microscopy and cytochemical techniques we investigated structures which are associated with long-term hypertension and ageing in the myocardial cell of the rat. Lysosomes, demonstrated by acid phosphatase and aryl sulfatase activities, were found mainly in the perinuclear region in young rats. With age these organelles appeared with increasing frequency in other regions of the cell. Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) showed an earlier apparent migration of lysosomes than did normotensive rats (WKY). Our observations indicate that lysosomes were closely associated with autophagic vacuoles, membrane swirls , translucent mitochondria, myelin figures and other structures linked with degenerative events. In the oldest SHR lysosomes, autolysosomes (autophagic vacuoles with lysosomal activity), and degenerative structures were observed in various regions of the myocardial cell. Peroxisomes, as demonstrated by catalase activity, did not seem to be affected by hypertension or age. A number of dense osmophilic structures did not react for any of the enzymes studied; these included myelin figures, mitochondrial inclusions and diffuse dense bodies. Our observations implicate both ageing and hypertension in the enhancement of lysosomes and their end products.
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PMID:Cytochemistry of myocardial structures related to degenerative processes in spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive rats. 623 95

The aim of this work was to establish, on a quantitative basis, the subcellular distribution of the enzyme system that converts arachidonic acid into prostaglandin (PG) E2 in mouse resident peritoneal (MRP) macrophages. Kinetic studies were conducted on cell-free extracts derived from cells cultivated for 1 d, using [1-14C]arachidonic acid as substrate and measuring the label in PGE2 after extraction and thin layer chromatography. The activity was synergistically enhanced by L-adrenaline and reduced glutathione, inhibited by indomethacin, and linearly related to the concentration of the cell-free extract. It was labile at 0 degrees C in the medium used for homogenization and fractionation of the cells (half-life less than 2 h). Addition of catalase (0.15 mg/ml) to the suspension medium increased the initial activity (by congruent to 70%) and the stability (half-life congruent to 6 h) of the enzyme in cytoplasmic extracts. It enabled us to establish the density distribution after isopycnic centrifugation in a linear gradient of sucrose. The sample centrifuged consisted of untreated cytoplasmic extracts, or cytoplasmic extracts treated with digitonin and Na pyrophosphate. Comparison of the centrifugation behavior of PGE2 synthesis activity with that of various enzymes used as reference for the major subcellular entities has revealed that PGE2 synthesis fairly fits the density profile of sulfatase C in each case. The conclusion is that at least the rate-limiting reaction in the conversion of arachidonic acid into PGE2 is catalyzed by an enzyme associated with the endoplasmic reticulum.
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PMID:Subcellular localization of the PGE2 synthesis activity in mouse resident peritoneal macrophages. 642 Apr 97

The characteristics of an unclassified Mycobacterium sp. isolated from three patients with Crohn's disease are presented. The organism is extremely fastidious and mycobactin dependent and may require up to 18 months of incubation for primary isolation. Colony morphology is rough. Characteristics are unlike those of any presently defined species. The isolates produced postive niacin, catalase, and 2-week arylsulfatase reactions and were susceptible to neotetrazolium chloride (1:40,000), streptomycin (2 micrograms/ml), and rifampin (0.25 micrograms/ml). Chromogenicity, nitrate reduction, quantitative catalase, Tween hydrolysis, urease, tellurite reduction, pyrazinamidase, and 3-day arylsulfatase tests were negative, and the isolates were resistant to thiophene-2-carboxylic acid hydrazide (10 micrograms/ml) and isoniazid (10 micrograms/ml). Optimum growth in broth was determined to be in 7H9 medium with Dubos oleic albumin complex, Tween 80, and mycobactin J at 37 degrees C without CO2 or agitation and in low medium depth. This Mycobacterium sp. may be a subspecies or biovariant of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis, or it may represent a new species of Mycobacterium. It is suggested that this Mycobacterium sp. may play an etiological role in some cases of Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Characteristics of an unclassified Mycobacterium species isolated from patients with Crohn's disease. 651 78


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