Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils' chemotaxis, surface charge, superoxide anions generation, NBT (nitro blue tetrazolium) reduction and intracellular
lysozyme
, and
beta-glucuronidase
content were estimated in patients with type I diabetes mellitus in a similar state of metabolic control. The chemotaxis of diabetic cells toward bacterial chemotactic factors was similar to controls, whereas migration toward complement-derived chemoattractants was significantly reduced. Polymorphonuclear neutrophils isolated from diabetic patients, when unstimulated, produced significantly greater amounts of superoxide anions and reduced NBT more efficiently. They also revealed reduced surface charge and lower intracellular content of
lysozyme
, whereas
beta-glucuronidase
content was similar to controls. The results obtained seem to indicate that neutrophils in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes manifest signs of being in the activated state. The possible mechanisms of such stimulation are discussed.
...
PMID:Evidence of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) activation in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 282 47
Sphingoid long-chain bases (sphinganine and sphingosine) have recently been shown to inhibit protein kinase C both in vitro [Y. Hannun et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12604-12609] and in intact human neutrophils, in which they block activation of the superoxide-generating respiratory burst [E. Wilson et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12616-12623]. In the present study we have used sphingosine to investigate the pathways for agonist-induced secretion of neutrophil granule contents. Induction of secretion of the specific granule component lactoferrin by a variety of agonists [phorbol 12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA), formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP), and calcium ionophore A23187] was completely inhibited by sphingosine with an ED50 of 6 to 10 microM. PMA-induced secretion of
lysozyme
(present in both the azurophilic and specific granules) was completely blocked with an ED50 of 10 microM, whereas fMLP-induced secretion was only about 50% inhibited. Secretion of the azurophilic granule proteins
beta-glucuronidase
and myeloperoxidase was activated by fMLP and A23187, but not by PMA, and was not affected by sphingosine. The use of A23187 in the presence of sphingosine allowed differentiation between calcium activation of protein kinase C-dependent versus-independent pathways. The effect of sphingosine was not mediated by neutralizing intracellular acidic compartments, since treatment of neutrophils with inhibitory concentrations of sphingosine did not significantly alter the uptake of labeled methylamine. We conclude that at least two mechanisms participate in the regulation of specific and azurophilic granule secretion, respectively: a protein kinase C-dependent pathway and a calcium-dependent pathway which does not involve protein kinase C.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C inhibition by sphingoid long-chain bases: effects on secretion in human neutrophils. 282 97
Studies were made on the effects of baicalein (5,6,7-trihydroxyflavone) on leukotrienes B4 and C4 biosyntheses and degranulation induced by calcium ionophore A23187 (A23187) in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Baicalein inhibited A23187-induced biosynthesis of leukotrienes B4 and C4 in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. The concentration of baicalein required for 50% inhibition (IC50) of leukotrienes B4 and C4 formations was 1.46.10(-6) and 6.00.10(-7) M, respectively, using 1.0 microgram/ml of A23187. In addition, baicalein dose-dependently inhibited
beta-glucuronidase
and
lysozyme
releases induced by A23187, leukotriene B4 plus cytochalasin B and platelet-activating factor plus cytochalasin B. Furthermore, baicalein was found to inhibit dose-dependently Ca2+ uptake into the cells and Ca2+ mobilization from the intracellular stores.
...
PMID:Effects of baicalein on leukotriene biosynthesis and degranulation in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 282 95
Protein I, the major outer membrane protein of Neisseria gonorrhoeae, is a voltage-dependent anion channel which can translocate from the gonococcus into human cells. Since granule exocytosis from neutrophils is regulated by ion fluxes, we examined the effect of protein I on neutrophil activation. Pretreatment with protein I (250 nM) impaired degranulation from neutrophils:
beta-glucuronidase
release decreased to 27 +/- 6% S.E. of cells treated with N-f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP, 0.1 microM) and to 13 +/- 4% of cells treated with leukotriene B4 (LTB4, 0.1 microM);
lysozyme
release decreased to 52 +/- 17% of fMLP-treated cells and 22 +/- 9% of LTB4-treated cells. Morphometric analysis was consistent: control neutrophils increased their surface membrane after fMLP (43.3 +/- 5.6 microns relative perimeter versus 71.4 +/- 3.7 microns) while protein I-treated neutrophils did not (29.4 +/- 2 (S.E.) microns relative perimeter versus 34 +/- 4 microns). Enzyme release after exposure to phorbol myristate acetate was not affected (
lysozyme
: 86 +/- 27% of control). Cell/cell aggregation in response to fMLP was inhibited by treatment with protein I. However, generation of O2 was not affected. Protein I altered the surface membrane potential (Oxonol V): protein I evoked a transient membrane hyperpolarization which was not inhibited by furosemide. After exposure to fMLP, protein I-treated neutrophils underwent a furosemide-sensitive hyperpolarization rather than the usual depolarization. Protein I did not alter increments in [Ca]i (Fura-2) stimulated by fMLP (460 +/- 99 nM (S.E.) versus 377 +/- 44 nM) nor decrements in [pH]i (7.22 +/- 0.04 S.E. versus 7.22 +/- 0.02, bis-(carboxy-ethyl)carboxyfluorescein). The results suggest that degranulation and O2 generation have separate ionic requirements and that protein I interrupts the activation sequence proximal to activation of protein kinase C.
...
PMID:Protein I, a translocatable ion channel from Neisseria gonorrhoeae, selectively inhibits exocytosis from human neutrophils without inhibiting O2- generation. 282 69
The data presented here demonstrate that recombinant human tumour necrosis factor beta (rHuTNF beta; lymphotoxin) is a neutrophil modulator. The lymphokine inhibited the locomotion of neutrophils and augmented the neutrophil oxygen-dependent respiratory burst in response to N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine (FMLP) and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), as measured by their capacity to produce chemiluminescence, H2O2 and superoxide. The effects on the respiratory burst occurred at a tenth of the concentration of TNF beta required to inhibit locomotion. After incubation with TNF beta, the neutrophils could be washed without any reduction in their capacity to show augmented responses. The TNF beta enhanced granule enzyme (
lysozyme
and
beta-glucuronidase
) release of neutrophils stimulated with cytochalasin B-FMLP.
...
PMID:Tumour necrosis factor beta (lymphotoxin) inhibits locomotion and stimulates the respiratory burst and degranulation of neutrophils. 283 16
The effects of several antioxidants on the three major functions of human neutrophils--oxidative burst, secretion and leukotriene formation--were investigated with special emphasis on the lipophilicity. The most striking differences were obtained when ascorbate and the lipophilic ester ascorbyl palmitate were compared. As expected, the luminol- and lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence was inhibited by all antioxidants to a different degree. Ascorbyl palmitate was able to block the biphasic luminol-dependent response completely with IC50 values of 10 and 25 microM for the first and second phase, respectively. In contrast, ascorbate only blocked efficiently the first phase of the response. The secretion of elastase was inhibited by ascorbyl palmitate dose-dependently with an IC50 value of around 200 microM, whereas ascorbate was completely inactive. Electron microscopy supported the assumption that inhibition was due to a block in degranulation and not to enzyme inactivation. This was further supported by a parallel, although somewhat lower, inhibition of other secretory enzymes like myeloperoxidase,
beta-glucuronidase
or
lysozyme
. Cells treated with the Ca2+-ionophore A23187 responded by LTB4-synthesis which was also inhibited by ascorbyl palmitate. A very efficient inhibition was observed in cell homogenates with an IC50 value of 1.5 microM. No inhibition by ascorbate was detected in both systems. Concomitant with the inhibition of 5-lipoxygenase the activity of 15-lipoxygenase increased. We conclude that cellular reductants may control neutrophil functions and that the inhibition by ascorbyl palmitate of the three processes relevant for inflammatory responses could be of therapeutic importance.
...
PMID:The suppression of granulocyte functions by lipophilic antioxidants. 283 72
Previous studies have shown that the decreased neutrophil migratory responsiveness seen in burned patients correlates with the extent of thermal injury and the extent of the neutrophil-specific granule deficiency. To understand better the relationship between the neutrophil dysfunction, degranulation, and thermal injury, a rabbit model was studied. Eighteen rabbits were burned over 20% of their surface area. Assay of peripheral blood heterophils disclosed decreased migratory activity compared with preburn levels and decreased
lysozyme
content vs preburn levels, but no change in the
beta-glucuronidase
content. The specific binding of tritiated formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine to peripheral blood heterophils was increased fivefold over that of control cells. These studies indicate that, following thermal injury, there is a selective decrease of specific granule contents and an increase in chemoattractant binding to the cell and also suggest an abnormality in chemoattractant receptor processing. The rabbit provides a convenient model for the study of compromised host defenses following thermal injury.
...
PMID:Abnormal rabbit heterophil chemotaxis following thermal injury. An in vivo model of an abnormality of the chemoattractant receptor for f-met-leu-phe. 283 42
The effect of the antimalarial drug mefloquine on human neutrophil degranulation, chemiluminescence, superoxide production and viability was examined in vitro. Mefloquine was found to significantly stimulate the release of
lysozyme
,
beta-glucuronidase
and myeloperoxide at a concentration of 10 micrograms/ml (2.5 X 10(-5) M) without loss of cell viability. At 40 micrograms/ml mefloquine (1 X 10(-4) M) cell viability was significantly decreased. Mefloquine at 10 micrograms/ml also significantly increased the release of
lysozyme
and
beta-glucuronidase
but not myeloperoxidase when neutrophils were stimulated with opsonized zymosan. At a lower zymosan concentration myeloperoxidase release was also increased. Enzyme activity was not directly stimulated by mefloquine. Mefloquine at 10 micrograms/ml significantly increased luminol-dependent chemiluminescence but significantly inhibited lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence when neutrophils were stimulated with opsonized zymosan. Under these conditions superoxide release, measured by cytochrome c reduction, was inhibited to a lesser degree. These results are discussed with reference to our previous report that mefloquine inhibits the neutrophil iodination reaction [Immunology 58: 125-130, 1986] and the use of mefloquine as an anti-inflammatory drug.
...
PMID:Stimulation of human neutrophil degranulation by mefloquine. 284 64
Because it has recently been hypothesized that human milk is antiinflammatory, the effects of aqueous human colostrum on human polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) respiratory burst activity and selected enzymatic activities was examined. Aqueous colostrum was found to spontaneously reduce ferricytochrome C in a concentration-dependent manner, prohibiting use of the standard assay to measure superoxide production. It also caused a significant concentration-dependent prolongation of the lagtime from stimulation of PMN with phorbol myristate acetate to the appearance of hydrogen peroxide. Substitution of an enzymatic peroxide-generating system for PMN did not alter the effect of colostrum. Colostrum also suppressed myeloperoxidase activity and
lysozyme
activity, but not
beta-glucuronidase
activity in PMN lysates. Inclusion of colostrum in an in vitro assay of PMN-mediated cell detachment significantly suppressed this PMN-mediated effect. These data demonstrate that aqueous human colostrum significantly interferes with PMN oxygen metabolic and enzymatic activities that are important in the mediation of acute inflammation.
...
PMID:Antioxidant properties of human colostrum. 284 22
Recombinant human interferon-alpha 2 (rIFN-alpha A) was evaluated as a modulator of neutrophil functions. Neutrophils treated with rIFN-alpha A for 1 h in vitro showed reduced chemiluminescence (CL) and aggregation in response to phagocytosis. In contrast, when certain soluble stimuli [f-met-leu-phe (fMLP) or leukotriene B4] were used, rIFN-alpha A treatment conferred a doubling of CL. This was paralleled by a similar increase in superoxide anion production and a 56% increase of release of
beta-glucuronidase
and
lysozyme
. The NBT test showed that IFN treatment did not increase the number of responding neutrophils. However, there was a significant increase in the displaceable binding of fML[3H]P. Enzyme release, aggregation, and CL in response to other soluble stimuli, the ionophore A23187 and phorbol myristate acetate were unaffected by IFN treatment. Likewise, chemotaxis was not affected. Thus, phagocytosis-associated events and aggregation were hampered by rIFN-alpha A whereas secretory responses to receptor-dependent soluble stimuli were augmented. The mechanism for the latter is most likely dependent on the observed modulation of binding of fMLP to its receptor.
...
PMID:Recombinant human leukocyte interferon modulates neutrophil function in vitro. 284 26
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