Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The stimulatory and inhibitory activities in the crude preparation of protein kinase modulator from dog heart were separated by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration, and the stimulatory modulator was further purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The isolated stimulatory modulator, as the crude modulator preparation, stimulated the activity of the purified guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cGMP)-dependent protein kinases of both mammalian and arthropod origins in the presence of cGMP. The cGMP-dependent protein kinases were not activated by cGMP in the absence of either the isolated stimulatory modulator or the crude modulator. The stimulatory modulator, unlike the crude modulator had no effect on the activity of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase. The stimulatory modulator was a protein since its activity was destroyed by trypsin but was resistant to hydrolysis by DNase, RNase, phospholipase C, and lysozyme. The isolated inhibitory modulator, presumably the same as the protein inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase reported by Walsh et al. (Wash. D.A., Ashby, C.D., Gonzalez, C., Calkins, D., Fischer. E.H., and Krebs, E.G. (1971) J. Biol. Chem. 246, 1977-1985), depressed the cAMP-stimulated activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase as did the crude preparation of protein kinase modulator. The isolated inhibitory modulator, unlike the crude preparation, was without effect on cGMP-dependent protein kinase. The present findings provide evidence to support that in mammals there are separate proteins for the stimulatory and the inhibitory activities of protein kinase modulator, in contrast to the modulator from an arthropod tissue (lobster tail muscle, Donnelly et al. (Donnelly, T.E., Jr., Kuo, J.F., Reyes, P.L., Liu, Y.P., and Greengard, P. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 190-198) which has been shown to possess both activities.
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PMID:Isolation of stimulatory modulator of guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate-dependent protein kinase from mammalian heart devoid of inhibitory modulator of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate-dependent protein kinase. 18 22

Further investigation with the inhibitor of interferon activity (IME) isolated from mouse embryo tissue is reported. The present results bring some new data concerning the physiochemical properties of the interferon antagonist. It is not dialysable, not sensitive to trypsin, lysozyme, hyaluronidase, RNAse and pH 2, but is sensitive to pH 10 and neuraminidase. Concentrated and partly purified tissue antagonist of interferon was separated on a column with Sephadex G 100. Three distinct, well separated fractions showing antiinterferon activity were obtained. The characteristics and molecular weight of each of these fractions were determined.
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PMID:Physicochemical characteristics of IME-inhibitor of interferon activity from mouse embryo tissues. 20 16

The infectivity of a bovine rotavirus was enhanced 140-, 8-, and 3-fold, respectively, by trypsin, protease, and lactase. Ficin, carboxypeptidases A and B, lysozyme, and beta-galactosidase had little effect on the infectivity. Chymotrypsin caused a threefold decrease in the infectivity. Trypsin acts directly on the rotavirus and not on the host cell.
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PMID:Effect of enzymes on rotavirus infectivity. 22 17

Three cationic proteins from the granules of human neutrophil granulocytes were obtained in a high degree of purity be means of affinity chromatography on 4-phenylbutylamine-Sepharose. Together with lysozyme, the three cationic proteins exhibit the highest electrophoretic mobility toward the cathode in acrylamide gels at moderately acid pH, among the granule constituents that are solubilized in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, containing 1 M NaCl. The three cationic proteins represent a group of "neutral proteases" distinct from elastase and collagenase. They hydrolyze casein, azocasein and the chymotrypsin substrate N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester. Optimal activity is found at pH 7.4-7;5. The enzymes are inhibited by the specific chymotrypsin inhibitor N-tosyl-L-phenylalanylchloromethane and by the naturally occurring inhibitors alpha-antichymotrypsin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, as well as by the trypsin inhibitors from soy beans and limabeans.
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PMID:Cationic proteins from human neutrophil granulocytes. Evidence for their chymotrypsin-like properties. 23 18

Human polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) granule extract (25 mug of protein) released 60 percent of the available 35SO4 from labeled rabbit articular cartilage in 0.5 hour at neutral pH. N-acetyl-L-alanyl-L-alanyl-L-prolyl-L-alanine choloromethyl ketone (NAcAAPACK), a specific elastase inhibitor, was only minimally effective against whole granule extract, and N-alpha-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone, which inhibits trypsin but not elastase, was completely ineffective. Preparative disc-gel electrophoresis of PMN granule extract revealed two separate regions with independent activity against 35SO4-labeled cartilage. One region contained elastases and when tested alone, was completely inhibited by NAcAAPACK. The other contained lysozyme and two esterases active against N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine-alpha-naphthol. Purified lysozyme proved inactive, suggesting that the chymotrypsin-like esterases were responsible for proteoglycan degradation by this region of the gel.
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PMID:Identification of neutral proteases in human neutrophil granules that degrade articular cartilage proteoglycan. 23 25

Lysozyme was induced by dexamethasone during normal differentiation of cultured mouse myeloid leukemia cells (M1) to macrophages and granulocytes. A large amount of lysozyme was produced by macrophage-like line cells (Mm-1), established from spontaneously differentiated macrophage-like cells from a clonal line of M1 cells. Lysozyme purified from the culture medium of these Mm-1 cells (Mm-1 lysozyme) had a molecular weight of 15,000, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and showed maximal activity at pH 6.6 with an optimal NaCl concentration of 0.04 M. Its mobility on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 4.5 was distinctly lower than those of lysozymes from hen egg white and human urine. Rabbit anti-Mm-1 lysozyme serum inhibited the activities of lysozyme preparations from peritoneal macrophages of normal mice and rats and dexamethasone-induced differentiated M1 cells, but not those of preparations from hen egg white and human urine. Lysozyme was also purified from normal mouse lung, which is rich in alveolar macrophages and was found to be similar to lysozyme purified from the culture medium of Mm-1 cells in size and electrophoretic mobility and in its pH optimum, trypsin peptide map, and antigenicity. Thus the molecular structure of the lysozyme induced in differentiated mouse myeloid leukemia cells is similar to that of lysozyme produced by normal cells.
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PMID:Characterization of lysozyme synthesized by differentiated mouse myeloid leukemia cells. 28 20

1. The reactivities of phenylglyoxal (PGO), glyoxal (GO), and/or methylglyoxal (MGO) with several proteins, including ribonuclease A [EC 3.1.4.22] and its derivatives, alpha-chymotrypsin [EC 3.4.21.1], trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4], lysozyme [EC 3.2.1.17], pepsin [EC 3.4.23.1], rennin [EC 3.4.23.4], thermolysin, and insulin and its B chain, have been examined. From analyses of the reaction products, PGO was shown to be the most specific for arginine residues. GO and MGO also reacted rapidly with arginine residues, but they also reacted with lysine residues to a significant extent. A side reaction with N-terminal alpha-amino groups was observed with each of these reagents. 2. Two arginine residues out of four in ribonuclease A, two out of three in alpha-chymotrypsin, one out of two in trypsin, one out of two in pepsin, and one out of five in rennin appeared to react with PGO fairly rapidly, indicating a difference in the relative accessibility of these residues by the reagent. Extensive modification of the arginine residues by PGO occurred with RCM-derivatives of ribonuclease A and insulin B chain. The N-terminal isoleucine residues of alpha-chymotrypsin and trypsin appeared to be unreactive with PGO because of salt bridge formation with an aspartyl residue. The activity of alpha-chymotrypsin toward N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester and the lytic activity of lysozyme were lost rapidly on treatment with PGO, as in the case of ribonuclease A. Pepsin and rennin were only partially inactivated by reaction with PGO.
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PMID:Further studies on the reactions of phenylglyoxal and related reagents with proteins. 32 41

Mechanisms were studied that might explain the attachment and damage to Candida albicans pseudohyphae by neutrophils in the absence of serum. Attachment of neutrophils to pseudo hyphae was inhibited by Candida mannans (1-10 mg/ml), but not by mannose, dextran, chitin, conconavalin A, or highly charged polyamino acids. Contact was also inhibited by pretreatment of Candida before incubation with neutrophils with chymotrypsin, but not trypsin or several inhibitors of proteases. Similar results were obtained with pretreatment of neutrophils, except that trypsin was inhibitory. When pseudohyphae were killed with ultraviolet light, proteinpolysaccharide complexes of mol wt <10,000 were released which appeared to bind to the surfaces of neutrophils and inhibit contact between neutrophils and Candida, as well as other fungi. Damage to Candida by neutrophils was inhibited by agents known to act on neutrophil oxidative microbicidal mechanisms, including sodium cyanide, sodium azide, catalase, superoxide dismutase, and 1, 4 diazobicyclo (2, 2, 2) octane, a singlet oxygen quencher. Neutrophils from a patient with chronic granulomatous disease did not damage Candida at all. However, the hydroxyl radical scavengers mannitol and benzoate were not inhibitory. Cationic proteins and lactoferrin also did not appear to play a major role in this system. Low concentrations of lysozyme which did not damage Candida in isotonic buffer solutions damaged pseudohyphae in distilled water. Isolated neutrophil granules damaged pseudohyphae only with added hydrogen peroxide and halide, and damage occurred only with granule fractions known to contain myeloperoxidase. These findings suggest that neutrophils recognized a molecule on the Candida surface which has a chymotrypsin sensitive protein component, and which may be liberated from the cell surface upon death of organism. The neutrophil receptors for Candida appear to be sensitive to trypsin and chymotrypsin. Damage to Candida by neutrophils occurred primarily by oxidative mechanisms, including the production of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide interacting with myeloperoxidase and halide, as well as singlet oxygen, but did not appear to involve hydroxyl radical. Lysozyme might have an accessory role, under some conditions.
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PMID:Mechanisms of attachment of neutrophils to Candida albicans pseudohyphae in the absence of serum, and of subsequent damage to pseudohyphae by microbicidal processes of neutrophils in vitro. 34 Apr 71

DNA-membrane complexes have been obtained from Escherichia coli by using a freeze-thaw lysis procedure that avoids lysozyme and detergents. Complexes made in this manner and containing DNA near the origin of replication are uniquely sensitive to ionic strength, Pronase, and trypsin. There is approximately one such complex per chromosomal origin. The sensitivities suggest that origin-specific binding is mediated by a protein. By using these unique characteristics to distinguish origin-specific complexes from the majority of DNA-membrane binding sites, it was found that the origin-specific binding persists after termination of chromosomal replication.
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PMID:Identification of a biochemically unique DNA-membrane interaction involving the Escherichia coli origin of replication. 34 76

When the cell wall of Bacillus subtilis is removed by lysozyme and the resultant protoplasts are plated on hypertonic soft agar medium, each protoplast forms an L colony. L bodies from such L colonies again plate as L-colony-forming units (CFU). However, if protoplasts or L bodies are "conditioned" by 1 h of incubation in 0.4% casein hydrolysate medium and then incubated in 25% gelatin medium for 1 h, 60 to 100% of the formerly naked cells give rist to bacillary colonies. The present experiments largely explain the mechanism responsible for the "heritable" persistence of the wall-less state in B. subtilis. It is shown that protoplasts produce a reversion inhibitory factor (RIF) which blocks reversion when the cell concentration exceeds 5 x 105 CFU/ml. This inhibitor is nondialyzable and sensitive to trypsin, heat, and detergent. Efficient reversion at 2 x 107 CFU/ml is obtained if the protoplasts are treated with trypsin after conditioning and chloramphenicol is incorporated into the gelatin reversion medium. In the presence of 500 mug of trypsin per ml, the requirement for gelatin is sharply reduced, and reversion occurs rapidly in liquid medium containing only 10% gelatin. Trypsin also stimulates reversion in L colonies growing on soft agar. Latent RIF is activated by beta-mercaptoethanol. This reagent blocks reversion of protoplast suspensions at densities of 5 x 105 CFU/ml. Comparison of the autolytic behavior of B. subtilis and of the RIF revealed that several or the properties of the two activities coincide: both are inhibited by high concentrations of gelatin, both are activated by beta-mercaptoethanol, and both have high affinity for cell wall. Going on the assumption that RIF is autolysin, models for protoplast reversion is suggested by the finding that mutants with altered teichoic acid show altered reversion behavior.
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PMID:Inhibitory protein controls the reversion of protoplasts and L forms of Bacillus subtilis to the walled state. 40 56


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