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

Radioactive labelling of the amino sugars in gonococcal peptidoglycan was followed by treatment with Chalaropsis muramidase and TLC separation of the products. Even after very brief periods of labelling (0.5 min) the peptidoglycan was already cross-linked to some 80% of the final value and little change occurred within 2 min. The remaining cross-linking was achieved only over a period of about one generation time. Streptomycete endopeptidase was used to show the extent to which new chains were cross-linked to old. Even at the earliest times many cross-linked units contained new material in both moieties and by 3 min there was little distinction in relative labelling, indicating that in Neisseria gonorrhoeae most newly synthesized glycan chains are cross-linked to other new chains rather than to pre-existing peptidoglycan. A model is proposed in which newly polymerized monomer units are predestined either towards dimer formation with other new chains, which are then rapidly O-acetylated and not further cross-linked, or towards the formation of trimers and higher oligomers, the latter being a slower process. Although significant O-acetylation of peptidoglycan was detectable even at the earliest times, efforts to detect O-acetylated lipid intermediates were unsuccessful. The chief lipid intermediate found was apparently the disaccharide-peptide unit linked to undecaprenol.
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PMID:O-acetylation of peptidoglycan in Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Investigation of lipid-linked intermediates and glycan chains newly incorporated into the cell wall. 309 11

The peptidoglycans from several Gram-negative and Gram-positive periodontal pathogens were isolated, purified, and characterized both morphologically and chemically. In addition, the effects of the mureolytic enzymes, lysozyme, M-1 N-acetyl-muramidase, and the AM-3 endopeptidase, on the peptidoglycans were examined. These enzymes were found to be highly effective in the degradation of the purified peptidoglycans; however, a Bacteroides capillus peptidoglycan-protein complex exhibited a greater resistance to these enzymes. Morphologically, the peptidoglycans consisted of large saccular sheets which, when viewed by scanning electron microscopy, contained numerous holes and tears. Chemically, the peptidoglycans consisted of muramic acid, glucosamine, alanine, glutamic acid, and meso-diaminopimelic acid (DAP). One Bacteroides species, Bacteroides gingivalis strain W, contained glycine and LL-DAP, suggestive of an indirectly cross-linked A3 gamma peptidoglycan.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the peptidoglycans from selected gram-positive and gram-negative periodontal pathogens. 398 14

Pep 5 and nisin are cationic bactericidal peptides which were shown to induce autolysis in Staphylococcus cohnii 22. In contrast to nisin, Pep 5 induced lysis could be stimulated in the presence of glucose. Addition of lipoteichoic acids (LTA) (D-alanine:phosphorus = 0.475:1) inhibited all effects of Pep 5 on susceptible cells in a molar ratio LTA:Pep 5 of 10:1. Treatment of S. cohnii 22 with Pep 5 or nisin for 20 min and subsequent washing with 2.5 M NaCl released autolysin activity. Crude preparations of the hydrolyzing enzymes produced free amino groups as well as polysaccharide fragments from the murein backbone, suggesting the presence of a muramidase or glucosamidase, and endopeptidase or amidase. Both enzyme activities were inhibited by lipoteichoic acid; they could be fully reactivated by addition of Pep 5 in sufficient concentrations. The velocity of hydrolysis was not influenced by nisin, whereas it was doubled in presence of Pep 5. The results are discussed in view of a possible mechanism of induction of lysis by Pep 5 and nisin.
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PMID:Induction of autolysis of staphylococci by the basic peptide antibiotics Pep 5 and nisin and their influence on the activity of autolytic enzymes. 400 48

Cells of Bacillus thuringiensis containing refractile spores autolyzed readily when suspended in buffer. The autolysate contained enzymes which lysed vegetative cell walls of the organism. Three enzymes were isolated from the autolysate, and each was purified approximately 30-fold. One enzyme, most active near pH 4.0, was found to be an N-acetylmuramidase. The other two enzymes exhibited pH optima at 8.5. One was stimulated by cobalt ions and the other was not. The cobalt-stimulated enzyme was shown to be an N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase. The cobalt insensitive enzyme exhibited both N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase and endopeptidase activity. The amidase activity may reflect incomplete separation of the cobalt-stimulated enzyme. The endopeptidase cleaved the peptide bond between l-alanine d-glutamic acid. A cell wall lytic endopeptidase with this specificity has not been previously reported. All three enzymes were extremely limited in the range of bacterial cell walls which they attacked. Except for cell walls of Micrococcus lysodeikticus, which were lysed by the muramidase, only cell walls of members of the genus Bacillus were attacked.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of three autolytic enzymes associated with sporulation of Bacillus thuringiensis var. thuringiensis. 573

The extent of lysozyme resistance and O-acetylation of purified peptidoglycan (PG) from 20 strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae was examined to determine how widespread these properties are among various subsets of gonococcal isolates. To determine digestibility by lysozyme, we treated [3H]- or [14C]glucosamine-labeled PG with hen egg white lysozyme (HEW-LZ) and determined the size distribution of HEW-LZ soluble PG at the completion of the reaction by molecular-sieve high-performance liquid chromatography, using a Varian TSK SW2000 column, a method that proved considerably more efficient than traditional chromatography for fractionating low-molecular-weight PG fragments solely on the basis of size. The extent of HEW-LZ resistance was expressed as the percentage of PG that was larger in size than disaccharide peptide tetramers (including insoluble PG removed by centrifugation). The percent O-acetylation was determined by converting insoluble PG totally to uncross-linked monomers by the combined action of Chalaropsis B muramidase followed by Escherichia coli endopeptidase and then quantitating radioactivity in O-acetylated and non-O-acetylated monomers after paper chromatography. The PG of the vast majority (19 of 20) of gonococcal strains examined was extensively HEW-LZ resistant (range, 40 to 60% larger than tetramers) and extensively O-acetylated (range, 34 to 52%). Only the PG of strain RD5 (highest rate of PG turnover among gonococci so far examined and the prototype of gonococci having O-acetyl-deficient PG) had greatly reduced O-acetylation (15%) and exhibited virtually no HEW-LZ resistance (2% larger than tetramers). Extensive HEW-LZ resistance and O-acetylation were apparently not associated specifically with (i) a given type of colonial variant (piliated versus nonpiliated or opaque versus transparent), (ii) a given type of clinical isolate (local versus disseminated), (iii) the extent of laboratory passage, or (iv) (with the possible exception of penicillin-resistant strain FA102) the presence of one or more genetic loci governing antibiotic resistance among members of an isogenic set of gonococci. From this survey, we conclude that lysozyme resistance and extensive O-acetylation of PG are widespread among gonococci and, thus, that most strains are potential sources of hydrolase-resistant PG that conceivably could persist as macromolecular fragments in vivo.
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PMID:Strain distribution in extents of lysozyme resistance and O-acetylation of gonococcal peptidoglycan determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. 641 14

Lysates of induced E. coli (lambda) lysogens contain two enzymes acting on murein: endopeptidase and murein transglycosylase. The transglycosylase was separated from the endopeptidase and purified to homogeneity. Its bacteriolytic activity was 200-fold higher than of hen egg lysozyme. The bacteriolytic activity of the lysate depends on the presence of the enzyme. The endopeptidase alone not lyse the cells, but it enhances the extent of lysis. The properties of the transglycosylase (molecular weight 17 500, pH optimum at 6.6, inactivation by Zn2+), show that it is entirely different from the bacterial enzyme of the same specificity described by others. Data are presented, which suggest that this enzyme is the phage lambda R-gene product.
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PMID:Murein transglycosylase from phage lambda lysate. Purification and properties. 644 76

The diagnosis of primitive hematologic malignancies in extramedullary sites (lymphoblastic lymphoma of T- or B-cell type and myeloid sarcoma) on paraffin-embedded tissue sections is difficult and often impossible because of the primitive morphology of the neoplastic cells. The authors studied 21 extramedullary tumors of lymphoid or myeloid blasts. They used a panel of 22 antibodies on frozen sections and 9 antibodies on paraffin sections to determine the spectrum of immunophenotypes and to develop a practical panel for diagnosis. All but two of the cases could be classified as lymphoid or myeloid using immunohistologic analysis. Thirteen cases were classified as lymphoblastic lymphoma/acute lymphoblastic leukemia (LBL/ALL); 10 were classified as precursor T (CD7+, CD3+/-, CD45+) and 3 as precursor B-cell (CD19+/-CD10+CD45-) type. Five cases were classified as myeloid sarcoma (CD13+ myeloperoxidase+, lysozyme+). Two LBL/ALL coexpressed either CD33 (1 case) or CD15 (1 case), and one myeloid sarcoma coexpressed TdT and CD7. One case appeared to be truly mixed lineage, coexpressing CD3 with myeloperoxidase and lysozyme, and two cases expressed no lineage-specific antigens. There were clinical differences between the three major tumor types, and within the category of T-precursor LBL/ALL, classification according to stage of thymocyte differentiation was associated with distinctive clinical features. In conclusion, the spectrum of immunophenotypes detected on frozen section was similar to that reported by flow cytometry on peripheral blood and bone marrow specimens. The most useful antigens on frozen sections were CD7 and CD3 (T cell), CD10 and CD19 (B cell), and CD13 (myeloid). TdT was coexpressed by one myeloid sarcoma and was undetectable in 40% of LBL/ALL. On paraffin sections, myeloperoxidase and lysozyme were reliable markers of myeloid lineage, but none of the markers used on paraffin sections distinguished between LBL/ALL of T- and B-precursor types. Both B-LBL/ALL and myeloid sarcomas were often CD45- on paraffin sections, which may be a obstacle in determining the diagnosis. These distinctions appear to have clinical relevance.
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PMID:Extramedullary tumors of lymphoid or myeloid blasts. The role of immunohistology in diagnosis and classification. 757 94

A case is presented of a female infant with an atypical histiocytoma. A gradually enlarging brown lesion was noted on the left side of the chest at the age of 2 weeks. Microscopic study of a biopsy revealed an ill-defined infiltration of spindle cells with indented nuclei. The tumor cells were positive for CD14, HLA-DR, lysozyme, alpha-1-antitrypsin and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, and negative for CD1, CD3, CD8, CD10, CD19, CD68 and S-100 by immunohistochemistry. Electron microscopy demonstrated no distinct Birbeck's granules, but aberrant granules were seen in a small number of cells. At 7 months of age, a nodule with similar histologic features was noted in the nuchal region, but was incompletely resected. The patient remains recurrence-free at 36 months of age. This case is thought to be a benign form of non-X histiocytoma.
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PMID:Non-X histiocytoma, similar to fibrous histiocytoma, in an infant. 758 38

Extensive immunohistochemical analyses of the hyperplastic human palatine tonsil disclosed variegated B cell phenotypes on the lymphoid cells among the crypt epithelium. The reticular epithelial network was evident by cytokeratin immunostaining. The reticular epithelium near the crypt lumen was positive for lysozyme. Secretory component was negative, while HLA-DR was frequently expressed. Intramucosal small lymphocytes, densely distributed in the luminal side, consisted mainly of B cells expressing CD19, CD20, CD21, CD22, CD45R, CD74, DBB42, HLA-DR, HLA-DQ, bcl-2 protein and surface IgM. Some B cells revealed mantle zone phenotypes (surface IgD+, CD5+, CD24+, DBA44+, CD10-, DNA7-). Cells of germinocyte phenotype (CD10+, DNA7+) were sparsely seen. A good number of intramucosal lymphoid cells were further labeled for CD11b, a phenotype of so-called B-1 cells. Plasma cells were clustered within the basal half. IgG was their major immunoglobulin class, followed by IgA, IgM and IgD classes. A smaller number of T cells (CD2+, CD3+, CD5+, CD45RO+, TCR alpha beta+) were identified among the epithelium. CD4+ cells predominated over CD8+ cells. TCR gamma delta+ cells were rare. Macrophages (CD68+), dendritic histiocytes (S-100 protein+, CD1+), and natural killer cells (CD16+ or CD57+) were also dispersed. Another unique feature of this lymphoepithelial complex was the existence of HLA-DR- intramucosal intramucosal microvasculature, where lymphocyte recirculation was suggested. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen was detected commonly in the epithelial cells but rarely in the lymphoid cells. Possible lymphoepithelial interactions and morphologic similarities to the thymic medulla are discussed.
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PMID:Reticular crypt epithelium and intra-epithelial lymphoid cells in the hyperplastic human palatine tonsil: an immunohistochemical analysis. 770 42

To date no hematopoietic progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells (DLC), which represent an highly efficient class of antigen presenting cells, have been identified or the cytokines they elaborate have been defined. Here we describe an acute leukemia patient whose blasts (90-96% in peripheral blood and bone marrow) had a phenotype consistent with putative progenitors of DLC. The patient was treated with ara-C and VP-16 but did not achieve remission. The blasts had lobulated nuclei, no cytoplasmic vacuolation or Auer rods and were weakly positive for acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase and negative for PAS, granzyme A, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV, ATPase/ADPase and lysozyme production. The blasts were positive for CD1a, CD4, CD16, CD35, HLADR, HLADQ, CD11b, CD11c, CD14, CD33, CD34, CD11a, CD71, CD19, CD25, IL-2R beta and negative for CD2, CD7, CD8, CD10, CD22, CD56, CD57, surface or cytoplasmic CD3, TCR delta and TCR beta, HTLV-1p19 and P-glycoprotein. On liquid culture with or without 5 x 10(-9) M 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) for 3 days, the blasts formed aggregates of proliferating and elongating cells on the wall of the flasks with a decline in CD34, numerous dendritic processes appeared on the cells and there was strong positivity for ATPase/ADPase, but no other changes in phenotype. No macrophages were observed, indicating derivation from separate DLCs. Cytogenetic analysis showed chromosomal abnormalities and electron microscopy showed Birbeck granules. Southern blotting of DNA showed rearrangement of one allele for both JH and TCR beta but no HTLV-1 related sequences. Culture supernatants from blasts cultured with or without TPA showed the production of large amounts of IL-8, IL-6, TNF-alpha, MIP-1 alpha, IL-10 and interferon gamma and modest amounts of IL-1 alpha, GM-CSF and stem cell factor. The presence not only of CD1a, HLADR, HLADQ and many other characteristics including Birbeck granules, but also differentiation along the lines of DLC with appearance of dendritic processes on the cells and expression of ATPase/ADPase activity, indicate that the leukemic blasts in our patient represented a leukemic counterpart of normal progenitors of DLC and the leukemia a new entity which could possibly be classified as AML-M8. Lastly, many pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by DLC could contribute to inflammation and IL-10 to immunosuppression.
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PMID:Phenotype, genotype and cytokine production in acute leukemia involving progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells. 791 55


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