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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It was found that thioglycolic acid prevents destruction of tryptophan during rapid hydrolysis of protein with a
trifluoroacetic acid
/HCl mixture (1:2, v/v) at 166 degrees C for 25 or 50 min. The addition of 5% (v/v) thioglycolic acid gave the maximum tryptophan recovery (88.3%) for a 25-min hydrolysate of
lysozyme
. Tryptophan recoveries varied slightly among three different proteins; 88% for
lysozyme
, 73% for alpha-chymotrypsinogen A, and 85% for apomyoglobin. However, when extrapolated to zero time, the values were close to one another: 94, 87, and 88%, respectively. The addition of thioglycolic acid was also advantageous for recovering amino acids other than tryptophan. Particularly, yields of carboxymethylcysteine and methionine were greatly improved. This modified rapid hydrolysis method gave satisfactory results without the need for separate analyses of tryptophan and cysteine, provided proteins were reduced and carboxymethylated prior to hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Recovery of tryptophan from 25-minute acid hydrolysates of protein. 396 60
Pyridine borane has been reported as a superior reagent over a wide pH range, 5-9, for the reductive methylation of amino groups of proteins with formaldehyde [J. C. Cabacungan , A. I. Ahmed , and R. E. Feeney (1982) Anal. Biochem. 124, 272-278]. It has also been reported to reduce tryptophan to dihydrotryptophan and to inactivate
lysozyme
in
trifluoroacetic acid
[M. Kurata , Y. Kikugawa , T. Kuwae , I. Koyama , and T. Takagi (1980) Chem. Pharm . Bull 28, 2274-2275]. In the present study the specificity of pyridine borane for the two different modifications under different reaction conditions has been demonstrated, and extended to the application to the synthesis of protein containing reductively attached carbohydrates. In the acid reduction, pyridine borane selectively reduced all six tryptophans in
lysozyme
to dihydrotryptophan while all other amino acids remained intact. On similar treatment no cleavage of the carbohydrate moiety from chicken ovomucoid, and no losses of activity of ovomucoid or ribonuclease, two proteins devoid of tryptophan, were observed. Nearly complete methylation of the lysines of
lysozyme
, chicken ovomucoid, and ribonuclease was achieved with formaldehyde at pH 7.0 after 2 h at room temperature, with the retention of full activity of the protein without any destruction of tryptophan. The same chemistry was applied to covalently attach glucose and lactose to bovine serum albumin. Parameters, including pH, temperature, and methanol, that affect the reactions were investigated. Incremental additions of pyridine borane during the course of the reactions increased the rate of modification. The covalent attachment of sugar to the epsilon-amino group of lysine was demonstrated by the synthesis of N-alpha- acetylglucitollysine and comparison with acid hydrolysates of the bovine serum albumin-sugar derivatives.
...
PMID:Pyridine borane as a reducing agent for proteins. 643 Jan 22
A new procedure for the analyses of tryptophan and the total amino acid composition of proteins was based on the observations that pyridine borane reduces tryptophan in
trifluoroacetic acid
, while other amino acids remain intact [M. Kurata, Y. Kikugawa, T. Kuwae, I. Koyama, and T. Takagi (1980) Chem. Pharm. Bull. 28, 2274-2275; W.S.D. Wong, D.T. Osuga, and R.E. Feeney (1984) Anal. Biochem. 139, 58-67]. Concentrated HCl was used instead of
trifluoroacetic acid
for analytical purposes. The products were stable to hydrolysis in 6 N HCl, and the reduction did not interfere with hydrolysis and subsequent analyses. Quantitative recovery was achieved with most proteins when they were subjected to acid reduction in ice-cooled concentrated HCl with two incremental additions of pyridine borane. The reaction was terminated after 10 min by dilution with an equal volume of H2O, vacuum sealing, and hydrolyzing at 110 degrees C for 22 h. The yields of the expected values for cytochrome c, catalase, bovine serum albumin, subtilisin BPN', trypsin, chymotrypsin, beta-lactoglobulin,
lysozyme
, and pepsin were obtained. Ovotransferrin and ovalbumin, however, yielded values for tryptophan lower than literature values. With two different ion-exchange methods, the recoveries of all other amino acids were comparable to those obtained by acid hydrolysis with 6 N HCl. Since the same hydrolysate can be analyzed for both tryptophan and all the other amino acids, the procedure is a more convenient method than those requiring separate determinations. Initial results indicate that the method may be applied to high-performance liquid chromatographic procedures with adaptations of the protocols if necessary.
...
PMID:Determination of tryptophan as the reduced derivative by acid hydrolysis and chromatography. 652 98
Fluid from a post-operative wound, six leg ulcers and a large blister were collected and analysed by biochemical, microbiological and immunological techniques. The results were compared with those from sera. All samples were lyophilized and extracted twice with 60% aqueous acetonitrile containing 1%
trifluoroacetic acid
. The pooled supernatants were lyophilized, redissolved, and the fluid extracts were characterized by six techniques (the blister exudate only with three): reverse-phase HPLC, Edman degradation, mass spectrometry, Western blot analysis, inhibition zone assay on plates with Bacillus megaterium (anti-Bm activity) and zone clearing on plates with cell walls from Micrococcus luteus (a
lysozyme
assay). The material corresponding to HPLC peaks of the wound fluid extract was identified as: histone H2B fragments 1-11,1-15 and 1-16, intact thymosin beta-4, defensins HNP1, 2 and 3,
lysozyme
and the peptide antibiotic FALL-39 and its precursor(s). The HPLC-separated blister fluid was extremely rich in anti-Bm activity (mainly defensins) and
lysozyme
. It may also contain factors not identified before. The plate assays scored 50-fold differences in anti-Bm activities and more than 10-fold differences in
lysozyme
, factors which together with thymosin could be active in wound healing. It is concluded that analysis of wound fluid yields peptide and activity patterns with novel fragments of important peptides, and quantitative differences, that can be useful to understand molecular mechanisms of wound healing further.
...
PMID:Biochemical and antibacterial analysis of human wound and blister fluid. 862 Aug 98
Peptides and proteins were separated by capillary electrophoresis (CE) in fused-silica capillaries coated with an irreversibly adsorbed monolayer of derivatized polystyrene nanoparticles. Whereas phosphate buffer, pH 3.10, enabled the highly efficient separation of basic proteins with plate counts up to 1,400,000 m-1, volatile buffer components such as formic acid or acetic acid titrated with ammonia to the desired pH had to be used for the direct coupling of CE with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). Compared to 40 mM phosphoric acid-sodium hydroxide, pH 3.10, a background electrolyte containing 125 mM formic acid-ammonia, pH 4.00, was shown to yield equivalent separation efficiency. Investigation of the influence of buffered electrolytes on the ESI-MS signal of
lysozyme
at pH 2.70-4.00 showed that the charge state distribution shifted to lower charge states at higher pH with a concomitant five-fold decrease in signal intensity of the most abundant signal. The presence of
trifluoroacetic acid
in the background electrolyte greatly increased the level of baseline noise and completely inhibited the observation of any mass signals related to proteins. Full scan spectra could be acquired from 50-500 fmol amounts of proteins during coupled CE-ESI-MS utilizing 100-125 mM formic acid-ammonia, pH 3.10. However, compared to UV detection, considerable band broadening is observed with ESI-MS detection which is mainly attributed to column overloading, band spreading in the interface, and scanning data acquisition. Finally, the major whey proteins beta-lactoglobulin A, beta-lactoglobulin B, and alpha-lactalbumin were identified in a whey drink by comparison of molecular masses determined by CE-ESI-MS to molecular masses calculated from the amino acid sequence.
...
PMID:Evaluation of volatile eluents and electrolytes for high-performance liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and capillary electrophoresis-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry of proteins. II. Capillary electrophoresis. 1044 42
The solubilities of heat-denatured and reduced, S-carboxymethylated proteins have been investigated in various organic solvents. Polar, protic solvents (formic acid,
trifluoroacetic acid
, 3-mercaptopropionic acid) were found to be good solvents for the denatured proteins (20-40 mg ml-1), and the solubilities of the reduced, S-carboxymethylated proteins were generally higher than those of the heat-denatured forms. Most other organic solvents were less effective in solubilizing the denatured proteins. Apolar solvents did not solubilise denatured proteins, but low solubilizing powers were observed for polar, aprotic solvents. Heat-denaturation was observed to result in the formation of large intermolecular aggregates, which, for ovalbumin and
lysozyme
, were formed by intermolecular S-S bonds, but for bovine serum albumin involved intermolecular isopeptide bonds.
...
PMID:The solubilities of denatured proteins in different organic solvents. 1062 37
In several studies
lysozyme
has been employed as a model protein to investigate the effects of formulation factors upon biological activity. The aim of this work was to develop and validate an HPLC technique to assay
lysozyme
and to compare the results with biological activity determined from a validated turbidimetric assay. The turbidimetric assay was based upon the lytic action of
lysozyme
on Micrococcus lysodeikticus cells, whilst the reverse-phase HPLC assay employed an acetonitrile gradient in 0.1%
trifluoroacetic acid
. The limits of detection and quantification were 3.84 and 6.24 microg mL(-1) for HPLC assay, whilst the corresponding values for turbidimetric assay were 1.94 and 3.86 microg mL(-1). The methods were used to monitor the loss of enzyme activity after heating. Lysozyme concentrations determined from HPLC peak height were found to correlate (r2 = 0.9963) with those obtained from turbidimetric assay.
...
PMID:Turbidimetric and HPLC assays for the determination of formulated lysozyme activity. 1134 73
Destabilase, endo-epsilon-(gamma-Glu)-Lys-isopeptidase, was prepared from the salivary gland secretion of the medicinal leech (Hirudo medicinalis). The secretion prepared by the known method of Rigbi et al. (1987) (secretion-K) lacks the destabilase-characteristic highly specific isopeptidase activity (the D-dimer-monomerizing activity) because of its degradation by proteolytic activity (the substrate of Glp-Ala-Ala-Leu-pNA) due to contamination with leech intestinal channel contents. Therefore, we have elaborated a new technique for preparation of a true leech secretion (secretion-I). This secretion is characterized by the complete absence of the leech intestinal channel contents and has no proteolytic activity. For the first time the destabilase-specific D-dimer-monomerizing and
lysozyme
activities were separated by fractionation of secretion-I by HPLC gel filtration through Superose S-12. For the purified destabilase preparation, these activities were separated by reversed-phase chromatography in an acetonitrile gradient (0-60%) in the presence of 0.1%
trifluoroacetic acid
. The monomerizing activity of destabilase is responsible for the ability of secretion-I to dissolve stabilized fibrin via isopeptidolysis of alpha-alpha and gamma-gamma fibrin chains bound by epsilon-(gamma-Glu)-Lys-isopeptide bonds.
...
PMID:Separation of monomerizing and lysozyme activities of destabilase from medicinal leech salivary gland secretion. 1181 43
A search for antibacterial activity in different body-parts of Pandalus borealis (northern shrimp), Pagurus bernhardus (hermit crab), Hyas araneus (spider crab) and Paralithodes camtschatica (king crab) was conducted. Dried samples were extracted with 60% (v/v) acetonitrile, containing 0.1% (v/v)
trifluoroacetic acid
, and further extracted and concentrated on C18 cartridges. Eluates from the solid phase extraction were tested for antibacterial,
lysozyme
and haemolytic activity. Antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Vibrio anguillarum, Corynebacterium glutamicum and Staphylococcus aureus was detected in extracts from several tissues in all species tested, but mainly in the haemolymph and haemocyte extracts. V. anguillarum and C. glutamicum were generally the most sensitive micro-organisms. In P. borealis and P. bernhardus most of the active fractions were not affected by proteinase K treatment, while in H. araneus and P. camtschatica most fractions were sensitive to proteinase K treatment, indicating antibacterial factors of proteinaceous nature. In P. bernhardus the active fractions were generally heat labile, whereas in H. araneus the activities were resistant to heat. Differences between active extracts regarding hydrophobicity and sensitivity for heat and proteinase K treatment indicate that several compounds are responsible for the antibacterial activities detected. Lysozyme-like activity could be detected in some fractions and haemolytic activity against human red blood cells could be detected in haemolymph/haemocyte and exoskeleton extracts from all species tested.
...
PMID:Antibacterial activity in four marine crustacean decapods. 1219 50
A search for antibacterial activity in different organs/tissues of the horse mussel, Modiolus modiolus, was conducted. Dried samples were extracted with 60% (v/v) acetonitrile, containing 0.1% (v/v)
trifluoroacetic acid
. Due to high salt content, two liquid phases were obtained; an acetonitrile-rich phase (ACN extract) and an aqueous phase. The aqueous phase was further subjected to solid phase extraction (SPE). Eluates from SPE and ACN extracts were tested for antibacterial,
lysozyme
, and toxic activity. Antibacterial activity was demonstrated in extracts from several tissues, including plasma, haemocytes, labial palps, byssus, mantle, and gills. Some of the extracts were sensitive to proteinase K treatment, indicating antibacterial peptides and/or proteins. Lysozyme-like activity and toxic activity against Artemia salina nauplii was detected in fractions from the gills, mantle, muscle, and haemocytes. Results from this study indicate that M. modiolus is a promising source for identifying novel drug lead compounds.
...
PMID:Antibacterial activities in various tissues of the horse mussel, Modiolus modiolus. 1505 Aug 41
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