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)

Gastro-intestinal mucosa obtained at surgical resection was studied by light microscopy using the unlabelled antibody enzyme method for immunohistochemical staining of lysozyme, anionic trypsin, cationic trypsin and pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (PSTI). Paneth cells, identified by their content of lysozyme, contained anionic trypsin, cationic trypsin and PSTI-like immunoreactivity. The demonstration of immunoreactive trypsin and immunoreactive PSTI is a further indication of the resemblance between Paneth cells and the pancreatic acinar cells.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical demonstration of pancreatic secretory proteins in human paneth cells. 243 86

The main pathways of epithelial differentiation in the intestine, Paneth, mucous, endocrine and columnar cell lineages are well recognized. However, in abnormal circumstances, for example in mucosal ulceration, a cell lineage with features distinct from these emerges, which has often been dismissed in the past as 'pyloric' metaplasia, because of its morphological resemblance to the pyloric mucosa in the stomach. However, we can conclude that this cell lineage has a defined phenotype unique in gastrointestinal epithelia, has a histogenesis that resembles that of Brunner's glands, but acquires a proliferative organization similar to that of the gastric gland. It expresses several peptides of particular interest, including epidermal growth factor, the trefoil peptides TFF1, TFF2, TFF3, lysozyme and PSTI. The presence of this lineage also appears to cause altered gene expression in adjacent indigenous cell lineages. We propose that this cell lineage is induced in gastrointestinal stem cells as a result of chronic mucosal ulceration, and plays an important part in ulcer healing; it should therefore be added to the repertoire of gastrointestinal stem cells.
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PMID:Aspects of the biology of regeneration and repair in the human gastrointestinal tract. 968 90