Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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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)
1. Cells of the hydrogen bacterium Alcaligenes eutrophus are broken by gentle lysis using
lysozyme
treatment in hypertonic sucrose followed by osmotic shock. By this method, 93% of the in vivo activity of the H2 oxidase is recovered and the ATPase remains particle bound. In contrast, cell disruption in a French pressure cell diminishes the in vivo activity of the H2 oxidase by 50% and solubilizes the bulk of the ATPase. 2. The bacterium contains a periplasmic cytochrome c with bands at 418, 521 and 550 nm (difference spectrum). In addition to cytochrome aa3, b-560, c-553 and o, low temperature difference spectra of membranes show the presence of two further cytochromes (shoulders at 551 and 553 nm). 3. The unsupplemented membrane fraction catalyses the oxidation of hydrogen, NADH, NADPH, succinate, formate and endogenous substrate (
NAD
linked) at rates 2--3-fold higher than membranes obtained from cells disrupted in a French pressure cell. With the exception of the H2 oxidase all oxidase activities in
lysozyme
membranes are sensitive to carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (20-100% stimulation of oxygen uptake). 4. The cytoplasmic fraction contains a B-type cytochrome with absorption maxima at 436 and 560 nm, capable of combining with CO; it contains non-covalently bound protohaem. In alkaline solutions a spectral transition to the haemochrome type with bands at 423, 526 and 556 nm occurs. The addition of NADH to an aerobic suspension of this cytochrome elicits new absorption maxima at 418, 545 and 577 nm (difference spectrum), which are believed to represent an oxygenated form of the reduced cytochrome.
...
PMID:Respiratory components and oxidase activities in Alcaligenes eutrophus. 18 46
An ADP-ribosyltransferase was purified approximately 500-fold from the supernatant fraction of turkey erythrocytes. The enzyme hydrolyzed [carbonyl-(14)C]
NAD
to ADP-ribose and [carbonyl-(14)C]nicotinamide at a low rate. Nicotinamide formation from
NAD
was enhanced by arginine methyl ester > D-arginine approximately L-arginine > guanidine; lysine, histidine, and citrulline were ineffective. Incubation of [adenine-U-(14)C]
NAD
and arginine methyl ester or arginine with the purified enzyme resulted in the formation of new compounds that contained (14)C, reacted with ninhydrin, and quenched background fluorescence of thin-layer plates viewed in ultraviolet light. Their mobilities on thin-layer chromatograms were indistinguishable from those of ADP-ribosylarginine methyl ester and ADP-ribosylarginine formed during incubation of choleragen with
NAD
and arginine methyl ester or arginine, respectively [Moss, J. & Vaughan, M. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 2455-2457]. The purified transferase also catalyzed the incorporation of label from [adenine-(14)C]-
NAD
into
lysozyme
, histones and polyarginine. When the (14)C-labeled
lysozyme
was incubated with snake venom phosphodiesterase, the radioactivity was released and, on thin-layer chromatograms, exhibited a mobility indistinguishable from that of 5'-AMP, as would be expected of an ADP-ribosylated protein, but not of a poly(ADP-ribosylated) product. The purified transferase activated rat brain adenylate cyclase and, as is the case with choleragen, activation was absolutely dependent on
NAD
. The presence in the avian erythrocyte of a protein that, like choleragen and Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin, apparently activates adenylate cyclase and possesses ADP-ribosyl transferase activity is consistent with the view that the mechanisms through which the bacterial toxins produce pathology are not entirely foreign to vertebrate cells, at least some of which may possess and employ an analogous mechanism for activation of adenylate cyclase.
...
PMID:Isolation of an avian erythrocyte protein possessing ADP-ribosyltransferase activity and capable of activating adenylate cyclase. 21 2
The inactivation of
lysozyme
caused by the radicals produced by thermolysis of 2,2'-azo-bis-2-amidinopropane can be prevented by the addition of different compounds that can react with the damaging free radicals. Compounds of high reactivity (propyl gallate, Trolox, cysteine, albumin, ascorbate, and NADH) afford almost total protection until their consumption, resulting in well-defined induction times. The number of radicals trapped by each additive molecule consumed ranges from 3 (propyl gallate) to 0.12 (cysteine). This last value is indicative of chain oxidation of the inhibitor. Uric acid is able to trap nearly 2.2 radicals per added molecule, but even at large (200 microM) concentrations, a residual inactivation of the enzyme is observed, which may be caused by urate-derived radicals. Compounds of lower reactivity (tryptophan, Tempol, hydroquinone, desferrioxamine, diethylhydroxylamine, methionine, histidine,
NAD+
and tyrosine) only partially decrease the
lysozyme
inactivation rates. For these compounds, we calculated the concentration necessary to reduce the enzyme inactivation rate to one half of that observed in the absence of additives. These concentrations range from 9 microM (tryptophan and Tempol) to 5 mM (
NAD+
).
...
PMID:Effect of additives on the inactivation of lysozyme mediated by free radicals produced in the thermolysis of 2,2'-azo-bis-(2-amidinopropane). 177 8
A method was developed for extracting enzymes from micro-organisms closely associated with ammonia-treated straw (NH3-S) that had been incubated in nylon bags in the rumen. Incubation of washed straw with 125 ml carbon tetrachloride/l and 20 micrograms
lysozyme
/ml for 3 h at 37 degrees gave carboxymethylcellulase (EC 3.2.1.4; CMCase) and
NAD
-linked glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2; GDH) activities greater than those extracted by sonication. GDH associated with NH3-S increased with incubation time and was highest in sheep receiving a high-barley diet. Particle-bound CMCase activity reached a peak between 16 and 24 h and declined thereafter. Particle-bound GDH activity showed no correlation with dry matter (DM) degradation in the rumens of sheep fed on a range of diets. In contrast, CMCase activity after 24 h was highly correlated with DM degradability of the same samples at 24 h (r 0.98) and 48 h (r 0.94). It was concluded that GDH and CMCase can be used as indices of the total population of colonizing rumen micro-organisms and of the fibre-degrading population respectively, and that these enzymes can therefore be used to assess rapidly and with great sensitivity variations in the rumen environment that affect the rate of fibre breakdown.
...
PMID:Use of particle-bound microbial enzyme activity to predict the rate and extent of fibre degradation in the rumen. 303 99
The characteristics of ADP-ribosyltransferase activity in skeletal muscle membranes have been studied. The membrane enzymes can ADP-ribosylate exogenous substrates such as guanylhydrazones, polyarginine,
lysozyme
, and histones. The properties of the enzyme are investigated by using diethylaminobenzylidineaminoguanidine as a model substrate. Incubation of the membranes with [32P]adenylate-labeled
NAD
results in the labeling of a number of cellular proteins. Magnesium ions, detergents, and diethylaminobenzylidineaminoguanidine stimulated the ADP-ribosylation of membrane proteins, whereas L-arginine methyl ester and arginine inhibited ADP-ribosylation. The labeling of specific proteins in the sarcoplasmic reticulum and glycogen pellet is influenced significantly by detergents, nucleotides, and thiols. The hydroxylamine sensitivity of the ADP-ribose linkage in the membrane proteins is similar to that reported for (ADP-ribose)-arginine linkage. Snake venom phosphodiesterase digestion of the ADP-ribosylated membranes produces 5'-AMP as the major acid-soluble digestion product. The results suggest that the primary mode of modification is mono(ADP-ribosyl)ation. The ADP-ribosyltransferase activity in the membrane preparations is not extracted under conditions used for solubilization of extrinsic proteins, suggesting that the activity is associated with some integral membrane protein.
...
PMID:Endogenous ADP-ribosylation in skeletal muscle membranes. 312 54
Reorganization and activation energies for charge transfer reactions occurring inside a dielectric sphere have been calculated by solving the problem of polar medium reorganization within and outside a dielectric sphere placed in another infinite dielectric. The dielectric sphere is assumed to simulate a protein globule, i.e. an enzyme molecule. It has been shown that for some reaction types the activation energy tends to decrease as the globule radius increases and that for each of the reaction types considered there is an optimal globule radius an increase of which does not bring about any tangible activation energy reduction. The calculated optimal radii for different processes are in good agreement with the increasing molecular sizes in the series: ribonuclease less than or equal to
lysozyme
less than serine proteinases approximately equal to cysteine proteinases less than
NAD
-dependent dehydrogenases. The calculated radii are usually about 1.5 to 1.7 times (and molecular masses about 4-5 times) smaller than the experimental ones. The reasons for this discrepancy are discussed and it has been suggested that the approximate nature of the treatment of a protein globule as a structureless dielectric is the main reason. It is shown that charge transfer at an acute angle to the globule surface is the optimum process. For endoergonic reaction stages it is the net charge transfer towards the periphery and for exoergonic ones that in the reverse direction which are advantageous. These conclusions are consistent with the data about the structure of the above-mentioned enzymes.
...
PMID:Medium reorganization energy and enzymatic reaction activation energy. 315 27
The energy-transducing, Mg-Ca activated ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) of E. coli is located on the inner surface of the cytoplasmic membrane. Antibody to purified ATPase has now been used to demonstrate that membrane vesicles as ordinarily prepared by the
lysozyme
-EDTA method consist of two distinct populations. About half the vesicles are everted, and thus readily agglutinated by antibody to ATPase, while half are right-side out. NADH oxidase (reduced
NAD
:O(2) oxidoreductase EC 1.6.99.3) activity is associated almost entirely with everted vesicles, while the ability to concentrate proline is a property of the right-side out vesicles. The results explain the failure of previous workers to observe the energization of membrane vesicles by oxidation of NADH.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli and their subfractionation with antibody to ATPase. 415 73
Partially purified enzymatic fractions from extracts of Escherichia coli B/r catalyse transfer of the isotope label from [adenine-2,8-(3)H]
NAD+
to some bacterial proteins, as well as to hen egg-white
lysozyme
. The radioactive group in the modified
lysozyme
was identified as mono(ADP-ribose). Several bacterial proteins were labelled in vivo with 32P; the presence of the label in the form of an ADP-ribosyl group was shown in one of them.
...
PMID:ADP-ribosylation of proteins in non-infected Escherichia coli cells. 626 16
Purified recombinant poly(hydroxyalkanoic acid) (PHA) synthase from Chromatium vinosum (PhaECCv) was used to examine in vitro the specific synthase activity, turnover of R-(-)-3-hydroxybutyryl coenzyme A (3HB-CoA) and poly(3-hydroxybutyric acid) formation under various conditions. The 3HB-CoA consumption was terminated by a reaction-dependent inactivation of the PHA synthase. Salts (MgCl2, CaCl2, NaCl), proteins (bovine serum albumin,
lysozyme
, phasine) or detergent (Tween 20) increased the 3HB-CoA turnover to 2.5-fold. Specific PHA synthase activity was only partially affected by the added components. In general, a higher concentration of salt often inhibited the activity of PhaECCv without affecting the yield according to 3HB-CoA turnover.
NAD+
and NADP+ (2 mM) inhibited PhaECCv completely, whereas NADH and NADPH did not. Macroscopic poly(3HB) granules were formed in vitro if PhaECCv was incubated in the presence of sufficient amounts of 3HB-CoA and if MgCl2 was present. The form and size of the granules synthesized in vitro were affected by the concentration of the PHA synthase protein as well as by bovine serum albumin and the GA24 protein, a poly(3HB)-granule-associated protein of Alcaligenes eutrophus. Scanning electron micrographs from the synthesized granules were obtained. The granules consisted of poly(3HB) that had a molar mass in the range (1-2) x 10(6) g/mol.
...
PMID:In vitro biosynthesis of poly(3-hydroxybutyric acid) by using purified poly(hydroxyalkanoic acid) synthase of Chromatium vinosum. 958 Dec 89
The cells of Haloarcula vallismortis, an extreme halophilic archaebacterium, were permeabilized by various chemical, physical, and biological treatments. Biological permeabilization by
lysozyme
and papain showed effective results as observed by studying the in situ activity of halophilic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (hGAPDH) as the model enzyme. Detergents N-cetyl-N, N, N-trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) and digitonin also showed significant results. Other strains of halobacteria could also be permeabilized by
lysozyme
. The cell morphology did not show any significant change after permeabilization as observed by phase contrast microscopy. The enzyme characteristics of hGAPDH were studied in situ using permeabilized H. vallismortis cells. The properties, like optimum pH, Km for GAP and
NAD
(+), inhibition by heavy metals, sulphydryl reagents, and other compounds, showed remarkable similarity with those studied in vitro.
...
PMID:Measurement of in situ halophilic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity from the permeabilized cells of archaebacterium Haloarcula vallismortis. 1250 32
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