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)

The use of some humoral, cellular and barrier immunity indices in the examination of practically healthy persons having an occupational contact with the complex of pesticides and grisine, an antibiotic intended for fodder revealed the presence of changes in various non-specific immunological reactivity links. The detected changes in the indices of the ingestive and digestive function of neutrophils could be interpreted as a compensatory reaction of the organism in response to the action of chemical agents, whereas reduction of lysozyme content and the appearance in the microbial pattern of deep dermal layers of mannite-splitting and hemolytic froms of microbes pointed to the presence of the first unfavourable shifts in humoral and barrier immunity factors. The indices of immunobiological reactivity were found to be sufficiently sensitive and could be used as auxillary tests of prenosological diagnosis of pathology of chemical etiology.
Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol 1977 Sep
PMID:[Value of the immunological indicators in the study of the health status of the chemical industry workers]. 59 27

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum lysozyme concentrations were determined in infants and children with and without acute infectious disease of the central nervous system. Serum lysozyme values from patients with bacterial and viral meningitis were found within the normal range. Lysozyme activity was absent or very low (below 0.5 microgram/ml) in normal CSF. High levels (4-12 microgram/ml) in patients with viral meningitis. A decrease of the lysozyme activity coincided with the clinical improvement of the bacterial meningitis. The lysozyme activity in CSF should be of significant value in detecting an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system.
Helv Paediatr Acta 1977 Sep
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid and serum lysozyme activity in bacterial and viral meningitis. 61 78

Serum lysozyme activity was determined in the sera of 70 patients with inflammatory bowel disease by the lysoplate method. Serum lysozyme levels were significantly elevated only in patients with Crohn's disease of the small bowel. Patients with either granulomatous or ulcerative colitis had serum lysozyme values not different from normals, irrespective of activity of their disease.
South Med J 1978 Sep
PMID:Serum lysozyme activity in inflammatory bowel disease. 68 4

The effect of progesterone on the secretion of protein by the magnum of 5-d-old, female chicks was determined. 2. The supernatant prepared by centrifuging an homogenate of the magnum at 105 000g was found, by immunodiffusion, to contain an antigenic component which precipitated the antisera for conalbumin 1, conalbumin 2 and ovalbumin after 5 d treatment with progesterone: there was no reaction to ovomucoid, lysozyme and avidin antisera. 3. Disc-electrophoresis of the homogenate revealed two bands at the site of ovalbumin. 4. Incorporation of 3H-lysine into the magnum proteins of progesterone-treated chicks did not differ from that of controls. 5. The secretion available in the magnum may be only a transudate from the serum and not a true secretory product. Progesterone behaved qualitatively as oestrogen in this study although the action is much less pronounced and was delayed.
Br Poult Sci 1978 Sep
PMID:Effect of progesterone on the magnum proteins during primary stimulation of chick oviduct. 70 91

An assay procedure for streptomycin was developed, using a surfactant-pH 8 buffer extraction, heating at 85 degrees C to eliminate inhibition from lysozyme activity, and centrifuging to remove physical barriers to diffusion. Recoveries of streptomycin from supplemented eggs averaged 42% over the range of 0.33--2.05 microgram streptomycin/g egg. Eggs were supplemented at 3.0, 30.0, and 300 microgram streptomycin/g and subjected to various cooking procedures: frying, poaching, scrambling, and hard boiling. There was little or no loss of activity as a result of the various cooking procedures with the exception of one of the hard boiled varieties where there was a 40% loss only at the 3.0 microgram/g supplementation. Streptomycin residues were quite stable to normal egg preparation procedures.
J Assoc Off Anal Chem 1978 Sep
PMID:Determination of streptomycin residues in eggs and stability of residues after cooking. 72 27

The procedure for neomycin residues used a surfactant to improve extraction, a centrifuge step to eliminate solids that interfere with the diffusion of the antibiotic, and a heat treatment to destroy interfering lysozyme activity. The use of Bcillus stearothermophilus and a 65 degree C incubation yielded a rapid assay with a sensitivity of 0.2 microgram neomycin activity/g egg. Frying eggs caused little or no loss of activity, poaching resulted in 25% loss, and soft boiling and hard boiling caused little or no loss of applied activity. Neomycin residues in eggs were quite stable to normal egg preparation procedures.
J Assoc Off Anal Chem 1978 Sep
PMID:Determination of neomycin residues in eggs and stability of residues after cooking. 72 28

Mutants of Escherichia coli K12, deficient in up to three major outer membrane proteins b, c and d have been constructed. Mutants that lack the lipopolysaccharide sugar heptose are deficient in protein b. All heptose-deficient strains are supersensitive to lysozyme, various antibiotics and detergents. They excrete the periplasmic enzyme ribonuclease I. Mutants deficient in proteins c and/or d have the same sensitivity towards these compounds as the parent strain. Cells of single, double and triple mutants are all rod-shaped. Electrophoretic analysis of cell envelope proteins indicates that in some mutants the protein deficiency is partially compensated for by increased amounts of one or two of the other major outer membrane proteins. Heptose-deficient strains have an increased amount of 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate.
Mol Gen Genet 1976 Sep 23
PMID:Heptose-deficient mutants of Escherichia coli K12 deficient in up to three major outer membrane proteins. 78 63

134 cases of acute leukemia in adults were classified according a "double blind" cytological diagnosis, a cytochemical study, and lysozyme assay. Each type has distinct characters, allowing a good nosological definition. The histochemical methods, as well as lysozyme assay are usually unnecessary, particularly in well differenciated myeloblastic, promyelocytic or myelo-monocytic acute leukemia. They are, on the contrary, frequently useful in poorly differenciated myeloblastic or monoblastic leukemia. But, they cannot help to solve every problem in cytological diagnosis: there are still 10% of undifferenciated acute leukemia, the lymphoblastic acute leukemia are not clearly defined and 4% of cases of acute leukemia have atypical characters leading to difficulties in cytological classification. The need for new methods and markers is emphasized.
Pathol Biol (Paris) 1976 Sep
PMID:[Cytological classification of adult acute leukemia (author's transl)]. 79 Feb 73

A method was developed to label specifically the glycan chains of the cell wall peptidoglycan of Streptococcus faecalis ATCC 9790 with [14C]acetate. The formation of peptide cross-links (a) during exponential growth, (b) after valine starvation and wall thickening, and (c) during regrowth after 2 hours of valine starvation, was studied using continuous, pulse and pulse-chase labeling of the peptidoglycan with both [14C]acetate and [3H]lysine. After labeling, walls were isolated, digested with the muramidase of Chalaropsis B, and the "free" peptidoglycan fragments (75 to 90% of the total peptidoglycan) were then fractionated on columns of Sephadex G-50, G-50, and G-25 in series into disaccharide-peptide monomer and peptide cross-linked bisdisaccharide-peptide dimer, trisdisaccharide-peptide trimer, and higher oligomer fractions. Peptidoglycan made during valine starvation and wall thickening was found to be slightly more cross-linked than peptidoglycan made during exponential growth. Pulse and pulse-chase experiments indicated that peptide cross-linking continued for an unexpectedly long time after incorporation of precursors into insoluble peptidoglycan.
J Biol Chem 1975 Sep 10
PMID:Studies of the formation of peptide cross-links in the cell wall peptidoglycan of Streptococcus faecalis. 80 47

Reccurrent abnormalities of polymorphonuclear leukocyte and monocyte bactericidal activity were demonstrated in a patient with sarcoidosis. Defective function occurred during hypercalcemia complicating recovery from Listeria meningitis, and during separate, unrelated episodes of erythema nodosum, staphylococcal cellulitis, and pneumococcal pneumonia. Leukocyte morphology, oxidative metabolism, degranulation, and content of myeloperoxidase and lysozyme were normal, but low leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activity was demonstrable on one occasion. Despite defective bactericidal function of monocytes, the patient's macrophages killed bacteria normally. The relationship between an intermittent leukocyte bactericidal defect and sarcoidosis is unclear; however, further studies of leukocyte function in sarcoidosis patients with opportunistic infection are indicated.
Am Rev Respir Dis 1975 Sep
PMID:Intermittent neutrophil-monocyte bactericidal defects in a patient with sarcoidosis. 80 91


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