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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Enzyme
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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)
3H-
FMLP
, a chemotactic peptide that resembles Escherichia coli chemotactic factor, is chemotactic for PAM, binds specifically to a site on the cell, and induces the generation of superoxide radicals by the cell. Scatchard analysis revealed an equilibrium dissociation constant at 26 degrees C of 1.45 x 10(-8)M and the presence of 1.7 , 10(5) receptors per cell. Binding was not inhibited by a partially purified C5a preparation or by the neutrophil-derived CCF but was inhibited by various N-formylated peptides. The order of potency of each peptide to inhibit 3H-
FMLP
binding was identical to the order of potency of each peptide to induce generation of superoxide by the PAM. Only small amounts of beta-glucuronidase activity and no
lysozyme
were detected in the supernatant after incubation of the cells for 30 min with varying concentrations of
FMLP
.
...
PMID:Determination of a specific receptor for formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine on th pulmonary alveolar macrophage and its relationship to chemotaxis and superoxide production. 626 Aug 78
The phospholipid mediator of anaphylaxis, platelet-activating factor (PAF) is chemotactic for polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). We have examined this agent's effects on several other PMN functions. Human PMN were prepared from heparinized venous blood by Ficoll gradient. Metabolic burst was examined by measurement of O2 use and O2.- production in the presence or absence of PAF (10(-6)--10(-9) M). Unless cells were treated with cytochalasin-B (5 micrograms/ml), no significant respiratory burst was demonstrated. However, pretreatment with PAF (10(-7) M) enhanced approximately threefold the O2 utilization found when cells were subsequently stimulated with 10(-7) M
FMLP
. PAF also stimulated arachidonic acid metabolism in 14C-arachidonic acid-labeled PMN. Thin-layer chromatography analysis of chloroform-methanol extracts showed substances that comigrated with authentic 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid had a marked increase in radioactivity following PAF stimulation at 10(-7) M. PAF failed to stimulate release of granule enzymes, B-glucuronidase,
lysozyme
, or myeloperoxidase unless cytochalasin-B were added. PAF from 10(-6) M to 10(-10) M affected PMN surface responses. PMN labeled with the fluorescent dye, chlorotetracycline, showed decreased fluorescence upon addition of PAF, suggesting translocation of membrane-bound cations. Further, the rate of migration of PMN in an electric field was decreased following PAF exposure, a change consistent with reduced cell surface charge. PMN self-aggregation and adherence to endothelial cells were both influenced by PAF (10(-6) M--10(-9) M). Aggregation was markedly stimulated by the compound, and the percent PMN adhering to endothelial cell monolayers increased almost twofold in the presence of 10(-8) M PAF. Thus, PAF promotes a variety of PMN responses: enhances respiratory burst, stimulates arachidonic acid turnover, alters cell membrane cation content and surface charge, and promotes PMN self-aggregation as well as adherence to endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Metabolic, membrane, and functional responses of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes to platelet-activating factor. 628 62
The anti-inflammatory effects of gold compounds include suppression of PMN lysosomal enzyme release. Since lysosomal products can provoke PMN aggregation, we assessed the effect of two gold compounds, auranofin and GST, on suppressing aggregation, degranulation, and metabolic functions of the cells. Aggregation of 1 x 10(7) cytochalasin B-treated PMNs in response to 2 x 10(-7)M
FMLP
, as assessed by light scattering, was inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by both drugs. Concentrations of auranofin ranging from 5 to 20 microM caused 30.8% to 89% inhibition, whereas 200 microM GST reduced aggregation by only 32%. FCS or BSA added to suspensions of normal PMNs considerably reduced the gold compound inhibitory effect on PMN aggregation. Cell viability assessed by dye exclusion and lactate dehydrogenase release was unaffected by the drugs. The suppressive activities of the drugs could not be removed by washing the PMNs. Correspondingly, the drugs suppressed lysosomal enzyme release induced by
FMLP
of PMNs rendered secretory with cytochalasin B. Concentrations of 20 microM auranofin and 200 microM GST resulted, respectively, in a 61.5% and 19.3% reduction of release of
lysozyme
, 61.7% and 27.1% reduction of beta-glucuronidase, 84.8% and 33.7%s reduction of myeloperoxidase, and 50.0% and 25.0% reduction of lactoferrin. Furthermore, auranofin inhibited 14C-1-glucose oxidation through the hexose monophosphate shunt in response to stimulation by either PMA or methylene blue. The in vivo studies suggested that auranofin could prevent neither neutropenia induced by zymosan-activated serum nor a corresponding rise in plasma lactoferrin levels. These findings suggest that the beneficial effect of gold compounds in rheumatoid arthritis are unlikely to be related to their ability to dampen PMN activation in vivo.
...
PMID:Correlation of in vitro and in vivo effects of gold compounds on leukocyte function: possible mechanisms of action. 628 1
Timegadine, a new non-acidic anti-inflammatory agent, inhibits in a concentration-dependent way the
FMLP
-induced release of beta-glucuronidase and
lysozyme
from human granulocytes. Superoxide generation and directed migration are also inhibited. As this effect on granulocytes occurs at drug concentrations inhibiting the lipoxygenase pathway of arachidonic acid metabolism, the hypothesis that these two phenomena could be related is discussed.
...
PMID:In vitro inhibition of granulocyte function by timegadine, a new anti-inflammatory agent. 632 59
Prominent and global abnormalities in chemotactic, oxidative, and microbicidal activity have been identified in neutrophils from patients with severe sepsis. To evaluate the possible contribution of degranulation as the basis for the observed abnormalities, 12 patients with intrabdominal infection were serially studied and neutrophil chemotaxis, enzyme content, and receptors for
FMLP
were evaluated. There was a significant correlation between chemotactic response to both activated serum and
FMLP
with the granular enzymes beta-glucuronidase and
lysozyme
. For
FMLP
-directed migration, r = 0.73, P less than 0.001 for
lysozyme
, and r = 0.59, P less than 0.001 for beta-glucuronidase. There was a similarly significant correlation between loss of
lysozyme
and an increase in
FMLP
receptors, previously shown to be a marker for degranulation. These data support the concept that in vivo degranulation, possibly due to effects of circulating chemoattractants on adherent neutrophils, is responsible for the enzymatic and chemotactic loss seen in cells from septic patients. This hypothesis also provides a mechanism to explain the respiratory distress syndrome if degranulation were to occur in the pulmonary capillary bed.
...
PMID:Neutrophil dysfunction in sepsis. III. Degranulation as a mechanism for nonspecific deactivation. 632 15
The reaction of
FMLP
with granulocytes causes aggregation and degranulation and enhances adherence to endothelium. To evaluate whether prevention of granule extrusion could impair these granulocyte activities, granulocytes were treated with either dexamethasone or hydrocortisone prior to treatment with
FMLP
. Dexamethasone was added to suspensions of cytochalasin B-treated granulocytes; it markedly impaired the aggregation response of the granulocytes of
FMLP
. When cytochalasin-B was not used, granulocyte aggregation in response to
FMLP
or PMA was inhibited by dexamethasone. Although dexamethasone prevented aggregation of cells following stimulation with
FMLP
or PMA, it failed to prevent the aggregation of granulocytes induced by rabbit lactoferrin. Adherence of granulocytes to human endothelial monolayers was enhanced by
FMLP
; dexamethasone inhibited the enhancement. However, with the addition of human lactoferrin to the granulocytes exposed to dexamethasone, the cells were able to adhere as well to endothelium as the cells exposed to
FMLP
but free of dexamethasone. When cytochalasin-B-treated granulocytes were incubated with dexamethasone or hydrocortisone prior to the addition of
FMLP
, the subsequent release of lactoferrin was substantially blocked, whereas the release of the primary granule products,
lysozyme
and beta-glucuronidase, was attenuated but not completely blocked. Thus, corticosteroids might block chemotactic-factor-induced granulocyte aggregation by selectively preventing release of specific granule products that contribute to and sustain aggregation.
...
PMID:Mechanism of dexamethasone inhibition of chemotactic factor induced granulocyte aggregation. 705 39
Cefdinir, a new oral 2-amino-5-thiazolyl cephalosporin, inhibited the luminol-amplified chemiluminescence (LACL) response of human neutrophils stimulated by PMA but not opsonized zymosan, in a concentration-dependent but not time-dependent manner. The LACL response to opsonized zymosan in cytochalasin B-treated neutrophils was, however, inhibited by cefdinir. Various cephalosporins, regardless of the presence of a 2-amino-5-thiazolyl moiety, did not significantly alter the neutrophil LACL response triggered by PMA and zymosan. The LACL response induced by the calcium ionophore A23187 and
FMLP
was also impaired by cefdinir, and this impairment was increased in cytochalasin B-treated neutrophils. Superoxide anion generation by neutrophils, measured in terms of lucigenin-amplified chemiluminescence and cytochrome c reduction, was not altered. Spontaneous and
FMLP
-induced neutrophil degranulation, assessed by
lysozyme
and beta-glucuronidase release, were not modified by cefdinir. Furthermore, cefdinir inhibited LACL generation in cell-free systems consisting of H2O2, NaI, and either horseradish peroxidase or a myeloperoxidase-containing neutrophil extract. Orthodianisidine oxidation in these two acellular systems was inhibited by cefdinir. Cefdinir did not alter neutrophil bacterial killing at concentrations that inhibited myeloperoxidase-containing neutrophil extract-dependent reactions induced by soluble stimuli. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that cefdinir directly inhibits the activity of myeloperoxidase-containing neutrophil extract released into the extracellular medium during neutrophil stimulation by soluble mediators, but has no effect on that released into the phagolysosome during phagocytosis. This unusual property of a member of the beta-lactam family could be of interest in modulating the exaggerated inflammatory process often associated with infectious diseases.
...
PMID:Cefdinir (CI-983), a new oral amino-2-thiazolyl cephalosporin, inhibits human neutrophil myeloperoxidase in the extracellular medium but not the phagolysosome. 813 56
The in vitro effect of unfractionated heparin and dermatan sulfate, as well as oligo-heparin and oligo-dermatan sulfate, on human PMN function was investigated. Superoxide anion generation in fMLP-stimulated PMN was dose-dependently reduced by heparin and oligo-heparin, while DS and oligo-DS lacked inhibitory activity.
FMLP
-stimulated PMN adhesion to endothelial cells was reduced to a similar extent by both heparin and oligo-heparin, but not by DS and oligo-DS. On the other hand, none of the compounds affected the adhesion of unstimulated PMN to either IL-1- or PMA-activated endothelial cells. Heparin and oligo-heparin also inhibited the homotypic aggregation of fMLP-stimulated PMN. As reported, coincubation of platelets with fMLP-stimulated PMN resulted in platelet activation, a process mainly mediated by the PMN-derived serine protease cathepsin G. Both heparin and DS, as well as their oligo-derivatives, reduced platelet activation induced by either fMLP-stimulated PMN or purified leukocytic cathepsin G. Finally, besides cathepsin G, also the activity of beta-glucuronidase and
lysozyme
released by stimulated PMN were reduced by heparin, oligo-heparin and DS. These data support the hypothesis that heparin and other GAGs may exert an antiinflammatory role.
...
PMID:Effect of heparin, dermatan sulfate, and related oligo-derivatives on human polymorphonuclear leukocyte functions. 843 35
Macrolide antibiotics are taken up and concentrated by host cells, particularly phagocytes, and are likely candidates to modify cell functions. In this study, we extended our previous work concerning the effect of three 14-membered-ring macrolides (dirithromycin, erythromycin and erythromycylamine) on human neutrophil exocytosis, and found that three other erythromycin A derivatives (roxithromycin, clarithromycin and the azalide, azithromycin) also triggered neutrophil degranulation in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. After 30 min of incubation, the correlation coefficients for concentration-dependence for roxithromycin were 0.885, 0.739 and 0.750 (P < 0.005) and for clarithromycin were 0.795, 0.599, 0.733 (P < 0.02), respectively, for
lysozyme
, beta-glucuronidase and lactoferrin release. Although the underlying mechanism was not elucidated, these and previous data suggest that intracellular accumulation is a prerequisite. Furthermore, comparison of the characteristics of macrolide-induced exocytosis with those of exocytosis triggered by the synthetic chemotactic stimulus
FMLP
suggested that different mechanisms are involved. In keeping with this possibility, we showed that combined treatment (macrolides plus
FMLP
) resulted in totally additive exocytosis of azurophilic but not specific granules. The clinical relevance of our data remains to be ascertained.
...
PMID:Comparison of various macrolides on stimulation of human neutrophil degranulation in vitro. 885 60
The presence of lipoproteins and lipooligosaccharides in Treponema denticola, an oral spirochaete associated with periodontal diseases, was investigated. T. denticola ATCC 35404 and the clinical isolate GM-1 were metabolically labeled with [3H]-cis-9-octadecenoic acid and extracted with the non-ionic detergent Triton X-114. The extract was phase separated, precipitated with acetone and delipidated to remove non-covalently bound lipid (dLPP). In T. denticola ATCC 35404, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide electrophoretic separation followed by autoradiography showed [3H]-cis-9-octadecenoic acid incorporation in bands with apparent molecular masses of 14, 20, 26, 31, 38, 72 and 85 kDa and a broad band running from 113 kDa to the top of the gel. This last band resolved into a 53 kDa [3H]-cis-9-octadecenoic acid band upon heating for 10 min, at 100 degrees C. The structural relationship of the outer sheath major oligomeric polypeptide of strain ATCC 35404 and the 53 kDa protein was demonstrated immunologically. Antibodies against the 113 kDa component of the oligomer cross-reacted with the 53 kDa protein. Proteinase K degraded the [3H]-cis-9-octadecenoic acid bands with the exception of the 14 kDa. The 14 kDa was also the major [3H]-fatty acid labeled compound found in the water phase following phenol-water extraction of whole T. denticola ATCC 35404 cells. This compound was purified from the water phase by gel filtration followed by hydrophobic chromatography. Chemical analysis showed that hexadecanoic acid was the predominant fatty acid bound to T. denticola lipoproteins. In the GM-1 strain [3H]-cis-9-octadecenoic acid incorporation was observed in the 116 kDa and 14 kDa bands. dLPP from strain ATCC 35404 caused an enhanced (0.8-8 micrograms/ml) luminol dependent chemiluminiscence (LDCL) effect in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) which could be related to protein concentration. The addition of dLPP to PMN together with
FMLP
at submaximal concentration (1 microM) resulted in a synergistic activation of LDCL. At 21 micrograms/ml, dLPP also induced
lysozyme
release by the PMN at approximately 30% of the release induced by the chemotactic peptide at 1 microM. In addition, dLPP (21 micrograms/ml) increased additively the release of
lysozyme
caused by 1 microM
FMLP
. The release of beta-glucuronidase was not affected. The modulation of neutrophil activity was abolished by preincubation of dLPP with proteinase K. The purified 14 kDa had no effect on either LDCL or exocytosis of lysosomal enzymes of PMN. These data strongly suggest that T. denticola possesses several lipoproteins including outer sheath major oligomeric polypeptides (113-234 kDa) and a lipooligosaccharide of molecular mass of 14 kDa. In addition, an enriched lipoprotein fraction from this oral spirochaete modulates oxygen dependent and independent mechanisms for controlling microorganisms by human PMN.
...
PMID:Lipoproteins of Treponema denticola: their effect on human polymorphonuclear neutrophils. 926 97
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