Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Protein I, the major outer membrane protein of Neisseria gonorrhoeae, is a voltage-dependent anion channel which can translocate from the gonococcus into human cells. Since granule exocytosis from neutrophils is regulated by ion fluxes, we examined the effect of protein I on neutrophil activation. Pretreatment with protein I (250 nM) impaired degranulation from neutrophils: beta-glucuronidase release decreased to 27 +/- 6% S.E. of cells treated with N-f-Met-
Leu
-Phe (fMLP, 0.1 microM) and to 13 +/- 4% of cells treated with leukotriene B4 (LTB4, 0.1 microM);
lysozyme
release decreased to 52 +/- 17% of fMLP-treated cells and 22 +/- 9% of LTB4-treated cells. Morphometric analysis was consistent: control neutrophils increased their surface membrane after fMLP (43.3 +/- 5.6 microns relative perimeter versus 71.4 +/- 3.7 microns) while protein I-treated neutrophils did not (29.4 +/- 2 (S.E.) microns relative perimeter versus 34 +/- 4 microns). Enzyme release after exposure to phorbol myristate acetate was not affected (
lysozyme
: 86 +/- 27% of control). Cell/cell aggregation in response to fMLP was inhibited by treatment with protein I. However, generation of O2 was not affected. Protein I altered the surface membrane potential (Oxonol V): protein I evoked a transient membrane hyperpolarization which was not inhibited by furosemide. After exposure to fMLP, protein I-treated neutrophils underwent a furosemide-sensitive hyperpolarization rather than the usual depolarization. Protein I did not alter increments in [Ca]i (Fura-2) stimulated by fMLP (460 +/- 99 nM (S.E.) versus 377 +/- 44 nM) nor decrements in [pH]i (7.22 +/- 0.04 S.E. versus 7.22 +/- 0.02, bis-(carboxy-ethyl)carboxyfluorescein). The results suggest that degranulation and O2 generation have separate ionic requirements and that protein I interrupts the activation sequence proximal to activation of protein kinase C.
...
PMID:Protein I, a translocatable ion channel from Neisseria gonorrhoeae, selectively inhibits exocytosis from human neutrophils without inhibiting O2- generation. 282 69
The aim for the present studies is to examine the relationship between the phosphorylation of the 47-kDa protein and some neutrophil responses such as degranulation, the synergistic effect of PMA on calcium ionophore-induced degranulation, superoxide generation, and the priming of the oxidative burst produced by the chemotactic factor fMet-
Leu
-Phe and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). Incubation of neutrophils with the protein kinase inhibitor 1-(5-isoquinoline-sulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H-7) inhibits the phosphorylation of the 47-kDa protein produced by PMA and fMet-
Leu
-Phe but does not affect
lysozyme
release induced by the same stimuli or fMet-
Leu
-Phe-induced N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase release. Furthermore, the synergistic effect of PMA on the A23187-induced degranulation is not inhibited by H-7. Also, pretreatment of the cells with H-7 inhibits superoxide production produced by PMA but not by fMet-
Leu
-Phe. The inhibitory effect of H-7 is more pronounced on the rate than on the extent of PMA-induced superoxide release. On the other hand, N-(2-guanidinoethyl)-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide hydrochloride, HA-1004, a less potent protein kinase inhibitor, has no inhibitory effect on superoxide generation produced by fMet-
Leu
-Phe or PMA. In the case of superoxide production, the addition of low concentrations of PMA to rabbit neutrophils primes these cells to the subsequent stimulation by fMet-
Leu
-Phe, dramatically increasing the effect. Conversely, low concentrations of fMet-
Leu
-Phe prime the cells to PMA stimulation. The stimulation by PMA of cells primed with fMet-
Leu
-Phe is inhibited by H-7. Moreover, the priming effect by PMA is also inhibited by H-7. This inhibition is less pronounced at a low concentration of PMA. On the other hand, in the case of human neutrophils, the priming effect of PMA is not inhibited by H-7. These results suggest several points. First, phosphorylation of the protein identified on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis as having a molecular weight of 47 kDa and PI of 4.9 is not necessary for degranulation produced by either PMA or fMet-
Leu
-Phe. Second, the phosphorylation of the 47-kDa protein is not necessary for superoxide generation, at least in the case of fMet-
Leu
-Phe and possibly for other stimuli. Third, in rabbit neutrophils, both the priming and stimulation of superoxide production with PMA are inhibited by H-7. In human neutrophils, the priming by PMA is not affected by H-7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dissociation of the 47-kilodalton protein phosphorylation from degranulation and superoxide production in neutrophils. 282 26
The destruction of proliferating lymphoid cells within germinal centers with subsequent replacement by histiocytoid cells has been described in infants and children dying of viral and bacterial infections. The etiology and significance of "epithelioid germinal centers" (EGCs) are unknown. The cells implicated in forming EGCs have included histiocytes and dendritic reticulum cells. We have studied four children at autopsy who died at ages ranging from 10 months to 7 years. Three contracted fatal infections, one with fulminant meningococcemia, one with bacterial sepsis, and one with viral hepatitis. The fourth child contracted viral pneumonitis and died of acetaminophen toxicity. Epithelioid germinal centers were found in numerous lymphoid organs (spleen, lymph nodes, and Peyer's patches) in all four cases. Avidin-biotin complex immunohistochemical analysis performed on formalin-fixed splenic tissue from the first three cases and snap-frozen splenic tissue from the second case revealed an absence of B cells in the follicular centers. The mantle zones surrounding follicles were thin but intact. The histiocytoid cells expanding the germinal centers were positive for S100 and R4/23 (dendritic reticulum cells) and negative for numerous histiocyte markers (alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and
lysozyme
). Increased numbers of killer cells (
Leu
-7) were present within the affected germinal centers in the three cases in which material was available for immunohistochemical studies. Overwhelming infections in these patients seem to result in anomalous natural killer cell activation resulting in localized nonselective destruction of follicular centers similar to anomalous natural killer cell activity reported to occur in fatal infectious mononucleosis. This may lead to an acquired immunodeficiency that precludes long-term survival in affected patients.
...
PMID:Epithelioid germinal centers in overwhelming childhood infections. The aftermath of nonspecific destruction of follicular B cells by natural killer cells. 284 41
Circular dichroism studies on synthetic peptides corresponding to the signal sequences of chicken
lysozyme
and Escherichia coli proteins, lambda-receptor and lipoprotein, have been carried out in trifluoroethanol. The peptides, (CH3)3-C-O-CO-Thr-
Leu
-Lys-Lys-
Leu
-Pro-
Leu
-Ala-Val-Ala-Val-Ala-Ala-Gly- Val-Met-Thr-Ala- Ala-Met-Ala-OCH3, (CH3)3-C-O-CO-Met-Lys-Ser-
Leu
-
Leu
-Ile-
Leu
-Val-
Leu
-Cys(benzyl)- Phe-
Leu
-Pro-
Leu
-Ala-Ala-
Leu
-Gly-OH and (CH3)3-C-O-CO-
Leu
-Val-
Leu
-Gly-Ala-Val-Ile-
Leu
-Gly- Thr-Thr-
Leu
-
Leu
- Ala-Gly-OCH3, corresponding to the signal sequences of lambda-receptor,
lysozyme
and the hydrophobic region of lipoprotein, respectively, show two negative bands at approx. 205 and 220 nm, characteristic of an alpha-helical conformation. Secondary structural features are discernible even in the shorter, 12-residue carboxy-terminal fragments of these signal peptides. A comparison of the conformation of the amino-terminal, central and carboxy-terminal fragments of lipoprotein signal sequence indicates that the central octapeptide fragment is more structurally ordered compared to the amino- and carboxy-terminal fragments.
...
PMID:Circular dichroism studies on synthetic signal peptides. 293 58
Immunohistological study of 18 cases of histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis (HNL) demonstrated numerous helper/inducer cells (OKT-4) and suppressor/cytotoxic cells (OKT-8) with activation (Tac) and proliferation (OKT-9) markers, and histiocytes (
lysozyme
, alpha-1 anti-chymotrypsin, OK-M1) in the affected areas. However, B cells (B-1), NK cells (
Leu
-7 and
Leu
-11), complement proteins and receptor (C4 and C3d receptor), and neutrophils (chloroacetate esterase) were scanty or absent in these foci. Activity of NK cells was also decreased in the peripheral blood of 2 cases examined. The results suggest that HNL might be induced by the abnormal T cell-histiocyte response against some causative agents which induce a similar reaction of delayed hypersensitivity type.
...
PMID:Immunohistological study of histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis. 294 16
A comparative study of large cell lymphoma (LCL) (ten B and ten T), Hodgkin's disease (15 cases), and true histiocytic lymphoma (two cases) was undertaken, using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections, a panel of eight antibodies, and one lectin to determine if any particular antibody or immunologic profile could reliably distinguish between these entities. The antibodies used were against
Leu
-M1, alpha-1-anti-chymotrypsin (alpha-ACT), alpha-anti-trypsin (alpha-AT),
lysozyme
, kappa, lambda, leukocyte common antigen (LCA), and S-100 protein. The lectin used was peanut agglutinin (PNA). Although
Leu
-M1 staining was positive in 11 of 15 cases (73%) of Hodgkin's disease, it was also positive in 4 of 10 cases (40%) of T-cell lymphoma, 2 of 10 cases (20%) of B-cell lymphoma, and 1 of 2 cases (50%) of true histiocytic lymphoma. Peanut-agglutinin staining results were similar to
Leu
-M1. The only staining profile that emerged was the presence of
Leu
-M1, PNA-, alpha-ACT, and alpha-AT staining in Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells in 11 of 15 cases of Hodgkin's disease.
Leu
-M1 and its staining pattern is characteristic, but not entirely specific for RS cells, and it was not positive in at least 25% of the cases of Hodgkin's disease in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. The limitations of this antibody and others should be recognized.
...
PMID:A comparative marker study of large cell lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, and true histiocytic lymphoma in paraffin-embedded tissue. 294 20
Activated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) isolated from peripheral blood specifically bind 125I-laminin after stimulation with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) or f-Met-
Leu
-Phe (FMLP) at 37 degrees C. Changes in laminin receptor expression are stimulus dose dependent at both chemotactic (10(-10) M to 10(-6) M) concentrations of FMLP, and secretory (greater than 5 ng/ml) levels of PMA. In the presence of cytochalasin B (5 micrograms/ml), 10(-7) M FMLP activation stimulates specific laminin binding, with an apparent Kd = 3.9 X 10(-9) M and 6.47 X 10(5) binding sites/cell, reaching equilibrium within 10 min at 4 degrees C. This observed activation-dependent change in laminin receptor expression is not due to interference by endogenous laminin, because no fluorescein-visualized anti-laminin antibody bound to cells without added glycoprotein, regardless of the level of activation. Levels of neutrophil
lysozyme
release, which show a PMA dose dependence similar to that of receptor binding activity, suggest that granule-plasma membrane fusion may be significant during increases in receptor expression. A lack of receptor stimulation by PMA from a granule-deficient patient or in granule-depleted cytoplasts from normal donors additionally supports this hypothesis. Electroblot transfer and autoradiography of subcellular fractions from unstimulated PMN reveals the presence of a 68,000 dalton laminin-binding component in the secondary/tertiary granule (beta) fraction, which may represent an intracellular laminin receptor pool.
...
PMID:Human neutrophil laminin receptors: activation-dependent receptor expression. 294 78
Six cases of diffuse large cell lymphoma (DLCL) of the liver were studied with immunohistochemistry for common leukocyte antigen (CLA),
lysozyme
, alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT), and kappa and lambda light chains on paraffin-embedded tissues. All six cases were positive for CLA. Four of the six cases showed staining for
lysozyme
and AAT (three focal and one diffuse staining). In three cases, frozen tissue for monoclonal antibodies and glutaraldehyde-fixed tissue for electron microscopic examination were available. Two of these showed B-cell phenotypes with monoclonal antibody studies. Electron microscopic examination on these two B-cell lymphomas showed scant cytoplasm and a paucity of cytoplasmic organelles. The third case did not show definite B- or T-cell surface markers but did show strong
Leu
-M1 and OKM1 staining. Electron microscopic examination of the tumor cells showed a prominent Golgi apparatus, abundant cytoplasm with numerous cytoplasmic organelles and phagolysosomes. However, DNA hybridization studies on this tumor showed immunoglobulin heavy and kappa light chain gene rearrangements typical of a B-cell lymphoma. All six lymphomas were solitary liver masses without evidence of disease elsewhere. The mean age for the six patients was 56.2 years (four males, two females).
...
PMID:Primary lymphomas of the liver. Report of six cases and review of the literature. 295 12
The morphologic differentiation between malignant lymphoma of the small noncleaved cell (SNC) type and lymphoblastic lymphoma (LBL) is at times difficult, particularly when fresh tissue is not available for immunologic studies. We have examined the reactivities of a panel of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies, including LN-1, LN-2, and antibodies to immunoglobulin light chains, leukocyte common antigen (LCA),
Leu
-M1, vimentin, S-100 protein,
lysozyme
, and alpha-1-antitrypsin, in paraffin-embedded, B5- and formalin-fixed tissue involved by SNC or LBL. The immunophenotypes in all of the cases included in this study had been characterized previously in fresh-frozen sections or cell suspensions. Among 21 samples of B5-fixed SNC, LN-1 was reactive in 17 and LN-2 in 18 cases. Among 13 B5-fixed LBL, LN-1 was reactive in two cases and LN-2 was reactive in two cases. Each of 20 B5-fixed samples of SNC was reactive with at least one of the antibodies, whereas 10 of the 13 B5-fixed samples of LBL were negative for both antibodies. Lesser reactivity was evident in formalin-fixed tissues, with only nine of 27 SNC specimens positive for LN-1 and 16 of 27 positive for LN-2. Most or all of the SNC and LBL samples were negative for immunoglobulin light chains,
Leu
-M1, vimentin, S-100 protein,
lysozyme
, and alpha-1-antitrypsin. The majority of both SNC and LBL were positive for LCA. We conclude that LN-1, preferably in combination with LN-2, can be used for distinguishing between SNC and LBL in paraffin-embedded, B5-fixed tissue when fresh tissue is not available.
...
PMID:Distinction between undifferentiated (small noncleaved) and lymphoblastic lymphoma. An immunohistologic study on paraffin-embedded, fixed tissue sections. 295 66
Extramedullary tissue infiltrates of acute myeloid leukemia are rare and often difficult to recognize in routine paraffin-embedded tissue sections. Since appropriate therapy for these tumors depends on their precise identification, we have studied a series of tissues infiltrated with primitive myeloid cells using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies capable of labeling cells of the myeloid/monocytic system in paraffin-embedded tissue sections. The current retrospective study involved tissues from 15 patients (eight men and seven women) with a mean age of 51 years (range, 23-77). A diagnosis of extramedullary myeloid cell tumors had been made on the basis of routine histology, chloroacetate esterase cytochemical stain, and--in some cases--electron microscopy. Paraffin-embedded tissue sections were cut and stained employing the alkaline phosphatase antialkaline phosphatase (APAAP) immunocytochemical procedure with monoclonal antibodies against leukocyte-common antigen (PD7/26-2B11), restricted components of the leukocyte-common antigen (UCHL1, 4KB5), granulocytes (Mac-387,
Leu
-M1), leukocytes (MT1, MT2, LN1, LN2), HLA-DR (LN3), and elastase (NP57), as well as polyclonal antibodies against lactoferrin,
lysozyme
, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin. Results indicate that antibodies against Mac-387, elastase, and
lysozyme
are most useful in the recognition of neoplastic myeloid cells. We conclude that tissues containing granulocytic tumors can be identified in paraffin-embedded tissue sections using a panel of antibodies and the APAAP procedure.
...
PMID:The immunophenotyping of extramedullary myeloid cell tumors in paraffin-embedded tissue sections. 297 Aug 8
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