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)
From experiments with glycoproteins containing the glycopeptide linkages, arabinose-O-hydroxyproline and galactose-O-serine (plant cell wall glycopeptides), N-acetylgalactosamine-O-serine/threonine (pig submaxillary
mucin
), and N-acetyl-glucosamine-N-asparagine (fetuin), it is apparent that anhydrous liquid HF, a reagent commonly used by snythetic peptide chemists for the complete removal of protecting groups from synthetic peptides, cleaves the O-glycosidic linkages of neutral sugars in 1 hr at 0 degrees C, and the O-glycosidic linkages of amino sugars in 3 hr at 23 degrees C. The N-glycosidic linkage of N-acetylglucosamine to asparagine is not cleaved under any conditions that have been tested. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis of bovine serum albumin treated in HF does not show any degradation of peptide bonds. Some relatively stable enzymes (
lysozyme
and RNase) have been shown by others to retain most of their enzymic activity after short treatment (1 hr at 0 degrees C) in HF. With the specificity of HF at 0 degrees C for neutral sugars it should be possible to generate di- or trisaccharides in high yield from polysaccharides containing both neutral and amino sugars with neutral sugars as the reducing termini.
...
PMID:A new approach to the structural determination of glycoproteins and polysaccharides: anhydrous HF solvolysis. 7 2
Little information is available about the acquired pellicle layer that is formed on denture surfaces or its role in regulating microbial colonization of the prosthetic surface. Because denture-induced stomatitis is associated with increased numbers of Candida albicans and other microorganisms on the denture surface, the acquired denture pellicle (ADP) may play a role in modulating this colonization. This study examined and compared ADP from healthy patients and patients with stomatitis by chemical and immunochemical methods. The ADP was found to be composed of a selectively adsorbed layer containing salivary amylase, high molecular weight mucin (MG1),
lysozyme
, albumin, and sIgA. Salivary cystatins, proline-rich proteins, and low molecular weight
mucin
(MG2) were not detected. ADP amino acid composition was distinct from any of the ductal salivas, but had many similarities with enamel pellicle. Immunoblots of ADP from patients with stomatitis identified additional serum components, degradation products, and C. albicans cell components that were not detected in ADP from healthy patients. Quantification of these molecules in ADP could lead to a diagnostic test for oral mucosal disease underlying a denture base. Identification of specific molecules in denture pellicle that promote adhesion of C. albicans may elucidate a mechanism of fungal cell colonization on the denture surface. Future studies that chemically modify the denture acrylic resin surface to immobilize antimicrobial proteins may be a means of decreasing pathogenic plaque development.
...
PMID:Characterization of acquired denture pellicle from healthy and stomatitis patients. 140 50
The distribution of
lysozyme
in normal and pathological human gastric and colonic mucosa was studied by light and electron microscopic immunocytochemical techniques and compared with histological and histochemical features. Lysozyme was localized in pyloric glandular epithelial cells, mucous neck cells of fundic glands, Paneth cells and some crypt cells of the mature colonic mucosa. In addition,
lysozyme
was detected in a large spectrum of "immature" or "regenerative" epithelium: neck cells of the gastric regenerative zone, undifferentiated columnar cells of surface and hyperplastic interfoveolar crests of the stomach, regenerative cells in a healed gastric ulcer, some goblet cells in incomplete intestinal metaplasia, cells of the regenerative zone at the bottom of colonic crypts and, finally, fetal intestinal epithelium. Electron microscopically, we localized
lysozyme
in the central core of mucous granules in the pyloric gastric glandular epithelium and in the dense mucous granules in gastric mucous neck cells. Lysozyme was also detected in some immature
mucin
-producing cells of the gastric regenerative zone and in the rough endoplasmic reticulum of surface hyperplastic columnar gastric cells. At the electron microscopic level, a peculiar correlation between the immunopattern of
lysozyme
and the morphology of mucous granules has been postulated. All our data support and extend the view that the presence of
lysozyme
may be related to cell immaturity as well as to a regenerative state of the cell. Finally, the
lysozyme
distribution and its relation to mucosubstances in gastric and colonic carcinoma suggest that
lysozyme
should not be considered an exclusive marker of cells of gastric derivation.
...
PMID:Lysozyme localization in normal and diseased human gastric and colonic mucosa. A correlative histochemical, immunohistochemical and immunoelectron microscopic investigation. 164 44
In this study an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay has been developed for the determination of
lysozyme
in saliva, serum and urine. The assay relies on the detection of specific protein rather than lytic activity, a property which has been shown to be most suitable for the quantitation of
lysozyme
in
mucin
containing substances. Our results indicate that no pretreatment is necessary for the immunochemical method. The assay is sensitive to concentrations as low as 1 microgram
lysozyme
/l. The intra-assay and inter-assay coefficients of variation were 5.9% and 15.8% respectively. The
lysozyme
level in whole saliva was 55.53 +/- 30.35 mg/l, in serum the level was 0.64 +/- 0.15 mg/l and in urine it was 0.17 +/- 0.22 mg/l. Comparisons between immunochemical determination and lytic assays showed a good correlation (serum, r = 0.79, P less than 0.01; saliva, r = 0.85, P less than 0.005; treated saliva, r = 0.96, P less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Measurement of lysozyme by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. 173 82
A distinct morphological variant of a diffuse type adenocarcinoma of the stomach with Paneth cell differentiation is reported. The tumor was a Borrmann's Type III carcinoma measuring 6.0 x 5.5 cm at the body along the greater curvature. It was composed of Paneth cell- and endocrine cell differentiated cancer cells in addition to tubular and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells. The Paneth cell differentiation was characterized histologically by cytoplasmic distinct coarse eosinophilic granules stained red with periodic acid-Schiff and Masson trichrome reagents and reddish brown with phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin, and electron microscopically by
lysozyme
in cytoplasmic electron dense granules. In addition, electron microscopy revealed acid
mucin
globules and various intermediate forms between Paneth granules and the
mucin
globules which might be regarded as abortive forms of Paneth granules presumably resulting from defective incorporation of
lysozyme
-positive mucosubstances into acid
mucin
. Endocrine differentiated cancer cells consisted of serotonin-, peptide YY-, and glucagon/glicentin-positive cells. The various cell phenotypes found in the present tumor could be explained on the basis of intestinal differentiation of gastric cancer.
...
PMID:Predominant Paneth cell differentiation in an intestinal type gastric cancer. 206 3
Numerous studies have demonstrated that patients with dry eyes have a compromised ocular surface. Furthermore, these patients suffer deficiencies of various surface defense mechanisms, such as tear volume, tear components (
lysozyme
, lactoferrin, and beta-lysin), the
mucin
network, cellular exfoliation, and subsurface immune secretions. When such individuals wear contact lenses (CLs), a special set of circumstances arises that increases the risk of ocular infection. The risk is greatest if the lenses are soft and, therefore, provide for little tear exchange beneath their surface. Under such circumstances, limited tear flow allows for a greater buildup of lens deposits and metabolic wastes, while permitting increased tear evaporation from the lens surface. The pathogenesis of infection is attributed to various mechanisms, including decreased tear flow beneath the lens, decreased tear components, stagnation of the
mucin
network, changes in surface cell exfoliation, and putative changes in the subsurface immune secretory system. Dry eye patients who wear soft CLs also run a greater risk of bacterial conjunctivitis, blepharitis, and sterile corneal infiltrates.
...
PMID:Is the dry eye contact lens wearer at risk? Yes. 218 82
This binding was investigated with a simplified method: whole saliva and
mucin
bound to C. albicans in significantly greater quantities than other proteins such as whole serum, albumin,
lysozyme
or fibrinogen; and the enzymatic treatment of C. albicans with chymotrypsin, papain or mannosidase decreased the amounts of these proteins bound. These results, taken together, suggest that salivary proteins or
mucin
may bind to the mannoprotein of C. albicans.
...
PMID:Binding of salivary or serum proteins to Candida albicans in vitro. 222 61
The normal pancreas consists of three major cell types or lineages that share a common embryologic origin from pluripotent endodermal precursors. The type of cell that undergoes neoplastic transformation to form a pancreatic carcinoma is controversial and may influence the phenotype and biologic behavior of the tumor. In this study, immunohistologic techniques were used to determine the cell lineage differentiation expressed in 29 primary exocrine pancreatic adenocarcinomas, five metastatic exocrine pancreatic adenocarcinomas, and five islet cell neoplasma. Specimens of normal pancreas and chronic pancreatitis were used for comparison. The cell lineage markers consisted of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against trypsin and lipase (acinar cells); secretory component, carbonic anhydrase II, and pancreatic cancer
mucin
SPan-1 (ductal cells); and chromogranin-A and somatostatin (islet cells). The expression of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and
lysozyme
were also determined. This collection of markers allowed the differentiation between acinar, ductal, and islet cells of normal pancreas and chronic pancreatitis specimens. The expression of cell lineage markers in islet cell tumors was homogeneous and restricted to chromogranin-A. In contrast, the expression of these markers in primary and metastatic exocrine pancreatic adenocarcinomas was variable. Reactivity with monoclonal anti-CEA was absent in normal pancreas, and was present in 83% of chronic pancreatitis specimens as well as 90% of exocrine pancreatic adenocarcinomas. In addition,
lysozyme
reactivity was absent in normal pancreas; however,
lysozyme
was expressed in one case of chronic pancreatitis, 17 cases of primary carcinoma, and three cases of metastatic carcinoma. These findings support the concept that the original transformed cell type in many pancreatic exocrine carcinomas resemble endodermal "stem cells" that retain the capability of differentiation along more than one cell lineage pathway.
...
PMID:Cell lineage markers in human pancreatic cancer. 222 68
Collecting duct carcinoma is an unusual variant of renal cell carcinoma, whose appearance and behavior are not well established. We identified six cases of collecting duct carcinoma in our files. The clinical, pathologic, and immunohistochemical characteristics of these tumors are reported. The most common symptom was gross hematuria (four cases). Two patients had cervical adenopathy due to metastatic tumor. Four rapidly developed systemic metastases and died within 4 to 24 months. The primary renal tumors were located predominantly in the renal medulla and pelvis and had a partially cystic white-gray appearance. Histologic examination showed prominent tubulopapillary structures, nests of clear cells, and infiltrating tubules in a dense desmoplastic stroma. Atypical hyperplastic changes were found in some of the adjacent collecting ducts. Mucicarminophilic material was present in glandular elements in all six cases. Immunohistochemical studies revealed positivity with antibodies to epithelial membrane antigen, keratins, peanut agglutinin, vimentin, Leu M1 and
lysozyme
. The location of this tumor in the medulla, its distinctive histologic appearance,
mucin
positivity, expression of high molecular weight cytokeratins, and peanut agglutinin suggest that this is a distinct clinicopathologic entity which has an aggressive clinical course.
...
PMID:Collecting duct carcinoma of the kidney. 231 86
Tear protein and gamma-globulin mixtures were adsorbed on soft contact lenses of different chemical composition, surface quality and water content. The adsorption process was followed by Fourier transform infrared-attenuated total reflectance spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). It was found that gamma-globulin underwent a conformational and orientational change after its adsorption and the extent of structural change appeared to be proportional to the binding strength of the protein with the hydrogel surface. Electrostatic interactions play a major role in the protein adsorption on lenses containing methacrylic acid. Lysozyme is selectively adsorbed on all of the high water content hydrogels and
mucin
is the major protein component for the pure PHEMA type of lenses. Studies on in vivo spoiled PHEMA and PVP/MMA lenses indicate that
lysozyme
is the major adsorbed deposit. Papain cleaning of in vivo spoiled lenses shows that although a portion of the deposits is desorbed, the enzyme itself becomes irreversibly adsorbed to the contact lens which may cause harmful effects to the eye.
...
PMID:Characterization of protein adsorption on soft contact lenses. IV. Comparison of in vivo spoilage with the in vitro adsorption of tear proteins. 242 46
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