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)
Lysozyme was isolated from
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin
-elicited rabbit alveolar macrophages by acid extraction and purified to homogeneity by a single-column procedure. Yields of the purified enzyme averaged between 20 and 30 mg per rabbit, values far in excess of those obtained with previously published methods. Rabbit
lysozyme
has a molecular weight of 14,300 and exhibits optimal lytic activity against Micrococcus lysodeikticus at an ionic strength of 0.04, pH 6.5. Our results indicate that
lysozyme
and other granule components can be fractionated from elicited alveolar macrophages by using simple techniques, suggesting methods for the bulk purification of lysosomal constituents.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of rabbit alveolar macrophage lysozyme. 3 67
Five murine monocyte of macrophage tumor lines adapted to culture were characterized for differentiated properties. They ingested zymosan and latex beads, bore receptors for immunoglobulin and complement, synthesized
lysozyme
(most of which was secreted), and produced granulocyte colony-stimulating activity, either spontaneously or inducibly. Some of the lines also mediated phagocytosis and exocytosis of red blood cells (RBC) and lysis of tumor targets, dependent on the presence of specific antitarget sera. All the lines were growth inhibited by zymosan and Mycobacterium bovis
BCG
, but not by latex beads. Other macrophage-activating agents, dextran sulfate and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), as well as tuberculin purified protein derivative (PPD), inhibited most of the lines. Except for Fc and C receptors, most of the above properties were not found with other types of hematopoietic tumors in culture. In attempts to activate the macrophage lines in vitro to the "angry" state, we found that preincubation with concentrations of LPS and PPD cytostatic to the cells stimulated antibody-dependent RBC lysis, but not antibody-independent or tumor cytolysis. A classification of monocyte-related tumors and normal cells is proposed based on functional activities and differential sensitivity to immunostimulating agents.
...
PMID:Immunologic functions and in vitro activation of cultured macrophage tumor lines. 10 54
To evaluate extracellular hydrolytic enzymes in an in vivo system, plastic chambers were glued over rabbit dermal
BCG
lesions in various stages of development, after the central epithelium was removed with a scalpel. They were filled with tissue culture medium and left in place 2 days. The following enzymes in the fluid were assayed: collagenase (an enzyme secreted but not stored in macrophages);
lysozyme
(both secreted and stored); DNase and RNase (released on cell death and possibly regurgitated but not secreted); and, as a control, lactic dehydrogenase (released only on cell death). Tissue sections were prepared and studied histologically for the type of cell infiltrate, for beta-galactosidase (our marker enzyme for macrophage activation), and for necrosis. At 11 and 18 days of age the
BCG
lesions were largest and the number of activated macrophages in the chamber beds was highest. At this time the levels of the five enzymes assayed in the chamber fluids reached their peaks, tuberculin hypersensitivity was well developed, and the bacilli components would still be plentiful. In general, the chamber fluids from 11- and 18-day
BCG
lesions contained higher enzyme levels than chamber fluids from tuberculin reactions. Active collagenase was only detected in fluids from such
BCG
lesions. Evidently, the serum in the chamber fluids was sufficient to inhibit the lower amounts of collagenase probably released from smaller
BCG
lesions and tuberculin reactions (and from the 2-week polystyrene lesions that were also evaluated). These studies demonstrate that in chronic inflammatory reactions, both acid-acting and neutral-acting hydrolytic enzymes are released extracellularly. Tissue components would be hydrolyzed locally wherever the acid-acting hydrolytic enzymes encounter a drop in pH and wherever the concentration of neutral-acting hydrolytic enzymes exceeds the concentration of their inhibitors.
...
PMID:Extracellular hydrolytic enzymes of rabbit dermal tuberculous lesions and tuberculin reactions collected in skin chambers. 20 93
Macrophages were obtained by pulmonary lavage from normal rabbits or rabbits that had developed pulmonary granulomas after receiving intravenous BCG vaccine 2-3 weeks earlier. The cells were disrupted in iso-osmotic sucrose and a low-speed supernatant was fractionated by isopycnic centrifugation on a linear sucrose density gradient. Three populations of hydrolase-containing granules (putative lysosomes) were found in both normal and
BCG
-induced macrophages. They were distinguished by their different distributions in the gradient and different sensitivities to disruption by digitonin and were termed:type A, containing
lysozyme
; type B, containing N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, beta-glactosidase, beta-glucuronidase and possibly some
lysozyme
; type C, containing cathepsin D. Acid phosphatase appeared to be about equally distributed between type B and C granules. Type A and B granules from
BCG
-induced macrophages showed markedly greater equilibrium density than did those from normal macrophages. Beta-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase had greater specific activity in the induced cells.
...
PMID:Analytical subcellular fractionation of alveolar macrophages from normal and BCG-vaccinated rabbits with particular reference to heterogeneity of hydrolase-containing granules. 45 80
The effect of pyran copolymer, injected into mice bearing the M109 Madison lung carcinoma, on serum concentrations of
lysozyme
, beta-glucuronidase, and N-acetyl-beta, D-glucosaminidase was studied and compared with that of other immunoadjuvants. Increases in
lysozyme
levels ranging from 50 to 100% were observed after injection of pyran,
BCG
and Bru-Pel; increases in the levels of the other enzymes were less consistent. Other immunoadjuvants were less effective in raising serum concentrations of lysosomal enzymes. The findings were correlated with the results of previous studies on macrophage activation and antineoplastic action produced by these immunoadjuvants and suggest that serum levels of
lysozyme
can serve as indices of these effects.
...
PMID:Effect of macrophage activation by immunoadjuvants on serum levels of lysosomal hydrolases in mice. 55 9
An immunohistochemical analysis of Rhodococcus equi-induced pneumonia in 10 foals was performed by biotin-streptavidin system. The detection of R. equi was more sensitive in immuno-stain using anti-R. equi serum than in Gram's stain. This bacteria also reacted to anti-
BCG
serum. Lysozyme and alpha 1-antitrypsin were detectable in macrophages. A particularly intense staining was observed in association with intracellular bacteria. Though a degree of reaction for alpha 1-antichymotrypsin was very low in comparison with
lysozyme
and alpha 1-antitrypsin, it was also demonstrated in macrophages ingesting R. equi. These bacteria were almost intact under an electron microscope. Therefore, the surface components of R. equi may play important roles of protection from intracellular enzymes of macrophages. The cells containing intracytoplasmic IgM, IgG or IgA were a few in number and scattered predominantly around the pneumonic lesion. It is considered that the bactericidal activity by immunoglobulins may be weak in comparison with phagocytosis by macrophages.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical observations on pneumonic lesions caused by Rhodococcus equi in foals. 164 74
This study is an attempt to understand the mechanism of macrophage activation and its effect on the microbicidal properties of the macrophage. Alveolar macrophages (AM) from normal and
BCG
-vaccinated guinea pigs were harvested at intervals of 1, 7, 14, 21, and 28 days. Half of the guinea pigs from each group were challenged intratracheally with Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. In AM, the levels of three lysosomal enzymes, beta-galactosidase (beta-gal), N-acetylglucosaminidase (N-ac), and
lysozyme
(lyso), were measured histochemically. The percentage of AM staining positively for these enzymes and the intensity of this staining were estimated as parameters of AM activation, along with the number of intracellular bacilli in these cells. Histochemical methods are preferred to biochemical methods as only the former indicate activation in individual cells. The enzymatic responses of AM depend on the type of vaccination and infection. Thus, beta-gal activity was significantly enhanced in immune animals whereas no such enhancement of activity was observed in the case of N-ac and lyso. The N-ac content was higher in infected animals and in the immune group, whereas lyso fluctuated at different time intervals after infection.
...
PMID:Intracellular tubercle bacilli-alveolar macrophage lysosomal enzymes interaction in experimental tuberculosis. 211 47
The injection of thioglycollate medium into the peritoneal cavity of the mouse induces high levels of macrophage fibrinolytic activity due to the production and secretion of a plasminogen activator, a trypsinlike serine protease, which is absent in unstimulated macrophages. Intraperitoneal injection of endotoxin or mineral oil can stimulate only a fraction (<10%) of the fibrinolytic activity of thioglycollate cells, similar to the partial stimulation (<10%) seen 1-2 days after phagocytosis of latex or SRBC by unstimulated macrophages. The endotoxin-stimulated macrophages contain and release relatively low levels of plasminogen activator, but these primed cells can be triggered to produce and secrete high levels of enzyme, by phagocytosis of latex. Under conditions where the plasminogen activator is induced and secreted, there are no effects on the production and/or release of
lysozyme
or intracellular acid hydrolases, Discovery of a two-stage procedure for inducing macrophage plasminogen activator made it possible to study the role of cell priming and phagocytosis separately. Endotoxin was a more effective priming agent, weight for weight, than lipid A:BSA complex. Secretion of the plasminogen activator was induced only by thioglycollate, or endotoxin and latex. In situ fibrinolysis was induced by these agents and mineral oil,
BCG
, and fetal calf serum, in decreasing order of effectiveness. Phagocytosis of latex in all cases except thioglycollate stimulation, increased fibrinolytic activity from three- to sixfold. Latex and a variety of other particles such as M. lysodeikticus, aggregated gamma-globulin and immune complexes showed dose-dependent stimulation of fibrinolysis by endotoxin-primed macrophages. Although the initial phagocytic trigger was not specific for the substance employed, the ability to induce a sustained response depended on the persistence of the phagocytized particle within the cell. Fibrinolysis and secretion of plasminogen activator continued at high levels for at least 9 days after uptake of latex, a nondigestible particle, whereas plasminogen activator was secreted only transiently after ingestion of rapidly digested M. lysodeikticus. The induction of plasminogen activator secretion provides a mechanism by which the activated macrophage can exert a selective effect on its extracellular environment.
...
PMID:Induction of macrophage plasminogen activator by endotoxin stimulation and phagocytosis: evidence for a two-stage process. 442 92
As a first step towards the production of a lysed BCG vaccine that would have reduced toxicity and allergenicity and yet be immunogenic, the growth and lysis of
BCG
bacilli under strictly controlled conditions have been studied.
BCG
grown in both Dubos and Aldridge liquid media showed an arithmetic linear growth, preceded by a very short logarithmic phase. This suggested that some of the cell population became metabolically inactive at a very early stage, possibly owing to suboptimal conditions of growth.Glycine,
lysozyme
and lithium chloride initiated lysis of
BCG
growth in the aforementioned media 24-48 hours after inoculation. After 2 weeks' incubation approximately 50% of the original
BCG
culture was lysed and the viable count had fallen 1000-fold. The autolytic pattern of
BCG
in a nitrogen-deficient, chemically defined Aldridge medium is also described.
...
PMID:Lysed BCG vaccines. 1. Observations on optimal conditions for BCG growth and lysis. 487 14
The authors have attempted to prepare lysed
BCG
vaccines retaining the protective antigens of the
BCG
cell wall and yet eliciting in experimental animals limited sensitivity to the tuberculin substances, the advantage sought being to retain the usefulness of the tuberculin following vaccination as an indicator of superinfection.Experimental vaccines were prepared by growing and lysing
BCG
in both Dubos and Aldridge liquid media with glycine, lysosyme and lithium chloride; vaccines were also prepared by autolysis in Aldridge nitrogen-deficient, chemically defined medium.Glycine,
lysozyme
and lithium chloride significantly reduced both the protective and allergenic properties of the lysates. The best protection was afforded by
BCG
cells autolysed in Aldridge medium. Treatment of the
BCG
autolysates with
lysozyme
alone did not affect the protective capability of the vaccines and almost completely eliminated the allergenicity. It is suggested that these
BCG
lysates contain metabolically inactive cells, which do not multiply in vitro but may still provide sufficient antigen in vivo to ensure protection.
...
PMID:Lysed BCG vaccines. 2. The effect of lysis on the immunogenicity and allergenicity of BCG vaccines. 530 50
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