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)

Procedures for lyzing staphylococcal cells with the use of ultrasound, lysozyme and a lytic enzyme complex of Actinomyces recifensis var. lyticus, 2435 were compared. The lysis level was estimated by two parameters: lower optical density and protein yield percentage. It was found that ultrasound provided rather high levels of cell destruction reaching 60-68 per cent. The use of lysozyme enabled to destroy 16 per cent of the cells. The enzyme complex of strain 2435 showed high lytic activity with respect to the tested culture. For destroying dense staphylococcal suspensions it appeared necessary to study the effect of preliminary treatment of the cells with various chemical substances on their liability to the effect of the enzyme complex. It was demonstrated that treatment of the cells with 0.01-0.1 M cystein HCl solutions, 0.01-0.02 M sodium dodecylsulfate solutions or 0.05-0.5 M sodium hydroxide solutions increased 2.6-4.7-fold the cell liability to enzymatic hydrolysis. The studies enabled to develop conditions providing complete lysis of 10-percent staphylococcal cell suspension within 5 to 15 minutes under the effect of the lytic enzyme complex of strain 2435. A procedure for isolating cell walls was developed.
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PMID:[Enzymatic lysis of staphylococcal cells and isolation of cell walls]. 337

The isolation of bacterially synthesized, recombinant-DNA-derived, bovine growth hormone (r-bGH) with native structure is described. The r-bGH is found in insoluble form, in a pellet fraction, after cell breakage and centrifugation. Cell envelope components (protein, lipid, endotoxin) and nucleic acids are selectively removed from the pellet fraction by an EDTA/lysozyme/deoxycholate extraction. We demonstrate that the r-bGH is largely reduced until solubilized using 6 M guanidine/HCl. Air oxidation is then carried out, in the presence of the guanidine/HCl. The oxidation results in a mixture of about one-third disulfide-linked oligomers and two-thirds oxidized monomer. The latter may include some incorrectly oxidized material, but appears to be mostly correctly oxidized. The oxidized monomer is isolated by gel filtration in the presence of guanidine/HCl. Subsequent guanidine/HCl removal leads to refolded, oxidized r-bGH. All steps in the procedure, in particular the oxidation and refolding steps, can be carried out at relatively high protein concentrations.
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PMID:Recombinant-DNA-derived bovine growth hormone from Escherichia coli. 1. Demonstration that the hormone is expressed in reduced form, and isolation of the hormone in oxidized, native form. 354 31

Two developments have enabled major advancements in the use of capillary gas chromatography (GC), the result being its much more widespread use in investigations on a broad range of chemical and biological problems. The 2 technological developments were the introduction of fused silica capillary columns and the development of immobilized stationary phases for capillary GC columns. Because fused silica columns with immobilized stationary phases of varying polarities are offered by numerous vendors of chromatographic equipment, they have become widely used for many analytical tasks. We conducted a study to compare the effectiveness of commercially available fused silica capillary columns with the classical ion-exchange method in the separation and quantitation of amino acids. We selected the N-trifluoroacetyl (TFA) n-butyl and the N-heptafluorobutyryl (HFB) isobutyl ester derivatives for this study because of the extensive research and application of these derivatives during the past 20 years. The amino acid content of hydrolysates of 5 materials was measured: ribonuclease, beta-lactoglobulin, lysozyme, soybean meal, and a commercial poultry feed. Single 6N HCl hydrolysates of each material were prepared to minimize sample preparation differences, and 3 independent analyses of each hydrolysate were made by each of 3 techniques: the N-TFA n-butyl and N-HFB isobutyl ester methods using capillary gas chromatography and the ion-exchange chromatographic method using a Beckman 121 M amino acid analyzer. Our results clearly demonstrate that capillary GC analysis of amino acids using fused silica bonded-phase columns provides data with good precision and in general excellent agreement with ion-exchange analyses.
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PMID:Amino acid analysis by capillary gas chromatography. 357 Nov 20

Tryptophan pyrrolooxygenase from wheat germ was separated into three molecular forms by microgranular DEAE-cellulose using a stepwise or a linear gradient elution procedure. In the first case molecular forms A and B were eluted with 10 mM Tris/HCl buffer (pH 7.4) and molecular form C was eluted with 50 mM KCl in the same buffer. The same separation could also be achieved with a linear KCl gradient (0-100 mM) in 10 mM Tris/HCl buffer (pH 7.4). The three molecular forms of tryptophan pyrrolooxygenase oxidized L-, D-, DL-Trp as well as many Trp derivatives with formation of N-formylkynurenyl derivatives. They also efficiently oxidized Trp-Phe, Trp-Tyr, Trp-Ala, Ala-Trp, Trp-Gly, Gly-Trp, Trp-Leu, Leu-Trp, Pro-Trp and Val-Trp, although the dipeptides were oxidized at different rates by the three molecular forms. A number of tryptophyl-containing tetra-, penta-, octa-, nona- and decapeptides were also oxidized. The oligopeptides which were known to have a helical conformation were better substrates than the smaller oligopeptides which were devoid of the conformational factor. The three molecular forms of tryptophan pyrrolooxygenase oxidized the tryptophyl residues of lysozyme, pepsin, chymotrypsin, trypsin and bovine serum albumin. It was found that molecular form A oxidized the more exposed (or hydrophilic) Trp residues of the proteins, while molecular form C also oxidized the Trp residues of a more hydrophobic nature. The three molecular forms were inhibited by chelating agents (alpha, alpha'-dipyridyl, EDTA and omicron-phenanthroline), although they differed in their sensitivities to these agents. Their optimum temperatures and inactivation rates at 65 degrees C was also different.
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PMID:Separation of tryptophan pyrrolooxygenase into three molecular forms. A study of their substrate specificities using tryptophyl-containing peptides and proteins. 369 18

A procedure for quantitation of tryptophan in feedstuffs is described. It is based on barytic hydrolysis of material at 125 degrees C for 16 h, acidification of hydrolysate to pH 3 with HCl, high-performance liquid chromatography on Nova Pak C18 (Waters Assoc.), and spectrophotometric determination of tryptophan at 280 nm. The recovery of tryptophan from lysozyme added to samples ranges from 98.7 to 100%.
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PMID:High-performance liquid chromatography and ultraviolet spectrophotometry for quantitation of tryptophan in barytic hydrolysates. 381 97

The acrA mutation in Escherichia coli led to a substantial increase of the acriflavine-binding capacity of the cell, whereas the related mutations acrB (gyrB) and arcC did not. Metal ions such as Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+ and Al3+ effectively released the bound acriflavine, in proportion to their ionic strengths. The presence of cations, in fact, increased the survival fraction of the cells in the acriflavine-containing medium. Polymyxin B, an antibiotic which binds to membrane phospholipid, competed with acriflavine for binding sites. Cell wall digestion by treatment with lysozyme and EDTA slightly decreased the acriflavine-binding capacity. Almost no difference was observed in acriflavine-binding capacity between intact cells and cells from which lipopolysaccharide has been extracted (46.9% removed from the acrA cells and 47.4% from the acrA+ cells). Acriflavine bound to the cells was most effectively extracted by ethanol containing 1% HCl or by 2% (w/v) SDS. The difference in the acriflavine-binding capacity between the acrA and acrA+ cells was also observed in the spheroplasts. These facts indicate a relationship between the acrA gene product and the acriflavine-binding capacity of the cells.
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PMID:Acriflavine-binding capacity controlled by the acrA gene of Escherichia coli. 390 Feb 82

Extracts of Mycobacterium bovis ATCC 19210 were prepared from cells following treatment with acetone 3 times, ethyl alcohol-ether 3 times (1:1, v/v), and chloroform 3 times. Cells were dried and suspended in 0.05M Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing lysozyme (1 mg/50 mg of dried cells). One aliquot of the lysozyme extract was filter-sterilized and 1 aliquot of the lysozyme extract was autoclaved. Delayed-type hypersensitivity responses elicited in sensitized guinea pigs, using the filter-sterilized lysozyme extract, were significantly greater than responses elicited using the autoclaved lysozyme extract (P less than 0.01). The filter-sterilized lysozyme extract and a purified protein derivative (PPD) of M bovis, at equal protein concentrations, elicited comparable delayed-type hypersensitivity responses in sensitized guinea pigs. Significant differences were not detected between the mean enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) values on sera collected from calves before exposure to M bovis, using each of the lysozyme extracts or the M bovis PPD (P greater than 0.05). Significant differences were detected when ELISA values obtained using each of the antigens on post-exposure serum were compared with ELISA values on serum collected from calves before exposure to M bovis (P less than 0.01). Differences were not detected in mean ELISA values on sera from cattle collected 12 months after exposure to M bovis, using each of the lysozyme extracts or M bovis PPD (P greater than 0.05); however, 8 of 8 calves were identified as positive on ELISA, using the filter-sterilized lysozyme extract, 7 of 8 calves were positive, using M bovis PPD, and 7 of 8 calves were positive, using the autoclaved lysozyme extract.
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PMID:In vitro and in vivo evaluation of lysozyme extracts of virulent Mycobacterium bovis in guinea pigs and calves. 390 33

It was found that thioglycolic acid prevents destruction of tryptophan during rapid hydrolysis of protein with a trifluoroacetic acid/HCl mixture (1:2, v/v) at 166 degrees C for 25 or 50 min. The addition of 5% (v/v) thioglycolic acid gave the maximum tryptophan recovery (88.3%) for a 25-min hydrolysate of lysozyme. Tryptophan recoveries varied slightly among three different proteins; 88% for lysozyme, 73% for alpha-chymotrypsinogen A, and 85% for apomyoglobin. However, when extrapolated to zero time, the values were close to one another: 94, 87, and 88%, respectively. The addition of thioglycolic acid was also advantageous for recovering amino acids other than tryptophan. Particularly, yields of carboxymethylcysteine and methionine were greatly improved. This modified rapid hydrolysis method gave satisfactory results without the need for separate analyses of tryptophan and cysteine, provided proteins were reduced and carboxymethylated prior to hydrolysis.
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PMID:Recovery of tryptophan from 25-minute acid hydrolysates of protein. 396 60

In the reaction of the intramolecular cross-linking between Lys-13 (epsilon-NH3+) and Leu-129 (alpha-COO-) in lysozyme using imidazole and 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide hydrochloride [Yamada, H., Kuroki, R., Hirata, M., & Imoto, T. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4551-4556], it was found that two-thirds of the protein (both the recovered and cross-linked lysozymes) showed a lower affinity than the rest against chitin-coated Celite, an affinity adsorbent for lysozyme. The protein with the reduced affinity was separated on chitin-coated Celite affinity chromatography and found to be slightly different from native lysozyme in the elution position of the tryptic peptide of Ile-98-Arg-112 on reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. In contrast with native lysozyme, the limited hydrolysis of this abnormal tryptic peptide of Ile-98-Arg-112 in 6 N HCl at 110 degrees C gave a considerable amount of beta-aspartylglycine. Therefore, it was concluded that two-thirds of the protein obtained from this reaction possessed the beta-aspartylglycyl sequence at Asp-101-Gly-102. As a result, we obtained four lysozymes from this reaction, the derivative with the beta-aspartyl sequence at Asp-101 (101-beta-lysozyme), the cross-linked derivative between Lys-13 and Leu-129 (CL-lysozyme), the CL-lysozyme derivative with the beta-aspartyl sequence at Asp-101 (101-beta-CL-lysozyme), and native lysozyme. In the ethyl esterification of Asp-52 in lysozyme with triethyloxonium fluoroborate [Parsons, S. M., Jao, L., Dahlquist, F. W., Borders, C. L., Jr., Groff, T., Racs, J., & Raftery, M. A. (1969) Biochemistry 8, 700-712; Parsons, S. M., & Raftery, M. A. (1969) Biochemistry 8, 4199-4205], the same bond rearrangement was detected in the same ratio.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of 101-beta-lysozyme that possesses the beta-aspartyl sequence at aspartic acid-101. 409 46

The biological activity of Odontomyces viscosus, which has been reported to cause periodontal disease in hamsters, was examined. The microorganism was cultured anaerobically in Brain Heart Infusion broth, and the cells were harvested. The washed cells were injected intradermally into the abdomen of rabbits. After 72 hr, a well-defined, firm, raised nodule (about 1.0 by 1.5 cm) with an erythematous border was seen at the injection site. Suspensions of cell wall and cytoplasmic material were injected intradermally, and the lesions appeared only at the site of cell wall injection. The cell walls, which were then treated with trypsin, pepsin, and ribonuclease, again produced the characteristic lesion. These nodular dermal lesions persisted for a minimal time of 10 days. The enzymatically treated cell walls were then hydrolyzed with 1 n HCl, and such hydrolysis up to 1 hr failed to alter the toxic activity of the cell walls. Similar dermal nodular lesions were obtained by injection of enzymatically treated cell walls of strains of Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus groups B, C, E, F, K, Lactobacillus casei, and Actinomyces israelii. Treatment with hot and cold trichloroacetic acid solutions and proteolytic enzymes, or with formamide, yielded insoluble fractions which produced the characteristic nodular lesions. The size of the lesion resulting from injection of these fractions was proportional to the amount of the injected material. The active fraction, which does not appear susceptible to hydrolysis by lysozyme, is thought to be cell wall mucopeptide. Histological studies showed skin abscesses due to the toxic reaction; however, in addition to the acute inflammatory reaction, there was local eosinophilia.
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PMID:Toxic properties of the cell wall of gram-positive bacteria. 533


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