Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Immunohistochemical identification of keratin proteins (TK, KL1 and PKK1), vimentin, myosin, S-100 protein (using polyclonal antiserum) and S-100 alpha and beta subunits, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), neuron-specific enolase (NSE), lactoferrin, and lysozyme was made in myoepitheliomas, myoepithelial adenomas, and clear cell adenomas of salivary gland origin. Myoepithelioma cells were divided into two types: plasmacytoid cells, which showed great heterogeneity in terms of keratins and S-100 alpha and beta proteins and a lack of GFAP, NSE, lactoferrin, and lysozyme in most the cells, and fibrous and dendritic tumor cells, which displayed variable staining for keratin and S-100 alpha and beta proteins. Myoepithelial adenomas were composed of small-, intermediate-, and large-sized spindle cells that showed irregular positive reactions for keratins and S-100 alpha and beta. Immunohistochemical deposition of S-100 protein was restricted strongly to the dendritic cells present in hyalinous and myxomatous areas. Clear cell adenomas revealed uniformly slight staining of keratins and S-100 proteins, and negative staining or rarely positivity for GFAP, NSE, lactoferrin, and lysozyme. When the immunohistochemical deposition of these proteins was compared between normal glands and myoepithelial tumors, heterogeneity of expression of keratins, S-100 proteins, GFAP, and NSE was notable in the tumors. Progenitor cells of several kinds of myoepithelioma were suggested to be intercalated reserve cells, which are thought to be the same cell that gives rise to pleomorphic adenoma of salivary glands.
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PMID:Myoepitheliomas and myoepithelial adenomas of salivary gland origin. Immunohistochemical evaluation of filament proteins, S-100 alpha and beta, glial fibrillary acidic proteins, neuron-specific enolase, and lactoferrin. 254 Apr 82

A novel bacterial protease specifically hydrolyzing actin with the formation of a stable fragment with Mr of 36 kDa was obtained. This protease was shown to be synthesized at the stationary phase of bacterial culture growth. The actin hydrolysis by bacterial protease was inhibited by o-phenanthroline, EDTA and p-chloromercuribenzoate but not by N-ethyl-maleimide, phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride, Leu-peptin, pepstatin and other serine proteinase inhibitors. The protease was stable within the pH range of 4.5-8.5 and had an activity optimum at pH 7.0-8.0. The protease activity was maintained for 40 min at 45 degrees C and for 30 min at 50 degrees C; at 65 degrees C the enzyme was fully inactivated by 5 min heating. The protease preparations causing quantitative conversion of actin into a 36 kDa fragment did not hydrolyze casein, albumin, ovalbumin, lysozyme, DNAase I, RNAase, myosin, alpha-actinin, tropomyosin and troponin. It was assumed that the protease under consideration is a neutral metalloprotease specifically hydrolyzing actin.
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PMID:[Protease from a strain of bacteria E. coli A2, specifically cleaving actin]. 268 80

To investigate the histogenesis of the granular cell, a large series of granular cell tumors was studied for clinical and histopathologic features with emphasis on immunocytochemical markers. The nongingival granular cell tumors (NGGCT) were found to be more prevalent among females than males by a ratio of 2:1 and arose on the tongue (67%), the buccal mucosa (13%), the lips (8%), the soft palate (6%), and other sites (6%). With the use of the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method, polyclonal rabbit antisera were employed. The antisera were directed to the following antigens: S-100 protein, myoglobin, myosin, actin, desmin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and muramidase. Results indicated that granular cell tumors are not homogenous for immunocytochemical markers. Nongingival granular cell tumors were universally positive for S-100 protein and failed to exhibit immunoreactivity for myogenous or histiocytic markers. Alternatively, the gingival granular cell tumor of infancy was negative for all markers, whereas rhabdomyoma was reactive with myogenous markers and a subpopulation of tumor cells displayed S-100 protein immunoreactivity. The granular cell ameloblastoma was reactive only with antiserum to alpha-1-antitrypsin. Ultrastructurally, granular cells from one of two NGGCT showed a direct evolution from skeletal muscle fibers. It is concluded that the oral NGGCT is a tumor positive for S-100 protein that may arise from muscle or nerve sheath.
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PMID:Oral granular cell tumors: a clinicopathologic and immunocytochemical study. 283 81

Two cases of alveolar soft part sarcoma have been studied immunocytochemically using antisera against epithelial membrane antigen, lysozyme, keratins, S-100 protein, desmin, vimentin, fetal myosin, slow myosin, alpha-skeletal muscle actin, alpha-smooth muscle actin and myoglobin. The neoplastic cells were negative with all antisera employed with the exception of the alpha-skeletal muscle actin antiserum which stained the cytoplasm of numerous neoplastic elements, including the crystalloid rods, typical cytoplasmic inclusions of these tumours. It is suggested that the presence of this protein indicates rhabdomyoblastic differentiation of these tumours.
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PMID:Alveolar soft part sarcoma: immunological evidence of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. 320 85

The ultrastructural features of 8 human cardiac myxomas were analyzed and correlated with immunohistochemical data, with the aim to clarify the characteristics of the cell lines involved in the tumor genesis. Immunohistochemical studies were performed to detect the presence and the distribution of intracytoplasmic filaments (vimentin, desmin, actin, myosin) as well as myoglobin and factor VIII-related antigen, albumin, and lysozyme. Eighty percent of myxoma cells were simultaneously positive for vimentin, desmin, and actin, whereas 30% of them stained with antifactor VIII and antivimentin antibodies. The submicroscopic analysis revealed two main cell populations: (1) one composed of stellate-shaped cells with scanty organelles and sparse hyaloplasmic filaments scattered throughout the myxoid stroma and forming a loose network with their projections; (2) another one included cells with more cytoplasmic organelles, intermediate filaments, and myofilaments arranged either singly or in both solid and hollow cord-like structures. Our results support the hypothesis that cardiac myxoma may originate from a reserve multipotent mesenchymal cell able to differentiate more or less completely along two major evolutional lines: myoid and endothelial. The tumor tissue thus seems to be involved in vessel formation, suggesting a growth pattern akin to that manifested in other forms of endocardial pathological reactivity in which reserve mesenchymal cells are engaged.
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PMID:Ultrastructural and immunohistochemical contribution to the histogenesis of human cardiac myxoma. 336 83

In an attempt to define the fibroblastic components of fibrous papular lesions of oral mucosa, 21 cases representing these lesions were selected for study. Paraffin or frozen sections of the lesions were stained, using the immunoperoxidase technique, with antibodies to: alpha-l-antitrypsin, alpha-l-antichymotrypsin, lysozyme, fibronectin, actin, myosin, and for Clq binding. Three of these cases were biochemically analyzed for collagen Types I, III, and V. This study demonstrated the presence of cytochemical markers in fibrous papules that were similar to those observed for the compartment of circumvascular fibroblasts in control normal mucosa. Analysis of the collagens present indicated that in addition to histologic similarities, the gene products of these extracellular matrices were similar to those reported for angiofibromas and Shagreen patches in tuberous sclerosis. The cells in these lesions appear to be distinct from myofibroblasts and the high affinity complement binding fibroblasts characterized by Bordin et al.(1).
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PMID:Immunocytochemical and biochemical characterization of the connective tissue component of fibrous papular lesions of oral mucosa. 393 20

A 22-year-old man with Marfan's syndrome and a history of antinuclear antibody-positive hepatitis died 25 days after undergoing cardiac valve replacement surgery for mitral valve prolapse. Giant cell myocarditis was found at autopsy. The multinucleated giant cells were shown by immunoperoxidase techniques to contain lysozyme, but not myosin or creatine phosphokinase, suggesting that they were derived from macrophage, rather than myocyte, precursors.
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PMID:Giant cell myocarditis after mitral valve replacement: case report and studies of the nature of giant cells. 672 75

Samples of human cerebral cortex were obtained from twelve autopsied patients with Alzheimer's disease or "normal" aging. Rabbit or goat anti-human antisera to the following plasma proteins: IgG, F(ab')2, Fc, kappa and lambda light chains, IgM, IgA, fibrinogen, albumin, C3, lysozyme, haptoglobin, macroglobulin, and microglobulin; antibodies to the following intracellular proteins: glial fibrillary acidic (GFA) protein, filamin, actin, non-muscle myosin, tubulin, cholinergic vesicle proteins, and neurofilament (NF) proteins were utilized in the immunoglobulin peroxidase bridge. Amyloid cores of classical or perivascular plaques and dyshoric angiopathy exhibited a strong reaction for intact IgG and for both of its light chains, moderate reactions for lysozyme, fibrinogen, albumin and IgA, and weak reactions for IgM, C3, Fc, F(ab')2, haptoglobin, macroglobulin and microglobulin. Antibodies to all three NF proteins, individually and pooled, stained dyshoric and plaque amyloid, while antibodies to other intracellular proteins did not. The coronae of classical plaques and many primitive plaques stained for GFA, but inconsistently for IgG, both light chains, lysozyme, actin, tubulin, and NF proteins. Affected vessels of three patients with Congophilic angiopathy were reactive for all plasma proteins (especially IgG, fibrinogen, and albumin) and for NF proteins. NF staining in Congophilic blood vessels, although variable, revealed a peripheral or adventitial distribution, whereas plasma proteins tended to be localized in the media of the vessel wall. The distributions of Congo red and NF positivity were often identical. Both NF and Congo red staining was sensitive to oxidation. Isolated NF proteins were Congophilic and capable of displaying apple-green birefringence. A hypothesis concerning the role of NF proteins in senile cerebral amyloid is presented.
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PMID:An immunoperoxidase study of senile cerebral amyloidosis with pathogenetic considerations. 679 14

Recent studies have suggested that activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is primarily responsible for the rapid loss of muscle proteins in various types of atrophy. The present studies were undertaken to test if different classes of muscle proteins are degraded by this pathway. In extracts of rabbit psoas muscle, the complete degradation of soluble proteins to amino acids was stimulated up to 6-fold by ATP. Peptide aldehyde inhibitors of the proteasome or the removal of proteasomes markedly inhibited only the ATP-dependent process. Addition of purified myosin, actin, troponin, or tropomyosin to these extracts showed that these proteins served as substrates for the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. By contrast, degradation of myoglobin did not require ATP, proteasomes, or any known proteases in muscles. When myosin, actin, and troponin were added as actomyosin complexes or as intact myofibrils to these extracts, they were not hydrolyzed at a significant rate, probably because in these multicomponent complexes, these proteins are protected from degradation. Accordingly, actin (but not albumin or troponin) inhibited the degradation of 125I-myosin, and actin was found to selectively inhibit ubiquitin conjugation to 125I-myosin. Also, the presence of tropomyosin inhibited the degradation of 125I-troponin. However, neither actin nor tropomyosin inhibited the degradation of 125I-lysozyme or soluble muscle proteins. Thus, specific interactions between the myofibrillar proteins appear to protect them from ubiquitin-dependent degradation, and the rate-limiting step in their degradation is probably their dissociation from the myofibril.
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PMID:Importance of the ATP-ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the degradation of soluble and myofibrillar proteins in rabbit muscle extracts. 890 Jan 46

Muscle wasting and weakness are common features of patients with critical illnesses, and may impair their recovery. This study examines whether cytoskeletal and contractile proteins are damaged, and which proteolytic mechanisms might be involved, in the muscle fibre atrophy or necrosis associated with the acute myopathy of critically ill patients. Ninety-eight muscle biopsies were obtained by the conchotome method from 57 critically ill patients and examined morphometrically and by immunohistochemical labelling. Sequential biopsies showed a mean reduction in fibre cross-sectional areas of 3-4% per day. More intense immunolabelling for desmin was seen in the smaller fibres of 52% of the biopsies, while immunolabelling for dystrophin, actin and myosin heavy chains was maintained. Myosin ATPase activity was weak in the smaller fibres in some biopsies, and electron microscopy showed the loss of myosin filaments in atrophic fibres. These changes suggest that loss of the filamentous structure of myosin, without degradation of the immunolabelled epitopes, leads to the collapse of the intermyofibrillar desmin network. Fibres with abnormal desmin labelling showed increased cathepsin B, lysozyme and ubiquitin immunolabelling. Nine cases showed increased immunolabelling for heat shock protein 72. The changes in desmin immunolabelling were more prevalent in patients with higher APACHE II scores on admission, but were not related to other clinical features. The results indicate that fibre atrophy is associated with myosin filament depolymerization and the presence of several proteolytic enzymes. In our study, these changes occurred in patients who were critically ill but who did not receive large doses of steroids or neuromuscular blocking agents.
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PMID:Muscle fibre atrophy in critically ill patients is associated with the loss of myosin filaments and the presence of lysosomal enzymes and ubiquitin. 988 61


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