Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The methods of cell lysis by
lysozyme
in tris-EDTA-sucrose with the consequent disruption of spheroplasts by the osmotic shock were used to obtain the total membranes from the intact or temperature-inactivated Rickettsia prowazekii. Detergents solubilization methods were used for analysis of outer membrane proteins. Sarcosyl insoluble material is shown to contain the main 134, 31, 29.5 and 25 Kd proteins, the minor 78, 60, 42, 17 Kd proteins, while the mixture of both membranes possess a more complex composition. Treatment of total membranes by the 2% octylglycoside results in elimination of the 31 Kd
polypeptide
. Inactivated Rickettsia can be used for isolation of the outer layer proteins diminishing the risk of working with this pathogenic microorganism.
...
PMID:[Methods of isolation and polypeptide composition of membrane fractions of Rickettsia prowazekii]. 211 32
Using the heat capacity values for amino acid side-chains and the peptide unit determined in the accompanying paper, we calculated the partial heat capacities of the unfolded state for four proteins (apomyoglobin, apocytochrome c, ribonuclease A,
lysozyme
) in aqueous solution in the temperature range from 5 to 125 degrees C, with an assumption that the constituent amino acid residues contribute additively to the integral heat capacity of a
polypeptide
chain. These ideal heat capacity functions of the extended
polypeptide
chains were compared with the calorimetrically determined heat capacity functions of the heat and acid-denatured proteins. The average deviation of the experimental functions from the calculated ideal ones in the whole studied temperature range does not exceed the experimental error (5%). Therefore, the heat-denatured state of a protein, in solutions with acidic pH preventing aggregation, approximates well the completely unfolded state of this macromolecule. The heat capacity change caused by hydration of amino acid residues upon protein unfolding was also determined and it was shown that this is the major contributor to the observed heat capacity effect of unfolding. Its value is different for different proteins and correlates well with the surface area of non-polar groups exposed upon unfolding. The heat capacity effect due to the configurational freedom gain by the
polypeptide
chain was found to contribute only a small part of the overall heat capacity change on unfolding.
...
PMID:Heat capacity of proteins. II. Partial molar heat capacity of the unfolded polypeptide chain of proteins: protein unfolding effects. 216 May 45
Polypeptide
hormone signal transmission by receptor tyrosine kinases requires the rapid reversal of tyrosine phosphorylation by protein phosphotyrosine phosphatases (PPTPases). We studied hepatic PPTPases in the rat with emphasis on acute and chronic regulation by insulin. PPTPase activity with artificial substrates ([32P]Tyr-reduced, carboxyamidomethylated, and maleylated
lysozyme
and [32P]Tyr-poly[glutamic acid:tyrosine] 4:1) was present in distinct membrane, cytoskeletal, and cytosolic fractions. These PPTPase activities were unaffected by alloxan diabetes. Acute administration of insulin to normal animals also did not change PPTPase activity in liver plasma membranes or endosomal membranes. Although alloxan diabetes did not affect PPTPase activity measured with artificial substrates or with epidermal growth factor receptors, a decrease in insulin receptor dephosphorylation was noted. Dephosphorylation of hepatic receptors from normal and diabetic rats by membrane PPTPase from control rats was similar. These results indicate that alloxan diabetes does not lead to a generalized effect on hepatic PPTPase activity, although a substrate-specific decrease in activity with the insulin receptor may occur.
...
PMID:Hepatic protein phosphotyrosine phosphatase. Dephosphorylation of insulin and epidermal growth factor receptors in normal and alloxan diabetic rats. 216 29
A simple extraction procedure was used for preparing cell surface proteins (CSPs) from Shigella dysenteriae type 1. The preparations obtained using either buffer or water extractions were free from lipopolysaccharide (LPS), as well as cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins. By SDS-PAGE, about 25 polypeptides were detected, and Western-blot analysis recognised 15
polypeptide
antigens. When analysed by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, using anti-Shigella dysenteriae type 1 rabbit sera, 18 antigenic bands were identified. Proteins obtained by this method were found to be highly immunogenic in rabbits. The cell-surface proteins were compared to outer membrane proteins (OMPs) obtained from the S. dysenteriae type 1 strain by a standard procedure involving
lysozyme
-EDTA extraction, sucrose density centrifugation, and detergent treatment. They were found to contain periplasmic, cytoplasmic, and lipopolysaccharide contaminants. Thus, the procedure described here offers a quick and simple alternative for obtaining relatively pure cell surface proteins from Shigella dysenteriae type 1. This method will be useful when immunogenically active proteins free from other cellular components are required for studies.
...
PMID:Cell surface proteins from Shigella dysenteriae type 1. 220 98
A semi-empirical method has been used to estimate the thermodynamic parameters of hydration of buried surface areas of ribonuclease S,
lysozyme
and myoglobin from the model of complete unfolding according to Ooi et al. ((1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 3086-3090). The buried surface area of proteins is considered as the difference between the accessible surface area of native protein and the completely extended
polypeptide
chain according to Lee and Richards ((1971) J. Mol. Biol. 55, 379-400). The contributions of nonpolar and polar protein groups to the general value of Gibbs energy, enthalpy, entropy and heat capacity of hydration have been determined. The obtained results on the thermodynamic behavior of proteins in the process of complete unfolding are in good agreement with the results of microcalorimetric studies of thermal denaturation.
...
PMID:Thermodynamic properties of globular proteins and the principle of stabilization of their native structure. 222 40
We evaluated surface areas on proteins that would be accessible to contacts with large (1-nm radius) spherical probes. Such spheres are comparable in size to antibody domains that contain antigen-combining sites. We found that all the reported antigenic sites correspond to segments particularly accessible to a large sphere. The antigenic sites were also evident as the most prominently exposed regions (hills and ridges) in contour maps of the solvent-accessible (small-probe) surface. In myoglobin and cytochrome c, virtually all of the van der Waals surface is accessible to the large probe and therefore potentially antigenic; in myohemerythrin, distinct large-probe-inaccessible, and nonantigenic, surface regions are apparent. The correlation between large-sphere-accessibility and antigenicity in myoglobin,
lysozyme
, and cytochrome c appears to be better than that reported to exist between antigenicity and segmental flexibility; that is, surface regions that are rigid often constitute antigenic epitopes, whereas some of the flexible parts of the molecules do not appear antigenic. We propose that the primary reason why certain
polypeptide
-chain segments are antigenic is their exceptional surface exposure, making them readily available for contacts with antigen-combining sites. Exposure of these segments frequently results in high mobility and, in consequence, to the reported correlation between antigenicity and segmental flexibility.
...
PMID:Antigenic determinants in proteins coincide with surface regions accessible to large probes (antibody domains). 241 41
10 pleomorphic adenomas of the human parotid gland were transplanted on several groups of nude mice. For comparative reasons, 10 other pleomorphic adenomas, a neurinoma and a chordoma and transplants of squamous cell carcinomas and of normal salivary gland tissue were also analysed. In the primary tumours and in the transplants, the presence of keratin, carcinoembryonic antigen, tissue
polypeptide
antigen, lactoferrin,
lysozyme
, immunoglobulins, secretory component, amylase, fibronectin and of several lectin-receptors (PNA, WGA, HPA, Ulex europaeus) was sought. The immunohistological observations show that many of the features of a pleomorphic adenoma are constant under the conditions of transplantation. In the transplanted tumour, the same heterogeneity as in the primary tumours can be observed. Autoradiographic studies show little labelling with 3-H thymidine, which is in good accordance with the biological behaviour of the tumour. The distribution of fibronectin shows an interesting association with myoepithelial-like cells. Our results support the hypothesis that the histogenetic origin of the pleomorphic adenoma is a cell pool of the terminal ductal segment. A differentiation towards ductal cells (with production of secretory substances) and towards myoepithelial cells (associated with large amounts of basal membrane like substances) is observed.
...
PMID:The pleomorphic adenoma of salivary glands transplanted on athmymic mice. A lightmicroscopical and immunohistochemical investigation. 241 5
A lectin with an affinity for certain sulphated polysaccharides, such as fucoidin and dextran sulphate, has been isolated from the vitelline membrane of hens' eggs and purified to homogeneity as assessed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies have been raised to the lectin and used in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy to localize the agglutinin in the outer layer of the vitelline membrane, where the lectin persists prior to the breakdown of the vitelline membrane. The quantity of lectin extracted from the two layers of the membrane, which have been separated by the method of Bellairs, Harkness & Harkness (1963), correlated well with the results of immunofluorescence microscopy. Sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the two layers of the membrane indicates that each layer has a distinctive
polypeptide
composition, the outer layer containing in particular
lysozyme
and avidin. The evidence obtained in this study indicates that the lectin is not involved in adhesion of the blastoderm to the vitelline membrane; neither is it involved in the expression of the blastoderm nor in maintaining the strength of the membrane. The possible roles in promoting transport of solutes across the membrane as well as providing bactericidal properties to the egg are discussed.
...
PMID:Isolation, characterization and localization of a lectin within the vitelline membrane of the hen's egg. 242 12
To analyze the nature of cell-cell interactions in chondrogenesis, two cations that influence these interactions, calcium and poly-L-lysine (PL), were tested for their effects on chondrogenesis in vitro. High density cultures of chick limb bud mesenchyme (Hamilton-Hamburger stages 23/24), were exposed to culture media containing calcium (0.6-3.3 mM) or PL (1-10 micrograms/ml). Both cations stimulated chondrogenesis in a dose-dependent manner, and also promoted cartilage formation in normally non-chondrogenic, low cell density cultures. Chondrogenesis was assayed based on cartilage nodule number, [35S]sulfate incorporation, and expression of type II collagen as detected by immunohistochemistry. The calcium effect was not mimicked by other divalent cations (Cd, Co, Ni, Mg, Mn, and Sr). The effect of PL was dependent on its Mr (greater than or equal to 14K) and charge, and was mimicked by poly-D-lysine but not by lysine or other analogs of PL or lysine (epsilon-amino caproic acid,
lysozyme
, poly-L-arginine, and spermidine). Calcium and PL probably act by different mechanisms since their effects were additive, and required their presence on different days of culture: calcium acted on Day 1, and PL on Day 2. It is proposed that calcium may play a role in the cell aggregation phase of chondrogenesis whereas PL, or a naturally occurring
polypeptide
of similar nature, may promote chondrogenesis by crosslinking specific anionic components of the cell surface or extracellular matrix.
...
PMID:Chondrogenesis of limb bud mesenchyme in vitro: stimulation by cations. 242 99
The 2.8 A resolution three-dimensional structure of a complex between an antigen (
lysozyme
) and the Fab fragment from a monoclonal antibody against
lysozyme
has been determined and refined by x-ray crystallographic techniques. No conformational changes can be observed in the tertiary structure of
lysozyme
compared with that determined in native crystalline forms. The quaternary structure of Fab is that of an extended conformation. The antibody combining site is a rather flat surface with protuberances and depressions formed by its amino acid side chains. The antigen-antibody interface is tightly packed, with 16
lysozyme
and 17 antibody residues making close contacts. The antigen contacting residues belong to two stretches of the
lysozyme
polypeptide
chain: residues 18 to 27 and 116 to 129. All the complementarity-determining regions and two residues outside hypervariable positions of the antibody make contact with the antigen. Most of these contacts (10 residues out of 17) are made by the heavy chain, and in particular by its third complementarity-determining region. Antigen variability and antibody specificity and affinity are discussed on the basis of the determined structure.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of an antigen-antibody complex at 2.8 A resolution. 242 78
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