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:3.2.1.20 (
alpha-glucosidase
)
4,237
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Microbioassays using bacteria or enzymes are increasingly applied to measure chemical toxicity in the environment. Attractive features of these assays may include low cost, rapid response to toxicants, high sample throughput, modest laboratory equipment and space requirements, low sample volume, portability, and reproducible responses. Enzymatic tests rely on measurement of either enzyme activity or enzyme biosynthesis. Dehydrogenases are the enzymes most used in toxicity testing. Assay of dehydrogenase activity is conveniently carried out using oxidoreduction dyes such as tetrazolium salts. Other enzyme activity tests utilize ATPases, esterases, phosphatases, urease,
luciferase
, beta-galactosidase, protease, amylase, or beta-glucosidase. Recently, the inhibition of enzyme (beta-galactosidase, tryptophanase,
alpha-glucosidase
) biosynthesis has been explored as a basis for toxicity testing. Enzyme biosynthesis was found to be generally more sensitive to organic chemicals than enzyme activity. Bacterial toxicity tests are based on bioluminescence, motility, growth, viability, ATP, oxygen uptake, nitrification, or heat production. An important aspect of bacterial tests is the permeability of cells to environmental toxicants, particularly organic chemicals of hydrophobic nature. Physical, chemical, and genetic alterations of the outer membrane of E. coli have been found to affect test sensitivity to organic toxicants. Several microbioassays are now commercially available. The names of the assays and their basis are: Microtox (bioluminescence), Polytox (respiration), ECHA Biocide Monitor (dehydrogenase activity), Toxi-Chromotest (enzyme biosynthesis), and MetPAD (enzyme activity). An important feature common to these tests is the provision of standardized cultures of bacteria in freeze-dried form. Two of the more recent applications of microbioassays are in sediment toxicity testing and toxicity reduction evaluation. Sediment pore water may be assayed directly or solvents may be used to extract the toxicants. Some of the solvents used for extraction of organic chemicals are themselves toxic to bacteria (e.g., dichloromethane), requiring exchange with a less toxic solvent (e.g., ethanol, methanol, DMSO). A modification of the Microtox test allows direct assay of solid-phase samples such as sediments. The toxicity reduction evaluation (TRE) must be carried out at wastewater treatment plants whose effluents fail toxicity standards. The TREs require numerous and repeated toxicity assays, thus favoring application of microbioassays. Presently, no single microbioassay can detect all categories of environmental toxicants with equal sensitivity. Therefore, a battery of tests approach is recommended. The differential sensitivity of alternative tests may, in fact, be exploited. Further research is needed to construct strains of genetically engineered microorganisms or isolate microorganisms or enzymes that respond to specific classes of toxicants. These can be combined into batteries appropriate for different environments or test objectives.
...
PMID:Bacterial and enzymatic bioassays for toxicity testing in the environment. 150 75
Dengue virus (DENV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus responsible for 50-100 million human infections each year. The development of DENV chemotherapy requires high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. A dengue virus-like particle (VLP) has been constructed using viral structural proteins to package a Renilla
luciferase
reporter replicon. VLP could be produced by either the sequential electroporation of the replicon RNAs and the structural gene RNAs or by electroporating replicon RNA into a stable cell line expressing the structural proteins. In both approaches, the key to produce high titer VLP (3x10(6)foci-forming unit/ml) is to use low temperature (30 degrees C) in the packaging step. In addition, exogenous expression of host protease furin increased VLP infectivity. The infection could be blocked by antibodies against viral envelope protein and by an inhibitor of viral NS5 polymerase, but not by an inhibitor of host
alpha-glucosidase
(castanospermine). The VLP infection assay was optimized for HTS in a 384-well format with consistent and robust signal, providing a simple and rapid cell-based assay for screening inhibitors against DENV entry, translation, and replication in an HTS format.
...
PMID:A high-throughput assay using dengue-1 virus-like particles for drug discovery. 2015 77