Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.20 (alpha-glucosidase)
4,237 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Six glycoside hydrolases in the culture medium of Bacteroides fragilis--alpha-glucosidase, beta-glucosidase, alpha-galactosidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, and alpha-L-fucosidase-were systematically purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration chromatography, and density gradient isoelectric focusing. The isoelectric focusing resolved the glycosidases into distinct, well-separated fractions and revealed three differently charged forms of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and of alpha-L-fucosidase. Furthermore, alpha-glucosidase and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase were shown to possess dual affinities for the respective galactoside substrates, and beta-galactosidase also hydrolyzed beta-D-fucoside. alpha-Glucosidase was purified to homogeneity, as indicated by a thin-layer isoelectric focusing zymogram technique. The glycosidases, with exception of beta-glucosidase and the acid alpha-L-fucosidase, were each separated from other glycosidic activities to 99%. The molecular weights varied between 58,000 and 125,000. The pH optima ranged from 4.8 to 6.9.
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PMID:Purification of glycoside hydrolases from Bacteroides fragilis. 625 Apr 77

The enzyme activities of alpha-fucosidase (pH 4.0 and pH 5.5), alpha-galactosidase, beta-galactosidase, alpha-glucosidase (pH 4.5 and pH 6.0), beta-glucosidase, beta-glucuronidase, beta-hexosaminidase, and alpha-mannosidase (pH 4.5 and pH 5.5) were investigated in sera from cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. Several of these activities were significantly increased in sera from patients compared to age-matched control children. CF-patients in a more advanced stage of the disease had a tendency to higher values of some of these hydrolases than those in better condition. No new isoenzymes of these hydrolases were found. Only minor differences could be detected in the pH-profiles of alpha-mannosidase and acid phosphatase from age-matched normal controls, heterozygotes and homozygotes for CF. With our technique, alpha-mannosidase and acid phosphatase showed the same thermostability in CF-patients. CF-heterozygotes and age-matched controls, except at 56 degrees C, when the activity of acid-phosphatase in the plasma from adult CF-heterozygotes decreased more than that from adult controls
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PMID:Acid hydrolases in sera and plasma from patients with cystic fibrosis. 626 20

The generation of enzymes located in lysosomes, in cytosol or in endoplasmatic reticulum/Golgi complex is studied in heterokaryons in which chick erythrocyte nuclei are reactivated. The lysosomal enzymes, alpha-glucosidase (alpha-glu) and beta-galactosidase (beta-gal), are synthesized in heterokaryons obtained after fusion of chick erythrocytes with human fibroblasts of patients with Pompe's disease (alpha-glu-deficient) and GM1-gangliosidosis (beta-gal-deficient), respectively. The enzymes appear to be of chick origin and their activities can be detected at first around 4 days after fusion, i.e., at a time when the nucleoli in the erythrocyte nuclei have been reactivated. Maximal activities are reached around 15 days after fusion. No generation of the lysosomal enzyme beta-hexosaminidase is detected in the heterokaryons up to 23 days after fusion of chick erythrocyte with either beta-hexosaminidase A- and B-deficient fibroblasts (Sandhoff's disease) or beta-hexosaminidase A-deficient fibroblasts (Tay-Sachs disease). Similarly no expression of the cytosol enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) is fond up to 30 days after fusion, when chick erythrocytes are fused with fibroblasts from two different G6PD-deficient cell strains (residual activities of 4 and 20% respectively). Indirectly we examined N-acetyl-glucosamine-1-phosphate transferase activity, an enzyme located in the endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi region. This enzyme is needed for the phosphorylation of the lysosomal hydrolases and absence of its activity is the cause of the multiple lysosomal enzyme deficiencies in patients with I-cell disease. The retention of both, chick and human beta-galactosidase in the experiments in which I-cell fibroblasts were fused with chick erythrocytes indicates a reactivation of the gene coding for this phosphorylating enzyme. It also implies that this step in the processing of human lysosomal enzymes is not species-specific.
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PMID:Expression of lysosomal enzymes in human mutant fibroblast-chick erythrocyte heterokaryons. 629 65

Over 24-h culture with hydrocortisone (400 nM), activity of brush-border alkaline phosphatase, alpha-glucosidase, and leucyl-2-naphthylamidase and cytoplasmic-mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase increased (P less than 0.05) by 80-133% compared with controls. Uptake of 3-O-methyl-D-[14C]glucose after 24-h culture was increased (P less than 0.05) by 30% compared with cultures without hydrocortisone. Labeling of protein with L-[14C]tyrosine and glycoprotein with D-[3H]glucosamine increased (P less than 0.05) by 40 and 88%, respectively, with hydrocortisone. The effects of hydrocortisone were dose dependent at normal serum concentrations (100-600 nM) and not further stimulated by larger concentrations. Cytoplasmic lactate dehydrogenase and lysosomal hexosaminidase activity, specific radioactivity of soluble precursor pools for protein and glycoprotein labeling, incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA, and morphology were unaffected by hydrocortisone. Inhibitors of glucocorticoid receptor binding (progesterone), mRNA transcription (alpha-amanitin), and protein synthesis (cycloheximide) prevented the effects of hydrocortisone. We suggest that hydrocortisone maintains the digestive, absorptive, and cellular function of cultured human jejunum. These protective effects were associated with increased protein synthesis and glycosylation and dependent on a classical steroid-hormone mechanism.
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PMID:Protection of epithelial function in human jejunum cultured with hydrocortisone. 634 19

Castanospermine (1,6,7,8-tetrahydroxyoctahydroindolizine) was tested against a variety of commercially available glycosidases and found to be a potent inhibitor of almond emulsin beta-glucosidase, and also to inhibit fungal beta-xylosidase. This alkaloid was inactive on yeast alpha-glucosidase, alpha- or beta-galactosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, alpha-L-fucosidase. Fifty-percent inhibition of beta-glucosidase required about 10 micrograms/ml of castanospermine. The amount of inhibition was uniform throughout the time course, and the inhibition with regard to substrate concentration (p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside) appeared to be of the mixed type. Castanospermine was also a potent inhibitor of beta-glucocerebrosidase when assayed with fibroblast extracts using either a fluorimetric or a radioactive assay. Interestingly enough, castanospermine also inhibited the lysosomal alpha-glucosidase, and this inhibition required comparable levels of alkaloid to that required for inhibition of beta-glucocerebrosidase. However, a number of other lysosomal glycosidases were not sensitive to castanospermine (i.e., alpha- or beta-galactosidase, alpha- or beta-mannosidase, alpha- or beta-L-fucosidase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase).
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PMID:Castanospermine, a tetrahydroxylated alkaloid that inhibits beta-glucosidase and beta-glucocerebrosidase. 640 22

The activities of various glycosidases in homogenates of the small-intestinal mucosa of one adult and two suckling echidnas, Tachyglossus aculeatus, were investigated. The activities of lactase (beta-D-galactosidase), beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, neuraminidase and alpha-L-fucosidase were higher in the sucklings than in the adult animal. Maltase and isomaltase activities were lower. Sucrase and cellobiase activities were absent or present in trace amounts only. The lactase activity had a pH optimum of 4.0-4.5, was predominantly in the soluble fraction following ultracentrifugation and was inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate, suggesting that it was due to a lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase and not a brush-border neutral lactase. The maltase activity of the sucklings also had the characteristics predominantly of a lysosomal acid hydrolase. It is proposed that in suckling echidnas, the oligosaccharides (mainly neuraminyllactose and fucosyllactose) of the mother's milk are digested intracellularly by lysosomal enzymes, rather than at the brush border, of the epithelial cells of the small-intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Intestinal glycosidase activities in one adult and two suckling echidnas: absence of a neutral lactase (beta-D-galactosidase). 641 47

Mouse peritoneal macrophages that had been treated with a monovalent carboxylic ionophore, monensin, selectively secreted lysosomal and nonlysosomal granular enzymes into the medium. When macrophages were incubated with 1 to 10 microM monensin, the release of beta-glucuronidase, beta-hexosaminidase and beta-galactosidase was stimulated time and does dependently. Neither the beta-glucosidase nor acid phosphatase, enzymes bound to the lysosomal membranes, however, were released by monensin. Neutral alpha-glucosidase, shown recently to be localized in nonlysosomal granules of macrophages (15), was released by monensin at concentrations lower than those required for lysosomal enzyme release. Increased release of lysosomal enzymes also took place in a manner similar to that seen with monensin-treated macrophages after treatment of macrophages with weak bases, chloroquine and ammonium chloride. Neutral alpha-glucosidase, however, was not released when chloroquine was present in concentrations that stimulated the release of lysosomal enzymes. The UDP-galactosyltransferase activity of the Golgi apparatus in the macrophages markedly decreased after treatment with low concentration of monensin.
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PMID:Stimulation of the release of lysosomal and nonlysosomal granular enzymes from macrophages treated with monensin. 643 21

Chorionic villi from first trimester and term human placentas have been incubated in vitro and shown to release the lysosomal enzymes, beta-hexosaminidase, alpha-glucosidase and beta-glucuronidase. There was negligible release of the cytoplasmic enzyme, lactate dehydrogenase, under the same conditions. The first trimester villi released proportionally more of their lysosomal enzyme content than did the term villi. Extracellular levels of beta-hexosaminidase were raised and those of alpha-glucosidase and beta-glucuronidase were lowered when tissue was incubated with 1 microM colchicine, suggesting that microtubules are involved in the control of lysosomal enzyme release from placental villi.
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PMID:Secretion of lysosomal enzymes by human placental villi in vitro. 645 98

Ten enzymes, all known to be glycoproteins, were examined by electrophoresis or gel isoelectric focusing in 12 different patients with primary or secondary sialidase deficiency. Aberrant electrophoretic mobilities of many of the enzymes attributable to abnormal sialylation were found in all the patients. In ten of the patients seven of the enzymes were affected. The unaffected enzymes were beta-galactosidase, alkaline phosphatase and beta-glucuronidase. In the cells from the two patients with I cell disease (mucolipidosis II) in which sialidase is one of many deficient enzymes, beta-galactosidase, alpha-galactosidase, alpha-fucosidase and alpha-mannosidase were undetectable, alkaline phosphatase showed a normal electrophoretic mobility and acid phosphatase, adenosine deaminase, alpha-glucosidase and beta-D-N-acetylhexosaminidase showed aberrant mobilities.
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PMID:Electrophoretic analysis of glycoprotein enzymes in the sialidoses and mucolipidoses. 645 53

The acid hydrolases alpha-glucosidase, beta-galactosidase, N-acetyl-beta-D-hexosaminidase, beta-glucocerebrosidase and cathepsin D were studied immunocytochemically in normal and mutant human cells using monoclonal and affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies. For light microscopy, Rhodamine or Fluorescein-labelled conjugates were used, and for electron microscopy protein A-gold conjugates were employed. With the double labelling procedure, it was found that in normal fibroblasts every lysosome contained all the enzymes studied. The method described also enabled us to demonstrate the presence or absence of mutant enzyme protein in fibroblasts derived from patients with a genetic lysosomal enzyme deficiency. Immunoreactive acid hydrolases or their precursor forms were found in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, the cisternae of the Golgi complex, Golgi associated vesicles and lysosomes. This is in agreement with the present concept that the Golgi complex plays an essential role in the processing and targeting of lysosomal enzymes.
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PMID:Immunocytochemistry of lysosomal hydrolases and their precursor forms in normal and mutant human cells. 648 Mar 99


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