Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The urinary excretion of lactate dehydrogenase, gamma-glutamyltransferase, alkaline phosphatase, arylsulphatase A, alpha-glucosidase, beta-galactosidase, trehalase, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, and leucine arylamidase was studied in 68 patients with biopsy-proved glomerular, 54 with interstitial renal disease and in 97 patients suffering from primary hypertension. The enzyme output of these 219 patients was compared to that of a reference population of 100 thoroughly selected healthy subjects. The highest incidence of elevated enzyme excretion was observed for N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase with 88% in glomerulopathies and 78% in interstitial disease, followed by beta-galactosidase. 94% of the patients with glomerular kidney disease, 90% of those with interstitial disease and about 60% of the subjects with primary benign hypertension revealed an output of at least one enzyme above upper reference limit. The highest average enzymuria occured in glomerulopathies, particularly high values in patients with the nephrotic syndrome. Application of discriminant analysis to the urinary enzyme pattern of glomerular and interstitial renal diseases resulted in an overall correct classification into the appropriate group of 89% of all patients. The discrimination between glomerular and interstitial disease was better in patients with normal renal function than in those with reduced function. Results show, that the analysis of urinary enzyme patterns may be a helpful adjunct for differential diagnosis of kidney diseases.
...
PMID:Evaluation of urinary enzyme patterns in patients with kidney diseases and primary benign hypertension. 3 57

Acidic hydrolases were assayed in urines of 19 normal children, 33 children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome of childhood (INS), 21 children with glomerulonephritides (GN) and 7 children with persistent proteinuria/hematuria, and in plasma of 10 children each with INS or GN. Both plasma and urinary acidic hydrolases were studied in intermittent orthostatic proteinuria. Cbeta-galactosidase and Cbeta-N-hexosaminidase were done in normals and children with active renal disease. Significantly (P less than 0.01) elevated urinary acidic hydrolases excretion in active renal diseases, both in INS and GN, returned to a normal range with regression of the diseases. Increased postural proteinuria was associated with normal urinary acidic hydrolases. Both beta-galactosidase and beta-N-hexosaminidase excretion was higher than similar mol wt proteins in normals and increased further in active renal diseases. The data suggests that increased urinary acidic hydrolases is related to the activity of the renal disease, and not to urinary WBC, hematuria or proteinuria. The likely source of urinary acidic hydrolases thus appears to be the injured renal parenchyma itself.
...
PMID:Urinary acidic hydrolases in renal diseases in children. 10 80

Two lysosomal glycohydrolases, beta-galactosidase and beta-N-hexosaminidase which have been associated with kidney disease were measured in the urine of 110 youngsters with juvenile diabetes mellitus. The mean enzyme excretions in the diabetic group were intermediate between those of normal youngsters and those with active renal disease. Three youngsters with known kidney disease had elevations comparable to others in the diabetic group but no direct correlation could be shown between enzyme elevations and proteinuria or Addis count abnormalities. Positive correlations were seen between enzyme levels and indices of metabolic balance including blood sugar, cholesterol and triglycerides but not with urine sugar or ketones. Duration and estimated stage and control of diabetes also correlated with the urinary enzymes. These preliminary studies are consistent with the possibility that the excretion of these enzymes reflects the ongoing renal damage which occurs in most juvenile diabetics.
...
PMID:Urinary acidic glycohydrolases as an index of kidney damage in juvenile diabetes mellitus. 11 9

N-Acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase, acid and alkaline phosphatase were monitored in urine kidney homogenates and serum of rats with papillary damage induced with ethyleneimine. Serum urea levels, total protein in the urine and urine volume were monitored throughout the study. Histological studies showed that the injection of ethyleneimine caused immediate papillary necrosis, followed later by secondary cortical involvement. Minor papillary necrosis induced by a low dose (0.5 mul/kg) of ethyleneimine was characterised by a rise in urinary N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase activity which was followed later by an increase in the activity of the other enzymes monitored. More severe papillary necrosis induced with a higher dose of ethyleneimine (5.0 mul/kg) resulted in an immediate rise in the activities of all the urinary enzymes which then decreased only to rise again when cortical involvement occurred. Serum urea was unaltered but urine volume and protein were increased coincidentally with the urinary enzyme activities. The value of the assay of urinary enzymes in distinguishing papillary from glomerular and tubular damage is assessed. The possible relevance of the ethyleneimine model to the etiology of papillary nephropathy is discussed.
...
PMID:Urinary enzyme excretion during renal papillary necrosis induced in rats with ethyleneimine. 120 12

In humans a higher incidence of renal toxicity is seen in old than in young patients undergoing gentamicin therapy. To investigate whether the sensitivity of the old kidney to gentamicin is a function of age, separate from the adverse effects arising from declining renal excretory function, the nephrotoxicity of 12 daily injections of this antibiotic was measured in rats. Young (7-10 months) and old (25-28 months) rats, selected for minimal age-related nephropathy, received an initial dose of 30 or 50 mg of gentamycin/kg. Based on the plasma half-lives, subsequent doses for the high dose group were reduced as needed to equalize renal exposure to gentamicin. Urinary excretion of beta-galactosidase peaked by the second or third day of injections, while proteinuria was highest in the second week. The amount of microscopic renal tubular damage was dose-related and was greater in the old rats of each dose group. The increased sensitivity of old kidneys toward gentamycin toxicity, although small, thus appears to be in addition to any age-related decrease in renal elimination of the drug from plasma.
...
PMID:Effect of aging on gentamicin nephrotoxicity and pharmacokinetics in rats. 716 27

Gene transfer into the mammalian kidney has proved difficult because of the structural complexity of the organ and its low mitotic index. This article describes the use of intra-arterially injected adenovirus to study gene transfer into the rat kidney in vivo. By pre-chilling the kidney, and incubating the virus with the kidney in the cold for extended periods of time, we were able to successfully transfer a beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) reporter gene into the vasculature without ischemic injury to the kidney. Transfer occurred largely in the cortex when cold was used alone, whereas with the use of cold and vasodilators, transfer was accomplished into the outer medulla in both the inner and outer stripes. In the Han:SPRD rat model of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), gene transfer occurred into the vasculature, some epithelial cysts and interstitial cells. This is the first description of substantial in vivo gene transfer into both normal and cystic kidneys. The methodology could find application in the creation of new models of renal disease, for in vivo therapeutic intervention or for genetic modification of an allograft at the time of harvest.
...
PMID:In vivo adenovirus-mediated gene transfer into normal and cystic rat kidneys. 873 61

In patients suffering from insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) with or without preclinical and clinical signs of diabetic nephropathy, the degree of epithelial cell lesions in the renal tubules was assessed from the urinary activities of enzymes at various sites, such as lysosomal (N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) and beta-galactosidase (beta-GA)), brush edge membranous (alanine aminopeptidase (AAP), and cytosolic (alpha-glucosidase (alpha-GL)). Patients from Groups 1 and 2 had no preclinical and clinical signs of nephropathy. In Group 1 patients, the magnitude of enzymuria was not different from that in normalcy. However, Group 2 patients exhibited significant increases in urinary NAG and beta-GA activities as compared to Group 1 patients and healthy individuals. In Group 3 patients with microproteinuria from 0.05 to 0.5 mg protein per ml urine, displayed a further enhancement of NAG and beta-GA activities as compared to Group 2 patients and significantly higher activity than did Groups 1 and 2 patients and healthy individuals. In Group 4 patients with macroproteinuria of > 0.5 mg/ml), greater increases in the activities of NAG, beta-GA, and AAP were not found, however, there was a significant increase in alpha-G1 activity. The findings suggest the varying degrees of epithelial cell damage in the renal tubules in patients of different groups and the possibility of early detection of lesion in the proximal portion of nephronic tubules in IDDM patients as assessed from urinary enzyme levels.
...
PMID:[Urinary enzymes in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus]. 899 62

MRL/Mp-lpr/lpr (MRL/lpr) mice suffer from a generalized autoimmune disease that includes autoantibody production and glomerulonephritis and develop massive lymphadenopathy characterized by an expanded population of CD4- CD8- B220+ T cells that is derived from autoreactive T cells in the periphery. Some of us previously reported that these atypical T cells overexpressed a gene for tyrosine kinase p59fyn (Fyn). To define the role of Fyn in the renal disease and lymphadenopathy in MRL/lpr mice, we have generated Fyn-deficient MRL/lpr mice whose fyn gene is replaced by the gene for beta-galactosidase. Fyn-deficient MRL/lpr mice developed markedly limited disease and lived more than twice as long as the conventional MRL/lpr mice. In the mutant mice, the production of IgG3 anti-DNA autoantibody was significantly (p < 0.005%) reduced, and glomerular deposits of IgG3 and C3 were remarkably diminished. Ag receptor-mediated proliferative responses of Fyn-deficient splenic T cells were markedly impaired. The mutant mice showed delayed accumulation of the atypical CD4- CD8- B220+ T cells that exhibited a significantly lower activity of ZAP-70 compared with those in the conventional MRL/lpr mice. These data demonstrated that Fyn is involved as a positive regulator in the disease of MRL/lpr mice. Fyn provides a signal for both the expansion of autoreactive T cells and the production of IgG3 anti-DNA autoantibody by B cells. Thus, manipulation of Fyn may improve systemic autoimmune disease in humans.
...
PMID:Suppression of autoimmune disease and of massive lymphadenopathy in MRL/Mp-lpr/lpr mice lacking tyrosine kinase Fyn (p59fyn). 927 47

Protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA) is a pleiotropic lysosomal enzyme that complexes with beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase, and possesses serine carboxypeptidase activity. Its deficiency in man results in the neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder galactosialidosis (GS). The mouse model of this disease resembles the human early onset phenotype and results in severe nephropathy and ataxia. To understand better the pathophysiology of the disease, we compared the occurrence of lysosomal PPCA mRNA and protein in normal adult mouse tissues with the incidence of lysosomal storage in PPCA(-/-) mice. PPCA expression was markedly variable among different tissues. Most sites that produced both mRNA and protein at high levels in normal mice showed extensive and overt storage in the knockout mice. However, this correlation was not consistent as some cells that normally expressed high levels of PPCA were unaffected in their storage capability in the PPCA(-/-) mice. In addition, some normally low expressing cells accumulated large amounts of undegraded products in the GS mouse. This apparent discrepancy may reflect a requirement for the catalytic rather than the protective function of PPCA and/or the presence of cell-specific substrates in certain cell types. A detailed map showing the cellular distribution of PPCA in nomal mouse tissues as well as the sites of lysosomal storage in deficient mice is critical for accurate assessment of the effects of therapeutic interventions.
...
PMID:Lack of PPCA expression only partially coincides with lysosomal storage in galactosialidosis mice: indirect evidence for spatial requirement of the catalytic rather than the protective function of PPCA. 973 81

Recombinant immunoconjugates constitute a novel class of immunoassay reagents produced by genetic fusion between an antigen recognizing moiety and a reporter enzyme or fluorescent protein, obviating the need for chemical coupling. In this work, we describe the construction, Escherichia coli production and characterization of recombinant beta-galactosidase (beta-gal)-based immunoconjugates directed to human immunoglobulin A (IgA). As the antigen recognizing moieties, either monovalent or dimeric (head-to-tail) versions of an IgA-specific affibody (Z(IgA1)) were used, previously selected in vitro from a protein library based on combinatorial engineering of a single staphylococcal protein A domain. To increase the likelihood of proper presentation on the assembled homotetrameric enzyme surface, the affibody moieties were linked to the N-terminus of the enzyme subunits via a heptapeptide linker sequence. The two resulting immunoconjugates Z(IgA1)-beta-gal and (Z(IgA1))(2)-beta-gal, containing four and eight affibody moieties per enzyme, respectively, could be expressed as soluble and proteolytically stable proteins intracellularly in E. coli from where they were purified to high purity by a single anion exchange chromatography step. The yields of immunoconjugates were in the range 200-400 mg/l culture. Biosensor-binding studies showed that both the Z(IgA1)-beta-gal and (Z(IgA1))(2)-beta-gal immunoconjugates were capable of selective IgA-recognition, but with an apparent higher binding affinity for the variant containing divalent affibody moieties, presumably due to avidity effects. The applicability of this class of recombinant immunoconjugates was demonstrated by IgA detection in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and dot-blot analyses. In addition, using human kidney biopsy samples from a nephropathy patient, IgA depositions in glomeruli could be detected by immunohistochemistry with low background staining of tissue.
...
PMID:Affibody-beta-galactosidase immunoconjugates produced as soluble fusion proteins in the Escherichia coli cytosol. 1458 Aug 89


1 2 Next >>