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

The origin and properties of cytosolic neuraminidase (acylneuraminyl hydrolase, EC 3.2.1.18) from pig brain were studied. 1. The brain extracts containing the cytosol derived from neuronal bodies and glial cells carry 0.69 munits neuraminidase/g fresh tissue. The behaviour of neuraminidase during extraction closely paralleled that of authentic cytosolic enzyme, lactate dehydrogenase; whereas, it differed from that of the lysosomal enzymes, beta-hexosaminidase and beta-galactosidase, also found in the extracts. 2. Nerve endings from either crude or purified preparations, when treated by hypoosmotic shock, released neuraminidase activity up to a maximum of 1.25 munits/g fresh tissue. The behaviour of releasable neuraminidase was always identical to that of lactate dehydrogenase and very similar to that of ATPase and acetylcholinesterase. Typical lysosomal enzymes, however, such as beta-galactosidase and beta-hexosaminidase, behaved differently under the same conditions. This neuraminidase activity is thought to be derived from the cytosol of nerve endings. 3. The specific activity of neuraminidase in nerve-ending cytosol is 15--20 times that in neuronal body and glial cell cytosol. Some properties (pH, Km value, V/t relationship) of the cytosolic enzymes of different origin are similar; others (stability on standing at 4 degrees C; resistance to freezing and thawing) are different. Hypoionic solutions caused both cytosolic neuraminidases to slowly precipitate and to assume a stable insoluble form which was still active.
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PMID:Studies on brain cytosol neuraminidase. II. Extractability, solubility and intraneuronal distribution of the enzyme in pig brain. 71 57

We have obtained transgenic mice expressing nuclearly targeted beta-galactosidase (nls-beta-gal) under the control of a chicken acetylcholine receptor alpha-subunit promoter. The expression of the transgene was detected in early somites, starting before embryonic day 9.5. In 13-day embryos, the expression pattern of the transgene closely paralleled that of the endogenous mouse alpha-subunit gene, assessed by in situ hybridization. Our results illustrate, with single-cell resolution, the tissue specificity of this alpha-subunit promoter during embryogenesis. After birth, the overall beta-galactosidase activity rapidly decreased with age. However, in diaphragms of newborn animals, beta-galactosidase activity selectively persisted in nuclei underlying the motor endplates. The latter were revealed by an acetylcholinesterase stain. Nls-beta-gal was also visualized by indirect immunofluorescence, while endplates were labelled with fluorescent alpha-bungarotoxin. Confocal microscopy unambiguously identified the more intensely stained nuclei as synaptic 'fundamental nuclei', and allowed estimates of relative staining levels. Thus an 842 bp acetylcholine receptor gene promoter confers preferential synaptic expression to a reporter gene within myofibres in vivo.
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PMID:An acetylcholine receptor alpha-subunit promoter conferring preferential synaptic expression in muscle of transgenic mice. 190 Apr 67

The phototoxicities of six metalloporphyrin dimethylesters (i.e. cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), manganese (Mn), nickel (Ni), tin (Sn) and zinc (Zn) were investigated. Hemolysis of human erythrocytes and inactivation of two enzymes (acetylcholinesterase and beta-galactosidase) were used to assess the phototoxic efficacy of these metal chelates. Tin protoporphyrin (SnPP), the only porphyrin found to hemolyze erythrocytes at a concentration of 40 microM (radiation dose, 230 kJ m-2), was much less efficient than either free protoporphyrin IX or hematoporphyrin. SnPP completely inactivated beta-galactosidase at concentrations above 15 microM (radiation dose, 75 kJ m-2) and drastically interfered with acetylcholinesterase activity at a concentration of 150 microM (radiation dose, 75 kJ m-2). CoPP, CuPP, MnPP, NiPP and ZnPP were ineffective photohemolytic agents at 40 microM (radiation dose, 230 kJ m-2), but inactivated acetylcholinesterase and beta-galactosidase activity to varying degrees. These results suggest that (i) metal ions reduce the phototoxicity of protoporphyrin IX, (ii) different metal ions reduce the phototoxic activity of protoporphyrin IX to different degrees and (iii) the biological activities of the various metal complexes vary in different assay systems.
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PMID:Metalloporphyrin phototoxicity. 212 21

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) are found both in vertebrate and insect central nervous systems. We have isolated a Drosophila gene by crosshybridization with a vertebrate probe. Structural conservation of domains of the deduced protein and of intron/exon boundaries indicate that the Drosophila gene encodes an nAChR alpha-like subunit (ALS). That the Drosophila gene product most resembles the neuronal set of vertebrate nAChRs alpha-subunits is also indicated by the failure of an ALS-beta-galactosidase fusion protein to bind alpha-bungarotoxin on blots in contrast to vertebrate endplate alpha-subunit constructions. The ALS encoding gene exceeds 54 kb in length and the transcript has a very long and unusual 5' leader. As we found previously for a gene whose product is also involved in cholinergic synapses, acetylcholinesterase, the leader encodes short open reading frames, which might be involved in translation control. We also note the presence of opa repeats in the gene, as has been found for various Drosophila genes expressed in the nervous system.
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PMID:Conservation of neural nicotinic acetylcholine receptors from Drosophila to vertebrate central nervous systems. 284 Feb 81

Radiation inactivation is a method to determine the apparent target size of molecules. In this report we examined whether radiation inactivation of various enzymes and brain receptors is influenced by the preparation of samples preceding irradiation. The apparent target sizes of endogenous acetylcholinesterase and pyruvate kinase from rat brain and from rabbit muscle and benzodiazepine receptor from rat brain were investigated in some detail. In addition the target sizes of alcohol dehydrogenase (from yeast and horse liver), beta-galactosidase (from Escherichia coli), lactate dehydrogenase (endogenous from rat brain), and 5-HT2 receptors, acetylcholine muscarine receptors, and [35S] butyl bicyclophosphorothionate tertiary binding sites from rat brain were determined. The results show that apparent target sizes are highly influenced by the procedure applied for sample preparation before irradiation. The data indicate that irradiation of frozen whole tissue as opposed to lyophilized tissue or frozen tissue homogenates will estimate the smallest and most relevant functional target size of a receptor or an enzyme.
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PMID:The apparent target size of rat brain benzodiazepine receptor, acetylcholinesterase, and pyruvate kinase is highly influenced by experimental conditions. 284 37

The activities of acid phosphatase, hexosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, Mg2+-stimulated Na+K+ATPase, fumarase and ATP:citrate lyase were measured in grey matter of rabbit spinal cord 7-8 days after intra-ventricular or intra-cisternal injection of aluminium. RNA, DNA, and water content were measured in whole spinal cords. Choline acetyltransferase (CAT) and acetylcholinesterase were assayed in dorsal grey matter of the cord, which contained no aluminium-induced neurofilament accumulations (NFAs), and ventral grey matter, which had large numbers of such NFAs. CAT was also assayed in the hypoglossal nerve. None of these measures were consistently altered in the aluminium treated rabbits, although the activity of beta-galactosidase was increased in the NFA-free caudate nucleus of rabbits given aluminium intra-ventricularly, possibly due to the presence of phagocytes on the ventricular surface of the caudate. It is concluded that neither aluminium nor its induced NFAs has a gross effect on neuronal metabolism within 7-8 days.
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PMID:Biochemical studies on rabbits with aluminium induced neurofilament accumulations. 298 21

In this study, the effect of sixteen different enzymes on serum C1 and its subcomponents was investigated. The sixteen enzymes could be divided into three groups. First, enzymes which activate native C1: trypsin (optimal concentration 2.4 x 10(-4) mM); alpha-chymotrypsin (2.3 x 10(3) mM); thrombin (1.0 x 10(-5) mM); plasmin (1.9 x 10(-5) mM); elastase (5.8 x 10(-5) mM); pronase (3.0 x 10(-6) mM). All these enzymes are serine esterase and activate native serum C1 bound to EAC4 at the given concentration within 10 min at 30 degrees C. Furthermore, native C1 inhibited by a pentosanpolysulfoester, Sp54, is unable to undergo the internal activation but can be externally activated by the serine esterases. Second, enzymes which do not activate native C1 but result in a dose and time-dependent loss of C1 activity: collagenase; pepsin; carboxypeptidase B. Third, enzymes which have no effect on C1 and C1: Lysozyme; neuraminidase; beta-galactosidase; L-amino acid oxidase; arginase; streptokinase, and acetylcholinesterase.
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PMID:Activation of the first component of complement, C1: comparison of the effect of sixteen different enzymes on serum C1. 619 90

When Drosophila cell lines are exposed to physiological doses of the steroid molting hormone, ecdysterone, they enter mitotic arrest and differentiate morphologically. These responses are accompanied by specific changes in gene expression. Several enzyme activities (acetylcholinesterase, beta-galactosidase, dopa decarboxylase, and catalase) are induced and the synthesis of a cytoplasmic actin and the four small heat-shock proteins is initiated. Several of these ecdysterone inducible genes have been physically isolated and characterized, in several cases by DNA sequencing. Current studies focus on introducing cloned ecdysterone inducible genes into responsive cells by DNA mediated transfection. Once it is clear that these introduced genes acquire the normal pattern of hormone-regulated gene expression in the cell, in vitro mutagenesis can be used before transfection to modify their structure. Transient expression, then, can become a functional assay to define regions of DNA flanking the coding region of inducible genes that are needed for proper gene expression and regulation in cultured cells.
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PMID:Drosophila cells and ecdysterone: a model system for gene regulation. 644 67

Ecdysterone-sensitive clones cultured in vitro were isolated from established cell lines of Drosophila melanogaster. The clones FC and 89K are ecdysterone-inducible for two enzymatic activities: acetylcholinesterase and beta-galactosidase. No activity could be detected in untreated cells, whereas after treatment with 50-250 nM ecdysterone, the activity appeared after one day and increased during 3-4 days. We wanted to modulate the response of the cells by varying the conditions of the hormonal stimulus. Mimicking the physiological situation of Drosophila (the ecdysterone peak corresponding to the molts is preceded by low levels) we pretreated the cells with a subthreshold concentration (1-5 nM) for 2 days and then we added the stimulating concentration of 50-250 nM ecdysterone. The enzymatic activities were then detectable within the following hours and the final level of induction was about twice the one of cells without pretreatment. Thus, the continuous presence of a subthreshold concentration of ecdysterone provokes the maturation of the cells which become able to respond to the hormonal stimulus by a quicker and higher enzymatic induction. The cellular maturation seems to be a critical period. It is altosid-sensitive. Altosid (a juvenile hormone analog) abolishes the effects of the ecdysterone-induced maturation.
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PMID:A critical period of ecdysterone action on sensitive clones of Drosophila cultured in vitro: the maturation of the cells. 677 94

Polymorphonuclear leucocytes were isolated from pig blood relatively free from other cells and were characterised biochemically and morphologically and compared with human PMNLs. The activities of 16 enzymes of porcine and human PMNLs were measured and compared. Alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, phosphodiesterase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, NADH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, malate dehydrogenase and acetylcholinesterase had higher specific activities in procine than in human cells. Alkaline phosphatase has an 87-fold higher specific activity in porcine than in human cells. beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme, beta-galactosidase, N-acetyl-glucosaminidase, beta-glucosidase, myeloperoxidase and catalase had higher specific activities in human than in porcine cells. beta-glucuronidase and myeloperoxidase showed over a 1000- and a 13-fold higher specific activity, respectively, in human than in porcine cells. Porcine PMNLs are readily available in large numbers and are recommended for studies of phagocytosis, chemotaxis and membrane biochemistry.
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PMID:Biochemical characterisation of porcine polymorphonuclear leucocytes: comparison with human polymorphonuclear leucocytes. 687 22


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