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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 characterization and properties of a beta-galactanase and alpha- and beta-galactosidases as well as heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate degrading enzymes which appear during the 15 days of the embryonic development of the mollusc Pomacea sp. is reported. The beta-galactanase, which appears around day 7 of development, was separated from alpha- and
beta-galactosidase
which emerge at day 1 and 4 after oviposition, respectively. The galactanase seems to be responsible for the degradation of an acidic beta-galactan (which is also synthesized by the eggs around day 5) to galactose and di- and tri-galactosides. Heparan sulfate appears around day 10 of development together with a heparan sulfate endoglucuronidase responsible for the degradation of its N-acetylated region. An alpha-N-acetylglucosaminidase and a beta-glucuronidase which act upon the N-acetylated fragments formed from heparan sulfate emerge around day 4 of development. Chondroitin sulfate and a chondroitin sulfate
sulfatase
emerge around day 9 of development whereas a beta-N-acetylgalactosaminidase and the beta beta-galactan, heparan and chondroitin sulfate, respectively. The possible role of these elements in the migration of mesenchymal cells, in the processes of cell-cell recognition and control of cell growth is discussed.
...
PMID:Appearance and fate of a beta-galactanase, alpha, beta-galactosidases, heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate degrading enzymes during embryonic development of the mollusc Pomacea sp. 806 9
Saposin B is involved in the hydrolysis of sulfatides, GM1 ganglioside, globotriaosylceramide, and several other sphingolipids and glycerolipids by lysosomal hydrolases. Saposin B is one of four small glycoproteins (saposins) derived from prosaposin. The carbohydrate chain of saposin B was removed and deglycosylated saposin B was characterized and compared with native saposin B. Deglycosylated saposin B stimulated the enzymatic hydrolysis of ganglioside GM1 by acid
beta-galactosidase
and sulfatide by
arylsulfatase A
to the same extent as native saposin B. In addition deglycosylated saposin B bound sulfatide and GM1 ganglioside identical to native saposin B. The stability of native saposin B to proteolytic digestion was unchanged by deglycosylation. Neither native saposin B nor deglycosylated saposin B were hydrolyzed by trypsin, endoproteinase Glu-C (V-8), chymotrypsin, or a mixture of acid proteases isolated from human testis. Unlike its effect on metabolic stability, the carbohydrate chain appears to affect folding of saposin B. When native and deglycosylated saposin B were reduced under denaturing conditions and refolded under identical conditions examination of the refolded products indicated that each protein was refolded in a qualitatively different way. A human mutation in saposin B-deficient metachromatic leukodystrophy, in which its glycosylation site is eliminated, has been reported. Our observations suggest that instability of the mutated saposin B is not due to the absence of a protective effect of the carbohydrate chain on proteolysis, but is likely due to aberrant folding resulting from the absence of a carbohydrate chain.
...
PMID:The effect of carbohydrate removal on stability and activity of saposin B. 809 82
Two exo-beta-galactosidases are involved in the lysosomal degradation of glycosphingolipids: GM1-
beta-galactosidase
(
EC 3.2.1.23
) and galactosylceramidase (EC 3.2.1.46). Analyses were performed with both enzymes, using lactosylceramides with varying acyl chain lengths as substrates that were inserted into unilamellar liposomes and naturally occurring sphingolipid activator proteins sap-B and sap-C, rather than detergents, to stimulate the reaction. While sap-B was a better activator for the reaction catalyzed by GM1-
beta-galactosidase
, sap-C preferentially stimulated lactosylceramide hydrolysis by galactosylceramidase. The enzymic hydrolysis of liposome-integrated lactosylceramides was significantly dependent on the structure of the lipophilic aglycon moiety of the lactosylceramide decreasing with increasing length of its fatty acyl chain (C2 > C4 > C6 > C8 > C10 > C18). However, in the presence of detergents the degradation rates were independent of the acyl chain length. Hydrolysis of liposomal lactosylceramide was compared with sap-B-stimulated hydrolysis of liposomal ganglioside GM1 by GM1-
beta-galactosidase
and sap-C-stimulated degradation of liposomal galactosylceramide by galactosylceramidase. Kinetic and dilution experiments indicated that sap-B forms water-soluble complexes with both lactosylceramide and GM1. These complexes were recognized by GM1-
beta-galactosidase
as optimal substrates in the same mode, as postulated for the hydrolysis of sulfatides by
arylsulfatase A
[Fischer, G. and Jatzkewitz, H. (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 481, 561-572]. GM1-
beta-galactosidase
was more active on these complexes than on glycolipids (GM1 and lactosylceramides) still residing in liposomal membranes. On the other hand, dilution experiments indicated that degradation of galactosylceramide and lactosylceramide by galactosylceramidase proceeds almost exclusively on liposomal surfaces: both activators, sap-C and sap-B, stimulated the hydrolysis of lactosylceramide analogues with long acyl chains more than the hydrolysis of lactosylceramides with short acyl chains.
...
PMID:Hydrolysis of lactosylceramide by human galactosylceramidase and GM1-beta-galactosidase in a detergent-free system and its stimulation by sphingolipid activator proteins, sap-B and sap-C. Activator proteins stimulate lactosylceramide hydrolysis. 820 Mar 56
Prosaposin contains separate domains in tandem for four saposins, A, B, C, and D. These mature saposins are produced by limited proteolysis of prosaposin. They are involved in lysosomal hydrolysis of GM1 ganglioside, gluco- and galactocerebrosides, sulfatides, and sphingomyelin and other sphingolipids. Prosaposin also exists as a secretory protein in body fluids. In this investigation prosaposin was expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda cells (Sf9) by infection with baculovirus containing a full length cDNA coding for human prosaposin. Prosaposin was isolated and purified from spent culture medium of the recombinant Sf9 cell cultures as well as from human seminal plasma and milk. From sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the molecular weight of both native human prosaposins is estimated to be 66 kDa and that of recombinant prosaposin as 58 kDa. Deglycosylation of native and recombinant prosaposins yielded a protein with a molecular weight of 54 kDa and isoelectric point of 5.4. The N-terminal sequence of both native and recombinant prosaposins was identical (G-P-V-L-L-G-L-K). Like mature saposins, all prosaposins possessed stimulative activity for cerebroside beta-glucosidase (saposins A and C activity), GM1 ganglioside
beta-galactosidase
(saposin B activity), and sphingomyelinase (saposin D activity) but not sulfatide
sulfatase
(saposin B activity). Partially proteolyzed products derived from prosaposins were isolated and identified. From seminal plasma, two proteins of 48 and 29 kDa and from Sf9 culture media, two proteins of 39 and 26 kDa were characterized. N-terminal amino acid sequencing and Western blot analysis of each protein indicated that the 39-and 48-kDa proteins are cleavage products containing domains for saposins B, C, and D (trisaposins), and the 26- and 29-kDa proteins are cleavage products containing domains for saposins C and D (disaposin). These observations suggest that proteolysis of prosaposin in these tissues occurs sequentially from the N-terminal region. Proteins involved in the initial proteolysis of prosaposin were partially characterized in human testis.
...
PMID:Isolation, characterization, and proteolysis of human prosaposin, the precursor of saposins (sphingolipid activator proteins). 832 76
Strains of a new type of slowly growing mycobacterium were repeatedly isolated from sputum from a patient with pulmonary disease. This photochromogenic organism grew at 22, 31, 37, and 41 degrees C, possessed catalase, acid phosphatase, esterase,
beta-galactosidase
, and
arylsulfatase
activities, and hydrolyzed Tween. It did not produce nicotinic acid or have nitrate reductase, acetamidase, benzamidase, isonicotinamidase, nicotinamidase, pyrazinamidase, succinidamidase, and acid phosphatase activities. Urease activity was variable. The organism is susceptible to ethambutol and resistant to isoniazid and streptomycin. A mycolic acid analysis revealed the presence of alpha-mycolates, alpha'-mycolates, and keto-mycolates. The results of comparative 16S rRNA sequencing placed this organism at an intermediate position between the rapidly and slowly growing mycobacteria. On the basis of the pattern of enzymatic activities and metabolic properties, the results of fatty acid analyses, and the unique 16S rRNA sequence, we propose that this organism represents a new species, for which we propose the name Mycobacterium intermedium. The type strain is strain 1669/91; a culture of this strain has been deposited in the Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen as strain DSM 44049.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium intermedium sp. nov. 849 35
Sphingolipid activator proteins (SAPs) are non-enzymatic glycoproteins required for lysosomal degradation of various sphingolipids with short oligosaccharide chains by their respective exohydrolases. Four of these (SAP-A to SAP-D or saposins A to D) are derived from a common precursor by proteolytic processing. Alternative splicing of the SAP-precursor gene results in insertion of additional 6 or 9 bases of exon 8' or 8, respectively, into the SAP-B coding region of the transcribed mRNAs. To examine the features of the three different SAP-precursor proteins (prosaposins), the respective cDNAs were stably expressed in baby hamster kidney cells. Pulse-chase experiments with transfected cells and endocytosis studies on human fibroblasts showed that synthesis, transport, and maturation of all SAP-precursor led to formation of the four mature SAPs (SAP-A to SAP-D). In order to determine the biological function of the three different SAP-B isoforms, SAP-precursor-deficient human fibroblasts were loaded with recombinant SAP-precursor proteins with or without 2- and 3-amino acid insertions, respectively, purified from the medium of the baby hamster kidney cells. They were found to stimulate at nanomolar concentrations the turnover of biosynthetically labeled ceramide, glucosylceramide, and lactosylceramide. Since the physiological function of SAP-B is to stimulate the degradation of sulfatide by
arylsulfatase A
(
EC 3.1.6.1
) and globotriaosylceramide by
beta-galactosidase
(
EC 3.2.1.23
) loading studies with the respective exogenously labeled lipids on SAP-precursor-deficient fibroblasts were performed. Addition of different purified SAP-precursors to the medium of the lipid-loaded fibroblasts showed positive stimulation of the lipid degradation by all three SAP-B isoforms derived from the SAP-precursors. These findings establish that all three forms of the SAP-B can function as sulfatide/globotriaosylceramide activator.
...
PMID:Expression of the three alternative forms of the sphingolipid activator protein precursor in baby hamster kidney cells and functional assays in a cell culture system. 862 40
N-Acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfate
sulfatase
(GALNS) catalyzes the first step of intralysosomal keratan sulfate (KS) catabolism. In Morquio type A syndrome GALNS deficiency causes the accumulation of KS in tissues and results in generalized skeletal dysplasia in affected patients. We show that in normal cells GALNS is in a 1.27-MDa complex with three other lysosomal hydrolases:
beta-galactosidase
, alpha-neuraminidase, and cathepsin A (protective protein). GALNS copurifies with the complex by different chromatography techniques: affinity chromatography on both cathepsin A-binding and
beta-galactosidase
-binding columns, gel filtration, and chromatofocusing. Anti-human cathepsin A rabbit antiserum coprecipitates GALNS together with cathepsin A,
beta-galactosidase
, and alpha-neuraminidase in both a purified preparation of the 1. 27-MDa complex and crude glycoprotein fraction from human placenta extract. Gel filtration analysis of fibroblast extracts of patients deficient in either
beta-galactosidase
(beta-galactosidosis) or cathepsin A (galactosialidosis), which accumulate KS, demonstrates that the 1.27-MDa complex is disrupted and that GALNS is present only in free homodimeric form. The GALNS activity and cross-reacting material are reduced in the fibroblasts of patients affected with galactosialidosis, indicating that the complex with cathepsin A may protect GALNS in the lysosome. We suggest that the 1.27-MDa complex of lysosomal hydrolases is essential for KS catabolism and that the disruption of this complex may be responsible for the KS accumulation in beta-galactosidosis and galactosialidosis patients.
...
PMID:Association of N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfate sulfatase with the multienzyme lysosomal complex of beta-galactosidase, cathepsin A, and neuraminidase. Possible implication for intralysosomal catabolism of keratan sulfate. 891 Apr 59
Aggrecan-derived chondroitin sulfate (CS) chains, released by beta-elimination, were derivatized with p-aminobenzoic acid or p-aminophenol; radioiodinated; and subjected to graded or complete degradations by chondroitin ABC lyase to generate linkage region fragments of the basic structure DeltaGlyUA-GalNAc-GlcUA-Gal-Gal-Xyl-R (where DeltaGlyUA represents 4, 5-unsaturated glycuronic acid, and R is the adduct), by chondroitin AC lyase to generate the shorter fragment DeltaGlyUA-Gal-Gal-Xyl-R, or by chondroitin C lyase to generate the same fragment when it was linked to a 6-O-sulfated or unsulfated GalNAc at the nonreducing end. Fragments were separated by size using gel chromatography, by charge using ion-exchange chromatography, and by size/charge using electrophoresis and then characterized by stepwise degradations from the nonreducing end by using mercuric acetate to remove all terminal DeltaGlyUA, by bacterial glycuronidase to remove the same residue when linked to unsulfated or 6-O-sulfated GalNAc/Gal, by mammalian 4-
sulfatase
to remove sulfate from terminal GalNAc 4-O-sulfate, by chondro-4-sulfatase to remove 4-O-sulfate from other GalNAc/Gal residues, and by
beta-galactosidase
to remove terminal Gal. Results with CS from bovine nasal cartilage aggrecan show that, in nearly all chains, Xyl and probably also the first Gal are unsubstituted, whereas the second Gal is 4-O-sulfated in one CS chain out of five. The first disaccharide repeat is sulfated at C-4 of GalNAc in one chain out of three and unsulfated in the other two. A sulfated first disaccharide is always joined to an unsulfated GlcUA-Gal-Gal sequence. In contrast, CS from human articular cartilage usually has a sulfated first disaccharide repeat. In CS from young human cartilage, sulfate groups are mostly at C-4 of GalNAc in the major part of the chain, but at C-6 in the nonreducing distal portion. In CS from old cartilage, sulfation at C-6 of GalNAc is a major feature from the nonreducing end down to approximately positions 4 and 5 from the linkage region, where GalNAc 4-O-sulfate is common.
...
PMID:Variations in the chondroitin sulfate-protein linkage region of aggrecans from bovine nasal and human articular cartilages. 891 Apr 87
Although the neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are often referred to as lysosomal storage disorders, information on brain lysosomal hydrolases in NCLs is not available. We have determined the specific activities of several acid hydrolases in postmortem brain gray matter of infantile (INCL), late infantile (LINCL), juvenile (JNCL), and adult (ANCL) forms of NCL, patients affected with other neurological disorders (ON), and normal controls. The specific activities of beta-hexosaminidase A and B were significantly high in JNCL gray matter, whereas in LINCL, the increase is significant only in beta-hexosaminidase compared to the controls. A significant increase in the activities of alpha-mannosidase, beta-glucuronidase, and acid phosphatase was also observed in LINCL and JNCL patients compared to the control values.
beta-galactosidase
activity was also found to be elevated in JNCL brains over the controls. In contrast, activities of beta-glucosidase and sialidase appeared to be lowered in INCL and LINCL. On the other hand, alpha-fucosidase, beta-mannosidase, and
sulfatase
were unaffected in NCLs brains. Thus, the present data indicate NCLs related abnormalities in some of the acid hydrolases in brain gray matter, which are primarily glycoproteins of lysosomal origin. These data in conjuction with the reported association of sphingolipid activator proteins (SAP) A and D and lysosomal glycoproteins with NCL storage bodies imply abberations in the glycoconjugate metabolism and lysosomal function.
...
PMID:Brain lysosomal hydrolases in neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinoses. 897 94
> Abstract The aim of this microcosm study was to determine influence of the antibiotic 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol (DAPG) on the effect of wild-type and functionally modified Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 strains in a sandy loam soil of pH 5.4 planted with pea (Pisum sativum var Montana). The functional modification of strain F113 was a repressed production of DAPG, useful in plant disease control, creating the DAPG negative strain F113 G22; both were marked with a lacZY gene cassette. Lowering the soil pH to 4.4 significantly reduced the plant shoot and root weights and the root length, whereas the bacterial inocula had no significant effect. Both inocula significantly reduced the shoot/root ratio at pH 5.4, but this effect was not evident at the lowered or elevated (6.4) pH levels. The decrease in pH significantly increased the fungal and yeast colony-forming units from the rhizosphere (root extract), but did not affect the total bacterial c.f.u.'s. Inoculatioin with strain F113 in the pH 4.4 soil resulted in a significantly greater total bacterial population. The fungal and yeast c.f.u.'s were not significantly affected by the inocula at any pH studied. Increasing the pH significantly increased the indigenous Pseudomonas population in comparison to the reduced pH treatment and significantly increased both the introduced and total Pseudomonas populations. The antibiotic producing strain significantly reduced the total bacterial population and the NAGase activity (related to fungal activity) at pH 6.4 where the inocula population was the greatest. Alkaline phosphatase, phosphodiesterase, aryl
sulfatase
, beta-glucosidase, alkaline
beta-galactosidase
, and NAGase activities significantly increased with increasing in pH. The F113 inocula reduced the acid phosphatase activity at pH 5.4 and increased the acid
beta-galactosidase
activity over all the pH treatments. The results presented illustrate the variation in impact with soil pH, with implications for variability in efficacy of Pseudomonas fluorescens biocontrol agents with soil pH.http://link.springer-ny.com/link/service/journals/00248/bibs/37n4p248.html
...
PMID:Effects of Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 on Ecological Functions in the Pea Rhizosphere Are Dependent on pH. 1034 Oct 54
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