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)

Two acidic beta-galactosidase isozymes (designated A1 and A2) were separated by isoelectric focusing from beta-galactosidase A of human liver. Kinetic studies with 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside substrate revealed similar parameters for both. The Km value was 0.32 mmol/1 for A1 and 0.30 mmol/1 for A2 and Vmax values of 59.3 and mumol min-1 mg-1, respectively. The pH optimum was 4.2 for beta-galactosidase A1 and 4.5 for the A2 form. The A1 enzyme form was shown to be more heat labile than the A2. Significant differences were observed with antibody preparations against the two enzyme forms. Using the anti-A1 antibodies two precipitin arcs with residual enzymatic activity were obtained by immunoelectrophoresis of beta-galactosidase A whereas only one with anti-A2 antibodies. Anti-A1 precipated 85% of the original activity present in beta-galactosidase A and only 56% could be precipated by anti-A2. The possibility of common structural components is suggested.
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PMID:Two immunologically distinct human acidic beta-galactosidase A isozymes. 56 Feb 98

A mannose-containing sialooligosaccharide has been isolated from the urine of a patient with a newly recognized mucolipidosis which showed a low liver beta-galactosidase activity and hyperglycopeptiduria. The chemical structure has been determined by glycosidase digestion, Smith degradation and permethylation studies. The following structure has been given for the oligosaccharide: NANAalpha2-6Galbeta1-4GlcNAcbeta1-2Manbeta1-3Manbeta1-4GlcNAc. This compound appears to be derived from an incomplete catabolism of glycoproteins with aspartylglucosylamine type side chains.
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PMID:Structure of a novel sialooligosaccharide from the urine of a patient with mucolipidosis. 66 33

1. Potato lectin is a glycoprotein that contains about 47% (by weight) l-arabinose, 3% d-galactose and 11% hydroxyproline. It has a monomeric molecular weight of about 50000 and probably exists as a monomer-dimer system in aqueous solution, with the monomer predominating. It has a very high viscosity, which would indicate either that the molecule is very expanded or that it is an elongated ellipsoid. 2. After prolonged proteolytic digestion of a reduced and carboxymethylated derivative of the lectin, a glycopeptide was isolated (of mol.wt. 32000-34000) that included all the carbohydrate and hydroxyproline of the original glycoprotein but less than 30% of the total original amino acid residues. 3. The arabinose of the glycoprotein is present exclusively as the beta-arabinofuranoside and this includes those residues that are directly linked to the hydroxyproline residues of the polypeptide chain. All the arabinose of the glycoprotein is linked to the polypeptide chain through the hydroxyproline residues; the ratio of arabinose to hydroxyproline is 3.4:1. Although alpha-arabinofuranosides are known to be present in arabinans and arabinogalactans, the natural occurrence of beta-arabinofuranosides has not previously been reported. 4. Nine or ten serine residues of the polypeptide chain are substituted with single alpha-galactopyranoside residues that can be removed by the action of alpha-galactosidase from coffee beans but not by a beta-galactosidase. This is the first report of an alpha-galactoside linkage to serine. The effect of alpha-galactosidase is much greater on a glycopeptide from which the arabinose has been already removed, which indicates a steric hindrance of the galactosidase action by adjacent chains of arabinosides. 5. In 0.5m-NaOH (pH13.7), galactose residues were removed from the serine residues of the glycopeptide by a process of beta-elimination. This reaction took place very slowly in the intact glycopeptide but much more rapidly when the arabinofuranoside residues had been removed. This inhibitory effect of the arabinofuranoside residues on the beta-elimination reaction is likely to be due to a negative charge on the hydroxy groups of the adjacent arabinofuranoside residues, which would be ionized at this high pH value. 6. It is suggested that potato lectin may be representative of a class of soluble plant glycoproteins that would include precursors of the cell-wall glycoprotein extensin. If this is the case, extensin should also contain beta-l-arabinofuranosides linked to hydroxyproline and alpha-d-galactopyranosides linked to serine residues of the polypeptide chain.
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PMID:Properties of potato lectin and the nature of its glycoprotein linkages. 66 30

Rough and smooth microsomes and Golgi membranes were incubated with UDP[14C]galactose and the incorporation of radioactivity into the lipid extract and into endogenous protein acceptors were measured. Antagonistic pyrophosphatases were inhibited with ATP and interference from beta-galactosidase activity was greatly decreased by carrying out the incubation at pH 7.8. After incubation the particles were centrifuged to remove free oligosaccharide residues. Radioactivity was found in the lipid extract from Golgi membranes but not from rough and smooth microsomes. This radioactivity, however, was not associated with dolichol or retinyl phosphates. The incorporation of radioactivity into proteins of the Golgi fraction was more than double than that of the microsomal fractions. In addition, the transferases in these two types of particles exhibited different properties. Trypsin treatment of intact rough microsomal vesicles, smooth vesicles and Golgi membranes removed about 5, 15 and 50%, respectively, of newly incorporated protein-bound galactose, indicating that the proportion of the newly galactosylated proteins, which are localized at the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane, is lowest in rough microsomes, intermediate in smooth, and highest in Golgi membranes.
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PMID:Incorporation of galactose from UDP-galactose into microsomal and Golgi membranes of rat liver. 69 7

The involvement of glycoconjugates in the insulin-receptor interactions in mouse liver is tested by digestions of membranes with various enzymes. Trypsin decreased the binding of [125I]insulin to liver membranes. After digestion with beta-galactosidase no ""high affinity'' receptor sites could be detected. The effects observed with plant lectins confirm the involvement of galactoconjugates in the insulin binding process. Sophora japonica and Ricinus communis lectins (with galactose specificity) and concanavalin A largely inhibit the binding process of insulin and those effects concern the ""high affinity'' receptor sites. Other lectins (wheat germ agglutinin, Dolichos) and enzymes (alpha-L-fucosidase, beta-N-acetyl-hexosaminidase and neuraminidase) are without effect on insulin binding. Comparative studies performed on diabetic mouse liver membrane (KK mice), previously characterized by decreased number of insulin receptors, are in good agreement with qualitatively similar receptor sites in both non-diabetic (control) and diabetic mice. Effects of enzymes and lectins yielded same results as compared to control membranes. Plasma membrane proteins and glycoproteins in both types of mouse are indistinguishable with respect to enzymic and chemical analysis. Sodium dodecyl sulphate acrylamide gel electrophoresis shows identical patterns. Moreover, the decrease in the number of insulin receptors is easily reversed with diet restriction. These data are consistent with the similarity of receptor sites in control and diabetic liver membrane.
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PMID:Involvement of glycoconjugates in insulin-receptor interactions. Studies in liver plasma membranes of control and diabetic mice. 69 17

A chromogenic substrate, 2-hexadecanoylamino-4-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside, has recently been described for the diagnosis of Krabbe's disease. Hydrolysis of this substrate by extracts of cultured cells and tissues was compared with the activities of lactocerebrosidase I and non-specific beta-galactosidase. Under appropriate conditions, hydrolysis of the chromogenic analogue was markedly reduced in extracts of cultured amniotic fluid cells and skin fibroblasts derived from cases of Krabbe's disease. Activity was also markedly deficient in extracts of Krabbe's brain, although only a partial reduction was measured in liver extracts. Generally activities were higher in tissues of fetal origion. Unfortunately, the new analogue proved less specific and less sensitive than the natural substrates used to diagnose Krabbe's disease. Consequently, the analogue does not provide a satisfactory alternative substrate for the prenatal diagnosis of Krabbe's disease.
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PMID:Use of a chromogenic substrate for the diagnosis of Krabbe's disease, with special reference to its application in prenatal diagnosis. 69 19

Complex carbohydrates on the surfaces of eukaryotic cells are thought to participate in a wide variety of cell-cell interactions. A model system has therefore been developed to study these processes. In the present experiments, the ability of chicken hepatocytes to recognize and adhere to sugars covalently linked to polyacrylamide gels was investigated. The gels were snythesized by two methods. Type I gels were prepared from a co-polymer of an active ester of acrylic acid (N-succinimidyl acrylate), acrylamide, and bisacrylamide. The "activated" polyacrylamide gel was then treated with the desired ligand containing an amino group, such as 6-aminohexyl O- or S-glycoside. Type II gels were formed by treating similar ligands with acryloyl chloride, followed by co-polymerization of the resulting N-substituted acrylamide with acrylamide and N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide. These polyacrylamide derivatives offer many advantages for studies with intact cells. They are not toxic to any cell type studied, can be cast in any desired shape, are transparent and stable over a wide range of pH values, and contain no cationic and low to negligible levels of anionic charge (charged groups can be introduced if desired), and the polyacrylamide matrix is stable to common biological agents such as bacteria and enzymes. In addition, type I gels can be synthesized using a broad range of molecules containing amino groups, such as glycopeptides, proteins, etc. The hepatocytes were prepared by collagenase perfusion of intact chicken livers. The rate and extent of adhesion of the cells to the derivatized gels was determined by measuring lactate dehydrogenase in these cells. This enzyme was also used to assay viability and cell "leakiness." At 37 degrees C, 70 to 100% of the cells adhered within 60 min to gels derivatized with N-acetylglucosamine, i.e. gels derivatized with 6-aminohexyl 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranoside (or the corresponding thioglycoside). By contrast, less than 5% of the cells adhered to polyacrylamide or to gels derivatized with 6-aminohexanol or the 6-aminohexyl glycosides of beta-D-glucose, beta-D-galactose, alpha-D-mannose, beta-D-maltose, beta-D-melibiose, beta-D-cellobiose, and (alpha or beta)-D-lactose. Kinetic studies with the chicken hepatocytes and N-acetylglucosamine gels showed that cell-gel binding was dependent upon Ca2+ and was decreased at low temperatures. Binding was inhibited by N-acetylglucosamine or by glycosides of this sugar, the most effective inhibitor being orosomucoid (alpha1-acid glycoprotein) pretreated with sialidase and beta-galactosidase. The cell surface receptor(s) involved in this interaction is not known, but may be related or identical to the chicken liver binding protein described by Lunney and Ashwell (Lunney, J., and Ashwell, G. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 341--343). The present results suggest that this model system should prove useful in delineating cell surface interactions with carbohydrates.
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PMID:Adhesion of chicken hepatocytes to polyacrylamide gels derivatized with N-acetylglucosamine. 70 Dec 94

Metabolism of tritium-labelled galactosylceramide and lactosylceramide added to the culture medium was examined in cultured skin fibroblasts from 4 patients with globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD) and 4 control individuals. The uptake of [3H]galactosylceramide and [3H]lactosylceramide by the fibroblasts continued actively at least up to 3 days. Approximately 30--40% of the galactosylceramide, which had been taken up, was released subsequently from the cells in a 4-day period, whereas only 10% of lactosylceramide was released during the same period. The GLD fibroblasts showed no abnormality in the kinetics of the uptake and in the release of these glycosphingolipids which are natural substrates of the beta-galactosidase genetically deficient in the disorder. This finding differs from that reported for fibroblasts from patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy, which showed abnormal accumulation and retention of sulfatide added to the culture media. However, degradation of added galactosylceramide to [3H]galactose by the GLD fibroblasts was only 25% of the control cells, while lactosylceramide was degraded at 70% of the normal rate. These findings are consistent with the known substrate specificities of the two acidic beta-galactosidases in human tissues; galactosylceramide is hydrolyzed almost exclusively by galactosylceramidase, while lactosylceramide can be hydrolyzed by both galactosylceramidase and GM1-ganglioside beta-galactosidase.
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PMID:Globoid cell leukodystrophy (Krabbe's disease). Metabolic studies with cultured fibroblasts. 73 Dec 65

Energy reserves of Escherichia coli can be depleted by our previously reported procedure to a level such that even the "downhill" transport of o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG) is completely dependent upon the exogenous energy supply. The ONPG concentration is high externally to the cells and is low intracellular because of the action of cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase. In the present work, depleted cell suspensions have been infused at low, steady rates with glucose and other energy sources while measurements of transport were being made. Comparing the rate of ONPG transport with the rate of introduction of glucose under conditions where the chosen glucose infusion rate limits transport, we find that 89 molecules of ONPG are transported per molecule of fully oxidized glucose. This transport yield is constant over a 6.5-fold range in rate of glucose addition. This constancy over a range of infusion rates implies that transport is the major cellular function under these special conditions. The yield value if 89 is in the agreement with the predicitions of 76 from Mitchell's chemiosmotic theory and constitutes an independent proff of its validity, since all the other proposed mechanisms of engery coupling predict much smaller yields. The lag from the start of glucose infusion into the reaction cuvette, to the extrapolated time at which a steady rate of transport and concomitant hydrolysis are achieved, is short (approximately 1 min). Similarly, the time after the infusion is stopped until the rate of transport returns to the background rate is also short. The latter implies that the energy metabolism is directed almost entirely to transport and/or other ongoing cellular processes and not to repair or renewal of an energy-independent, facilitated diffusion system.
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PMID:Energy cost of galactoside transport to Escherichia coli. 78 35

Tetrahymena were grown in proteose-peptone medium supplemented with glucose, mannose, fructose, galactose, acetate, succinate, or pyruvate and then washed and resuspended in a non-nutrient salt solution and the amounts of 7 acid hydrolases secreted into the medium in a one hour incubation were measured. Cells that had been grown in the presence of glucose secreted about half the amounts of acid phosphatase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and acid protease as did control cells grown in unsupplemented medium. Pyruvate was about as effective as glucose and both were slightly more effective than acetate or fructose. Succinate had little effect. Similar experiments showed that alpha-mannosidase, beta-fucosidase, and beta-galactosidase are secreted into the salt solution and the secretion is reduced by prior growth of the cells in medium supplemented with glucose or mannose but not galactose. Except for alpha-mannosidase, these reductions in amounts of hydrolase secreted were not accompanied by appreciable changes in intracellular activity, and therefore demonstrate a persistent effect of growth in the presence of certain metabolites on the subsequent secretion of lysosomal hydrolases. Since the inhibition of subsequent secretion depended on both the individual metabolite and the particular hydrolase examined, it appears that the effect of metabolites is not limited to a general inhibition of secretion but may differentially alter some properties of lysosomal subpopulations. A preliminary characterization of the secreted acid protease of Tetrahymena suggests that there may be two acid proteases released, since up to 25% of the activity was not inhibited by high concentrations of pepstatin, leupeptin, or chymostatin.
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PMID:Effects of metabolites present during growth of Tetrahymena pyriformis on the subsequent secretion of lysosomal hydrolases. 80 52


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