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)

Ten strains of Propionibacterium shermanii were tested for beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) activity. Of these ten strains, five yielded enhanced enzyme activity when cell suspensions were treated with toluene-acetone; on solvent treatment, the remaining five lost a considerable portion of the activity found in whole-cell suspensions. By using a strain yielding decreased activity upon solvent treatment, explanations for the loss in activity were sought through assays for possible alternative beta-galactoside utilization mechanisms. When this strain was assayed for beta-D-phosphogalactoside galactohydrolase by using orthonitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside-6-P04 as a substrate, the activity was wither lower or indiffernt as compared with beta-gal activity determined simultaneously. Cell suspensions of P. shermanii 7 and 22 (strains chosen for further work) grown separately on the individual substrates (lactose, glucose, galactose, and sodium lactate) did not show significant differences in beta-gal activity. Optimal temperature for beta-gal activity in untreated and toluene-acetone-treated cell suspensions of strain 7 was 52 C. With strain 22, of the temperatures tested, maximal activity in untreated cell suspensions was noted at 58 C and with solvent-treated cells at 32 C. In the cell-free extract (CFE) system, both strains exhibited maximal activity at 52 C. Optimal pH for untreated and solvent-treated cell suspensions of both strains was around 7.5. In the P. shermanii 22 CFE system, maximal activity occurred at pH 7.0; pH had very little effect on enzyme activity in P. shermanii 7 CFE. Sodium or potassium phosphate buffers in the assay system yielded the best activity. In the CFE system of these two strains, Mn2+ was definitely stimulatory, but in untreated and solvent-treated cell systems of these strains presence or absence of Mn2+ in the assay system had variable effects on enzyme activity. Maximal beta-gal activity was noted in P. shermanii 7 cells harvested after 28 h of growth at 32 C in sodium lactate broth. Sulfhydryl-group blocking agents inhibited enzyme activity in P. shermanii 22 CFE; the inhibition was partly reversed by dithiothreitol.
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PMID:Beta-galactosidase of Propionibacterium shermanii. 23 59

GM1-ganglioside hydrolysis by leukocytes and fibroblasts, tissues easily obtainable from patients, was investigated using 3H-labeled GM1 and was found to be at least as active as that reported for any other tissue. Sodium taurocholate was required for the reaction, the crude bile salt at an optimum concentration of 0.4% producing twice as much activity as pure taurocholate at its optimum concentration of 0.8%. Leukocyte GM1-ganglioside beta-galactosidase and 4-MU-beta-gal cleaving activities were similar, 134.5 +/- 23.3 and 179.8 +/- 25.4 nmol/h/mg protein, respectively. In cultured skin fibroblasts and amniotic fluid cells these enzyme activities were 4 to 5 times higher. Homozygotes for GM1-gangliosidosis showed negligible activity while in heterozygotes the leukocyte GM1-cleaving activity was reduced to one-third of control values. In leukocytes from patients with four other sphingolipid storage diseases the activity was either normal (Krabbe's, Tay-Sachs, Metachromatic leukodystrophy) or increased (adult Gaucher's).
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PMID:GM1-ganglioside beta-galactosidase in leukocytes and cultured fibroblasts. 41 12

Urinary excretion of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), glutathione-S-transferase (GST), leucine arylamidase (LAS), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), beta-galactosidase (GAL), beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), sodium, and glucose were determined in female Sprague-Dawley rats the subsequent three days after intraperitoneal treatment with single doses of 4.5 mg CdCl2 X 1H2O/kg, 20 mg Na2CrO4/kg, and 0.75 mg HgCl2/kg body weight. Although the pathological effects were localized within the same part of the nephron (i.e., the proximal tubule), there were marked differences with regard to the extent and time course of the parameters affected. Treatment with cadmium resulted essentially in a marked decline in sodium and glucose excretion. The administration of chromate led to a slightly to moderately elevated excretion of the enzyme activities measured with the cytosolic LDH as the most increased enzyme (ca. 500% of controls on Day 3 postadministration). Median glucose excretion was unaffected whereas sodium excretion was transiently reduced. The maximum of enzyme excretion after HgCl2 was essentially the same on the first day postadministration and the amount of enzyme activity in urine up to 20 times higher compared to that after chromium. Sodium excretion was below that of controls on Days 2 and 3, whereas glucose excretion was markedly elevated (up to 8000% of controls). The results indicate that it is possible to discriminate with the use of selected urinary enzymes, substrates, and electrolytes various kinds of nephrotoxic actions not only in different but also within the same part of the nephron.
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PMID:Comparative investigations on the effects of acute intraperitoneal cadmium, chromium, and mercury exposure on the kidney. 287 41

Percoll density gradient centrifugation was used for isolating large quantities of bradyzoites of Sarcocystis suicanis, which were used for enzymatic analysis. Crude extracts of bradyzoites contained activities suggestive of several acid hydrolases. Levels of acid and alkaline phosphatase were higher than those of beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase and beta-galactosidase. Acid phosphatase was purified 156-fold with an overall recovery of 54% using DEAE-Sepharose 4B and Sephadex G-200 chromatography. The partially purified enzyme was not a glycoprotein and had a molecular weight of approximately 170,000. The enzyme was markedly inhibited by Cu++, Hg++, and iodoacetamide, suggesting the presence of a sulfhydryl group. Sodium tartrate caused strong inhibition of the enzyme. The acid phosphatase of S. suicanis appears to be a unique enzyme that cannot be classified under high or low molecular weight acid phosphatases of widely diverse origin.
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PMID:Studies on the enzymes of Sarcocystis suicanis: purification and characterization of an acid phosphatase. 311 63

The optimal reaction condition and kinetic properties of 8 lysosomal hydrolases in rabbit cornea determined with the use of fluorogenic derivatives of 4-methylumbelliferone are described. The enzymes studied were alpha- and beta-glucosidase alpha- and beta-galactosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-acetylglucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase. Sodium taurocholate was an essential requirement for beta-glucosidase activity. Approximately the same pH optimum values, Michaelis-Menten constants and sensitivity to inhibitors were found as by other investigators in other tissues. The reaction conditions described in this report can be used for studying the influence of physical chemical, viral, bacterial agents etc. on the cornea and further also for the diagnosis of eventual lysosomal storage diseases.
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PMID:Characterization and quantification of acid phosphatase and glycoside hydrolases in rabbit cornea. 681 28

Helicobacter pylori adhere to Kato III and Hela S3 cells in monolayer cultures. To explore whether cell surface glycoconjugates on these two cell lines mediate binding of H. pylori, various carbohydrates, glycoproteins, and glycolipids were tested to inhibit H.pylori cell adhesion. The adhesion was measured (i) with a urease-based assay and (ii) by cells stained with fluorescein. Sodium periodate and sialidase treatment (but not alpha- or beta-galactosidase, heparitinase,lysozyme, or trypsin) inhibited H. pylori binding to both cell lines. Sulfatides and sulfated glycoconjugates (50 microg/ml) but not heparin or a number of simple carbohydrates inhibited binding (1 mg/ml). The two H.pylori strains studied (CCUG 17874 and strain 25) showed high binding of soluble 125I-labeled heparin and other sulfated carbohydrate compounds.
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PMID:Sulfatides inhibit binding of Helicobacter pylori to the gastric cancer Kato III cell line. 909 25

The unrefined fold of Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase based on a monoclinic crystal form with four independent tetramers has been reported previously. Here, we describe a new, orthorhombic form with one tetramer per asymmetric unit that has permitted refinement of the structure at 1.7 A resolution. This high-resolution analysis has confirmed the original description of the structure and revealed new details. An essential magnesium ion, identified at the active site in the monoclinic crystals, is also seen in the orthorhombic form. Additional putative magnesium binding sites are also seen. Sodium ions are also known to affect catalysis, and five putative binding sites have been identified, one close to the active site. In a crevice on the protein surface, five linked five-membered solvent rings form a partial clathrate-like structure. Some other unusual aspects of the structure include seven apparent cis-peptide bonds, four of which are proline, and several internal salt-bridge networks. Deep solvent-filled channels and tunnels extend across the surface of the molecule and pass through the center of the tetramer. Because of these departures from a compact globular shape, the molecule is not well characterized by prior empirical relationships between the mass and surface area of proteins. The 50 or so residues at the amino terminus have a largely extended conformation and mostly lie across the surface of the protein. At the same time, however, segment 13-21 contributes to a subunit interface, and residues 29-33 pass through a "tunnel" formed by a domain interface. Taken together, the overall arrangement provides a structural basis for the phenomenon of alpha-complementation.
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PMID:High resolution refinement of beta-galactosidase in a new crystal form reveals multiple metal-binding sites and provides a structural basis for alpha-complementation. 1104 15

In order to investigate the influence of the carbon source on the expression of cry1D -lacZ in Bacillus thuringiensis with different genetic backgrounds, cry1D -lacZ was introduced into different strains and cultured in liquid medium containing different carbon sources. Analysis of activity of beta-galactosidase showed that cry1D -lacZ expressed differently in the same host because of different carbon sources and differently in different hosts utilizing same carbon sources,suggesting that metabolism pathway of carbon source in HD-133-5 was special. Sodium succinate as carbon source could lead to earlier sporulation and earlier expression of cry1D -lacZ. When sodium acetate acted as carbon source, cry1D -lacZ could keep high, stable expression in different hosts. These results are helpful for future fermentation of Bacillus thuringiensis.
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PMID:[Effects of carbon sources on the expression of cry1D -lacZ in Bacillus thuringiensis]. 1612 87