Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Assay of
alpha-L-iduronidase
, heparin sulphamidase, N-acetyl-alpha-D-glucosaminidase, arylsulphatase B, alpha-L-fucosidase, beta-glucuronidase,
beta-galactosidase
and alpha-D-mannosidase in cultured cells is described. Activities in deficient fibroblast strains are compared to control fibroblast strains. The first case of Sanfilippo B in the United Kingdom is reported. A comparison of enzyme activities in cultured fibroblasts and amniotic fluid cells is made.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of the mucopolysaccharidoses using cultured skin fibroblasts and amniotic fluid cells. 11 32
Alpha-L-Iduronidase activity and
beta-galactosidase
activity were determined in mixed leukocyte preparations in 10 families in which the Hurler syndrome had occurred. Affected patients, heterozygotes, and normal subjects were clearly distinguished by
alpha-L-iduronidase
activity alone. Patients had 0-3%, obligate heterozygotes 19-60%, and normal subjects 83-121% of the mean normal activity. There was no overlap between heterozygotes and normal subjects. Although the mean
alpha-L-iduronidase
to
beta-galactosidase
ratio was significantly lowered in heterozygotes when compared with that of normal subjects, appreciable overlap was noted between the two groups.
...
PMID:Hurler syndrome: alpha-L-iduronidase activity in leukocytes as a method for heterozygote detection. 81 11
The activities of 14 lysosomal enzymes in chorionic villi at gestational ages of 6-12 weeks were assayed. Arylsulphatases A and B, alpha-glucosidase and beta-glucuronidase activities increased with advancing gestational age. When compared with the activity in cultured amniotic fluid cells, arylsulphatase A,
beta-galactosidase
, alpha-glucosidase, heparan N-sulphatase,
alpha-L-iduronidase
, alpha-mannosidase, neuraminidase, and sphingomyelinase showed significant differences. All except beta-glucuronidase showed lower activity in chorionic villi than in cultured amniotic fluid cells. Prenatal diagnosis using chorionic villi was possible except for
alpha-L-iduronidase
. Storage at -20 degrees C up to 42 days did not significantly affect activity. The results emphasize the importance of using fresh or frozen age-matched control tissue for diagnosis.
...
PMID:Variation of lysosomal enzyme activity with gestational age in chorionic villi. 207 34
Mucopolysaccharidosis Type I (Hurler's syndrome) was diagnosed in an 18 week old fetus of a woman with 1 affected child by direct assay of glycosaminoglycans in amniotic fluid. Subsequently the fetus was aborted by hysterotomy and diagnosis was confirmed by analyzing glycosaminoglycans in fetal liver, electron micrographs isozymes of galactosidases, and fetal skin sulfate turnover. In this case the amnio tic fluid contained 78% dermatan and heparan sulfates. The fetal liver contained 28.8% dermatan sulfate and 62.4% heparan sulfate among the soluble glycosaminoglycans. Some translucent lysosomal vacuoles with osmiophilic inclusions were evident in liver but not in central nervous system. Isozymes A and B of alpha-galactosidase and
beta-galactosidase
- B were very low in fetal tissues compared with age-matched controls. 5 other lysosomal enzymes were slightly elevated upon assay with fluorescent substrates. Sulfate turnover studies in cultured fetal skin cells showed excessive accumulation but enhanced release rates in presence of pooled normal human serum (Hurler corrective factor). When these studies were done, the enzyme defect in Hurler's syndrome was known to be
alpha-L-iduronidase
, but no substrate was available commercially.
...
PMID:Early prenatal diagnosis of Hurler's syndrome with termination of pregnancy and confirmatory findings on the fetus. 426 90
Coated vesicles from calf brain and rat liver contain cryptic receptors which recognize and bind lysosomal enzymes via mannose 6-phosphate residues on oligosaccharide side chains (Campbell, C. H., Fine, R. E., Squicciarini, J., and Rome, L. H. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 2628-2633). In addition to mannose 6-phosphate receptors, we now report that coated vesicles from calf brain and rat liver contain the lysosomal enzymes alpha-L-fucosidase,
beta-galactosidase
, beta-glucosidase, beta-hexosaminidase,
alpha-L-iduronidase
, and alpha-mannosidase. Enzyme activities co-migrated with coated vesicles purified by agarose gel electrophoresis. Treatment of intact coated vesicles with pronase (0.05 mg/ml) had little effect on lysosomal enzyme activities, whereas a similar treatment of coated vesicles in the presence of 0.045% taurodeoxycholate resulted in the loss of most of the enzyme activities. Addition of 10 mM mannose 6-phosphate to disrupted liver coated vesicles specifically displaced up to 80% of the cryptic lysosomal enzyme activity. Disrupted liver coated vesicles and highly purified liver lysosomes were treated with anti-beta-hexosaminidase A and anti-
beta-galactosidase
antibodies and immunoprecipitates were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. High molecular weight bands were present in the coated vesicle immunoprecipitates which were not present in the lysosome immunoprecipitates. The data suggest that coated vesicles contain mannose 6-phosphate receptor-bound lysosomal enzymes, some of which are of a higher molecular weight form. These higher molecular weight forms may represent newly synthesized enzymes that are en route to lysosomes.
...
PMID:Coated vesicles from rat liver and calf brain contain lysosomal enzymes bound to mannose 6-phosphate receptors. 613 57
Assay conditions were studied for eight lysosomal enzymes in lymphoblastoid cell lines transformed by Epstein-Barr virus. The transformed lymphoblastoid cells retained all eight enzyme activities, though the levels sometimes differed from those in the peripheral lymphocytes or granulocytes. The levels of these eight lysosomal enzymes were measured in lymphoblastoid cells from 11 patients with hereditary lysosomal storage diseases--GMI-gangliosidosis, a variant of
beta-galactosidase
deficiency (sialidase deficiency with a partial
beta-galactosidase
deficiency), Tay-Sachs disease, Gaucher disease, Hurler syndrome, Scheie syndrome and I-cell disease--and from 20 of their obligate heterozygotes. No activity of enzymes that were deficient in the respective disease, except I-cell disease, was detected in the lymphoblastoid cells from the patient. In I-cell disease, the cells showed lower levels of some enzyme activities. beta-D-Galactosidase activity from heterozygotes of the patient with GMI-gangliosidosis and
alpha-L-iduronidase
activity from heterozygotes of the patient with Hurler syndrome were in carrier range. On sephadex G-150 gel filtration, beta-D-galactosidase in control material gave two peaks (I and II). In GMI-gangliosidosis, peak II was absent and peak I was markedly diminished. Peak II in the heterozygotes was smaller than that of control. On DEAE cellulose column chromatography of hexosaminidase, two major isoenzymes (hexosaminidase A and B) were detected in control. However, hexosaminidase A was not detected in Tay-Sachs disease, and the ratios of hexosaminidase (Hex) A/Hex B in the parents were lower than those in control.
...
PMID:Lymphoblastoid cell lines, transformed by Epstein-Barr virus, in the enzymatic study of hereditary lysosomal storage diseases. 627 59
This report describes a third mucopolysaccharidosis in animals: canine mucopolysaccharidosis VII. The affected dog was the offspring of a father-daughter mating. Weakness in the rear legs was evident at 8 weeks of age and became progressively worse. He had a large head, a shortened maxilla, and corneal granularities. Most joints were extremely lax, easily subluxated, with joint capsules that were swollen and fluctuant. The dog was alert and had apparently normal pain perception. At 13 months of age, there was radiographic evidence of extensive skeletal disease including bilateral femoral head luxation, abnormalities in the shape and density of the carpal and tarsal bones, radiolucent lesions of the epiphyseal regions of most long bones, and cervical vertebral dysplasia and platyspondylia. The electrophoretic pattern of precipitated glycosaminoglycans indicated a predominance of chondroitin sulfate. The animal died suddenly from gastric dilatation. There was generalized hepatomegaly, thickening of the atrioventricular heart valves, and generalized polyarthropathy. Vacuolated cytoplasm was observed in hepatocytes, keratocytes, fibroblasts, chondrocytes and cells of the synovial membrane, retinal pigment epithelium, and cardiac valves. Neurons had cytoplasmic vacuoles. Electron microscopy demonstrated membrane-bound cytoplasmic inclusions in polymorphonuclear leukocytes, hepatocytes, synovium, heart valves and spleen. The activities of 12 lysosomal hydrolases were determined in liver from the affected and control dogs: beta-glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31), beta-hexosaminidases A and B (EC 3.2.1.30), alpha-hexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.-),
alpha-L-iduronidase
(EC 3.2.1.76), alpha-galactosidase A (EC 3.2.1.22),
beta-galactosidase
(
EC 3.2.1.23
), arylsulfatases A and B (EC 3.1.6.1), acid alpha-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.24), acid beta-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.25), and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine-6-sulfate sulfatase (EC 3.1.6.-).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Beta-glucuronidase deficiency in a dog: a model of human mucopolysaccharidosis VII. 643 80
The effect of bacterial endotoxin (LPS) on lysosomal enzyme activities of fibroblasts from normals and mucolipidosis III patients was investigated. Exposure of normal fibroblasts to LPS for 24 hours resulted in enhanced intracellular activities of beta-glucuronidase,
beta-galactosidase
,
alpha-L-iduronidase
and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase. Endotoxin also led to an increased extracellular activity of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase. In contrast, mucolipidosis III fibroblasts did not show either intracellular or extracellular increase of lysosomal hydrolases after LPS treatment. Difference in cellular responsiveness to LPS may be related to the mechanism of LPS-cell interaction.
...
PMID:Effect of bacterial endotoxin on lysosomal enzyme activities of normal and mucolipidosis III fibroblasts. 726 Feb 37
The clan GH-A is a group of more than 200 proteins representing nine established families of glycosyl hydrolases that act on a large variety of substrates. This clan includes five enzymes implicated in lysosomal storage diseases: beta-glucuronidase (Sly disease), beta-glucocerebrosidase (Gaucher disease),
beta-galactosidase
(Landing disease and Morquito type B disease), beta-mannosidase (mannosidosis) and
alpha-L-iduronidase
(Hurler-Scheie disease). Examination of known 3D structures from some families of the clan allowed us to deduce structural and functional features shared by these proteins. We then used the hydrophobic cluster analysis method to study the protein sequences of the entire clan. Our results reveal that, despite low levels of sequence identity, all the proteins of the clan (including the aforementioned lysosomal enzymes) likely share a similar catalytic domain consisting of an (alpha/beta)8 barrel with conserved functional amino acids located at the C-terminal ends of six of the eight strands constituting the beta-barrel. Interestingly, several mutations reported to be responsible for lysosomal storage diseases are located within these conserved regions of the lysosomal enzyme catalytic domains.
...
PMID:Active-site motifs of lysosomal acid hydrolases: invariant features of clan GH-A glycosyl hydrolases deduced from hydrophobic cluster analysis. 913 34