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)

A solid-phase enzyme immunoassay of 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha (a stable degradation product of prostaglandin I2) was developed in which the hapten molecule was labeled with beta-galactosidase. The antiserum was bound to a polystyrene tube, and the enzyme-labeled and unlabeled 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha were allowed to react in a competitive manner with the immobilized antibody. The activity of the immunologically bound beta-galactosidase was assayed by fluorometry, and correlated with the amount of unlabeled 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha. According to a calibration curve 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha was detectable in a range of 30 fmol-10 pmol. When 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha was extracted from human serum by using an octadecylsilyl silica column (Sep-Pak C18) and the crude extract was subjected to the enzyme immunoassay, the content of 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha was 50-60 pmol/ml of human serum. An endogenous substance(s) which disturbed the immunoreaction and gave such an apparently high concentration of 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha separated from the endogenous 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha by HPLC. With the purified 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha fraction there was a good correlation (r = 0.994) between enzyme immunoassay and radioimmunoassay. The validity of the enzyme immunoassay was confirmed by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring.
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PMID:Enzyme immunoassay of 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha in a solid phase. 392 41

A glycosyltransferase assay system was devised utilizing as acceptor a purified glycopeptide which was acylated at its N-terminus using caprylic (C8) anhydride. The glycopeptide contained five amino acids and an N-linked biantennary oligosaccharide, and it was purified from a pronase digest of bovine fibrinogen. Desialylation and beta-galactosidase digestion conditions were developed to produce asialo- and asialo-agalacto glycopeptides. Using fatty acid anhydrides, N-acylation conditions for these glycopeptides were then optimized. The products formed when the appropriate acylated glycopeptide was incubated with either of two N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases and UDP-[3H]N-acetylglucosamine were easily separated from unused sugar nucleotide and breakdown products by exploiting the affinity of the radiolabeled acylated glycopeptide products for pellicular C18 cartridges. The products of the enzymatic reactions bound quantitatively to the cartridges and could be eluted in small amounts of methanol. The Km values for the unacylated and acylated glycopeptide acceptors were similar when measured using either N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V or the N-acetylglycosaminyltransferase which transfers N-acetylglucosamine in beta(1,3) linkage to N-acetyllactosamine (or lactose). This assay system can be used to measure many glycosyltransferases and other enzymes which transfer to N-linked biantennary oligosaccharides and is applicable to additional glycosyltransferases that transfer to other oligosaccharides which can be prepared as glycopeptides.
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PMID:Glycosyltransferase assay system utilizing an acylated glycopeptide acceptor. 771 67

A pituitary cell population of 14-day-old female rats, containing lactotropes and somatotropes but deprived of gonadotropes, was prepared by unit gravity sedimentation through a serum albumin gradient and allowed to reaggregate either as such or after mixing this population with cells of the gonadotropic alpha T3-1 cell line. In a perifusion system gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) had no effect on prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) release in the former aggregates but stimulated PRL release in the latter. In the alpha T3-1 cell-containing aggregates GnRH showed a biphasic effect on GH release: inhibition during exposure to GnRH followed by a rebound secretion upon removal of the peptide. The aggregation capacity of alpha T3-1 cells with the normal pituitary cells was demonstrated by using an alpha T3-1 cell clone stably transfected with the reporter gene beta-galactosidase. Perifusion of the gonadotrope-deprived aggregates with medium conditioned by alpha T3-1 cell provoked a rapid stimulation of PRL release and a biphasic effect on GH release. Medium conditioned by the corticotropic cell line AtT20 also stimulated PRL release but had no concomitant effect on GH release. Medium conditioned by alpha T3-1 cells, when added for 40 h to aggregates of 14-day-old rat pituitary, provoked an increase in the number of 3H-thymidine (3H-T)-labelled lactotropes and a decreased in the number of 3H-T-labelled somatotropes. The conditioned medium was concentrated on Sep-Pak C18 and ultrafiltrated through an Amicon membrane with 3-kD molecular weight cut-off and the retained molecules separated by reversed-phase HPLC. The material stimulating 3H-T labelling of lactotropes eluted from the column with a different retention time than material inhibiting 3H-T labelling of somatotropes, suggesting that the effect on lactotropes is mediated by (a) molecule(s) different from that affecting somatotropes. The effects of alpha T3-1 cells and their secretion products on lactotropes and somatotropes were comparable to those we previously observed using enriched populations of normal gonadotropes. The HPLC elution profiles of the substances affecting 3H-T incorporation as well as the specificity of these effects were also similar to that of the substances isolated previously from gonadotrope-conditioned medium. The present data, therefore, support previous conclusions on the paracrine control of the lactotrope/somatotrope lineage by the gonadotropes. Further purification and chemical characterization of the growth factors with selective action on lactotropes and somatotropes may lead to a better understanding of the development of the latter lineage.
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PMID:Interaction of alpha T3-1 cells with lactotropes and somatotropes of normal pituitary in vitro. 789 38

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.
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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

The application of cationic liposome reagents has advanced DNA and mRNA transfection research in vitro, and data are accumulating which show their utility for in vivo gene transfer. However, chemical structure-activity data leading to a better mechanistic understanding of their biological activity is still limited. Most of the cationic lipid reagents in use today for this application are formulated as liposomes containing two lipid species, a cationic amphiphile and a neutral phospholipid, typically dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE). The studies reported here examine the effects of some systematic chemical structural changes in both of these lipid components. Cationic and neutral phospholipids were formulated together as large multilamellar vesicles (MLV) or small sonicated unilamellar vesicles (SUV) in water, and each formulation was assayed quantitatively in 96-well microtiter plates under 64 different assay conditions using COS.7 cells and an RSV-beta-galactosidase expression plasmid. The cationic lipid molecules used for these studies were derived from a novel series of 2,3-dialkyloxypropyl quaternary ammonium compounds containing a hydroxyalkyl moiety on the quaternary amine. A homologous series of dioleylalkyl (C18:1) compounds containing increasing hydroxyalkyl chain lengths on the quaternary amine were synthesized, formulated with 50 mol % DOPE, and assayed for transfection activity. The order of efficacy was ethyl > propyl > butyl > pentyl > 2,3-dioleyloxypropyl-1-trimethyl ammonium bromide (DOTMA). DOTMA, which is commercially available under the trademark Lipofectin Reagent, lacks a hydroxyalkyl moiety on the quaternary amine. A homologous series of hydroxyethyl quaternary ammonium derivatives with different alkyl chain substitutions were synthesized, formulated with 50 mol % DOPE, and assayed in the transfection assay. The order of transfection efficacy was dimyristyl (di-C14:0) > dioleyl (di-C18:1) > dipalmityl (di-C16:0) > disteryl (di-C18:0). The addition of 100 microM chloroquine in the transfection experiment enhanced the activity of the dioleyl compound by 4-fold and decreased the activity of the dimyristyl compound by 70%. For each of the compounds and formulations examined in this report, large multilamellar vesicles (MLV; diameter 300-700 nm) were more active than small unilamellar vesicles (SUV; diameter 50-100 nm). The neutral phospholipid requirements for transfection activity in COS.7 cells with these cationic lipid molecules were examined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Enhanced gene delivery and mechanism studies with a novel series of cationic lipid formulations. 830 May 83

Native protein separations by capillary gel electrophoresis are achieved using linear acrylamide gel matrices. Polyacrylamide gels with a concentration range of 3.5-5% did not exhibit size separations for native proteins with molecular weights from 20,000 to 47,000. The separation of native proteins in gel-filled capillaries is based solely on the charge of the protein as in normal zonal electrophoresis. Retention of protein activity in the acrylamide matrix was demonstrated by performing enzymatic assays in the gel matrix. Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and beta-galactosidase assays were conducted in both C18-PF108-modified and polyacrylamide gel-filled capillaries. Enzyme assays were achieved by filling the capillary with an appropriate substrate dissolved in the electrophoresis buffer. The product formed by the reaction of enzyme with substrate was monitored using a standard UV-visible detector. Both constant potential and zero potential modes of analysis were demonstrated. The polyacrylamide gel columns provide the advantages of minimized diffusion and limited band spreading due to the high viscosity of the gel matrix. The lowest detection limit achieved was 5.2 x 10(-20) mol (7.6 x 10(-12) M sample injected) of ALP. The dual enzyme assay of ALP and beta-galactosidase was achieved in gel-filled capillaries simultaneously.
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PMID:Native protein separations and enzyme microassays by capillary zone and gel electrophoresis. 837 67

Ecological and physiological effects of the sulphate-reducing bacterium (SRB) Desulfovibrio desulfuricans on other intestinal organisms were investigated in anaerobic chemostats (dilution rate approximately 0.2 h-1). Reproducible defined bacterial communities were used in these experiments, comprising 14 different saccharolytic and amino acid fermenting species: Bifidobacterium longum, Bif. adolescentis, Bif. pseudolongum, Bif. infantis, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, Bact. vulgatus, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Enterococcus faecalis, Ent. faecium, Escherichia coli, Clostridium perfringens, Cl. butyricum, Cl. innocuum, Cl. bifermentans. Lactobacillus and Cl. bifermentans populations never rose above minimum detection limits (log10 2.0 and 4.0, respectively) under the experimental conditions employed in these studies. Inclusion of Des. desulfuricans in bacterial cultures (c. log10 8.4 viable cells ml-1) resulted in marked reductions (i.e. greater than 1 log) in planktonic cell population densities of several species, particularly Bif. longum, Cl. perfringens and Bif. pseudolongum. The two bacteroides species were unaffected by Des. desulfuricans, while numbers of Cl. butyricum increased. Extensive wall growth developed in the SRB culture, consisting mainly of Des. desulfuricans (log10 9.2 viable cells ml-1), Bact. thetaiotaomicron and Bact. vulgatus, with lesser numbers of facultative anaerobes, Cl. perfringens and Bif. longum. Wall growth was associated with a reduction in planktonic cell mass and increased acid production by the cultures. Chemotaxonomic study of chemostat microbiotas, on the basis of cellular fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analyses, showed the existence of characteristic bacteroides (C15) and bifidobacterial (C18) markers, but desulfovibrio markers (i-C15:0, C16:0, i-C17:1) could be identified. The metabolic activities of saccharolytic organisms were altered in the SRB chemostat, including synthesis of a number of hydrolytic enzymes involved in carbohydrate breakdown, such as alpha-galactosidase, alpha-glucosidase and beta-galactosidase, together with several mucinolytic enzymes. High concentrations of sulphide (8.2 mmol 1-1) were detected in the SRB chemostat, suggesting that this metabolite may have been inhibitory to some species. Saccharolytic organisms growing in the SRB fermenter utilized more starch, but less galactose-containing polymers, which correlated with the observed glycosidase activities. Profound differences were also recorded with respect to fermentation product formation in the chemostats, where a major switch to acetate production occurred in the SRB culture, with concomitant reductions in propionate, butyrate and lactate, which is an important electron donor for desulfovibrios.
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PMID:Growth of a human intestinal Desulfovibrio desulfuricans in continuous cultures containing defined populations of saccharolytic and amino acid fermenting bacteria. 975 Mar 10

A novel strategy for the purification of carbohydrate-based chemical libraries synthesized in solution was developed. Purification of reaction products was accomplished by means of solid-phase extraction enabled by protecting the 2-, 3-, 4-, and 6-hydroxyl groups of a galactose derivative as their hydrophobic O-laurates. The presence of multiple O-laurates allowed adsorption of reaction products onto C18 silica while reagents and by-products were washed away with MeOH. Products were quantitatively eluted with pentane. Purification of products using solid-phase extraction offers the combined advantages of solution synthesis (normal solution reactivity and ease of reaction monitoring) with those of solid-phase synthesis (facile product isolation permitting the use of large excesses of reagents). To demonstrate the utility of the hydrophobic recovery-procedure, tetra-O-lauroyl-beta-D-galactopyranose-1-thiol was subjected to high-yielding reactions with a panel of Michael-acceptors and an alpha-chloro ketone. The resulting ketone adducts were then either reduced to the alcohols or reductively aminated with a selection of amino acids to give 30 different 1-thio-beta-D-galactosides as mixtures of four diastereomers after removal of protecting groups. At each step, the product was separated from the reagents and their by-products by simple adsorption onto C18 silica, washing with MeOH and elution of product with pentane. After completion of the combinatorial chemistry sequence, the O-laurates were cleaved by methanolysis and the product methyl laurate in turn removed from the desired water-soluble products by C18 adsorption. Individual library members were thus conveniently produced on 10-30 mg scales at purity levels of > 90%. One of the 1-thio-beta-D-galactosides thus produced was found to be a competitive inhibitor of the beta-galactosidase from E. coli with Ki value of 1.7 microM.
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PMID:Solid-phase extraction on C18 silica as a purification strategy in the solution synthesis of a 1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranoside library. 980 28

Sialoglycosphingolipids (gangliosides) are membrane components of eukaryotic cells that modulate cell signal transduction events. Discrepancies exist in the published descriptions of the gangliosides present in the human peripheral monocyte/macrophage. Macrophages were isolated from healthy human volunteers by two different methods. Their ganglioside fractions were isolated and examined by 2D thin-layer mobility, enzymatic susceptibility, and mass spectral-collision induced dissociation-mass spectral analyses. Thin-layer ganglioside chromatographic patterns displayed four major doublets and were similar for monocytes/macrophages isolated by either apheresis/elutriation or density gradient centrifugation. All gangliosides were resistant to beta-galactosidase but sensitive to Clostridium perfringens sialidase, indicating the absence of terminal galactose residues and sialidase-resistant sialic acid moieties. Mass spectra indicated only three major sets of glycolipid components with mass heterogeneity in the ceramide portion of each set. In all the gangliosides, the ceramide moiety contained only C18 sphingosine with the heterogeneity produced by the presence of C16 or C24 fatty acid. One doublet was resistant to Newcastle disease virus sialidase, indicating the presence of an alpha(2-6)-linked sialic acid residue with the same mass as another doublet. All data was consistent with the following structures as the major gangliosides of human peripheral monocyte/macrophages: II(3)NeuAcLacCer (sialolactosyl ceramide, GM3), IV(3)- and IV(6)NeuAcnLcOse(4)Cer (sialoparagloboside, nLM1), and IV(3)NeuAcnLcOse(6)Cer (a sialohexosylceramide).
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PMID:The major gangliosides of human peripheral blood monocytes/macrophages: absence of ganglio series structures. 1158 59

Neptunia natans is a unique aquatic legume indigenous to tropical and sub-tropical regions and is nodulated symbiotically by rhizobia using an unusual infection process unlike any previously described. Previously, isolates of neptunia-nodulating rhizobia from Senegal were characterized as Allorhizobium undicola. Here we report on a different group of neptunia-nodulating rhizobia isolated from India. Sequencing of the 16S rDNA gene from two of these Indian isolates (strains J1T and J2) show that they belong in the genus Devosia rather than Allorhizobium. Currently, the only described Devosia species is D. riboflavina (family Hyphomicrobiaceae, order Rhizobiales). The complete 16S rDNA sequences of strains J1T and J2 are 95.9% homologous to the type strain, D. riboflavina LMG 2277T, suggesting that these neptunia-nodulating strains from India belong to a new Devosia species. This hypothesis was confirmed by further studies of polyphasic taxonomy (DNA-DNA hybridisation, TP-RAPD patterns, SDS-PAGE of cellular proteins, 16S rDNA RFLP patterns, carbon source utilisation, cellular fatty acid analysis and other phenotypic characterisations), all of which support the proposal that these neptunia-nodulating strains constitute a new Devosia species, which we name Devosia neptuniae sp. nov. These gram negative, strictly aerobic short rods are motile by a subpolar flagellum, positive for catalase, oxidase, urease and beta-galactosidase, can utilise several carbohydrates (but not organic acids) as carbon sources and contain C18:0 3-OH, cis-7 C18:1 11-methyl and cis-7 C18:1 as their major cellular fatty acids. Unlike D. riboflavina, the longer-chain C24:1 3-OH and C26:1 3-OH hydroxy fatty acids are not detected. The type strain of D. neptuniae is LMG 21357T (CECT 5650T). Assignment of this new taxon represents the fourth example in the literature of a non-rhizobial genus of bacteria capable of forming a bonafide dinitrogen-fixing root-nodule symbiosis with legume plants.
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PMID:Description of Devosia neptuniae sp. nov. that nodulates and fixes nitrogen in symbiosis with Neptunia natans, an aquatic legume from India. 1274 9


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