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Target Concepts:
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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)
BT-R1, the Manduca sexta midgut receptor for the crystal toxin Cry1Ab produced by Bacillus thuringiensis ssp. berliner, was partly purified by gel filtration from M. sexta
brush border
membrane vesicles in the presence of the detergent CHAPS. Fractions containing BT-R1 were tested for their stability against degradation as indicated by retention of Cry1Ab binding on ligand blots. At 4 degrees C and pH 7.4 in the presence of Ca2+, BT-R1 was stable for up to 48 h but a 65% loss of binding was observed after 100 h. Under the same conditions, no loss of binding was observed in the presence of EGTA after 100 h. Cry1Ab binding decreased markedly as pH increased from 6 to 10 for incubations of 24 h at 4 degrees C. Increasing the temperature of incubation from 4 to 37 degrees C also decreased Cry1Ab binding. Neither metal ions nor free sulfhydryl groups are involved in Cry1Ab binding to BT-R1. A trypsin-like, metal-ion-dependent proteolytic activity co-eluted with BT-R1 during gel filtration. This endoproteolytic activity was unaltered by the addition of Cry1Ab. BT-R1 did not co-elute with peaks of aminopeptidase, alkaline phosphatase, alpha-glucosidase, beta-glucosidase and
beta-galactosidase
activities. When BT-R1 in the gel filtration fraction was further purified on a Mono Q anion exchange column, partial separation of the trypsin-like activity from BT-R1 was observed. BT-R1 could be removed from the appropriate Mono Q fraction by immunoprecipitation with only a slight decrease in this activity. These results demonstrate that there is no copurification of BT-R1 and these enzymes and that BT-R1 is unlikely to form complexes with them. Binding of Cry1Aa and Cry1Ac to BT-R1 in gel filtration fractions is similar to that of Cry1Ab, indicating that BT-R1 may be the high-affinity receptor for the Cry1A toxins. Binding of Cry1Ab to a 120 kDa protein has not been observed in this study.
...
PMID:Further characterization of BT-R1, the cadherin-like receptor for Cry1Ab toxin in tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) midguts. 930 95
The small intestine is functionally dependent on the presence of the
brush border
, a tightly packed array of microvilli that forms the amplified apical surface of absorptive cells. In the core of each microvillus, actin filaments are bundled by two proteins, villin and fimbrin. Previous in vitro studies using antisense approaches indicated that villin plays an important role in the morphogenesis of microvilli. To examine the in vivo consequences of villin deficiency, we disrupted the mouse villin gene by targeted recombination in mouse embryonic stem cells. A
beta-galactosidase
cDNA was also introduced into the villin locus by the targeting event. Homozygous villin-deficient mice are viable, fertile, and display no gross abnormalities. Intact microvilli are present in the small intestine, colon, kidney proximal tubules, and liver bile canaliculi. Although subtle ultrastructural abnormalities can be detected in the actin cores of small intestinal microvilli, localization of sucrase isomaltase, brush border myosin I, and zonula occludens I to the microvillar surface of the small intestine is normal. Thus, in vivo, villin plays a minor or redundant role in the generation of microvilli in multiple absorptive tissues.
...
PMID:Targeted disruption of the mouse villin gene does not impair the morphogenesis of microvilli. 943 28
Twelve male and female Wistar rats each received cadmium (as CdCl2) in their diet at concentrations of 0, 10, 50, and 250 ppm for 72 weeks. After 1, 4, 8, 13, 18, 26, 32, 45, 57, and 68 weeks a total of 8 enzymes from different cellular compartments of the nephron were measured. At the end of the study period, the kidneys were examined histopathologically. Concentrations up to and including 50 ppm did not induce any adverse effect. At 250 ppm, growth of male and female animals was markedly retarded. Significantly increased activities of the cytosolic phosphohexose isomerase were excreted by males and females receiving 250 ppm at all timepoints from week 13. The values of the mitochondrial glutamate dehydrogenase were mostly elevated from week 1 to 57, however, due to a wide scatter range, were only occasionally significantly different from control values. The
brush border
enzymes (gamma-glutamyl transferase, alkaline phosphatase and leucine arylamidase) were not changed in a relevant manner in female rats, while in 250 ppm males the excreted activity of ALP and LAP from week 1 to week 18, and that of GGT during the entire study period were significantly lower than the control values. Excretion of the lysosomal enzymes aryl sulfatase A,
beta-galactosidase
, and beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase was at no time influenced in a noteworthy manner. Histopathology after 72 weeks revealed chronic but also acute degenerative changes in the kidneys of 250 ppm males and females. A comparison of published data on persons having undergone high cadmium exposure with the results presented here shows remarkable differences.
...
PMID:Time course of chronic oral cadmium nephrotoxicity in Wistar rats: excretion of urinary enzymes. 1053 56
Villin, an actin bundling protein found in the apical
brush border
of absorptive tissues, is one of the first structural genes to be transcriptionally activated in the embryonic intestinal endoderm. In the adult, villin is broadly expressed in every cell of the intestinal epithelium on both the vertical axis (crypt to villus tip) and the horizontal axis (duodenum through colon) of the intestine. Here, we document that a 12.4-kilobase region of the mouse villin gene drives high level expression of two different reporter genes (LacZ and Cre recombinase) within the entire intestinal epithelium of transgenic mice. Deletion of a portion of this transgene results in reduction of
beta-galactosidase
activity in restricted domains of the small intestine (duodenum) and large intestine (cecum). In addition, expression is reduced in the crypt compartment throughout the intestine. Thus, the global expression pattern of villin in the intestine is apparently the consequence of an amalgam of distinct and individual domain-specific control processes. That is, expression of villin in the duodenum and cecum requires different regulatory sequences than the rest of the intestine, and the expression of villin in crypts is regulated by different circuitry than expression of villin on villus tips.
...
PMID:Cis elements of the villin gene control expression in restricted domains of the vertical (crypt) and horizontal (duodenum, cecum) axes of the intestine. 1206 99
Lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (LPH,
EC 3.2.1.23
-62) is a
brush border
membrane (BBM)-associated enzyme in intestinal cells that hydrolyse lactose, the most important sugar in milk. Impairing in lactase activity during rotavirus infection has been described in diseased infants but the mechanism by which the functional lesion occurs remains unknown. We undertook a study to elucidate whether rotavirus impairs the lactase enzymatic activity in BBM of human enterocyte cells. In this study we use cultured human intestinal fully differentiated enterocyte-like Caco-2 cells to demonstrate how the lactase enzymatic activity at BBM is significantly decreased in rhesus monkey rotavirus (RRV)-infected cells. We found that the decrease in enzyme activity is not dependent of the Ca(2+)- and cAMP-dependent signalling events triggered by the virus. The LPH biosynthesis, stability, and expression of the protein at the BBM of infected cells were not modified. We provide evidence that in RRV-infected cells the kinetic of lactase enzymatic activity present at the BBM was modified. Both BBM(control) and BBM(RRV) have identical K(m) values, but hydrolyse the substrate at different rates. Thus, the BBM(RRV) exhibits almost a 1.5-fold decreased V(max) than that of BBM(control) and is therefore enzymatically less active than the latter. Our study demonstrate conclusively that the impairment of lactase enzymatic activity at the BBM of the enterocyte-like Caco-2 cells observed during rotavirus infection results from an inhibitory action of the secreted non-structural rotavirus protein NSP4.
...
PMID:An NSP4-dependant mechanism by which rotavirus impairs lactase enzymatic activity in brush border of human enterocyte-like Caco-2 cells. 1750 19
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