Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.31 (beta-glucuronidase)
7,680 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cytotoxic mechanism of action of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) was examined using murine L929 fibrosarcoma cells in vitro. Two cell lines were evaluated: parental TNF sensitive (L929S) (50% cytotoxic concentration, 2-6 ng/ml); and TNF resistant (L929R) (50% cytotoxic concentration, greater than 10,000 ng/ml). The latter resistant cell line was developed by serial passage in increasing concentrations of recombinant human TNF. Sensitive cells demonstrated cytolytic and cytostatic effects at TNF concentrations between 2 and 6 ng/ml, respectively. However, TNF failed to show any selective depression of RNA, DNA, or protein synthesis or ATP content in these cells until general cell death was apparent, as defined by the cell rounding and lifting off the plastic surface. The cytokine also failed to cause DNA single-strand breaks, as detected by alkaline elution techniques. TNF was also found to be no more active in glutathione-depleted cells than in target cells containing normal glutathione levels. In contrast, various nonspecific lysosomotropic agents such as ammonium chloride and D-saccharic acid lactone led to a marked inhibition of the cytotoxic action of TNF in vitro. Furthermore, significant differences in lysosomal enzyme activity were noted between L929S and L929R cells. The changes in L929R cells involved a 50% reduction in total lysosomal protein levels and a marked depression of beta-glucuronidase activity. In contrast, L929R lysosomal hexosaminidase activity was significantly elevated over the L929S cells. From these studies it is concluded that the antitumor activity of TNF does not involve specific inhibition of macromolecular synthesis, ATP production, or the level of reduced thiols. Instead, TNF cytotoxicity appears to require functional lysosomes, which are altered when TNF resistance develops in vitro.
Cancer Res 1989 May 15
PMID:Association of lysosomal activity with sensitivity and resistance to tumor necrosis factor in murine L929 cells. 271 56

Renal toxicity is the major side effect of cis-dichlorodiammine platinum (CDDP) and it develops renal tubular damage. In the present study, the acute changes of urinary beta-glucuronidase (beta-GL) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activities following CDDP administration as indicators of its toxicity were studied in 5 patients with urological malignant tumors. The activities were measured for 11 days continuously from the day before CDDP administration. In all cases, both urinary enzyme activities increased with CDDP administration. Increase patterns of urinary beta-GL activities were similar to those of urinary NAG, but remarkably-high values of beta-GL activities were found in cases of urothelial tumors probably because urinary beta-GL derives from the kidney (lysosomes of tubular cells) and from the epithelial cells of urinary tract. Urinary ALP activities changed corresponding well with urinary gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP). This study shows that the determination of urinary beta-GL is not a significant marker of CDDP renal toxicity, especially in cases with urological malignancies, in contrast to results for urinary brush border enzyme activities such as ALP or gamma-GTP.
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PMID:[Study on urinary beta-glucuronidase and alkaline phosphatase activities as indicators of CDDP renal toxicity]. 272 12

The effect of feeding psyllium husk, a water-soluble fiber, and cellulose, a water-insoluble fiber, against chemically induced colon cancer was investigated in rats. Adult male rats were fed semipurified diets containing 20% fat, no fiber, or 10% psyllium husk or cellulose for 22 weeks. Tumors were induced in one-half of the rats fed each diet by the gastric intubation of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) during Weeks 3-11. In terms of the number of animals with tumors in each group, psyllium strongly reduced the tumorigenicity of DMH and cellulose moderately reduced tumorigenicity, whereas the two fibers did not differ significantly from each other with respect to tumorigenicity. Psyllium-fed rats had the highest fecal aerobic counts, lowest beta-glucuronidase, and highest 7-alpha-dehydroxylase activities. The psyllium diet also resulted in increased fecal output and percent moisture. Rats fed cellulose tended to have greater fecal bulk and lower beta-glucuronidase activity compared with rats fed no fiber and lower 7-alpha-dehydroxylase activity compared with rats fed psyllium husk.
Nutr Cancer 1987
PMID:Reduction of DMH-induced colon tumors in rats fed psyllium husk or cellulose. 281 29

The relationship between various dietary constituents and colon cancer has been demonstrated by previous research. This study was conducted to investigate the combined effects of several dietary constituents on the preneoplastic stage of azoxymethane (AOM)-induced colon cancer in rats. A nutritionally adequate, "low-risk" (LR) diet was formulated through the modulation of dietary fat, fiber, protein, vitamins A and E, and selenium. Female F344 rats were given three weekly subcutaneous injections of AOM and were maintained on either the LR diet or a "high-risk" (HR) diet. After 12 weeks, the rats were killed and the following parameters were determined: pH of colon contents, fecal beta-glucuronidase activity, tissue ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity, and colonic labeling index. The pH of the colon contents and incremental labeling index were lower in the group given the LR diet and treated with AOM compared with the group given the HR diet and treated with AOM; however, no statistically significant dietary effects were observed for beta-glucuronidase and ODC activities. The results of this study indicated that the colons of rats fed the LR diet exhibited different proliferative characteristics than did the colons of rats fed the HR diet.
Nutr Cancer 1987
PMID:The effects of a "low-risk" diet on cell proliferation and enzymatic parameters of preneoplastic rat colon. 281 30

Activities of a cathepsin B-like cysteine proteinase have previously been observed to correlate with the malignancy of several animal and human tumors. Plasma membrane fractions of some of these tumors have been found to be enriched in cathepsin B-like activity. We have determined the subcellular distribution of this enzyme and three additional lysosomal hydrolases (cathepsin H, beta-hexosaminidase, and beta-glucuronidase) in normal murine liver and six metastatic variants of the B16 melanoma. The tissues were fractionated initially by differential centrifugation followed by Percoll density gradient centrifugation of the light mitochondrial fraction. Two fractions were obtained: an L-2 fraction enriched in all four lysosomal hydrolases; and an L-1 fraction enriched in a marker enzyme for the plasma membrane. Cathepsin B-like and beta-hexosaminidase activities, but not the other hydrolase activities, were also found to be enriched in the L-1 fractions of the metastatic B16 tumors. We explored the nature of the association of the cathepsin B-like activity with the plasma membrane using fractions from the spontaneously metastatic B16 amelanotic melanoma. Activity could not be dissociated from the plasma membrane fraction by washing with a physiological salt solution suggesting that it was not adsorbed to this fraction nonspecifically, nor could it be displaced by mannose 6-phosphate or other sugars which compete for binding to the known lysosomal receptors. High salt concentrations, low concentrations of the mild detergent saponin, mild acidification, or phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C did not elute the cathepsin B-like activity. However, activity was eluted by exposure to 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate, a detergent used in the purification of integral membrane proteins. The B16 amelanotic melanoma plasma membrane-associated cathepsin B-like activity had a slightly higher pH optimum and was resistant to inactivation by neutral pH and to inhibition by three low molecular weight inhibitors of cysteine proteinases. The Ki values for inhibition by leupeptin and stefin A were 20-fold higher. The presence of a cathepsin B-like cysteine proteinase at the surface of metastatic tumor cells, particularly in a form which can retain activity at physiological pH and retain activity in the presence of extracellular proteinase inhibitors, may contribute to the focal dissolution of the extracellular matrix observed at sites of contact with invading tumor cells.
Cancer Res 1987 Dec 15
PMID:Properties of a plasma membrane-associated cathepsin B-like cysteine proteinase in metastatic B16 melanoma variants. 282 39

Normal AXC/SSh rat ventral prostate and clonally derived AXC/SSh rat prostate cancer cells were evaluated for ability to metabolize estrone sulfate (E1S), estrone glucuronide (E1G), or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS). Both normal and malignant prostate cells converted E1S to estrone. Neither normal nor malignant prostate cells had significant ability to metabolize DHEAS to DHEA, indicating differential specificity of prostate sulfatases(s) for estrogen and androgen sulfates. Both normal and neoplastic prostate cells possess beta-glucuronidase which hydrolyzed E1G to estrone. To assess potential physiologic consequences of these enzymatic activities, we determined the effect of steroid conjugates on in vitro proliferation of selected clonal lines of AXC/SSh rat prostate cancer cells. DHEAS, 10(-6) to 10(-9) M in decade intervals, did not affect in vitro proliferation of AXC/SSh prostate cancer cells; however, 10(-5) M DHEAS decreased in vitro proliferation of these cells. Neither E1S nor E1G, 10(-5) to 10(-9) M in decade intervals, affected in vitro proliferation of AXC/SSh prostate cancer cells. These findings suggest that low residual levels of steroid conjugates, which are not removed by charcoal stripping of serum, do not affect demonstrated in vitro androgen modulation of AXC/SSh rat prostate cancer cell proliferation (Cancer Res. 46, 3775-3781, 1986).
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PMID:Differential metabolism of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and estrogen conjugates by normal or malignant AXC/SSh rat prostate cells and effects of these steroid conjugates on cancer cell proliferation in vitro. 283 88

Neutrophil level in blood (1 l) and those of certain enzymes in neutrophils were measured in 36 patients with stomach tumors and 40 healthy controls. The range of the enzymes included myeloperoxidase (MPO), beta-glucuronidase (GR), N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), acid phosphatase (AcP), alkaline phosphatase (AlP), lactate dehydrogenase (LD) and dehydrogenase-glucoso-6-phosphoric acid (DG-6-P). Glycogen and lipids were also assayed. The MPO and AcP levels of neutrophils in cancer patients were found to be significantly higher than in healthy controls, whereas the levels of the other enzymes were not. The glycogen and lipid concentrations in neutrophils in cancer patients were significantly lower than in healthy controls.
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PMID:[Histochemical characteristics of neutrophils of the peripheral blood in patients with cancer of the stomach]. 283 37

The enzyme activity of cancerous tissue and the adjacent normal epithelium of 40 patients with breast cancer was determined. This enzymatic activity was correlated with the responsiveness of those tumors to the chemotherapy. It was found that the presence of cytochrome oxidase and alkaline phosphatase and the absence of leucine aminopeptidase, beta-glucuronidase and dehydrogenases in cancerous tissues was related to good response. On the contrary, the absence of alkaline phosphatase and cytochrome oxidase and the presence of leucine aminopeptidase, beta-glucuronidase and dehydrogenases in the cancerous tissues was related to poor response and therefore to poor survival.
Cancer Lett 1988 Nov
PMID:Correlation of histoenzymological studies with the response to chemotherapy and survival in breast cancer patients. 284 63

Gnotobiotes were produced by administrating Lactobacillus plantarum IAM 1041 in ICR strain male germfree mice which were fed by ordinary or high fat diet. Both groups were orally administered 0.3 mg/10 g of body weight (B.W.) of methylazoxymethanol (MAM) acetate. The oral administration of 0.3 mg/10 g/B.W. once a week for 11 consecutive weeks caused a total of 68 adenomatous polyps in the large intestine (an average of 11.4/mouse) of gnotobiotic high fat diet mice and a total of 32 adenomatous polyps (an average of 5.3/mouse) of the ordinary diet mice. There were no malignancies in either of the groups. Bile acids in the feces showed higher values in the high fat diet group than in the ordinary group. Bile acids are a factor which promotes the appearance of intestinal tumors. It was also assumed that the L. plantarum promoted the activation of beta-glucuronidase and alcohol dehydrogenase in the liver and intestine.
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PMID:Promoting effects of bile acid to intestinal tumorigenesis in gnotobiotic ICR mice. 293 59

Activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, and acid phosphatase and myeloperoxidase was determined in neutrophils and lymphocytes of patients with cancer of the larynx and precancerous states of the larynx as well as--for comparative reasons--in patients with malignant tumors of female generation organs, breast carcinoma, cancer of the stomach and endometriosis. The main result of investigations performed was in fact that intracellular deficiency of beta-glucuronidase within the neutrophils characterizes patients with cancer and precancerous states of the larynx. Patients with cancer of the larynx show additionally a deficiency of neutrophil myeloperoxidase. Deficiency of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase occurs, in contrast, in patients with malignancies of female generation organ. Activity of myeloperoxidase in neutrophils from patients with gastric carcinoma is slightly elevated.
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PMID:Enzymatic deficiencies of the immune system cells in patients with cancer of the larynx and other malignancies. 299 16


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