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:3.2.1.31 (
beta-glucuronidase
)
7,680
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Correlations were sought between local cerebral metabolic rates (LCMRs) for glucose in various regions of the cortex, determined in premortem PET scans, with the regional activities of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), acetylcholinesterase (AChE),
beta-glucuronidase
(Gluc, a probable index of reactive gliosis), and phosphate-activated glutaminase (PAG, a possible indice of the large pyramidal neurons) measured on postmortem tissue. Significant negative correlations between LCMRs and Gluc activities were found in 6 PET-scanned cases of Alzheimer disease (AD), and positive correlations of LCMRs with PAG were found in 5. By contrast, a positive correlation with ChAT and AChE was found in only 1. The results are consistent with the metabolic deficits in AD being primarily a reflection of local neuronal loss and gliosis. Similar data on two cases of Huntington's disease showed no significant correlations, while 1 patient with Parkinson
dementia
showed a significant (negative) correlation only with Gluc.
...
PMID:Correlations of regional postmortem enzyme activities with premortem local glucose metabolic rates in Alzheimer's disease. 207 21
Gene therapy in the brain has focused mainly on neurons (gray matter), with little comparable research on white matter. In this study, injections into mice cerebral white matter of mice were done to assess the distribution of gene transfer with recombinant feline immunodeficiency virus vectors expressing either beta-galactosidase or
beta-glucuronidase
. Our results show that vectors were preferentially distributed along the white matter of the external capsule, which was the site of vector injection as confirmed by horseradish peroxidase labeling. Moreover, we found gene transfer almost exclusively to NeuN(+) cells lining the external capsule, which then robustly secreted recombinant
beta-glucuronidase
throughout the white matter of the entire external capsule on the injected side. These results may have application to lysosomal storage diseases with widespread central nervous system deficits, and other disorders such as multiple sclerosis and human immunodeficiency virus
dementia
.
...
PMID:Transduction of neurons lining the cerebral external capsules in mice with feline immunodeficiency virus based vectors. 1458 96
Expansion of the lysosomal apparatus occurs in subcortical white matter in brains from persons with AIDS. This study examined whether HIV-associated subcortical
dementia
(HAD) is significantly related to this lysosomal anomaly. Brain cortex and adjacent white matter from the middle frontal gyrus were obtained from the National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium. Lysosomal hydrolase activity was assayed in 57 subjects who underwent neuropsychological testing within 6 months prior to autopsy. Decedents were evaluated from 4 geographical sites in the United States: Galveston/Houston, Texas (n = 36), Los Angeles, California (n = 5), New York, New York (n = 5), and San Diego, California (n = 11). Increased
beta-glucuronidase
activity, a representative lysosomal glycosidase, was correlated with the amount of neurocognitive impairment. Significant correlation was present in 5 of 7 functional testing domains, including some that draw upon frontal lobe output (r = 0.419; P < 0.002). The biochemical anomaly was negligible in cerebral cortex and cerebrospinal fluid and was not correlated with brain dysfunction in those compartments. Glycosidase activation was associated significantly with increased HIV RNA concentration in brain tissue (r = 0.469; P < 0.021) and possibly with HIV RNA in cerebrospinal fluid (r = 0.266; P < 0.067). HIV RNA in blood plasma was not correlated. These results support the suggestion that abnormal metabolism in white matter glial cells contributes to cognitive slowing in persons with HAD. Because membrane turnover is routed through the endosome-lysosome apparatus, these data are in agreement with brain spectroscopic data that have suggested that there is an increase in membrane turnover in white matter glia.
...
PMID:Potential role for white matter lysosome expansion in HIV-associated dementia. 1601 Jan 64
The brain tissue obtained after death is subjected to several circumstances that can affect RNA integrity. The present study has been directed to reveal possible pitfalls and to control RNA normalization in post-mortem samples in order to recognize the limitations and minimize errors when using TaqMan PCR technology. This has been carried out in samples of the frontal cortex in a series of control and diseased cases covering Parkinson's disease,
dementia
with Lewy bodies pure form and common form, and Alzheimer's disease. Special attention has been paid to the value of the agonal state, post-mortem delay and pH of the nervous tissue as approximate predictors of the quality of RNA, as well as to the use of the Bioanalyzer to confirm RNA preservation. In addition, since possible disease-modified mRNAs have to be normalized with ideal unaltered RNAs, TaqMan human endogenous control plates have been used to determine the endogenous control most appropriate for the study.
beta-glucuronidase
(GUS) and beta-actin were good endogenous controls because their expression levels showed a small variation across a representative number of control and pathological cases. RNA stability was also analysed in a paradigm mimicking cumulative delay in tissue processing. GUS mRNA levels were not modified although beta-actin mRNA levels showed degradation at 22 h. Finally, the control of RNA degradation for the normalization of genes of interest was also tested. mRNA expression levels for superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) and metalloproteinase domain 22 (ADAM22) were examined at several artificial post-mortem times, and their expression levels compared with those for putative controls beta-actin and GUS. In our paradigm, the expressions of SOD1 and ADAM22 were apparently not modified when normalized with beta-actin. Yet their expression levels were reduced with post-mortem delay when values were normalized with GUS. Taken together, these observations point to practical consequences in TaqMan PCR studies. Short post-mortem delays and acceptable pH of the brain are not sufficient to rule out RNA degradation. The selection of adequate endogenous controls is pivotal in the study. beta-actin and GUS are found to be good endogenous controls in these pathologies, although GUS but not beta-actin expression levels are preserved in samples with long post-mortem delay.
...
PMID:TaqMan PCR assay in the control of RNA normalization in human post-mortem brain tissue. 1652 42