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 localization of acid hydrolases was examined in Chinese hamster ovary cells with defective mannose 6-phosphate receptors; these mutants had been shown to exhibit reduced uptake and altered binding of exogenously added acid hydrolase (Robbins, A. R., Myerowitz, R., Youle, R. J., Murray, G. J., and Neville, D. M., Jr. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 10618-10622). Cells were grown in the presence of [3H]mannose, alpha-L-iduronidase and beta-hexosaminidase were immunoprecipitated sequentially, electrophoresed on polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulfate, and detected by fluorography. About 55% of the alpha-L-iduronidase and beta-hexosaminidase synthesized by the mutants in 12 h was found in the growth medium; parental cells secreted only approximately 15%. The mutants also secreted 2 to 6 times more alpha-mannosidase, beta-glucuronidase, and alpha-L-fucosidase than the parent as determined by measurements of enzyme activity. Intracellular levels of these enzymes were reduced in the mutants. The mutants secreted acid hydrolases in the precursor forms, within the cells these enzymes resided in lysosomes and were processed normally; thus, the mutants appeared aberrant only with respect to distribution of hydrolases between intracellular and extracellular compartments. [35S]methionine-labeled beta-hexosaminidase and alpha-L-iduronidase secreted by the mutants were taken up normally by both human fibroblasts and wild type CHO cells, and this uptake was inhibited by mannose 6-phosphate. Thus, the elevated secretion of acid hydrolases was not due to alteration of the mannose 6-phosphate recognition marker on the enzymes, but appears to result from alterations in the mannose 6-phosphate receptor.
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PMID:The mannose 6-phosphate receptor of Chinese hamster ovary cells. Compartmentalization of acid hydrolases in mutants with altered receptors. 627 Jan 23

Mannose 6-phosphate is an important recognition site involved in transport of newly synthesized lysosomal enzymes from the endoplasmic reticulum to lysosomes. The current study is the first demonstration of functional mannose phosphate receptors in macrophages. The receptor appears to be similar in many respects to that expressed in fibroblasts. Binding at 4 degrees C of a mannose-6-P-containing ligand, alpha-mannosidase from Dictyostelium discoideum, was specific and saturable (KD = 1.6 nM). In the presence of permeabilizing agents (saponin and digitonin), macrophage mannose-6-P receptors gave a distribution of 15-20% on the surface and 80-85% inside. Uptake studies gave a Kuptake value of 4.9 nM. Mannose-6-P, Hansenula holstii phosphomannan, and fructose 1-phosphate were effective inhibitors of alpha-mannosidase uptake. Inhibitors of mannose uptake, such as beta-glucuronidase, mannose-bovine serum albumin, fucose-bovine serum albumin, or mannan had no effect on alpha-mannosidase uptake. Likewise, an inhibitor (fucoidin) of the macrophage receptor which recognizes negatively charged proteins did not inhibit alpha-mannosidase uptake. Uptake was linear over 90 min and inhibited by chloroquine, suggesting that surface receptors recycle. These data demonstrate that macrophages contain receptors which specifically recognize mannose-6-P units and are distinct from the well characterized mannose receptors. The finding that the mannose-6-P receptors play a role at the surface, together with the fact that most of the receptors are intracellular (similar to the mannose receptor) suggests that both carbohydrate receptors play a regulatory role at the surface and intracellularly in transport of lysosomal enzymes.
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PMID:Identification of mannose 6-phosphate receptors in rabbit alveolar macrophages. 632 65

Castanospermine (1,6,7,8-tetrahydroxyoctahydroindolizine) was tested against a variety of commercially available glycosidases and found to be a potent inhibitor of almond emulsin beta-glucosidase, and also to inhibit fungal beta-xylosidase. This alkaloid was inactive on yeast alpha-glucosidase, alpha- or beta-galactosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, alpha-L-fucosidase. Fifty-percent inhibition of beta-glucosidase required about 10 micrograms/ml of castanospermine. The amount of inhibition was uniform throughout the time course, and the inhibition with regard to substrate concentration (p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside) appeared to be of the mixed type. Castanospermine was also a potent inhibitor of beta-glucocerebrosidase when assayed with fibroblast extracts using either a fluorimetric or a radioactive assay. Interestingly enough, castanospermine also inhibited the lysosomal alpha-glucosidase, and this inhibition required comparable levels of alkaloid to that required for inhibition of beta-glucocerebrosidase. However, a number of other lysosomal glycosidases were not sensitive to castanospermine (i.e., alpha- or beta-galactosidase, alpha- or beta-mannosidase, alpha- or beta-L-fucosidase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase).
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PMID:Castanospermine, a tetrahydroxylated alkaloid that inhibits beta-glucosidase and beta-glucocerebrosidase. 640 22

Histochemical methods for the localization of four glycosidases (beta-glucuronidase, beta-N-acetyl glucosaminidase, beta-D-galactosidase and alpha-mannosidase) have been applied to 40 cases of human normal and hyperplastic breast tissue and 100 human breast carcinomas. All tissues have been fixed in formol-calcium at 4 degrees C and washed in gum sucrose. beta-Glucuronidase and beta-N-acetyl glucosaminidase have consistently been detected in essentially all cells of normal and hyperplastic tissue. A similar distribution has been found for better differentiated carcinomas but the number of cells with detectable enzyme decreases in the more poorly differentiated tumour. beta-D-Galactosidase and alpha-mannosidase have only been demonstrated in very occasional cells in normal breast tissue. The incidence increases in hyperplastic tissue, and in approximately half the carcinomas many cells have detectable enzyme. The localization of beta-D-galactosidase has not been related to tumour differentiation but the better differentiated carcinomas tend to have few cells with demonstrable alpha-mannosidase. Although it has been suggested that glycosidases can have an effect on membrane function no differences have been found between those carcinomas having a few or many cells with detectable enzyme and the presence or absence of axillary lymph node metastasis. Total enzyme activity cannot be detected in fixed tissue, nor can an accurate quantitative assessment be made, but under the conditions of this study it is possible to conclude that there are differences between normal and malignant breast tissue in the localization of glycosidases.
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PMID:The histochemistry of glycosidases in human benign and malignant breast tissue. 642 4

In porcine interareolar placental epithelia, the following enzymes were demonstrated by histochemical methods after 30, 58, 80, 100, and 110 d of pregnancy, respectively: beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase, alpha-mannosidase, acid phosphatase, alkaline phosphatase, nonspecific esterases, cytochrome oxidase, 5-nucleotidase, leucine aminopeptidase, adenosine triphosphatase, diaphorases (NADH, NADPH), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase (NAD, NADP), beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, glycero-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, NAD-glycero-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase (NAD, NADP), lactate dehydrogenase. The results show that most of the enzyme activities remained almost unchanged during the period of investigation. Only G-6-PDH and 6-PGDH activities increased within the uterine epithelium and nonspecific esterase activity within uterine as well as chorionic epithelia during the 2nd half of pregnancy. Within chorionic and uterine epithelia, hydrolases but not dehydrogenases demonstrated a higher activity at the bases of chorionic villi as compared to the apices and flanks of the latter. The action and influence of the demonstrated enzymes on metabolism, energy transfer, secretory, and resorptive activities of chorionic and uterine epithelia are discussed.
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PMID:[Enzyme histochemical studies of the swine placenta. Histoptics of enzymes in interareolar placental epithelia]. 643 35

Changes in the activities of several lysosomal enzymes were studied during transformation of mouse spleen cells in vitro. The activity of beta-glucuronidase increased during culture in the presence of T or B-cell mitogens, and lymphoblasts contained higher levels of activity than did small, non-transformed lymphocytes. Moreover, lymphoblasts in well-transformed cultures had higher activities than those in poorly-transformed cultures. The activities of other lysosomal enzymes (N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-glucosidase) also increased during mitogenic stimulation, but each at different rates, although aryl sulphatase was unaffected. Such differences may be of importance when lymphocytes are used for diagnosis of inherited lysosomal deficiency diseases.
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PMID:Effects of mitogenic stimulation of lymphocytes on lysosomal enzyme activity. 643 92

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)
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PMID:Beta-glucuronidase deficiency in a dog: a model of human mucopolysaccharidosis VII. 643 80

In platelets of subjects affected with myeloproliferative disorders the following lysosomal enzymes were studied: alpha-mannosidase, alpha-fucosidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase, beta-glucuronidase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and acid phosphatase. For each enzyme the specific activity, the optimum of pH and buffer, Km and saturating substrate concentrations, as well as thermostability were determined. Control and patient enzymes showed no difference.
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PMID:Platelet lysosomal enzymes are normal in myeloproliferative disorders. 643 83

Ten enzymes, all known to be glycoproteins, were examined by electrophoresis or gel isoelectric focusing in 12 different patients with primary or secondary sialidase deficiency. Aberrant electrophoretic mobilities of many of the enzymes attributable to abnormal sialylation were found in all the patients. In ten of the patients seven of the enzymes were affected. The unaffected enzymes were beta-galactosidase, alkaline phosphatase and beta-glucuronidase. In the cells from the two patients with I cell disease (mucolipidosis II) in which sialidase is one of many deficient enzymes, beta-galactosidase, alpha-galactosidase, alpha-fucosidase and alpha-mannosidase were undetectable, alkaline phosphatase showed a normal electrophoretic mobility and acid phosphatase, adenosine deaminase, alpha-glucosidase and beta-D-N-acetylhexosaminidase showed aberrant mobilities.
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PMID:Electrophoretic analysis of glycoprotein enzymes in the sialidoses and mucolipidoses. 645 53

Sera from 9 persons with either biopsy-proven alcoholic liver disease or a history of chronic, excessive ethanol consumption were analyzed for their content of various hydrolases. Compared to controls, significant elevations in the following enzyme activities were seen in sera from the patient population: acid phosphatase (2.0-fold), beta-glucuronidase (2.1-fold), hexosaminidase (1.4-fold), and alpha-L-fucosidase (2.3-fold). In addition, alpha-mannosidase activity, previously reported to be unchanged in cases of hepatic cirrhosis [Reglero et al., Clinica chim. Acta 130: 155-158], (1980) was found to be significantly increased (p less than 0.001) when assays were performed at acid (pH 4.5) or intermediate (pH 5.5) hydrogen ion concentrations. Fractionation of sera on DEAE-Sephadex columns showed that the increase in alpha-mannosidase activity in the serum of patients with alcoholic liver disease was due to increases in the level of at least one 'acid alpha-mannosidase' and two intermediate pH optimum alpha-mannosidases. The general increase in the activity of a group of glycosidases is consistent with a hypothesis involving decreased clearance of glycoproteins from the blood of persons with hepatic cirrhosis.
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PMID:Serum alpha-mannosidase in patients with alcoholic liver disease. 671 94


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