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

The anti-inflammatory effects of gold compounds include suppression of PMN lysosomal enzyme release. Since lysosomal products can provoke PMN aggregation, we assessed the effect of two gold compounds, auranofin and GST, on suppressing aggregation, degranulation, and metabolic functions of the cells. Aggregation of 1 x 10(7) cytochalasin B-treated PMNs in response to 2 x 10(-7)M FMLP, as assessed by light scattering, was inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by both drugs. Concentrations of auranofin ranging from 5 to 20 microM caused 30.8% to 89% inhibition, whereas 200 microM GST reduced aggregation by only 32%. FCS or BSA added to suspensions of normal PMNs considerably reduced the gold compound inhibitory effect on PMN aggregation. Cell viability assessed by dye exclusion and lactate dehydrogenase release was unaffected by the drugs. The suppressive activities of the drugs could not be removed by washing the PMNs. Correspondingly, the drugs suppressed lysosomal enzyme release induced by FMLP of PMNs rendered secretory with cytochalasin B. Concentrations of 20 microM auranofin and 200 microM GST resulted, respectively, in a 61.5% and 19.3% reduction of release of lysozyme, 61.7% and 27.1% reduction of beta-glucuronidase, 84.8% and 33.7%s reduction of myeloperoxidase, and 50.0% and 25.0% reduction of lactoferrin. Furthermore, auranofin inhibited 14C-1-glucose oxidation through the hexose monophosphate shunt in response to stimulation by either PMA or methylene blue. The in vivo studies suggested that auranofin could prevent neither neutropenia induced by zymosan-activated serum nor a corresponding rise in plasma lactoferrin levels. These findings suggest that the beneficial effect of gold compounds in rheumatoid arthritis are unlikely to be related to their ability to dampen PMN activation in vivo.
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PMID:Correlation of in vitro and in vivo effects of gold compounds on leukocyte function: possible mechanisms of action. 628 1

Microsomal and lysosomal beta-glucuronidase (beta-D-glucuronide glucuronosohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.31) of monkey brain were differentially eluted from Con A-Sepharose when subjected to chromatography and linear gradient elution with methyl alpha-glucoside at 28+/-1 degree C. The lysosomal enzyme was eluted as a sharp peak in the first few fractions, while the microsomal enzyme was eluted as a broad peak extending over several fractions. This differential pattern of elution was dependent only on the temperature of elution and the concentration of methyl alpha-glucoside used. The lysosomal and microsomal glucuronidases were purified to apparent homogeneity and their neutral sugar analysed. Both of them contained glucose, mannose and fucose but the microsomal enzyme contained about 3-times as much of all these sugars as the lysosomal enzyme. Sodium periodate treatment of the microsomal enzyme resulted in a shift in its elution pattern, similar to the lysosomal enzyme when subjected to Con A-Sepharose chromatography. The content of neutral sugars and the structural features of the oligosaccharide units in the microsomal glucuronidase might be responsible for its elution pattern. A processing of the carbohydrate units of the microsomal glucuronidase might be envisaged to take place if it were to act as a precursor of the lysosomal glucuronidase.
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PMID:Lysosomal and microsomal beta-glucuronidase of monkey brain. Differential elution characteristics from con A-sepharose and neutral sugar composition. 629 78

Implanted foreign bodies are highly susceptible to pyogenic infections and represent a major problem in modern medicine. In an effort to understand the pathogenesis of these infections, we studied the phagocytic function in the vicinity of a foreign body by using a recently developed guinea pig model of Teflon tissue cages subcutaneously implanted (Zimmerli, W., F.A. Waldvogel, P. Vaudaux, and U.E. Nydegger, 1982, J. Infect. Dis., 146:487-497). Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) purified from tissue cage fluid had poor bactericidal activity against a catalase-positive microorganism. When compared with blood or exudate PMN, they exhibited a significant reduction in their ability to generate superoxide in response to a particulate or a soluble stimulus (72 and 57%, respectively, P less than 0.001). Not only their total contents in myeloperoxidase, beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme, and B12 binding protein were significantly reduced (by 62, 21, 47, and 63%, respectively, P less than 0.01), but also their capability for further secretion of residual B12 binding protein upon stimulation. Ingestion rates of endotoxin-coated opsonized oil particles were reduced by 25% (P less than 0.05). In an effort to reproduce these abnormalities in vitro, fresh peritoneal exudate PMN were incubated with Teflon fibers in the presence of plasma. Interaction of PMN with the fibers led to significant increases in hexose monophosphate shunt activity and exocytosis of secondary granules (P less than 0.01). PMN eluted after such interaction showed defective bactericidal activity, oxidative metabolism, and granular enzyme content similar to those observed in tissue cage PMN. The local injection of fresh blood PMN into tissue cages at the time of, or 3 h after, inoculation with 100 microorganisms (Staphylococcus aureus Wood 46) reduced the infection rate from 50 to 56 cages to 1 of 21 (P less than 0.001) and 3 of 8 cages (P less than 0.001), respectively. These results suggest that the in vivo as well as in vitro interaction of PMN with a nonphagocytosable foreign body induces a complex PMN defect, which may be partly responsible for the high susceptibility to infection of foreign bodies.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of foreign body infection. Evidence for a local granulocyte defect. 632 36

The sub-cellular localisation of enzymes has been defined by latency analysis, and fractionation by differential centrifugation, in cell-free extracts prepared from the mycelium of Aspergillus nidulans by growth in the presence of 2-deoxyglucose followed by treatment with a mixture of beta-glucuronidase, sulphatase and beta-glucanase and exposure to N2 cavitation at 5.2 PMa. In such extracts pyruvate carboxylase and NAD-dependent and NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenases are exclusively localised in the cytosol whereas all the other enzymes studied have sub-cellular localisation patterns similar to those described for mammalian liver. Electrophoretic analysis has established the presence of unique mitochondrial and cytosolic isoenzymes for many of the enzymes, e.g. NAD--malate dehydrogenase, NADP--isocitrate dehydrogenase, glutamate/oxaloacetate transaminase, fumarase, which show a marked extent of incomplete latency and the presence of significant activity in the mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions prepared by differential centrifugation. A novel method is described for detection of citrate synthase activity following electrophoresis of the cell-free extract. Application of this method confirms the absence of a unique cytosolic isoenzyme of citrate synthase and hence shows that citrate synthase activity detected in the soluble fraction results from damage to the mitochondria during isolation. A scheme is proposed on the basis of these data to describe the organisation of lipid and amino acid synthesis from glucose in an organism which possesses a cytosolic pyruvate carboxylase.
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PMID:The sub-cellular localisation of pyruvate carboxylase and of some other enzymes in Aspergillus nidulans. 634 55

The effect of a 24 hr starvation period on islet lysosomal enzyme activities and the in vivo insulin response to glucose, glibenclamide and L-isopropyl-noradrenaline (L-IPNA) was studied in mice. It was observed that fasting induced a significant decrease of islet acid amyloglucosidase activity, whereas the activities of acid phosphatase, beta-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase, and beta-glucuronidase in islet tissue were unaffected by the fasting period studied. Starvation markedly reduced the acute insulin response to a maximal dose of glucose or glibenclamide. However, the insulin response to a maximal dose of L-IPNA was of similar magnitude in both fed and fasted animals. Pretreatment of fasted mice with purified fungal acid amyloglucosidase could restore the impaired insulin response to glucose to the normal level seen in fed mice. It is suggested that islet acid amyloglucosidase activity is of importance for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, and that reduced levels of islet amyloglucosidase may contribute to the impairment of glucose-induced insulin release seen after fasting.
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PMID:Effect of fasting on islet lysosomal enzyme activities and the in vivo insulin response to different secretagogues. 640 43

Human seminal plasma contain two forms of beta-glucuronidase (beta-D-glucuronidase glucuronosohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.31) which are present in the ratio of 4:1. The major form of beta-glucuronidase with a slow moving band in electrophoresis was purified to homogeneity as revealed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, double immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis. The major form of beta-glucuronidase shows dual optimum pH at 4.3 and 4.7 with a dip in the activity at pH 4.5. The Km of this form of beta-glucuronidase is dependent on pH and was found to be 0.95, 3.08 and 0.67 mM at pH 4.4, 4.5 and 4.7, respectively. The major form of beta-glucuronidase from seminal plasma is stable at 55 degrees C for 30 min but it denatures at 65 degrees C. Heat denaturation is faster at acidic pH (4.7) than at alkaline pH (7.8). However, the activity of enzyme increased linearly with increase in temperature up to 70 degrees C during incubation with substrate. Cu, Ag, Hg and Ni salts inhibited enzyme activity significantly at 0.1 and 1.0 mM concentration, but the inhibition of HgCl2 was protected by cysteine. 1,4-D-Saccharic acid lactone and ascorbic acid inhibited seminal beta-glucuronidase competitively, yielding Ki values of 1.7 . 10(-3) mM and 10.3 mM, respectively. Though fructose and mannose also showed significant inhibition of beta-glucuronidase at 10-100 mM, glucose did not show any effect. The molecular weight of the major form of beta-glucuronidase was found to be 279 000, and it appears to be composed of four subunits each having a molecular weight of 74 000.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the major form of beta-glucuronidase from human seminal plasma. 641 96

It was reported that neurotropin (NSP), an extract isolated from the inflamed skins of rabbits inoculated with vaccinia virus, activates murine T cell functions participating in cell-mediated immunity. The present study was undertaken to examine the effect of NSP on plastic dish-adherent macrophages (M phi) from ddY mice in vitro. Total activities of beta-glucuronidase and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase in resident peritoneal M phi was slightly enhanced when the M phi were cultured with NSP (10-1000 micrograms/ml) for 48 and 96 hr, but no enhancement was noted in 24 hr culture. Intracellular activity of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was also strongly enhanced in a dose-dependent manner by culturing with NSP for 48 and 96 hr. The enhanced LDH activity in the M phi cultured with NSP for 96 hr was completely inhibited by cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. In addition, consumption of glucose in the culture media by the M phi was also enhanced by culturing with NSP for 96 hr. Intracellular activity of LDH and glucose consumption of plastic dish-nonadherent cells from normal mouse peritoneal cells, however, was not enhanced by NSP in 96 hr culture. In regard to allogeneic M phi-mediated cytostatic activity to P815-X2 mastocytoma, NSP had no effect on cytostatic activities of the resident and thioglycollate-induced M phi, although NSP by itself dose-dependently inhibited the growth of P815-X2 mastocytoma without affecting cell viability. These results suggest that NSP biochemically activates mouse peritoneal M phi in vitro, but the M phi activated by NSP can not inhibit the growth of P815-X2 mastocytoma.
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PMID:[Immunopharmacological actions of neurotropin (4). Effect of neurotropin on mouse peritoneal macrophages]. 644 Aug 35

The effect of aniline mustard glucuronide (AMG), p-hydroxyaniline mustard (HAM), and aniline mustard (AM), on Walker ascites tumour cells in vitro showed that AM in about 80 times more toxic than its glucuronide but HAM is at least 800 times more toxic. A non toxic dose of AMG became completely lethal to Walker tumour cells in vitro, if bovine liver beta-glucuronidase was added to the incubation medium. Prior treatment of Walker tumour cells in vitro with glucose, increased the breakdown of AMG to HAM within the intact cells, while a non-toxic dose of the glucuronide became completely lethal to cells pretreated with glucose. The administration of AMG in combination with glucose to animals bearing the highly resistant to alkylating agents Sarcoma-180 tumour, increased the toxicity of the glucuronide but produced a slight effect on tumour growth. Glucose administration in Sarcoma-180 and ADJ/PC6 tumour bearing animals did not alter the tumour intracellular pH determined in vivo indirectly from the distribution of the weak non-metabolizable organic acid 5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolinedione (DMO) between intra- and extra-cellular water. The present data suggest that the combination of aniline mustard glucuronide with glucose, could be effective in those tumours which have a high beta-glucuronidase activity and a lower tumour intracellular pH could be induced by glucose.
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PMID:Cytotoxicity of aniline mustard glucuronide alone or in a combination with glucose in Walker cells in culture and sarcoma-180 tumour bearing animals. 666 40

Phenylbutazone (PBZ), a classic anti-inflammatory and prostaglandin-synthesis inhibitor drug, was used to determine the role of prostaglandins and other mediators on the development and perpetuation of the response to intraperitoneal Escherichia coli endotoxin administration. The PBZ (15 mg/kg of body weight) was administered IV 30 minutes after endotoxin administration and was repeated later at 6 and 12 hours at a dose of 10 mg/kg. A variety of evaluation measurements (hematologic, blood glucose, pyruvate, lactate and fibrinogen, serum beta-glucuronidase, prothrombin time, blood gases, hepatic glycogen, plasma esterase, capillary refill time, and rectal temperature) were utilized. Marked alterations were noted for all evaluators following endotoxin administration except for blood fibrinogen, prothrombin time, and plasma esterase activity. The PBZ therapy blocked the hemoconcentration, hyperglycemia, increased blood lactate, decreased bicarbonate, decreased blood pH, pyrexia, and prolonged capillary refill time responses associated with endotoxin administration. Despite the significant blocking effects of PBZ on endotoxin responses, the eventual survival rate was unaffected in these experiments.
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PMID:Therapeutic effect of phenylbutazone on experimental acute Escherichia coli endotoxemia in ponies. 678 19

The effect of the cyclooxygenase inhibitors, indomethacin and diclofenac, and of PGE2 on either resting or stimulated macrophages was investigated. Peritoneal macrophages were obtained from untreated mice and cultured for 10 days. Macrophage activation was induced by zymosan phagocytosis and was monitored by testing for plasminogen activator secretion and the cellular levels of lactate dehydrogenase, beta-glucuronidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I. It was found that cyclooxygenase inhibitors activate resting macrophages and enhance the degree of activation obtained after zymosan phagocytosis. Addition of exogenous PGE2, on the other hand, had the opposite effect, it suppressed activation induced either by cyclooxygenase inhibitors, phagocytosis or a combination of both. Cyclooxygenase inhibitors and PGE2 did not affect the hexose monophosphate shunt activity of resting macrophages and had only a minor effect on the respiratory burst occurring during zymosan phagocytosis. It appears, therefore, that the observed changes in the state of activation of the macrophages are not related to hexose monophosphate shunt activity. The described effects suggest that PGE2 and possibly other cyclooxygenase products may function as inhibitory feed-back regulators of macrophage activation.
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PMID:Effects of cyclooxygenase inhibitors and prostaglandin E2 on macrophage activation in vitro. 679 85


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