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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)
Alveolar macrophages have been shown to bind glycoproteins and synthetic glycoconjugates (neoglycorpoteins) that have mannose,
N-acetylglucosamine
, or glucose in the exposed, nonreducing position. Galactose-terminal glycoproteins are not bound. Binding of radiolabeled ligands to cells is nearly completely impaired by the presence of an excess of yeast mannan. Binding is temperature sensitive and proceeds optimally at pH 7.0. Prior treatment of the cells with trypsin severely decreases their capacity to bind ligands. An inhibition assay has been developed, using radioiodinated glucose-albumin conjugate, agalacto-orosomucoid,
beta-glucuronidase
, and RNase B as ligands. Various glycoproteins have been shown to be effective inhibitors of ligand binding including horseradish peroxidase, agalacto-orosomucoid,
beta-glucuronidase
, ovalbumin, agalacto-fetuin, and RNase B. RNase A and asialo-fetuin are ineffective as antagonists. The results suggest the presence of a cell surface receptor on alveolar macrophages that binds glycoproteins having terminal sugars with the mannose or glucose configuration.
...
PMID:Evidence for receptor-mediated binding of glycoproteins, glycoconjugates, and lysosomal glycosidases by alveolar macrophages. 27 29
The binding of 22 human liver hydrolase activities by immobilized lectins of six different carbohydrate specificities, namely alpha-D-mannose (glucose), D-
N-acetylglucosamine
, D-N-acetylgalactosamine, L-fucose, alpha-D-galactose and beta-D-galactose, were examined. Differences in binding among these enzymes and within specific enzymes were observed. For example, the neutral forms of alpha-mannosidase and beta-xylosidase were bound by the Ulex europaeus lectin I (specific for L-fucose), whereas the acidic forms were not. Bandierea simplicifolia lectin (specific for alpha-galactose) bound 65% of
beta-glucuronidase
activity; recycling experiments demonstrated complete binding of the enzyme that had been eluted with the competitor D-galactose and no binding of the fraction that was not initially bound. These results suggested the presence of two forms of this enzyme. Similar data were obtained for acidic beta-galactosidase activity. These experiments may provide the basis for the expanded use of immobilized lectins for purification and characterization of hydrolases and other glycoproteins.
...
PMID:Binding of human liver hydrolases by immobilized lectins. 42 66
Oligomers of hyaluronic acid were prepared by digestion of hyaluronic acid from rooster combs with testicular hyaluronidase (hyaluronate 4-glycanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.35), leech head hyaluronidase (hyaluronate 3-glycanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.36), and with fungal hyaluronidase (hyaluronate lyase from Streptomyces hyalurolyticus). The oligomers were fractionated by gel permeation, using Sephadex G-50. Oligomers isolated after incubation of the hyaluronic acid with the testicular hyaluronidase were further modified. To prepare oligomers with
N-acetylglucosamine
at both ends, terminal nonreducing glucuronic acid residues were removed with
beta-glucuronidase
. Reducing terminal
N-acetylglucosamine
residues were removed by reaction under mildly alkaline conditions. The reducing terminal
N-acetylglucosamine
residues were also reduced with sodium borohydride to form N-acetylglucosaminitol. The potentials of the various oligosaccharides to bind to the proteoglycan from bovine nasal septum cartilage were estimated by determining their effectiveness as inhibitors of the proteoglycan-hyaluronate interaction. The present study shows that, to bind maximally to the proteoglycan, the hyaluronate oligosaccharide must be at least 10 sugar residues in length and be terminated at the nonreducing and reducing ends with a glucuronate residue and an
N-acetylglucosamine
residue, respectively. Sugar residues extended beyond this basic decasaccharide, do not interact with the hyaluronate binding site on the proteoglycan.
...
PMID:Interactions of cartilage proteoglycans with hyaluronate. Inhibition of the interaction by modified oligomers of hyaluronate. 43 8
Electron microscope autoradiography was used to study the cellular localization of seven glycoproteins rapidly cleared from the circulating plasma of rats and taken up by the liver. 1 and 15 min after intravenous administration of the 125I-glycoproteins, livers were fixed in situ by perfusion and processed for autoradiography. Autoradiographic grains in the developed sections were found to represent the intact 125I-ligand. A quantitative analysis of the distribution and concentration (density) of autoradiographic grains over the three major cell types of the liver was then performed. Three molecules, asialo-fetuin, asialo-orosomucoid, and lactosaminated RNase A dimer, the oligosaccharide chains of which terminate in galactose residues, were bound and internalized almost exclusively (greater than 90%) by hepatocytes. Conversely, four molecules, the oligosaccharide chains of which terminate in either N-acetyl-glucosamine (agalacto-orosomucoid) or mannose (ahexosamino-orosomucoid, preputial
beta-glucuronidase
, and mannobiosaminated RNase A dimer), were specifically bound and internalized by cells lining the blood sinusoids--that is, by Kupffer cells and endothelial cells. Endothelial cells were two to six times more active (on a cell volume basis) than were Kupffer cells in the internalization of these four 125I-ligands. Mannose and
N-acetylglucosamine
-terminated glycoproteins competed with each other for uptake into either endothelial cells or Kupffer cells, indicating that a single system recognized mannose or N-acetyl-glucosamine residues. Finally, agalacto-orosomucoid and ahexosamino-orosomucoid were also associated with hepatocytes, but competition experiments utilizing excess asialo-orosomucoid demonstrated that residual galactosyl residues were responsible for this association.
...
PMID:An electron microscope autoradiographic study of the carbohydrate recognition systems in rat liver. I. Distribution of 125I-ligands among the liver cell types. 51 41
Electron microscope autoradiographic and biochemical methods were used to study the intracellular fates of several 125I-glycoproteins, known to be specifically bound and internalized by the different cell types in the liver. At the earliest times examined (1--2 min), 125I-glycoproteins (ASGP) were localized predominantly along the sinusoidal front of hepatocytes. Analysis of the distribution of autoradiographic grains indicated that: (a) approximately 40--60% of the 125I-ligand could be ascribed to the plasmalemma; (b) a significant fraction had already been internalized; yet (c) very little 125I-ligand was present in the lysosome-Golgi region. Between 4 and 15 min after administration of 125I-ASGPs, there was a dramatic redistribution of autoradiographic grains from regions of the plasmalemma and peripheral cytoplasm (30% decrease) to the lysosome-Golgi region (30% increase). At longer times (30 min), there was continued drainage of 125I-ASGP into this region. The grain density over secondary lysosomes was 60--90 times higher than that over recognizable Golgi elements, clearly indicating that lysosomes were the ultimate destination of the 125I-ASGP. However, no more than 60% of the total 125I-ligand could be localized to lysosome-rich regions of the hepatocyte, with the remaining 40% primarily in the intermediate cytoplasm. Biochemical evidence for proteolysis of the internalized 125I-ASGP (presumably within lysosomes) was obtained when [125I]-mono-iodotyrosine was found in the liver (i.e., hepatocytes) at times later than 15 min. The temporal redistribution observed for mannose and
N-acetylglucosamine
-terminated glycoproteins (ahexosamino-orosomucoid and agalacto-orosomucoid, respectively) in endothelial cells indicated that the 125I-ligands resided in macropinocytic vesicles (1--15 min) before their ultimate residence in dense bodies (15 min). The same 125I-ligands were also localized to structures resembling secondary lysosomes in Kupffer cells. The lysosomal nature of "these organelles" was implied from the appearance of [125I]mono-iodotyrosine in the liver at later times. 125I-
beta-glucuronidase
followed the same intracellular pathway in both cell types but was not degraded.
...
PMID:An electron microscope autoradiographic study of the carbohydrate recognition systems in rat liver. II. Intracellular fates of the 125I-ligands. 51 42
1. Incubation of rabbit tracheal explants with N-[(3)H]acetyl-d-glucosamine and N-acetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine led to labelling of a number of soluble macromolecular products separable from the medium, after papain digestion, by ion-exchange chromatography. 2. With N-acetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine in the incubation medium, a neutral glycoprotein, two acidic glycoprotein fractions, hyaluronic acid and a glycosaminoglycan fraction were obtained and all were radioactively labelled. Similar labelling occurred with N-fluoroacetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine or N-fluoro[(3)H]acetylglucosamine as precursor. 3. Maximal labelling was obtained at 96h after incubation of cultures. N-Fluoroacetyl-glucosamine under these conditions was incorporated into hyaluronate less efficiently than
N-acetylglucosamine
. 4. With N-fluoroacetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine as precursor, a hyaluronate component was separated that on enzymic degradation by glycosidases (hyaluronidase,
beta-glucuronidase
and N-acetyl-beta-hexosaminidase) yielded a (14)C-labelled oligosaccharide fraction together with N-acetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine and N-fluoroacetyl-d-[1-(14)C]glucosamine, consistent with some exchange of N-acetyl groups having occurred. 5. The results on enzymic degradation of labelled macromolecules by glycosidases suggest that the presence of incorporated N-fluoroacetyl side chains may render the hyaluronate analogue more resistant to hyaluronidase.
...
PMID:Incorporation of N-fluoroacetyl-D-glucosamine into hyaluronate by rabbit tracheal explants in organ culture. 51 60
Glycoproteins having mannose and/or
N-acetylglucosamine
in the terminal non-reducing position [Stockert, Morell & Scheinberg (1976) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 68, 988--993], and various lysosomal enzymes [Stahl, Schlesinger, Rodman & Doebber (1976) Nature (London) 264, 86--8] are rapidly cleared from plasma by the liver after intravenous administration. A liver cell-separation technique was used to determine the cellular localization of 125I-labelled
beta-glucuronidase
, ribonuclease B, agalacto-orosomucoid and asialo-orosomucoid. On a specific readioactivity basis, all ligands except 125I-labelled asialo-orosomucoid were enriched in the non-parenchymal cell fraction. Isolated cells, fixed and stained for
beta-glucuronidase
or N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase activity after intravenous injection of the enzymes, showed enrichment in the non-parenchymal cell fraction (probably Kupffer cells). After uptake by the non-parenchymal cells, liver lysosomal
beta-glucuronidase
and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase showed degradation half-times of 2.2 and 0.4 days respectively.
...
PMID:Plasma clearance of glycoproteins with terminal mannose and N-acetylglucosamine by liver non-parenchymal cells. Studies with beta-glucuronidase, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, ribonuclease B and agalacto-orosomucoid. 72 98
Normal
N-acetylglucosamine
1-phosphotransferase activity toward mono- and oligosaccharide acceptor substrates was detected in cultured skin fibroblasts from mucolipidoses II and III patients who were designated as variants (one of four mucolipidosis II and three out of six mucolipidosis III patients examined). The activity toward natural lysosomal protein acceptors was absent or deficient in cell preparations from all patients with classical as well as variant forms of mucolipidoses II and III. Complementation analysis, using fused and cocultivated mutant fibroblast combinations, revealed that, while cell lines with variant mucolipidosis III constituted a complementation group distinct from that of classical forms of mucolipidoses II and III, the variant mucolipidosis II cell line belonged to the same complementation group as did the classical forms. In contrast to the mutant enzyme from variant mucolipidosis III patients that failed to recognize lysosomal proteins as the specific acceptor substrates, the activity toward alpha-methylmannoside in the variant mucolipidosis II patient could be inhibited by exogenous lysosomal enzyme preparations (bovine
beta-glucuronidase
and human hexosaminidase A). These findings suggest that
N-acetylglucosamine
1-phosphotransferase is composed of at least two distinct polypeptides: (1) a recognition subunit that is defective in the mucolipidosis III variants and (2) a catalytic subunit that is deficient or altered in the classical forms of mucolipidoses II and III as well as in the mucolipidosis II variant.
...
PMID:Mucolipidoses II and III variants with normal N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphotransferase activity toward alpha-methylmannoside are due to nonallelic mutations. 130 24
The purification of rat liver
beta-glucuronidase
from a lysosomal fraction by methods including affinity chromatography, chromatofocusing and preparative PAGE steps is described. Molecular weights of 300,000 and 150,000 were estimated by two dimensional gradient PAGE/immunoelectrophoresis of the lysosomal extract. Isoelectrofocusing in agarose gel followed by immunoelectrophoresis in the second dimension revealed the presence of at least five maxima in the range pH 4.3-7.4. The structural assessment of the carbohydrate chains of lysosomal and microsomal
beta-glucuronidase
was performed by lectin affinity immunoelectrophoresis. Reaction with Concanavalin A indicated the presence of bi-antennary complex, oligomannosidic and hybrid type structures, whereas the absence of tri- and tetra-antennary complex type structures was deduced from the lack of interaction with phytohemagglutinin-L. The reaction with Lens culinaris agglutinin, Pisum sativum agglutinin and Lotus tetragonolobus lectin revealed that part of the glycans contained a fucose alpha(1-6)-linked to the
N-acetylglucosamine
attached to asparagine. The presence of terminal beta(1-4)-galactose residues was detected with Ricinus communis agglutinin I.
...
PMID:Purification of beta-glucuronidase and structural assessment of the carbohydrate chains by lectin affinity immunoelectrophoresis. 184 76
Adherent cultures of rat peritoneal macrophages secrete lysozyme and the lysosomal marker enzymes
beta-glucuronidase
, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and acid phosphatase; the levels of secreted lysosomal cathepsin D, however, were found to be insignificant. Incubation of the cells at 4 degrees C for 15 min with yeast mannan or with 50 mM mannose, methyl alpha-glucopyranoside, or
N-acetylglucosamine
caused the concentration of cathepsin D in the culture medium to increase 30-40-fold; mannose-6-phosphate had no effect. 125I-labeled cathepsin D was prepared and the binding constant to the macrophage cell surface was determined to be KD = 27 nM. The data suggest that cathepsin D binds to the mannose receptor of macrophages and that binding to this receptor is not in equilibrium with the bulk medium.
...
PMID:Binding of cathepsin D to the mannose receptor on rat peritoneal macrophages. 193 26
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