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)

An inhibitor of myeloperoxidase has been identified in the synovial fluids and sera from patients with rheumatoid arthritis and sera from normal subjects. Initially, these fluids were found to inhibit stimulus induced degranulation of polymorphonuclear leucocytes independently of the stimulating agent. Subsequently, the fluids were shown to inhibit the released enzyme rather than the degranulation response of polymorphonuclear leucocytes. Both rheumatoid and normal serum samples contained high concentrations of the inhibitor but the concentrations were lower in rheumatoid synovial fluids. The inhibitory activity seemed to be specific for peroxidase as the fluids did not inhibit beta-glucuronidase activity. A protein of relative molecular mass (Mr) 150 kd was purified from synovial fluid by affinity chromatography on myeloperoxidase-Sepharose. It is concluded that serum and synovial fluid contain a novel myeloperoxidase inhibitor, which acts by binding to myeloperoxidase and thereby prevents myeloperoxidase releasing oxidative products in serum.
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PMID:Inhibition of myeloperoxidase by synovial fluid and serum. 164 55

Granule laden astrocytes exhibiting an affinity for chrome alum hematoxylin and aldehyde fuchsin (Gomori stains) have been described in the periventricular brain of all terrestrial vertebrate species examined to date including humans. The astrocytic inclusions are rich in sulfhydryl groups, emit an orange-red autofluorescence, and stain intensely with diaminobenzidine, a marker of endogenous peroxidase activity. The distinct autofluorescence pattern and the absence of neutral lipid, acid phosphatase, and beta-glucuronidase activity exclude lipofuscin or lysosomes as components of these astrocytic granules. The emission of orange-red autofluorescence and the nonenzymatic nature of the peroxidase activity implicate the presence of porphyrins and metalloporphyrins such as heme as major constituents of these cytoplasmic gliosomes. The role of Gomori-positive astrocytes under normal and pathologic conditions is incompletely understood. In vivo, numbers of astrocytic granules increase as a function of advancing age, in response to chronic estrogen stimulation, and following X-irradiation. In vitro, these cells accumulate with increasing time in culture and following exposure to the sulfhydryl agent, cysteamine. Gomori-positive astrocytes may supply heme to neurons for the synthesis of cytochromes, catalases, and other heme enzymes. They may play a role in photostimulation of sexual cyclicity, the promotion of neuritic development, the degradation of toxic lipoperoxides, and the metabolism of various neurotransmitters. Conversely, these cells may contribute to the pathogenesis of several neurologic and neuroendocrine disorders. Examples of the latter include a) augmentation of goldthioglucose neurotoxicity, b) induction of hypothalamic anovulation and reproductive failure, c) exacerbation of porphyric encephalopathy, and d) potentiation of parkinsonism and other free radical-related neurodegenerations.
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PMID:Gomori-positive astrocytes: biological properties and implications for neurologic and neuroendocrine disorders. 171 59

The paper presents the importance of cytochemical research in the diagnostics of thyroid gland diseases. It is considered that this research usefully supplements the standard cytodiagnostics of the thyroid, especially in clarifying functional and morphological changes in goiter. Given are the basic principals of cytochemical analyses as well as the valuing, in other words, the quantification of cytochemical results. The following methods are more closely described: PAS, alpha-naphthilacetate esterase, naphthol AS-D acetate esterase, peroxidase, beta-glucuronidase and alkaline phosphatase.
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PMID:[Cytochemical study of the thyroid gland]. 187 Apr 67

The peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, beta-glucuronidase and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase activity was assessed using a semiquantitative cytochemical methods in peripheral blood neutrophils from 10 maintenance haemodialysed patients treated with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHu EPO) due to severe anaemia. The examination was performed immediately prior to rHu EPO treatment, after 10 weeks and 32 weeks of therapy. A statistically significant increase in the beta-glucuronidase and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase activity was observed after 10 weeks, while all the enzymes studied except peroxidase showed a significant elevation of their activity after 32 weeks of the treatment as compared with the values obtained prior to therapy.
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PMID:[Activity of selected neutrophil enzymes of patients maintained on hemodialysis and treated with erythropoietin (rHu EPO)]. 189 3

The activity of some glycosidases, trypsin-like proteinases, peroxidase, inhibitors of beta-glucuronidase and trypsin-like proteinases, as well as the amount of thiocyanates were studied in mixed saliva (MS), dental deposit (DD) and gums (G) of patients with inflammation of the periodontium. In periodontitis the activity of beta-glucuronidase increases fourfold and that of beta-galactosidase doubles in the G; the activity of beta-glucuronidase and its inhibitors increases, the activity of proteinases diminishes, and the antitryptic activity increases in MS, the activity of peroxidase and the amount of thiocyanates change in this case. Along with the peroxidase-H2O2-thiocyanates system, the inhibitors of beta-glucuronidase and trypsin-like proteinases possess properties of unspecific protection, preventing destruction of the periodontal tissues by glycosides and proteinases of microbial and animal origin.
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PMID:[Enzymatic protective systems of saliva in inflammation of the periodontium]. 205 29

Ovine neutrophils were isolated and characterised by their morphology, biochemical and functional responses. Two major granule types were observed, peroxidase positive and peroxidase negative, which were identified as the ovine equivalent of the human azurophil and specific granules respectively. A third type of granule identified, which was present at low frequency and was peroxidase negative, was possibly the ovine equivalent of the bovine large granule. Superoxide production following stimulation with PMA, A23187, PAF, ConA and opsonized zymosan (ZC), was 20-50% less, compared to bovine and human neutrophils. Coincubation of PMA with either PAF or A23187 enhanced superoxide production by 4 to 5 fold above that of the latter stimulants alone. The amount of beta-glucuronidase was similar to, while myeloperoxidase was more than twice that found in bovine neutrophils. Vitamin B12 binding protein was found in very small amounts, compared to that of bovine or human neutrophils. It was observed that coincubation of PMA with PAF, or A23187 resulted in an inhibition of beta-glucuronidase secretion and an enhancement of myeloperoxidase secretion, respectively. Phagocytic capability of ovine neutrophils was found to be optimal at a neutrophil to ZC ratio of 1:10, and which corresponded with an enhanced myeloperoxidase secretion.
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PMID:Functional and biochemical properties of ovine neutrophils. 233 92

Female BALB/cJ (resistant), C3H/HeJ (intermediate resistant), and C3H/HeDub (susceptible) inbred mice, 4-5 wk old, were infected with Taenia taeniaeformis. Liver sections were stained for the enzymes acid phosphatase, beta-glucuronidase, and peroxidase. Eosinophils present around the parasite were identified by the ethanolic Congo red method. Possible gross changes in lipid metabolism in the hepatocytes surrounding the parasite were investigated with the Sudan black B method. The results of observations made by light microscopy were: (1) beta-glucuronidase activity above background levels was observed only in the hepatocytes around the parasite in BALB/cJ mice at 4, 5, and 6 days postinfection (PI); no reaction was observed in the other 2 strains of mice studied; (2) acid phosphatase activity was very strong at 2, 3, and 4 in the 3 strains of mice while this reactivity was weak at 5 and 6 days PI; (3) the cytoplasm of the hepatocytes around the metacestode stained more heavily with Sudan black B than other hepatocytes; and (4) the presence of eosinophils appearing at 3 days PI around the parasite in all 3 strains of mice was demonstrated by staining with Sudan black B, the substrate of peroxidase, and Congo red. Infected C3H/HeJ and BALB/cJ mice had higher numbers of liver eosinophils than infected C3H/HeDub mice throughout the observation time. The present results suggest 2 conclusions: (1) a parasite-liver interaction occurs as is evident by hepatocyte changes in beta-glucuronidase activity and Sudan black B staining, and (2) resistance to the early stages of T. taeniaeformis is associated with the appearance of eosinophils.
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PMID:Taenia taeniaeformis: early inflammatory response around developing metacestodes in the liver of resistant and susceptible mice II. Histochemistry and cytochemistry. 244 33

Beta-glucuronidase and N-AS-D-chloroacetate esterase cytochemistry have been applied to rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells. Both staining procedures allowed a clear-cut differentiation of either cell type. Kupffer cells which had been stained with beta-glucuronidase showed a positive reaction, whereas sinusoidal endothelial cells were completely negative. If the chloroacetate reaction was used, the former stained diffusely while the latter showed a characteristic granular staining pattern. Identity and purity of sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells was validated by transmission and scanning electron microscopy as well as by the pattern of released eicosanoids which is characteristic for either cell type. These two staining techniques are a valuable addition to the peroxidase reaction commonly applied for differentiation.
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PMID:Beta-glucuronidase and chloroacetate-esterase staining discriminates rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells from Kupffer cells in primary culture. 245 75

Activity of acid phosphatase (AP), beta-glucuronidase (GR), N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (GZ), and peroxidase (P) was assessed using a semiquantitative cytochemical method in peritoneal macrophages of 30 patients with end-stage renal failure treated by intermittent peritoneal dialysis and of 30 control patients with normal renal function. The dialysed patients showed a significantly higher activity of GR and P at the beginning of the treatment as compared with the respective activities observed in the control group and a further significant rise of these activities after 4 months of dialysis. Activity of AP at the beginning of the treatment was insignificantly lower than in the control group and the difference became significant at the end of the investigated period. There was no significant difference between the dialysed patients and the control group in the activity of GZ assessed at the beginning of the dialytic treatment and after 4 months of dialysis. A significant decrease in that activity was, however, observed in the course of dialysis.
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PMID:Changes in activity of selected lysosomal enzymes in peritoneal macrophages of renal failure patients on peritoneal dialysis. 256 1

In order to investigate the availability and release of enzymes from eosinophilic granulocytes in response to a variety of stimuli, guinea pig peritoneal eosinophils were obtained after repeated intraperitoneal injections of freeze-dried Trichinella spiralis larvae. The activities of the enzymes peroxidase, arylsulfatase B, beta-glucuronidase, aminopeptidase, histaminase, cytochrome c oxidase, acid phosphatase, adenosine triphosphatase and glucose 6-phosphatase, and the major basic protein (MBP) were studied histochemically and, in part, also biochemically. Eosinophils were incubated with the following substances: histamine, platelet activating factor, calcium ionophore, compound 48/80, leukotriene B4, prostaglandins E1, and E2, heparin, and eosinophil-chemotactic factors from neutrophils and lymphocytes. Eosinophils displayed a selective and stimulus-dependent enzyme and MBP reaction. Calcium ionophore and compound 48/80 provoked a release of cytotoxic major basic protein, partly associated with peroxidase release, while leukotriene B4 and eosinophil chemotactic factors caused histaminase and peroxidase release and activated leucinaminopeptidase. Heparin and calcium ionophore induced release of both MBP and histaminase. These data support the concept that eosinophils exhibit either inflammatory or cytotoxic, or antiinflammatory properties upon stimulation by various agents.
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PMID:Activation and release of enzymes and major basic protein from guinea pig eosinophil granulocytes induced by different inflammatory stimuli and other substances. A histochemical, biochemical, and electron microscopic study. 275 82


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