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)

Cytochemical methods for the demonstration of enzyme activities in blood and bone marrow cells were systematically improved by the addition of an inert polymer, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), to the incubation medium and by using optimized reaction media. The methods investigated were tetrazolium salt methods for lactate, glucose-6-phosphate, succinate and glutamate dehydrogenase, the indoxyl-tetrazolium salt method for alkaline phosphatase, the diaminobenzidine method for peroxidase, and diazonium salt methods for chloroacetate esterase, beta-glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, acid phosphatase, and dipeptidylpeptidase II and IV. PVA in the media preserved the morphology of cells very well and prevented leakage of large molecules such as enzymes from the cells. Therefore, fixation or long periods of air-drying prior to incubation leading to substantial loss of enzyme activity could be avoided. A brief period of drying (2 min at 37 degrees C) of the cell preparations just before the incubation was sufficient for making the cells permeable. Localization of enzyme activities was very precise and precipitation of the final reaction product was confined to sites which are known to contain the enzyme under study (granules, mitochondria, lysosomes). These advantages advocate the use of PVA in haematological enzyme cytochemistry and especially for diagnosis of leukemia.
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PMID:Enzyme cytochemistry of unfixed leukocytes and bone marrow cells using polyvinyl alcohol for the diagnosis of leukemia. 280 89

The biosynthesis of myeloperoxidase in human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 cells was studied by pulse-chase and immunoprecipitation methods and separation of subcellular organelles using Percoll density gradient fractionation. These studies revealed that in control and monensin (1 microM) treated cells, more than 85% of the total immunoprecipitable radiolabeled myeloperoxidase was present predominantly in precursor form (Mr 91,000) and resided in lower density compartments after an initial 3-h labeling period. Using biochemical and ultrastructural techniques, the lower density regions of the gradient were found to contain elements of the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi complex. Following a 16-h chase period, about 70% of the radiolabeled myeloperoxidase in untreated cells was found predominantly in denser regions of the gradient and was present mainly in the form of the mature large subunit (Mr 63,000). These dense regions were shown to contain azurophilic granules by means of the distribution of beta-glucuronidase and myeloperoxidase activities and by electron microscopy. Processing of myeloperoxidase and its deposition into dense granules were blocked by monensin treatment. Following a 16-h chase period in the presence of monensin, approximately 80% of the radiolabeled myeloperoxidase continued to reside in lower density compartments and was predominantly in precursor (Mr 91,000) and intermediate (Mr 81,000 and 74,000) forms. Only about 10% of the radiolabeled myeloperoxidase was associated with dense azurophilic granules. Monensin treatment produced large, Golgi-derived vacuoles which were isolated using Percoll density centrifugation and identified by electron microscopy. These vacuoles were found to be essentially devoid of peroxidase activity and pulse-labeled, newly synthesized radiolabeled myeloperoxidase species. The effects of monensin on transport and processing were reversible after a 3-h exposure and 16-h chase period in the absence of monensin. Taken together, these data indicate that maturation of myeloperoxidase is closely linked to its deposition into dense azurophilic granules via a monensin-sensitive process(es). The lower density compartments within which immature myeloperoxidase species accumulate in the presence of monensin appear to be functionally related to or associated with Golgi or endoplasmic reticulum structures distinct from the large monensin-induced vacuoles.
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PMID:Biochemical and ultrastructural effects of monensin on the processing, intracellular transport, and packaging of myeloperoxidase into low and high density compartments of human leukemia (HL-60) cells. 282 13

Within 1 min of stimulation of human neutrophils by the chemotactic peptide (N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine) plus cytochalasin B, myeloperoxidase (together with other granule enzymes) was secreted and detected extracellularly. In contrast with the other granule constituents assayed (vitamin B12-binding protein and beta-glucuronidase), the activity of released myeloperoxidase rapidly decreased, so that, by 10 min after stimulation, only about 5% of the total cellular activity was detected. This inactivation was shown to be dependent on oxidant generation during the respiratory burst, since inactivation was not observed (a) after stimulation of anaerobic suspensions or (b) after release from neutrophils from a patient with chronic granulomatous disease; purified myeloperoxidase was rapidly inactivated after incubation with H2O2, presumably owing to the formation of an inactive enzyme-H2O2 complex. These results show that experiments designed to assess the role of myeloperoxidase in neutrophil functions which utilize assays based on peroxidase activity will grossly underestimate this enzyme if oxidant generation during the respiratory burst has also been activated.
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PMID:Oxidative inactivation of myeloperoxidase released from human neutrophils. 282 34

Coordinated observation of various factors in the inflammatory system and their relations shows that the levels of proamidase in granuloma pouch fluid in carrageenin-induced inflammation increase during the healing process whereas the proamidase shows (1) remarkably low values in rats injected with high doses of carrageenin, (2) low values in the earlier stages of inflammation with tissue damage (high values of fluid lipid peroxide and lactate dehydrogenase) and with phagocytosis (high values of fluid peroxidase and beta-glucuronidase), and (3) high values in the later stages where wound healing is progressing (high values of protein in plasma, fluid and granuloma pouch tissue and low values of fluid volume, fluid peroxidase, beta-glucuronidase and pouch tissue weight). In short, proamidase shows low values in the stage of tissue damage and constantly increasing values during the process of healing. Thus the measurement of proamidase, which reflects the degree of wound healing, provides an important parameter for a broad, coordinated observation of the inflammatory process, and may enable the management of inflammation.
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PMID:Management of inflammation: proamidase as a parameter for a better understanding of inflammatory processes. 298

Basophilic granulocytes were purified from the blood of normal individuals by successive isopyknic centrifugation and elutriation centrifugation. Starting with the leukocyte-rich fraction of 500 ml of blood, we recovered 31 to 80% (mean 51%, n = 20) of the basophils in 45 to 87% purity (mean 69%, n = 23). The contaminating cells were mainly lymphocytes. The basophils were greater than 98% vital (exclusion of ethidium bromide and hydrolysis of fluorescein diacetate). The histamine content of the basophils was 1.1 to 2 pg/cell (mean 1.6 pg/cell, n = 22). With anti-IgE, 30 to 50% of the histamine was released; with phorbol myristic acetate (PMA) or the calcium ionophore A23187, 70 to 100% of the histamine was released. Serum-opsonized zymosan (STZ) did not induce histamine release. Reactions with monoclonal antibodies revealed that the basophils expressed the C3bi receptor (CR3) and the leukocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA1), but not the gp 150,95 antigen, the C3b receptor (CR1), or the low avidity Fc gamma receptor. Basophils carry class I but not class II HLA antigens. During incubation of the basophils with serum-opsonized Staphylococcus aureus or Escherichia coli, these bacteria were neither phagocytized nor killed. STZ, PMA, A23187, or anti-IgE did not initiate an "oxidative burst" in the basophils. This was tested with oxygen consumption, cytochrome c reduction, NBT reduction, chemiluminescence, and release of hydrogen peroxide. Moreover, we did not detect cytochrome b558, superoxide dismutase, catalase, or peroxidase in the basophils. Of the typical granule-associated enzymes lysozyme, Vitamin B12-binding protein, and beta-glucuronidase, only beta-glucuronidase was present in the basophils in detectable amounts. This enzyme was released, together with histamine, on incubation of the cells with PMA, A23187, or anti-IgE, but not with STZ. We conclude that basophils from normal human blood are not phagocytes and are probably not involved in the oxidative defense of the host against foreign antigens.
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PMID:Metabolic comparison between basophils and other leukocytes from human blood. 300 19

Previous studies on the fractionation of human neutrophil granules have identified two major populations: myeloperoxidase (MPO)-containing azurophil, or primary, granules and MPO-deficient specific, or secondary, granules. Peripheral blood neutrophils from individual donors were lysed in sucrose-free media by either hypotonic shock or nitrogen cavitation. Using a novel two-gradient Percoll density centrifugation system, the granule-rich postnuclear supernatant was rapidly (ten minutes) and reproducibly resolved into 13 granule fractions (L1 through L8 and H1 through H5). Granule flotation and recentrifugation experiments on both continuous, self-generated and multiple-step gradients using individual and mixed isolated fractions demonstrated that the banding patterns were isopycnic and nonartifactual. Isolated granules were intact based on the findings that biochemical latency of several granule enzymes was greater than 95%, and thin-sectioned electron micrographs demonstrated intact granule profiles. Biochemical analyses of the granule marker proteins MPO, beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme, and lactoferrin indicated that a number of the fractions were related to the major azurophil and specific granule populations. Lactoferrin was found in ten of 13 fractions (L1 through L8, H1 to H2), whereas MPO was found in every fraction. Consistent with these biochemical data, all fractions exhibited varying degrees of heterogeneity based on ultrastructural morphology and cytochemistry, including diaminobenzidine (DAB) reactivity for peroxidase and periodate-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) staining for complex glycoconjugates. A variable but significant percentage (23% to 70%) of the granules in fractions L1 through L8 and H1 and H2 showed DAB reactivity, while about 90% of the granules in fractions H3 through H5 were peroxidase positive. These results demonstrated that DAB-reactive granules spanned the entire range of granule size and density. Ultrastructural PA-TCH-SP staining of isolated granule fractions revealed patterns similar to those of granules in intact neutrophils at different stages of development. Granules from human acute promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60) exhibited a surprisingly low density compared with typical azurophil granules from normal, mature neutrophils. The data suggest that both functional and maturational differences contribute to granule heterogeneity, and provide a new practical and conceptual framework for further defining the phenomenon of neutrophil granule heterogeneity.
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PMID:High resolution of heterogeneity among human neutrophil granules: physical, biochemical, and ultrastructural properties of isolated fractions. 301 86

Defensins are a newly recognized class of small, cationic polypeptides that have in vitro microbicidal activity toward certain bacteria, fungi, and viruses. Human neutrophil granules were separated into 13 density fractions by using a high-resolution Percoll gradient centrifugation procedure, and the distribution of the three defensin polypeptides in these fractions was determined. Levels of defensins and several granule marker proteins were estimated in each fraction from relative staining intensities of bands following acid-urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of total acid-extractable proteins. These results were confirmed by enzyme immunoassay measurements of defensins and quantitative determinations of the typical azurophil granule components, myeloperoxidase, beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme, and elastase. The five higher density granule fractions (H1 through H5) contained fourfold higher relative amounts of defensins as compared with the eight lower density fractions (L1 through L8), accounting for approximately 50% of the total protein. In particular, fraction H5 was especially enriched in defensins but was relatively deficient in myeloperoxidase, beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme, and elastase. Ultrastructural morphology showed that fraction H5 contained the largest granules. Seventy percent of these granules exhibited electron-dense rims and electron-lucent central regions when stained with methanolic uranyl acetate-lead citrate, and 70% showed this same characteristic rim-staining pattern after limited reaction (30 minutes) for peroxidase with diaminobenzidine. These distinctively large, rim-stained granules were identified in intact, mature peripheral blood neutrophils as well as in human bone marrow promyelocytes, indicating that their synthesis occurs during early myeloid development. This unusual granule type may play a specialized role in the microbicidal functions of the neutrophil, distinct from that of typical azurophil granules.
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PMID:Defensin-rich dense granules of human neutrophils. 304 Jan 55

Five out of eight consecutive cases with initial symptoms of a 'midline granuloma' were identified as malignant histiocytosis (histiocytic sarcoma) which within 5 months to 4 years led to generalization and death. The three remaining cases also fulfilled the morphological criteria of this type of neoplasia, though these patients are still alive 1/2 to 8 years after diagnosis, possibly as a result of local radiotherapy. The age of the individuals ranged from 18 to 71 years and there was a male preponderance of 7:1. The histiocytic nature of the atypical cells was primarily documented by intense activity of NaF-inhibitable non-specific esterase, of acid phosphatase and of beta-glucuronidase as demonstrated in cryostat sections of formaldehyde-saccharose-fixed fresh biopsy specimens and by the detection of alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and lysozyme antigens, in that order of constancy (immunohistochemical examination of formaldehyde-fixed paraffin sections, using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method). There was among the reported cases a considerable heterogeneity with regard to these 'markers'. We conclude that malignant histiocytosis is a (the?) major cause of the 'midline granuloma syndrome'.
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PMID:Malignant histiocytosis (histiocytic sarcoma). A (the?) major cause of the 'midline granuloma syndrome'. 351 40

Composition of the aqueous phase of mammary secretions during the nonlactating and postpartum periods was determined in nine cows. Protein concentrations increased until several days before parturition and then declined precipitously. Lactose declined rapidly in early involution, remained low during the middle of the nonlactating period, and increased rapidly prepartum. The pH of secretions followed an inverse pattern to lactose and was negatively correlated with lactose during the nonlactating period but not the postpartum period. Peroxidase activity initially increased in secretions in early involution, then declined until parturition when peroxidase activity again increased. Activities of the glycosidic enzymes N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, and alpha-mannosidase increased through the nonlactating period until 2 to 3 wk prepartum, from which time all three enzyme activities declined through the postpartum period. The magnitude of increase in the glycosidases was not the same; peak activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase increased 20-fold over the activity at d 1 of involution, whereas beta-glucuronidase and alpha-mannosidase increased 4 to 5-fold over the same period.
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PMID:Mammary function during the nonlactating period: enzyme, lactose, protein concentrations, and pH of mammary secretions. 357 23

A microgranule fraction, isolated from human neutrophils by using a novel high-resolution Percoll density gradient system contained granules with the lowest density and diameter when compared with 12 other isopycnic granule fractions. Ultrastructurally, from 34% to 50% of the microgranules showed homogeneous diaminobenzidine (DAB) staining under conditions for localizing peroxidase reactivity. The presence of myeloperoxidase (MPO) was further confirmed by biochemical and spectral analysis and immunodiffusion methods. Periodate-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) intensely stained vicinal glycols in the matrix of greater than 97% microgranules in contrast to the weak or absent staining seen in larger primary granules. Directly sampled segmented neutrophils contained small DAB- and PA-TCH-SP-positive granules, which often appeared in clusters. These DAB-positive microgranules selectively remained within the cells after stimulation of exocytosis with the calcium ionophore A23187. The enriched DAB-positive microgranule fraction recovered from A23187-treated cells also contained lysozyme and beta-glucuronidase but lacked vitamin B12 binding protein activity. A similar small, DAB- and PA-TCH-SP-positive granule type was also identified in normal promyelocytes and was the predominant or only granule type observed in leukemic or preleukemic myeloid cells from four patients. This study demonstrates a unique subpopulation of MPO-containing microgranules in normal and leukemic human myeloid cells that are distinguished from (other) primary granules by their extremely low density, small size, content of complex carbohydrates, and resistance to secretion.
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PMID:Peroxidase-containing microgranules in human neutrophils: physical, morphological, cytochemical, and secretory properties. 366 48


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