Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.36 (
hyaluronidase
)
4,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During skin penetration, infective hookworm larvae encounter hyaluronic acid as they migrate between epidermal keratinocytes and through the ground substance of the dermis. A
hyaluronidase
would facilitate passage through the epidermis and dermis during larval invasion. Zoonotic hookworm larvae of the genus Ancylostoma were shown to contain a
hyaluronidase
activity that migrated on modified sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) hyaluronic acid gels with an apparent Mr of 49,000. A second form with an Mr of 87,000 was also identified. The major etiologic agent of cutaneous larva migrans, A. braziliense, was shown to have the greatest enzyme activity, hydrolyzing up to 3.3 micrograms of hyaluronic acid per h per micrograms of total parasite protein at pH 6.0, whereas A. caninum and A. tubaeforme each had much less enzyme activity. The differences in enzyme activities between species correlated with differences in the intensities of the lytic zones at 49 and 87 kDa on SDS-PAGE hyaluronic acid gels. Hookworm
hyaluronidase
activity exhibited a broad pH optimum between 6.0 and 8.0 and did not hydrolyze chondroitin sulfate, two features that suggest that the hookworm enzyme is more like the invertebrate leech
hyaluronidase
than mammalian testicular or lysosomal hyaluronidase. Larvae of A. braziliense were shown to release
hyaluronidase
activity and degrade radiolabeled hyaluronic acid in vitro.
Gold sodium thiomalate
was identified as an enzyme inhibitor. The
hyaluronidase
is the second major virulence factor that we have identified from infective hookworm larvae.
...
PMID:Hyaluronidase from infective Ancylostoma hookworm larvae and its possible function as a virulence factor in tissue invasion and in cutaneous larva migrans. 154 16
Sodium aurothiomalate
, a low molecular weight inhibitor of
hyaluronidase
, blocked in-vitro fertilization in hamsters at the level of the zona pellucida: concentrations of 25-250 micrograms inhibitor/ml prevented fertilization of cumulus-intact and cumulus-denuded eggs. Fertilization of zona-free ova was not affected. In-vivo fertilization was also reduced (from 100% controls to 37.5%) by 10 mg inhibitor/ml added to an epididymal sperm suspension before artificial insemination into the uterus. These findings suggest that
hyaluronidase
may play a role in zona penetration or that sodium aurothiomalate blocks sperm penetration of the zona by inhibiting an enzyme(s) other than
hyaluronidase
.
...
PMID:Inhibition of fertilization in the hamster by sodium aurothiomalate, a hyaluronidase inhibitor. 677 82