Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.2.1.36 (
hyaluronidase
)
4,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to increase the value of the zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test, a comparatively simple and fast method using the fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 was developed. Human spermatozoa were washed and incubated 1 hr medium BWW for capacitation. Hamster oocytes were stripped of cumulus oophorus and zona pellucida with
hyaluronidase
and
trypsin
, washed and used immediately. Thirty oocytes were placed in a drop of BWW containing 3,5.10(6)/ml of human spermatozoa under mineral oil. The sperm-oocyte preparation was incubated for 3 hr at 37 degrees C, during the last 15 min of incubation, the fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 (H) was added and incubation was allowed to proceed until the incubation time was over. Observations showed that the female pronucleus, eccentrically placed, gives a bright green-bluish fluorescence whereas chromatin of sperm heads shows different stages of decondensation and also a bright fluorescence. This inexpensive method has given consistent results in a large number of cases and provides an additional new approach to the "penetration test" as a proof of the capacity to form a "male pronucleus".
...
PMID:The zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test: a simple procedure using a DNA fluorescent stain to detect the male pronucleus formation. 172 51
Oriented bovine lens capsules give X-ray diffraction patterns suggesting a considerable degree of order in the collagenous components, predominantly type IV collagen. Here we report the effects of preliminary treatment of lens capsules before orientation. Extraction with 4 M guanidinium hydrochloride or with heparinase/
hyaluronidase
reveals the same collagenous diffraction patterns previously seen after extraction with 1 M NaCl. There is a four-point pattern of d-spacing 3.9 nm, indicating liquid crystal cybotactic nematic organization, along with sharp streaked meridional reflections which index as orders of 21 nm. This suggests that the removal of basement membrane proteoglycans results in a reduction in diffuse scatter and clarification of the pattern. Extraction of the lens capsules with
trypsin
or dithiothreitol greatly reduces the intensity of the four-point pattern while leaving the meridional pattern unaffected. This strengthens the evidence that the 21 nm period has its origins in the collagen IV helix. Reduction in the four-point pattern could arise if disruption of non-helical NC1 domains or 7S overlap regions allows slippage of the collagen molecules on orientation, weakening the proposed 1 nm intermolecular stagger. Ultra-low angle diffraction patterns of extracted lens capsules show meridional reflections which index as a long-range axial repeat of approximately 95 nm. This is consistent with a model of microfibrils of type IV collagen in which the NC1 domains bind to the collagen helix at approximately 100 nm intervals, as has been previously suggested.
...
PMID:Short and long range order in basement membrane type IV collagen revealed by enzymic and chemical extraction. 177 28
Enzymes are often used for preparation of excitable tissues. The effects of papain,
trypsin
, pronase, collagenase and
hyaluronidase
on the photoreceptor function were studied by recording of scotopic PIII responses. Each enzyme treatment diminished the amplitudes of the PIII responses with a characteristic time course. The effects of papain, collagenase and
hyaluronidase
were at least partly reversible, while
trypsin
and pronase irreversibly reduced the amplitudes of the PIII responses.
...
PMID:Enzyme treatment of photoreceptors: effects on the scotopic PIII component of the frog electroretinogram. 196 26
A murine monoclonal antibody (E10) was made against cultured cartilage cells. The E10 antibody binding is localized to the surface of cultured cartilage cells in suspension and is present in the cytoplasm in paraffin embedded sections. There is no reactivity with cartilage matrix, or with the matrix of cartilaginous tumors. Reactivity is removed by treatment with
trypsin
and
hyaluronidase
, but not by treatment with heparinase, neuraminidase, and chondroitinase. Regeneration of E10 antigen after trypsinization takes 48 hours in chondrocytes in tissue culture. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of an E10 immune precipitate of cultured chondrocytes results in two peaks: one at a very high molecular weight and a small fragment at approximately 250 kd. Specificity has been demonstrated by cytofluorometry, immunofluorescence, and immunohistochemistry, in both frozen and paraffin-embedded tissues. Positive reactivity was seen in cultured cartilage cells, chondrocytes in fetal and adult cartilage, chondrosarcomas, and chordomas. Minimal reactivity was found in a chondromyxoid liposarcoma. Acinar cells of salivary and sweat glands and mast cells in various tissues and tumors were also positive. There was no reactivity with other tissues and tumors, including myxoid and mucinous tumors and epithelial tissues.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody to human cartilage cells and its reactivities to chondrocytic tumors. 206 41
The binding and internalization of endogenous growth hormone in Chang hepatoma cells were localized on the cell surface and in the Golgi-endoplasmic reticulum-lysosome (GERL) area by various indirect immunocytochemical labeling techniques, namely, peroxidase or colloidal gold conjugated to secondary antibody, and avidin-biotin complex methods. Rabbit antiserum and monoclonal antibodies raised against HPLC-purified porcine growth hormone were used in this study. In fixed material, antigen-antibody complexes were found to be homogeneously distributed along the cell membrane. Control groups showed negative binding on the cell surface. Trypsin treatment before immunolabeling removed antibody binding completely, but
hyaluronidase
was ineffective. Pretreatment of lectins did not block the recognition of primary antibody to antigen molecules on cell surface. Internalization of the antigen-antibody peroxidase or gold complexes was demonstrated in the cells, which were immunolabeled at 4 degrees C, and then reincubated for 0-30 min at 37 degrees C before fixation. After reincubation, the internalized ligand complexes were found in vesicles near the cell surface or in the GERL area near the Golgi apparatus which, however, did not label for peroxidase. These findings suggest that the
trypsin
-sensitive growth hormone, specifically bound and internalized into Chang hepatoma cells, is localized in the GERL instead of the Golgi apparatus and might be involved in the mechanism of tumor cell growth.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical demonstration of the binding and internalization of growth hormone in GERL of Chang hepatoma cells. 207 35
To maintain the hatchability of miracidia, pure worm eggs of S. mansoni were collected in great quantities from liver and spleen of experimentally infected mice. For this purpose, the tissue was digested with papain,
hyaluronidase
and
trypsin
. Worm eggs in the residue were separated from remaining host cells, tissue materials and dead eggs by using the sieving chamber (sieves 200 microns x 200 microns and 28 microns x 28 microns) and by density gradient centrifugation.
...
PMID:[Preparative representation of the living eggs of Schistosoma mansoni]. 212 71
Enzymes, which degrade elements of the extracellular environment, were studied for their actions upon stereocilia and their cross-linkages by scanning electron microscopy. Chondroitinase,
hyaluronidase
and keratanase, which attack carbohydrate moieties of the extracellular matrix, had little effect upon hair bundles. Collagenase and plasmin (fibrinolysin) also had only marginal effects. Elastase produced dramatic effects upon hair bundles. Both lateral and tip links were degraded resulting in separation and splaying of stereocilia. Many stereocilia showed no marked loss of rigidity, although some were bent or kinked. In general, inner hair cells were the most susceptible to elastase followed by row 3, row 2, row 1 of the outer hair cells. The proteolytic enzyme
trypsin
did not noticeably disrupt the hair bundles. Protease caused loss of rigidity and fracture of stereocilia resulting in considerable collapse of hair bundles. Crosslinkages between stereocilia were less noticeably degraded. These results indicate that both lateral and tip links of stereocilia comprise a proteinaceous moiety which could be elastin or some chemically related structure.
...
PMID:Action of elastase, collagenase and other enzymes upon linkages between stereocilia in the guinea-pig cochlea. 216 89
Separation and recombination experiments were made with manually or
trypsin
-dissociated dental papillae (day 15, 16, 17, 18 in utero and 2, 7, 14 postnatal) and manually isolated hard tissues of the third molar crown (14 postnatal days). Several series of hard tissues were further treated with citric acid,
hyaluronidase
or sodium hypochlorite. The recombinations were transplanted into the subcutaneous tissue of new-born mice. Grafts were removed 7, 14 and 21 days later and prepared for light and electron microscopy. Whatever the age of the papilla and whatever the treatment of the crowns, well-characterized odontoblasts differentiated and deposited new layers of tubular dentine, except when the recombined dental papilla was 15 days old. These findings indicate that odontoblasts are very early committed (since day 16 in utero) and that they may differentiate in dental papillae in contact with chemically altered dentinal matrices.
...
PMID:Differentiation of odontoblasts in mouse dental papillae recombined with normal or chemically-treated dentinal matrices. 228 4
We undertook an interdisciplinary biomechanical and biochemical study to explore the extent and manner in which the total pool of proteoglycans influences the kinetic and static behavior of bovine articular cartilage in tension. Two biomechanical tests were used: (a) the viscoelastic creep test and (b) a slow constant-rate uniaxial tension test; and two enzymatic proteoglycan extraction procedures were used: (a) chondroitinase ABC treatment and (b) a sequential enzymatic treatment with chondroitinase ABC,
trypsin
, and Streptomyces
hyaluronidase
. We found that the viscoelastic creep response of all cartilage specimens may be divided into two distinct phases: an initial phase (less than 15 s), characterized by a rapid increase in strain following load application, and a late phase (15 s less than or equal to t less than 25,000 s), characterized by a more gradual increase in strain. A major finding of this study is that the kinetics of the creep response is greatly influenced by the glycosaminoglycan content of the tissue. For untreated and control specimens, the initial response comprises about 50% of the total strain, while for chondroitinase ABC and sequentially extracted specimens, the initial response comprises up to 83% of the total strain. Furthermore, most untreated and control specimens did not reach equilibrium within the 25,000 s test period, while enzymatically digested specimens often reached equilibrium in less than 100 s. Thus, we conclude that through their physical restraints on collagen, the bulk of proteoglycan present in the tissue acts to retard fibrillar reorganization and alignment under tensile loading, thereby effectively preventing sudden extension of the collagen network. In contrast, the results of our slow constant-rate uniaxial tension experiment show that essentially complete extraction of proteoglycan glycosaminoglycans does not affect the intrinsic tensile stiffness and strength of cartilage specimens or the collagen network in a significant manner. Hence, an important function of the bulk proteoglycans (i.e., the large aggregating type) in cartilage is to retard the rate of stretch and alignment when a tensile load is suddenly applied. This mechanism may be useful in protecting the cartilage collagen network during physiological situations, where sudden impact forces are imposed on a joint.
...
PMID:Effects of proteoglycan extraction on the tensile behavior of articular cartilage. 232 54
Interactions between macrophages and articular surfaces were studied in an in vitro model which has been described before. Either stimulated peritoneal macrophages or a purified population of bone marrow macrophages were incubated with mice femoral heads which were either untreated or were digested with collagenase,
trypsin
or
hyaluronidase
prior to incubation. Scanning electron microscopy (EM) examination showed that macrophages attached to the surface and in their vicinity tags and fibers were visible. Transmission EM was used after labeling the surfaces with cationized ferritin employed as a sensitive marker to define the integrity of the articular surface. Alterations of the surface of various degrees of intensity were seen in all the sections examined. No adhering macrophages were found, due probably to detachment of cells during tissue processing for transmission EM. Attachment of macrophages to the surface and alterations of the latter were seen also when hyaluronic acid was added to the incubation medium or when the surfaces had been treated with
hyaluronidase
before incubation.
...
PMID:Interaction between macrophages and articular surfaces: an in vitro transmission and scanning electron microscopy study. 237 23
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