Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The defatted rabbit skin was extracted with 0.5 M LaCl3, and the extract was dialyzed exhaustively against distilled water. The precipitate formed during dialysis was dissolved in 28 mM EDTA (ethylenediamine tetraacetate) (pH 7.0). Fr A was obtained from the solution by precipitation with ethanol in the presence of sodium acetate. The results of gel filtration on Sepharose 4B, electrophoresis on cellulose acetate membrane before and after digestion with Streptomyces hyaluronidase, and analytical data indicated that Fr. A was hyaluronic acid with high molecular weight. The present observation together with previous findings suggest that the binding status of proteoglycans in the skin differs significantly from that in cartilages.
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PMID:Extraction of hyaluronic acid from rabbit skin with lanthanum chloride. 746 13

The aim of this study was to develop techniques to obtain monodispersed, human islet cells in large quantities, since these constitute a potentially transplantable beta cell mass with which to treat established type 1 diabetes, as well as provide the most appropriate substrate for studying the immune pathogenesis of the disease. Human islets were isolated from the pancreas of beating-heart organ donors by collagenase digestion. Enzymatic (collagenase types II, IV, V, and XI, trypsin, DNAse, and hyaluronidase) and chemical (EDTA and EGTA) conditions were then used to find the optimum requirements for digestion of intact human islets into their constituent cells. The combination of trypsin with EDTA provided the highest yield of monodispersed islet cells (963 cells/islet) and highest viability (88%). DNAse with EGTA gave high yields (710 cells/islet) but viability was low (55%). Lower yields and viability were obtained using collagenase types II, IV, V, and XI (47-243 cells/islet; viability 45-62%), hyaluronidase (410 cells/islet; 75% viability), and EDTA alone (253 cells/islet; viability 43%). Human islet cells monodispersed using trypsin 0.125 mg/ml in 0.1 mM EDTA retained an insulin secretory response to glucose, and had intact surface class I MHC molecules when analyzed immediately after digestion by flow cytofluorimetry. Our results indicate that functionally intact, single, human islet cells may be obtained in abundance, and provide a potential substrate for islet cell transplantation in the treatment of patients with type 1 diabetes.
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PMID:Development of techniques for obtaining monodispersed human islet cells. 750 87

The viscoelastic properties of culture medium obtained from confluent 3T3-L1 preadipocytes, after differentiation with isobutyl-methylxanthine and dexamethasone, were studied with a rotational Couette viscometer. In close association with adipocyte differentiation, the culture medium showed gel-like properties, in concert with an increase in viscosity. This behavior vanishes after digestion by Streptomyces hyaluronidase or chondroitinase ABC, but not after application of collagenase, pronase, trypsin, DNase, or neuraminidase, or by treatment with EDTA or mercaptoethanol, indicating that the primary substance responsible for this behavior is hyaluronic acid. The material revealed a non-Newtonian behavior with an irreversible disruption of the network by shear force at high speeds. The viscosity of the medium, containing about 1 microgram/ml of hyaluronic acid, was calculated to be similar to that of a solution containing 1.7 mg high molecular weight hyaluronic acid per milliliter of stock culture medium. The comparison of rheological properties between the culture medium and solutions of hyaluronic acid indicated the possibility of a highly organized network in the culture medium that is more complicated than a simple interaction between homologous hyaluronic acid molecules. The non-Newtonian behavior depends on the hyaluronic acid concentration in the medium as well as on the length of exposure of the 3T3-L1 cells to the isobutyl-methylxanthine/dexamethasone mixture. The results point toward the possibility of interaction between hyaluronic acid and binding proteins.
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PMID:Rheological effects of the presence of hyaluronic acid in the extracellular media of differentiated 3T3-L1 preadipocyte cultures. 768 59

In the pig, the gastrointestinal tract grows rapidly after birth and undergoes a short postnatal maturation. The objective of the present work was to assess the metabolic characteristics of the small intestinal mucosa during this period by investigating glucose, galactose, and glutamine metabolism in pig isolated enterocytes. Piglets were used immediately after birth or at various stages during suckling or postweaning. Fed animals were taken in a postabsorptive state. The jejunoileum was excised and perfused with an EDTA (5 mM)-containing buffer. The epithelial cell layer was further dissociated in the presence of hyaluronidase (0.01%). The resulting cell suspension (95% absorbing enterocytes; viability greater than 90%) was incubated with 14C-labeled substrates to measure 14CO2 production in parallel with substrate disappearance. The capacity to utilize glutamine was high and remained steady during the suckling period. Glucose utilization capacity was limited at birth and increased more than 3-fold during the first week of suckling. Such an increase was not observed in piglets kept unsuckled since birth. Galactose utilization capacity remained steady during the first week but afterward gradually disappeared. Lactate and pyruvate production through glycolysis was the major pathway accounting for glucose or galactose disappearance. A capacity for a net glucose production from galactose was evidenced during the first week of suckling. Thus, isolated newborn pig enterocytes exhibit specific and transient metabolic characteristics during the first postnatal week.
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PMID:Glucose, galactose, and glutamine metabolism in pig isolated enterocytes during development. 797 Sep 31

Little is known about how lymphocytes migrate within secondary lymphoid organs. Stromal cells and their associated reticular fibers form a network of fibers that radiate from high endothelial venules to all areas of the lymph node and may provide a scaffold for lymphocyte migration. We studied interactions of lymphocytes with cultured human tonsillar stromal cells and their extracellular matrix using shear stress to distinguish transient interactions from firm adhesion. Tonsillar lymphocytes and SKW3 T lymphoma cells tethered and rolled on monolayers of cultured tonsillar stromal cells and their matrix. A significant proportion of these rolling interactions were independent of divalent cations and were mediated by CD44 binding to hyaluronan, as shown by inhibition with mAb to CD44, soluble hyaluronan, as hyaluronidase treatment of the substrate, and O-glycoprotease treatment of the rolling cells. O-glycoprotease treatment of the substrate also blocked binding completely to stromal matrix and partially to stromal monolayers. SKW3 cells tethered and rolled on plastic-immobilized hyaluronan, confirming the specificity of this interaction. By contrast, monolayers of resting or stimulated human umbilical vein endothelial cells failed to support CD44- and hyaluronan-dependent rolling. SKW3 cells added under flow conditions to frozen sections of human tonsil bound and rolled along reticular fibers in the presence of EDTA. Rolling was blocked by either CD44 mAb or hyaluronan. We propose that lymphocytes migrating through secondary lymphoid organs may use CD44 to bind to hyaluronan immobilized on stromal cells and reticular fibers.
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PMID:CD44 and hyaluronan-dependent rolling interactions of lymphocytes on tonsillar stroma. 876 28

The neuropeptide galanin is widely distributed in the gastrointestinal tract and exerts several inhibitory effects, especially on intestinal motility and on insulin release from pancreatic beta-cells. The presence of galanin fibres not only in the myenteric and submucosal plexus but also in the mucosa, prompted us to investigate the regulatory role of galanin, and its mechanism of action, on the secretion of the insulinotropic hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Rat ileal cells were dispersed through mechanical vibration followed by moderate exposure to hyaluronidase, DNase I and EDTA, and enriched for L-cells by counterflow elutriation. A 6- to 7-fold enrichment in GLP-1 cell content was registered after elutriation, as compared with the crude cell preparation (929 +/- 81 vs 138 +/- 14 fmol/10(6) cells). L-cells then accounted for 4-5% of the total cell population. Bombesin induced a time-(15-240 min) and dose- (0.1 nM-1 microM) dependent release of GLP-1. Glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP, 100 nM), forskolin (10 microM) and the phorbol ester 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA, 1 microM) each stimulated GLP-1 secretion over a 1-h incubation period. Galanin (0.01-100 nM) induced a dose-dependent inhibition of bombesin- and of GIP-stimulated GLP-1 release (mean inhibition of 90% with 100 nM galanin). Galanin also dose-dependently inhibited forskolin-induced GLP-1 secretion (74% of inhibition with 100 nM galanin), but not TPA-stimulated hormone release. Pretreatment of cells with 200 ng/ml pertussis toxin for 3 h, or incubation with the ATP-sensitive K+ channel blocker disopyramide (200 microM), prevented the inhibition by galanin of bombesin- and GIP-stimulated GLP-1 secretion. These studies indicate that intestinal secretion of GLP-1 is negatively controlled by galanin, that acts through receptors coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein and involves ATP-dependent K+ channels.
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PMID:Galanin inhibits glucagon-like peptide-1 secretion through pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein and ATP-dependent potassium channels in rat ileal L-cells. 961 55

The importance of the interstitium and its major ground substance component, hyaluronan (HA), for solute and fluid transport across the peritoneal membrane has been debated during the last few years. We therefore partly removed HA from the peritoneal membrane using enzymatic digestion with hyaluronidase for 2 h, after which the transport properties of the peritoneal membrane were studied in peritoneal dialysis dwells. A dialysis fluid containing 3.86% glucose was used. As a marker of macromolecular transport, the total peritoneal clearance of radiolabelled albumin out of the peritoneal cavity and its clearance to plasma were measured, as well as the albumin clearance from plasma to dialysate. Transport of small solutes between plasma and dialysate was measured by assessing the mass transfer area coefficient of 51Cr-EDTA and glucose. Hyaluronidase preincubation yielded a 78% reduction of HA in the superficial layer of the peritoneal membrane, without alterations in the transport of either small or large solutes compared with the situation in preincubated controls. The only changes observed were between rats incubated with either hyaluronidase or vehicle alone compared to non-incubated controls. In conclusion, despite a large reduction of the HA content of the tissues surrounding the peritoneal cavity, hyaluronidase incubation did not produce any significant changes in solute and fluid transport across the peritoneal membrane. Our data indicate that peritoneal membrane HA in physiological concentrations plays a rather subordinate role in the overall transport of small solutes and water across the capillary-interstitial peritoneal barrier.
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PMID:Effects of peritoneal hyaluronidase treatment on transperitoneal solute and fluid transport in the rat. 1071 74

A novel approach to the production of transgenic poultry is to use primary follicular oocytes (PFOs). However, fundamental information regarding the impact of isolation and culture procedures on PFO integrity is lacking. This study describes the isolation and culture of PFOs from mature turkeys and the effects of these procedures on PFO morphology and germinal vesicle (GV) integrity. To isolate PFOs, ovarian cortex was incubated in trypsin-EDTA alone or further incubated in collagenase plus hyaluronidase (CH). About 200 to 500 PFOs, ranging in size from less than 100 microns in diameter to 1,000 microns, were recovered from each ovary. The culture of PFOs less than 100 microns in diameter for 4 h resulted in blebbing of the oolemma followed by extrusion of ooplasm. Primary follicular oocytes 100 to 250 microns in diameter survived culture for 24 h whereas larger PFOs survived for up to 7 d. Those PFOs with intact granulosa cell investments survived longer than those fully or partially denuded of granulosa cells with CH. Co-culture of PFOs (100 to 250 microns in diameter) on a monolayer of granulosa cells derived from mature, yellow-yolk follicles augmented PFO survival rates. The rate of GV breakdown was not influenced by the isolation or culture of the PFO. These data provide the basis for developing procedures for the in vitro maturation and in vitro fertilization of isolated PFOs.
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PMID:Effects of isolation and culture of turkey primary follicular oocytes on morphology and germinal vesicle integrity. 1073 29

An enzyme that degraded glycosaminoglycan hyaluronic acid was released during in vitro development of Ascaris suum L3 to L4. The enzyme did not hydrolyze glycosaminoglycan chondroitin sulfate A. One molecular form of hyaluronidase was detected, with a molecular weight estimated at 47.8 +/- 8.6 kDa by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and at 55.0 +/- 1.3 kDa by substrate SDS-PAGE zymography. Activity of the enzyme was optimal between pH 5.0 and 6.0, and was present at neutral pH. Hyaluronidase activity was not affected by 5 mM concentrations of cupric sulfate, zinc chloride, calcium chloride, manganese chloride or EDTA. In addition, NaCl had no effect on enzyme activity at concentrations of 0.2-1.0 M. The highest level of hyaluronidase was present in culture fluid collected between days 4 and 6 of in vitro culture, and this period corresponded with that of the highest rate of increase in the percentage of L4. The presence or absence of hyaluronic acid plays a key role in basic developmental processes of vertebrates and is regulated, in part, by hyaluronidases. Developmental processes occurring during the transition of A. suum L3 to L4 may likewise depend on hyaluronidase. In addition, the infection process of a number of organisms, including some nematodes, depends on hyaluronidase. A. suum may likewise utilize hyaluronidase to facilitate larval migration within the host.
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PMID:Release of hyaluronidase during in vitro development of Ascaris suum from the third to fourth larval stage. 1157 May 51

We investigated whether different protocols for the digestion of adult human articular cartilage influence the cell yield and capacity to attach and proliferate in culture dishes. Chondrocyte yields were expressed as a percentage of the total number of cells in the tissue, determined both histologically (using the dissector method) and biochemically (measuring the DNA content of tissue digests). Human cartilage specimens (n = 79) were digested using different protocols based on combinations of collagenase II (CGN), trypsin/EDTA, hyaluronidase, and tosyllysylchloromethane (TLCM). Yields of viable chondrocytes were the highest within a specific range of CGN concentrations and digestion times, but always < 22% of the total available cells. The combination of CGN with trypsin/EDTA or TLCM accelerated the digestion process but did not significantly increase cell yields. The percentage of viable cells that attached to culture dishes ranged 75-85% (< 19% of the total) and was reduced by TLCM. Doubling times of attached cells were comparable in all experimental groups. Our results indicate that chondrocyte yields and capacity to attach and proliferate are not highly sensitive to the specific isolation protocol used. However, typically used cartilage digestion protocols yield only a small fraction of the total available cells, possibly introducing an uncontrolled selection of certain chondrocyte subpopulations.
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PMID:Enzymatic digestion of adult human articular cartilage yields a small fraction of the total available cells. 1450 38


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