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)
The ultrastructural distribution of ruthenium red staining material is studied in the cerebral cortex of rat. It is established that the material is located equally along the cell surface of the neurons, glial and endothelial cells, and within a number of cell organelles: mitochondria, smooth
endoplasmic reticulum
, synaptic vesicles and throughout both membranes of the nuclear envelope. Using digestion with
hyaluronidase
and trypsin, and lipid extraction an attempt is made to determine the participation of some chemical compounds such as acid mucopolysaccharides, glycoproteins, glycolipids and acid polypeptides in the composition of the ruthenium red-positive material. Moreover, the problem of the optimal conditions for the carrying out of ruthenium red staining in the CNS is discussed.
...
PMID:Distribution of ruthenium red staining material in the cerebral cortex of rat. 5 84
The ultrastructural study of liver tissues from 38 patients with type B viral hepatitis consistently showed the presence of hepatitis B core antigen of 21-25 nm size in the liver cell nuclei and to a lesser extent in the cytoplasm. This finding and the demonstration of the tubular form of hepatitis B surface antigen in the proliferative degranulated
endoplasmic reticulum
constituted the etiologic criterion for the diagnosis of the disease. The double-shelled Dane-like particles were frequently found in association with the tubular form of the surface antigen. The core particles were found in the protoplasmic processes of hepatocytes and this correlated with the immunofluorescent microscopic findings that the antigen may be shed into circulation with the protoplasm. The core antigen was found to resist digestion by various enzymes such as protease, DNase, RNase, phospholipase C, lipase, lysozyme, diastase, neuraminidase and
hyaluronidase
, all of which did not destroy the immunoreactivity as demonstrated by immunoelectron and immunofluorescent microscopy. Similarly, sodium dodecyl sulfate, Tween 80 and mercaptoethanol also had no effect. The formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded liver tissue sections could be treated with protease to facilitate the immunofluorescent staining for the core antigen in tissue.
...
PMID:Structural and immunoreactive characteristics of hepatitis B core antigen. 5 6
Submandibular glands of 4-week-old rats were dissociated by a procedure involving digestions with collagenase and
hyaluronidase
, chelation with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, and mechanical force. The isolated cells were purified by centrifugation in a Ficoli solution and were maintained in culture for 36 hours. On the basis of trypan blue exclusions, about 70 per cent of the dissociated cells were viable. Electron microscopic observations indicated that the isolated acinar cells and intercalated and striated duct cells retained their essential in situ ultrastructural characteristics. During a 36-hour culture period the number of viable cells declined to about 40 per cent, and the various cell types formed mixed aggregates. The ultrastructural features of the intercalated and duct cells changed relatively little, but the acinar cells revealed several structural alterations. These included a decrease in the number of the secretory granules, fusions of the secretory granules, and an increase in the rough surfaced
endoplasmic reticulum
. In general, the polarity of acinar cells became less distinct. The endogenous peroxidase activity in the acinar cells gradually diminished during the culture. Isoproterenol when added to the cultured cells failed to stimulate the incorporation of radioactive thymidine or the discharge of the secretory material from the acinar cells.
...
PMID:Short term culture of dissociated rat submandibular gland cells. 16 89
The recirculating perfusion of adult rat liver with a Ca-++-free Hanks' solution produces a release of the adhesiveness of cells and a cleaving of the desmosomes. The addition of collagenase and
hyaluronidase
to the perfusion medium leads to complete dissociation of the liver tissue into a mixture of isolated cells and cell cords in which the hepatocytes remain connected with specific junctional differentiations, namely the gap and tight junctions. Individual cells are released by submitting the suspension of cell trabeculae to a gentle rolling. The gap junctions are ruptured at least in one of the two adjacent cells and remain generally attached to the other cell taking with them a small portion of cytoplasm. This technique of isolation of hepatocytes yields about 60-65% of the parenchymal cells contained in a liver; endothelial cells and other cells of the connective tissue are not recovered. The ultrastructural preservation of the isolated hepatocytes is excellent and the glucose-6-phosphatase activity, confined to the
endoplasmic reticulum
, appears unaltered in most cells. Protein, DNA and RNA recovery in the preparations of isolated hepatocytes is satisfactory, amounting to 70% of that found in liver homogenate; glycogen, the most labile component examined, is partly lost or degraded during the manipulations. Cell diameters measured by different methods confirm the preservation of the original volume of the in situ hepatocytes and the presence of more than one type of parenchymal cell. By submitting this heterogeneous cell population to an isopycnic density gradient centrifugation, two types of hepatocytes can be distinguished: the light hepatocytes, with a mean diameter of 20.5 mum and a mean density of 1.10, are characterized by an extended smooth-walled
endoplasmic reticulum
entrapping dispersed alpha-glycogen particles; the heavy hepatocytes, with a mean diameter of 19.0 mum and a mean density of 1.14, present a relatively reduced compartment of smooth
endoplasmic reticulum
, but large accumulations of glycogen. It is suggested that the cell fraction of low density is enriched in centrolobular cells and the high density fraction in perilobular hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Isolation and subfractionation on ficoll gradients of adult rat hepatocytes. Size, morphology, and biochemical characteristics of cell fractions. 16 28
Antibodies to proteoglycan (PG) and glycoprotein of bovine nasal cartilage were conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate and with horseradish peroxidase. Hyaluronidase digestion of cartilage tissue-specimens increased the intensity of immune reactions; pronase digestion or extraction with 4 M guanidinium chloride abolished the staining. In the intercellular matrix fine filaments beaded with small granules were seen forming an irregular network. The interstices of the network are filled with collagen fibers linked together by the filaments and granules. In view of the linear conformation of core proteins of PGs and the globular conformation of glycoproteins (link proteins), it may be supposed that the granules and filaments represent these two protein components of PG-aggregates. In chondrocytes a homogeneous staining was recorded in the
endoplasmic reticulum
, in the juxtanuclear areas and in several smooth-walled vesicles and elongated areas situating subjacent to the cell membrane. In contrast to the extracellular immune reactions, this homogeneous intracellular staining was never enhanced by
hyaluronidase
digestion. This is interpreted in the sense that conformation changes of molecules secreted, and the aggregation of PGs, occur extracellularly.
...
PMID:The localization of proteoglycans and glycoproteins in the hyaline cartilage. 33 74
Release of peroxidase from secretory cells of rat lacrimal gland upon cholinergic stimulation was studied in vitro with single lobules and isolated cells (lacrimocytes). Isolated lobules, kept in Eagle's medium, remain structurally intact and reaction product of peroxidase is confined to cisternae of rough
endoplasmic reticulum
, elements of the Golgi apparatus, and all secretory granules. Morphologically, exocytosis occurs by membrane fusion and discharge of granule content. The highest rate of peroxidase released from lobules is observed at 10(-4) M carbamylcholine. The specific activity of peroxidase released into the medium is fourfold higher as compared to the lobules. Release of peroxidase is suppressed by atropine when added before or after the addition of carbamylcholine. At 4 degrees C, no peroxidase release occurs upon cholinergic stimulation. The exocytotic release of peroxidase is dependent on energy supply, as indicated by substantial inhibition (at 37 degrees C) under anoxic conditions or in the presence of dinitrophenol, KCN, or carboxyatractyloside. Furthermore, the process is sensitive to colchicine and vinblastine. Isolated lacrimocytes, consiting of 95% secretory acinar cells, are prepared by digestion with collagenase,
hyaluronidase
, and trypsin. They retain the characteristic polarity of secretory cells in situ, and localization of peroxidase is the same as in lobules. Since isolated lacrimocytes respond to cholinergic stimulation in the same way as lobules, the receptors are not damaged by the isolation procedure and appear to be associated directly with the exocrine cell. Oxygen uptake by isolated lacrimocytes is about 14 nmol O2 X min-1 X 10(-6) cells; it is about doubled by uncoupling with dinitrophenol. Oxygen uptake rises by 20-30% above the resting rate upon cholinergic stimulation. This additional uptake is suppressed by atropine or by added cholinesterase, indicating that continuous receptor occupancy may be required for the energy demand by exocytosis. On the basis of the specific activity of peroxidase in the medium, the energy demand resulting from cholinergic stimulation is estimated to be 0.08 mumol ATP (or energy-rich phosphate bonds) per microgram of protein released from the lacrimocytes.
...
PMID:Exocytosis in secretory cells of rat lacrimal gland. Peroxidase release from lobules and isolated cells upon cholinergic stimulation. 95 71
The submandibular glands of 4-week-old rats were dissociated by a procedure involving digestions with collagenase and
hyaluronidase
, chelation of divalent cations and mechanical force. A suspension of single cells was obtained in low yield by centrifugation in a Ficoll-containing medium. Immediately after dissociation and after a culture period of 16-18 hr the dissociated cells were tested for agglutinability by concanavalin A (Con A). Using ferritin (tfer)-conjugated Con A the lectin binding by the isolated acinar cells was also studied. The dissociated cells were agglutinated by low concentrations of Con A and bound Fer-Con A molecules on their entire surface without any indication of polarization of the cell membrane. There was a considerable cell to cell variation in the amount of Fer-Con A binding which was, in general, sparse and patchy. The contact surfaces between agglutinated cells revealed a dense binding of Fer-Con A molecules irrespective of the types of cells participating in the agglutination reaction. Cells cultured for 16-18 hr were no longer agglutinated by Con A. As compared to the freshly dissociated cells the cultured acinar cells revealed a more uniform and denser binding of Fer-Con A molecules. Furthermore, there were more lectin molecules bound to the cell surface corresponding to the basal part of the cell, where the nucleus and most of the rough surface
endoplasmic reticulum
were located, than to the apical cell surface. It is suggested that the higher density of lectin-binding sites on the cell surface in the vicinity of the cisternae of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
indicates insertion sites of newly synthesized membrane glycoproteins.
...
PMID:Distribution of concanavalin A binding sites on the surface of dissociated rat submandibular gland acinar cells. 115 94
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
A recent hypothesis for the cellular mechanism of fluid secretion by lacrimal acini has been based, in part, on the results of subcellular fractionation analyses of lacrimal gland fragments which had been incubated for a brief period in vitro. An important assumption in those studies was that the ion transporters and neurotransmitter receptors measured in isolated subcellular fractions were associated with membranes derived from the acinar cells, since these comprise the bulk of the lacrimal gland mass. This study was undertaken to validate this assumption. Acinar complexes were isolated from rat exorbital lacrimal glands by digestion with collagenase,
hyaluronidase
, and DNase. Although terminal intralobular duct segments and myoepithelial cells were occasionally noted, the preparations appeared to be free of larger ducts, blood cells, blood vessels, and interstitial cells. Acinar cells were then disrupted, and the homogenates underwent the fractionation procedure used previously for lacrimal gland fragment preparations. This procedure involved a sequence of analyses by differential sedimentation, isopycnic centrifugation on sorbitol gradients, and partitioning in dextran-polyethyleneglycol two-phase systems. Calculated initial specific activities for sodium/potassium adenosinetriphosphatase (Na+/K(+)-ATPase), alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, and succinate dehydrogenase were identical to those obtained from fragment preparations. Major membrane populations resolved by the sequential analyses, including one believed to represent
endoplasmic reticulum
membranes, two believed to be derived from the acinar cell basal-lateral membrane, and two believed to be derived from the Golgi complex, corresponded closely to populations resolved from lacrimal fragment preparations. In addition to validating the previous use of lacrimal gland fragment preparations in studies of acinar cell function, these results suggest that preparations of isolated lacrimal acini will be useful for future work on neurotransmitter-receptor regulation and basal-lateral plasma membrane dynamics in the lacrimal gland.
...
PMID:Analytic subcellular fractionation of acini from rat lacrimal gland. 217 90
The distribution of hyaluronic acid in the oocyte-cumulus complexes collected from the oviduct ampulla of superovulated hamsters was revealed by use of
hyaluronidase
coupled to colloidal gold. On thin sections of Lowicryl-embedded oocyte-cumulus complexes, gold particles were associated specifically with interconnecting fibrillar materials that make up the cumulus matrix. Inside the cumulus cells, gold particles were found over the cisternal membrane of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
, in the contents of lysosomes and multivesicular bodies, and over Golgi vesicles of some cumulus cells. A high concentration of gold labeling was observed over the peripheral condensed chromatin and perinucleolar components in the nucleus. The cell surface of the cumulus cells also appeared to be labeled. Gold particles, however, were absent over the mitochondria and lipid vacuoles. In the oocytes, labeling was found to be associated mainly with rough
endoplasmic reticulum
and arrays of lamellar structures; cortical granules, mitochondria, and coated vesicles were essentially devoid of gold particles. Gold particles were also seen along the plasma membrane of the oocytes and within the perivitelline space. The zona pellucida was not labeled by
hyaluronidase
-gold. Different control experiments confirmed the specificity of the labeling. Digestion of thin sections with
hyaluronidase
prior to incubation with
hyaluronidase
-gold abolished the initial reaction, whereas treatment of thin sections with chondroitinase did not prevent labeling of oocyte-cumulus complexes by
hyaluronidase
-gold. Although the function of hyaluronic acid in the oocyte-cumulus complex at the time of ovulation and fertilization is not known, the high concentration of this particular compound in the cumulus matrix and the cumulus cells and its specific locations in the perivitelline space and in the superovulated oocytes implicate the significance of its presence and warrant future investigations.
...
PMID:High-resolution localization of hyaluronic acid in the golden hamster oocyte-cumulus complex by use of a hyaluronidase-gold complex. 228 56
1
2
3
Next >>