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)

A new method of isolating Pneumocystis carinii from infected lungs of cortisonized rats is described. Clumping of parasites and host lung material was diminished by suspension of macerated Pneumocystis-laden rat lung in a modified calcium, magnesium-free Hanks' balanced salts solution at physiologic pH and osmolality, containing the wetting agent G-acid. After washing, this material was suspended in a second buffer system for digestion. The digestion step was done in the same buffer but with the addition of calcium, magnesium, collagenase, hyaluronidase and deoxyribonuclease. These innovations allowed enumeration of trophozoites as well as cysts. Following digestion, the parasites were separated from particulate host lung debris by Percoll density gradients designed to pellet the debris, leaving parasites in the gradient. Density studies done prior to this step revealed that trophozoites and non-nucleated cysts had similar densities, 1.028 g/ml, whereas nucleated cysts were heavier at 1.030 g/ml. Particulate host lung debris could be removed due to its heavier density, 1.040 g/ml. The significance of this study includes: relatively clump-free suspensions of infected rat lung, enumeration of trophozoites as well as cysts, and characterization of nucleated cysts.
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PMID:An improved method of isolating Pneumocystis carinii from infected rat lungs. 349 99

Patients diagnosed as suffering from erysipelas or cellulitis were subjected to bacteriological and serological investigations. The serological tests used included the anti-streptolysin O reaction (ASO), the anti-deoxyribonuclease B test (ADB) and the anti-hyaluronidase tests (AHT) that are specific both for the group A streptococcus (Streptococcus pyogenes) and for the human pyogenic streptococci of group C or group G. Antibody tests to the alpha-lysin and the nuclease of Staphylococcus aureus were also employed. Conventional bacteriological culture methods were used plus needle aspiration of injected saline in most patients with erysipelas, but recognized pathogens were isolated in only 42% of cases. Our results indicate the limitations of these tests for making initial diagnoses and deciding treatment. Serial serological testing was very successful in differentiating cellulitis due to group A, C or G haemolytic streptococci, or occasionally Staphylococcus aureus, but was positive in only 40% of cases of erysipelas.
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PMID:The value of bacteriology and serology in the diagnosis of cellulitis and erysipelas. 400 55

A comparison between the results of the streptozyme hemagglutination test and serological titers for anti-streptolysin O (ASO), anti-hyaluronidase (AH), anti-deoxyribonuclease B (ADN-B), and anti-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotidase (ANAD) was made in two groups of human sera. In one group, serological titers for all the four antibodies were lower than the threshold of sensitization reported by the producing firm. In the second group, the titer of at least one of the four antibodies was equal to or higher than the threshold. False-positive and false-negative reactions occur with those sera when one or more antibody titer is at or near the threshold of the test as described by the manufacturer. The test was positive for all sera where either the ASO was greater than 166 or the ANAD was greater than 270, and for 98% of the sera with ADN-B greater than 360. It is, therefore, concluded that the streptozyme test can be used as an adjunct to the clinical diagnosis of streptococcal infections and their nonsuppurative sequelae. It is less useful to assess the levels of antibodies in sera from general population surveys. For such sera, the relative specificity and sensitivity of the test might yield misleading results. Until more experience is gained with the test, caution should be used in its application to infant and older adult age groups, where significant streptococcal antibody titers are frequently near the threshold of the test.
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PMID:Specificity and sensitivity of the streptozyme test for the detection of streptococcal antibodies. 436 57

Synaptic vesicles isolated from guinea-pig cerebral cortex had an electrophoretic mobility of -3.55mum.s(-1).V(-1).cm in saline-sorbitol, pH7.2, at 25 degrees C (ionic strength 0.015g-ions/1). The mobility was pH-dependent, varied with ionic strength and indicated that the vesicular surface contained weak acidic functions with a pK(a) in the range 3.0-3.8. Although the vesicular surface was determined to be highly negatively charged, treatment with neuraminidase had no effect on mobility and indicated that the relatively strong carboxyl groups of sialic acid do not contribute significantly to vesicular electrokinetic properties. Treatment of synaptic vesicles with trypsin or trypsinized concanavalin A resulted in increases in mobility, but treatment with ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, chrondroitinase ABC or hyaluronidase had no significant effect on mobility. Mn(2+) or Ca(2+) was more effective in decreasing vesicle mobility than was Mg(2+), Sr(2+) or Ba(2+). The electrokinetic properties of the synaptic vesicle surface are discussed and contrasted with the properties of the synaptosomal membrane.
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PMID:Electrokinetic properties of isolated cerebral-cortex synaptic vesicles. 478 38

Co-culture of cancer patients' nonadherent peripheral blood lymphocytes with irradiated autologous fresh tumor cells, termed the mixed lymphocyte-tumor interaction (MLTI) test, resulted in significant stimulation of 3H-Tdr in corporation on day 6 in 19 of 37 autologous combinations. The MLTI test was performed in a microtiter wells (0.2 ml) and a variety of solid tumor cells (sarcomas and carcinomas) were used. Tumor cells were dissociated from the fresh biopsy tissue by nontrypsin enzymatic digestion (deoxyribonuclease, hyaluronidase, and collagenase) and the tumor cells enriched by depletion of macrophages using adherence procedures. Occasionally, further tumor cell purification was achieved by separation of cells on the basis of size on dis-continuous gradients. Positive MLTI resulted in stimulation as high as 20-fold over the backgrounds of PBL and tumor cells cultured alone. Mean positive MLTI was SI of 7.7. The negative MLTI were not a reflection of generalized immunosuppression, because tumor cell preparations that did not stimulate autologous PBL did stimulate allogeneic PBL. In an additional patient, PBL not responding in the autologous MLTI did respond to allogeneic tumors. MLTI using cryopreserved cells reproduced the MLTI results using fresh cells in 11 of 16 tests; the other five tests were all positive in the fresh MLTI and negative when using cryopreserved cells. Despite reports from many other groups it appears that positive MLTI were not tumor-specific. In 14 experiments we were able to simultaneously test the proliferative response to autologous tumor as well as to an autologous normal tissue (lung, liver, colon, and bowel). In eight of these experiments positive responses were obtained with tumor stimulators and in seven of these, positive proliferation was also obtained with normal tissue.
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PMID:The human mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell interaction test. I. Positive autologous lymphocyte proliferative responses can be stimulated by tumor cells as well as by cells from normal tissues. 620 46

Purpura was grossly observable in albino mice 6 to 8 h after the intraperitoneal injection of sterile, deoxyribonuclease-treated, cell-free extracts prepared by sodium deoxycholate-induced lysis, sonic disruption, Parr bomb treatment, autolysis without sodium deoxycholate, or alternate freezing and thawing of washed suspensions of Streptococcus pneumoniae type I. Cell-free extracts obtained from sonically disrupted, heat-killed cells (100 degrees C for 20 min) did not contain purpurogenic activity. The reaction was maximal at approximately 24 h postinjection, started to fade slowly after 24 to 48 h, and usually was not grossly observable by 4 to 6 days postinjection. The purpura-producing principle (PPP) in the cell-free extract was purified by sequential ammonium sulfate precipitation, protamine sulfate precipitation, Sepharose 6B gel filtration, wheat germ lectin-Sepharose 6MB affinity chromatography, ribonuclease and trypsin treatment, and a second Sepharose 6B gel filtration step. The final preparation (i) contained glucosamine (5.6%), muramic acid (8.0%), neutral carbohydrate (12.8%), phosphate (8.0%), orcinol-reactive material (6.0%), and Lowry-reactive material (1.6%), and (ii) was free of detectable amounts of deoxyribonucleic acid, capsular polysaccharide, neuraminidase, cytolysin, and hyaluronidase. The isoelectric point and molecular size of the PPP were approximately pI 3.0 and several million daltons, respectively, and the activity remained in the supernatant fluid after centrifugation for 1 day at 105,000 x g. PPP activity was destroyed by incubation with egg white lysozyme and sodium metaperiodate but was resistant to trypsin, pronase, alpha-amylase, deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease, alkaline phosphatase, pancreatic lipase, 7% trichloroacetic acid, 6 M urea, autoclaving (121 degrees C) for 30 min, and mild acid and alkali exposure. Our observations indicate that the PPP requires intact beta-1,4-glucosidic linkages for activity and support the working hypothesis that activity is associated with pneumococcal peptidoglycan solubilized by the bacterium's autolysin.
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PMID:Characterization of pneumococcal purpura-producing principle. 624 53

All strains of Legionella pneumophila tested produced detectable levels of extracellular protease, phosphatase, lipase, deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease, and beta-lactamase activity. Weak starch hydrolysis was also demonstrated for all strains. Elastase, collagenase, phospholipase C, hyaluronidase, chondroitinase, neuraminidase, or coagulase were not detected in any of these laboratory-maintained strains.
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PMID:Extracellular enzymes of Legionella pneumophila. 626 49

Serum samples from 14 patients whose burns had become infected with streptococci of groups A (11 patients), C (one patient) or G (two patients), and from 19 burned patients without bacteriological evidence of streptococcal infection were examined for anti-streptococcal antibodies. Tests were made for anti-streptolysin O (ASO), anti-hyaluronidase (AH), anti-deoxyribonuclease B (anti-DNAase B) and antibody against M-associated protein (MAP). Sera from the patients with streptococcal infections were also examined, when this was practicable, for 'bactericidal' (anti-M) antibody and for antibody against the opacity factor (OF) of the infecting serotype. In patients infected with group A streptococci, the ASO response was generally poor, except in patients infected with strains of type T12/M12, and the AH response was rather similar, but most of the patients gave a rapid and vigorous anti-DNAase B response, except when the burn was small or colonization occurred very late. Antibody to the M and MAP antigens, and to OF (when the infecting strain formed this), was weak and transient, or absent, except in three of four patients infected with streptococci of type T12/M12.
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PMID:Streptococcal antibodies in patients with burn injuries. 701 88

Non-group A beta-hemolytic streptococci were isolated from the throats of 30 adult patients with symptoms of pharyngitis. Grouping by counterimmunoelectrophoresis identified 7 strains belonging to group B, 5 to group C, 8 to group G, 1 to group K; 9 were no groupable. Convalescent sera were available from 17 patients and were assayed for antibody to streptolysin O (AO), deoxyribonuclease B (AB), hyaluronidase (AH), and to the patients' own group of steptococci as well as to group A streptococci by indirect immunofluorescence (IF). Control sera were employed as well. Elevated titres of antibody to the enzymes occurred in 3 (OA), 5 (AB), and none (AH) of the patients' sera. The titre of the patients' antibody (by IF) to their own isolates was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than that to streptococci of group A and that of normal controls to streptococci of similar groups. These data support a causative role for non-group A hemolytic streptococci in human pharyngitis.
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PMID:Serological evidence for a causative role of non-group A hemolytic streptococci in pharyngitis. 703 42

We have isolated epithelial cell clusters from mammary glands of pregnant and lactating rats by collagenase-hyaluronidase-deoxyribonuclease digestion, followed by Ficoll density-gradient centrifugation. Clusters of greater than 90% viable cells were identified by light microscopy as essentially devoid of other cell types; the integrity of their subcellular organelles verified by electron microscopy. Binding characteristics of the synthetic glucocorticoid [3H]dexamethasone were studied in cytosols prepared from isolated cell clusters. Cytosols from both pregnant and lactating rats bound [3H]dexamethasone with high affinity to a single class of low capacity binding sites. In both types of cytosol the dissociation constant (Kd 4 degrees C approximately/nM) of the binding was similar; the number of sites per cell in lactating rats was approximately double that in pregnant rats. The specificity of binding was typical of a classical glucocorticoid receptor, with a hierarchy of affinity by competition studies dexamethasone greater than progesterone greater than aldosterone much much greater than testosterone = estradiol. In particular, no difference in progesterone affinity for these glucocorticoid receptors was seen between pregnancy and lactation. This suggests that reported differences in inhibitory action of progesterone, pregnancy versus post-partum, are not glucocorticoid-receptor mediated.
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PMID:Glucocorticoid receptors in epithelial cells isolated from the mammary glands of pregnant and lactating rats. 705 35


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