Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.5.1.5 (urease)
7,257 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to improve the isolation and identification of yeasts in a cancer research hospital, a protocol was developed utilizing an improved blood culture methodology and a four-test schema for rapid yeast identification. The blood culturing technique, based upon centrifugation, has shown a ten-fold increase in isolation of fungi from blood and has provided for: quantitation or organisms, unlimited selection of media and atmospheres for primary culturing, and a 1:200 dilution of microorganisms away from serum antimicrobial factors and antibiotics. The four-test schema, which may be adapted for the identification of any unknown yeast in pure culture, consists of a dye pour plate auxanogram (DPPA), Tween 80-Oxgall-Caffeic acid (TOC), a rapid nitrate-reductase test (swab test) and Urea 'R' Broth. Using this protocol, over 95% of the clinical isolates received were correctly identified within 24 hours and 100% by 48 hours. By using DPPA, a 14 sugar assimilation pattern for each isolate was determined within 12 to 16 hours; and in some cases, as little as 6 hours. Growth on TOC yielded one of the following results: (1) Candida albicans and Candida stellatoidea sequentially produced germ tubes and chlamydospores in 3 hours and 24 hours, respectively; (2) Cryptococcus neoformans produced a brown pigment specific for its identification in 12 hours or less. The swab test gave results on nitrate utilization in less than 15 minutes and urease was detected within 4 hours.
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PMID:Isolation and rapid identification of yeasts from compromised hosts. 37 Jun

Helicobacter pylori (HP) has been shown to possibly be a pathogen of gastric carcinoma. HP has urease activity and produces ammonia in the stomach. In this study, the role of ammonia on gastric carcinogenesis induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) were investigated in rats. After 24 weeks pretreatment with MNNG (83 mg/l), 0.01% ammonia or tap water as a drinking water was administered for 24 weeks. The ammonia-treated rats showed a significantly higher incidence of gastric cancer (percent of animals with tumors and number of tumors per rat). Ammonia would thus appear to have an important role in HP-related human gastric carcinogenesis.
Cancer Lett 1992 Jul 31
PMID:Ammonia: a possible promotor in Helicobacter pylori-related gastric carcinogenesis. 151 5

Helicobacter pylori (HP) are Gram-negative spiral bacteria which occur in the human stomach. The bacteria were cultured in vitro for the first time in 1983. It is suspected that the bacteria may cause chronic gastritis of type B and may also be a contributory cause of chronic ulceration and cancer of the stomach. The bacteria are accompanied by characteristic inflammatory changes in the gastric mucosa. The significance for gastritis, chronic ulceration, non-ulcer dyspepsia and carcinoma of the stomach is discussed. HP occurs in a great proportion of the population of the world and the frequency increases with age. The route of infection is unknown but faecal-oral infection is probable. Correlation between the presence of HP and the occurrence of symptoms is poor in the individual patient. The bacteria can be demonstrated histologically, cytologically, by culture, by the urease test, by the urease expiration test or serologically. The bacteria are sensitive for a series of antibiotics and bismuth but no effective treatment is known as the recurrence rate is high.
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PMID:[Helicobacter pylori]. 163 4

Trace levels of urethane, a cancer causing chemical, were detected in many kinds of wine, sherry, whisky, brandy and sake. Urethane formation from urea and ethanol in sake can be prevented by the treatment of acid urease, which is produced by Lactobacillus fermentum, but urethane, once formed, is very difficult to decompose. In order to keep the safety of alcoholic beverages, enzymatic removal of urethane has become an urgent problem. We found that Bacillus licheniformis sp., isolated from mouse gastrointestine, decomposed urethane to ethanol and ammonia. The enzyme showed higher urethanase activity at an acidic condition than at a neutral condition, and was resistant against ethyl alcohol of high concentrations. However, the enzyme had a low affinity to urethane for the industrial removal of the compound from alcoholic beverages.
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PMID:Urethanase of Bacillus licheniformis sp. isolated from mouse gastrointestine. 181 24

Urethan, a cancer causing chemical, was reported to contaminate some alcoholic beverages. Since urethan is formed by heating urea with ethyl-alcohol, removal of urea is necessary to prevent urethan formation in alcoholic beverages. Acid urease, whose optimal pH lies around 4, lowered urea concentrations in Japanese sake. This finding indicates a protective effect of acid urease on urethan's potential hazards in alcohol.
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PMID:Removal of urea from alcoholic beverages with an acid urease. 335 67

Weanling rats were fed low-fat (1% w/w safflower oil) or high-fat (1% w/w safflower oil plus 35% w/w beef fat or cocoa butter) diets for 30 days, and the activities of five cecal microbial enzymes were determined. When compared with the low-fat diet, beef fat significantly increased total cecal beta-glucuronidase activity, but cocoa butter, with a similar fatty acid composition, did not. Both high-fat diets significantly decreased total cecal azoreductase, beta-glucosidase, and nitrate reductase activities, but neither significantly affected urease activity. When expressed as specific activities (per 10(11) bacteria), cocoa butter decreased azoreductase, and beef fat caused increases of beta-glucuronidase and urease. Beef fat, but not cocoa butter, significantly reduced cecal bacterial numbers when compared to the low-fat diet. Both high-fat diets led to equivalent reductions in the proportion of aerobic bacteria.
Nutr Cancer 1984
PMID:Dietary fat and cecal microbial activity in the rat. 654 72

Sodium saccharin, at concentrations similar to those in the urine of rats fed 1-5% sodium saccharin in their diet, markedly inhibited urease, and 3 proteases in vitro and sodium ion did not appear to play a role in enzyme inhibition. These observations suggest that enzyme inhibition of any of a large number of enzymes may play a role in the tumorigenesis of the urinary bladder by saccharin.
Cancer Lett
PMID:The inhibition of urease and proteases by sodium saccharin. 681 43

Adult rats were fed diets containing 0, 25, 50, 100, 200, or 400 g lactalbumin/kg diet for 10 days, and the activities of six cecal microbial enzymes were determined. Total activity per cecum of azoreductase, beta-glucosidase, and urease increased significantly with increasing dietary protein, whereas the activities of beta-glucuronidase and nitroreductase were not significantly affected. Nitrate reductase activity decreased significantly. Total numbers of cecal bacteria were not significantly altered by the treatment.
Nutr Cancer 1983
PMID:Dietary protein and cecal microbial metabolism in the rat. 687 47

Neopterin, a pteridine compound produced by macrophages activated by interferon-gamma, is widely used to assess the activation of cellular immunity. An elevation in serum or urinary neopterin reflects immune activation in many different disorders, including viral infections, cancer, autoimmune diseases or acute myocardial infarction, but less attention has been paid to neopterin concentration in other biological fluids. The aim of the present study was to examine neopterin concentration in gastric juice. An association with the presence of Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium linked to the most common disorders of upper digestive tract, was also investigated. Gastric juice was obtained at endoscopy from 61 patients. Neopterin was determined by a radioimmunoassay and the presence of H. pylori was examined by urease test. The macroscopic finding of bile in gastric juice was associated with significantly higher neopterin levels compared to patients where no bile was noted (15.5 +/- 15.6 vs. 2.1 +/- 3.0 nmol/l, P < 0.001). However, similar concentrations were observed in the H. pylori positive and H. pylori negative patients (7.6 +/- 12.0 vs. 11.1 +/- 14.9 nmol/l). Even in the absence of macroscopic bile contamination, no significant difference could be found between the infected and uninfected patients (2.3 +/- 3.2 vs. 1.3 +/- 1.9 nmol/l), and the patients with duodenal ulcer and normal findings (3.8 +/- 4.6 vs 1.6 +/- 1.9 nmol/l). The contamination of gastric juice with bile represents the limitation for the use of neopterin as a marker of immune activation in the gastric mucosa. Rather than an index of immune activation, gastric juice neopterin concentration represents a marker of duodenogastric reflux.
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PMID:Gastric juice neopterin in Helicobacter pylori infection. 777 51

Recently many reports have shown a strong association between Helicobacter pylori infection in the stomach and recurrent peptic ulcer. Moreover, prospective cohort serological studies showed that H. pylori infected individuals have significantly increased rate of gastric cancer in the USA. H. pylori is a gram-negative spiral organism which has urease activity and produces ammonia and CO2 from urea, and nestles in the gastric pits and overlaying mucus gel layer. Many diagnostic methods of H. pylori infection are available; ie bacterial culture, 13C-urea breath test, histology, serum IgG antibody against H. pylori. We developed a new method, ie tissue IgA antibody against H. pylori and detection of H. pylori DNA in the gastric juice by PCR method. Triple therapies with metronidazole, bismuth compounds, and amoxicillin or tetracyclin are difficult to use in Japan because of their sever side effects. Thus, new methods with proton pump inhibitor (PPI) and amoxicillin have been introduced. We treated 14 patients of whom were H. pylori positive-active peptic ulcer with 30 mg/day of lansoprazole, a new PPI, plus 1,500 mg/day of amoxicillin for 2 weeks and 8 (57%) patients were eradicated. Gastric carcinogenesis are multi-steps and multifactorials process. Hypothetical sequence of intestinal type of gastric cancer is that superficial gastritis-->atrophic gastritis-->intestinal metaplasia-->dysplasia-->gastric cancer and H. pylori infection may play a role in the early stage of the sequence. We examined mucosal IgA antibody against H. pylori in chronic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia detected by the Tes-Tape method in 25 resected specimens after gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Positivity rates of tissue H. pylori IgA antibody were lower in the mucosa of intestinal metaplasia than in non-metaplastic gastric mucosa and were negative in carcinoma. Causal relationship between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer is not proven and factors other than H. pylori infection are also important in the gastric carcinogenesis. Finally we introduce 2 reports: (1) NIH Consensus Conference: Helicobacter pylori in peptic ulcer disease (JAMA. 1994; 272: 65-69). The consensus panel concluded that 1. ulcer patients with H. pylori infection require treatment with antimicrobial agents in addition to antisecretory drugs whether on first presentation with the illness or on recurrence; 2. the value of treating nonulcerative dyspepsia patients with H. pylori infection remains to be determined; and 3. the interesting relationship between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer requires further exploration. (2) World Health Organization: Working Group Meeting (Reported in World Congress of Gastroenterology, Los Angeles, 1994). H. pylori plays a causal role in the chain of events leading to cancer of the stomach. Group I: definite carcinogen.
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PMID:[Helicobacter pylori in peptic ulcer and gastric cancer]. 785 88


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