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Query: EC:3.5.1.5 (
urease
)
7,257
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Struvite stones are formed as the result of urinary tract infection by
urease
-producing bacteria. Ultrastructural examination of calculi removed from a patient revealed bacteria incorporated throughout the stone matrix. Exopolysaccharide stained by ruthenium red was associated with most of the bacteria, but it represented only a small portion of the organic matrix in the stone. Localised deposits of calcium and
phosphorus
, components of carbonate-apatite, and magnesium, a struvite component, were detected in close proximity to the cells. Histochemical examinations revealed that several of the gram-negative bacteria within the stone matrix possessed high levels of
urease
activity. We propose that bacterial slime production, intimately involved in the initiation of stone matrix deposition, is less prominent in mature stones because of the increased incorporation of host-derived mucoproteins and mucopolysaccharides.
...
PMID:Observations of the ultrastructure of infected kidney stones. 247 Sep 5
Interexperimental variation in the incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia of chickens that occurred in studies on the effect of dietary calcium,
phosphorus
and cholecalciferol metabolites was apparent from previous reports from this laboratory. Since the source of commercial soybean meal used in the diets was known to change, studies were conducted to evaluate different sources of soybean meal on the incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia. A series of experiments demonstrated that the soybean meals from one source consistently produced a high incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia (34-69%); whereas soybean meals from a different source consistently produced low incidences (14-28%). This same relationship was found with soybean meals from these two plants produced a year apart. When the levels of two soybean meals that produced a high incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia were reduced in the diet from 35 to 24 12% the incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia was reduced from 60 and 69% to 25 and 20% to 15 and 10%, respectively. The most striking difference between the meals observed by chemical analysis was in the high antitrypsin and
urease
values of the meals that induced tibial dyschondroplasia. Chickens fed the soybean meal that reduced tibial dyschondroplasia also had reduced pancreas size in one experiment but not another. The soybean meals that induced tibial dyschondroplasia caused an increase in testes size but had no effect on liver, adrenal and thyroid size or plasma levels of calcium,
phosphorus
and triiodothyronine (T3). No difference in the utilization of the diets as measured by metabolizable energy values and lipid calcium,
phosphorus
or phytin
phosphorus
retention was found between the soybean meals that induced high or low incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia with chickens at 19-21 d of age.
...
PMID:Effects of different soybean meals on the incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia in the chicken. 404 May 57
The activity of the complete arginine pathway-urea cycle was assessed in intact plant cells by employing the commercial enzymes arginase (EC 3.5.3.1) and
urease
(
EC 3.5.1.5
) to determine the amount of NaH14CO3 incorporated into [guanido-14C]arginine and/or into [14C]urea during a 3-h labeling period. Recovery of [guanido-14C]arginine was linear from 5 to 1000 nmol/g tissue and averaged 80 +/- 5% (mean +/- SE, N = 3). The procedure is reliable, inexpensive, well suited to the simultaneous analysis of numerous samples, and significantly more sensitive than existing methods. The method is ideally suited for assessing the activity of the complete arginine biosynthetic pathway in intact cells. In addition, the method has the distinct advantage of providing simultaneous measurement of the amount of NaH14CO3 accumulating in arginine relative to the amount accumulating as urea. Evidence is presented demonstrating that both the activity of the arginine pathway and the relative amounts of [guanido-14C]arginine and [14C]urea synthesized from NaH14CO3 were influenced by changes in the level of ornithine, NH+4, or
phosphorus
available to plant tissues.
...
PMID:Application of commercial enzymes to measure the activity of the arginine pathway-urea cycle in intact cells. 609 59
Growing steers were used in a replicated 3 X 3 Latin square to study the influence of ionophores on mineral metabolism and ruminal
urease
activity. Treatments consisted of: 1) basal high energy diet; 2) basal plus 33 ppm lasalocid and 3) basal plus 33 ppm monensin. Each period was 33 days and apparent absorption and retention of macrominerals were measured during the last 5 days of each period. Mineral intake during the collection period was not affected by treatment. Both ionophores increased apparent absorption of sodium, magnesium and
phosphorus
. Retention of magnesium and
phosphorus
were higher for steers receiving either lasalocid or monensin. Potassium and calcium absorption were not significantly affected by treatment. Serum concentrations of macrominerals were similar for all treatments. Zinc and copper concentrations in serum were higher in animals fed monensin or lasalocid. Steers fed either ionophore had lower concentrations of soluble potassium and calcium in rumen fluid. Both ionophores also decreased ruminal osmolality. Bacterial
urease
, a nickel-dependent enzyme, was decreased by 28 and 66% in animals that received lasalocid and monensin, respectively. These findings indicate that lasalocid and monensin affect metabolism of certain minerals in ruminants.
...
PMID:Influence of monensin and lasalocid on mineral metabolism and ruminal urease activity in steers. 669 34
Magnesium ammonium phosphate calculi developed in the urinary bladders and urethras of four of five offspring of Miniature Schnauzer parents with recurrent struvite urolithiasis. Calculi were detected by radiograhy when the dogs were 12 to 15 months old. Males and females were affected. A significant number of
urease
-producing staphylococci were identified in the urine of three of four dogs before urolith formation, and in one dog after urolith formation. The dogs were evaluated until they were 26 months old. Serum concentrations of calcium,
phosphorus
, and magnesium were inside usual limits throughout the study. Abnormalities that might predispose to urinary tract infection were not identified by radiography or necropsy studies. In one dog, bladder calculi recurred after surgical removal of multiple cystoliths. In another, urethral obstruction and acute generalized pyelonephritis induced a lethal uremic crisis. Gross and microscopic lesions, detected after necropsy of all dogs with uroliths, were typical of bacterial infection.
...
PMID:Struvite urolithiasis in a litter of miniature Schnauzer dogs. 740 90
Fifty-five Tunisian children with urinary stones, between the ages of 8 months and 15 years, underwent morphological and infrared spectrophotometric analysis of their stones. This study provides an approach to the aetiological profile of urinary stones in Tunisian children. The nucleus of the stones was composed of acidic ammonium urate in 48% of cases with a morphology suggestive of
phosphorus
deficiency associated with a history of diarrhoea. In 24% of cases, the nucleus contained struvite indicating the presence of urinary tract infection by
urease
-positive bacteria. The main growth factors of urinary stones were hyperoxaluria and urinary tract infection. In 5 cases, the stones were due to a hereditary lithogenic metabolic disease : cystinuria in 1 case and primary hyperoxaluria in 4 cases.
...
PMID:[Etiologic factors of urinary lithiasis in Tunisian children]. 877 1
Effective management of struvite calculi requires a comprehensive approach to eliminate the stone burden and prevent stone recurrence. These stones occur more frequently in women, infants, and the elderly, as these patients are at greater risk for urinary tract infections. All patients should have routine laboratory testing as well as an excretory urogram. Appropriate urine cultures should be completed. Definitive management should promptly follow diagnosis. Percutaneous nephrolithotomy with or without SWL is the usual treatment. Appropriate antibiotic use is helpful; magnesium and
phosphorus
restriction and administration of
urease
inhibitors are less valuable.
...
PMID:Struvite stones: diagnosis and current treatment concepts. 1060 17
Two Streptomyces griseus strains were isolated from different soil types. S. griseus CAG17 strain was isolated from an agricultural area with low organic matter but rich in
phosphorus
content and S. griseus 26K strain was isolated from a forest area rich in organic matter with a low
phosphorus
content. The survival and metabolic activity of these isolates were studied in dynamic sterile soil microcosm systems. The fitness of each isolate was studied by re-inoculation in a soil type different from its origin. Maximum percentage of germination and respiration rates occurred within the first 48 h after each soil turnover (removal and addition of certain soil volumes). Data suggested that S. griseus CAG17 survived better independently of the soil type in comparison with S. griseus 26K which sporulated within the first 12 h after inoculation. Incubation temperatures did affect the lifecycles in relation to soil type. For example, the lowest temperature tested, 22 degrees C, was more favourable for extended germination and adaptation in general but revealed lesser spore numbers in the 'foreign' soil environment. Monitoring metabolic activity by estimation of
urease
, phosphatases and dehydrogenase-specific activities, between 18 and 35 degrees C incubation temperatures, was a reliable method for studying the survival and growth of streptomycete populations in soil. Results also confirmed that respiration rate and enzyme-specific activity corresponded with spore counts in long-term experiments which were designed for the investigation of survival and growth of S. griseus CAG17. Under selective pressure by heavy metals, in soil microcosm systems, metabolic activity proved a useful tool for the investigation of streptomycete activity. These methods could also be applied in agricultural field studies for monitoring microbial populations under conditions where various 'pollutants' are present in soil samples.
...
PMID:Determination of metabolic activity of streptomycetes in soil microcosms. 1094 95
A field experiment was carried out to assess the effectiveness of the addition of sugar beet, rock phosphate, and Aspergillus niger directly into the planting hole, and the mycorrhizal inoculation of seedlings with Scleroderma verrucosum, for promotion of plant growth of Cistus albidus L. and Quercus coccifera L. and enhancement of soil physicochemical, biochemical, and biological properties, in a degraded semiarid Mediterranean area. One year after planting, the available
phosphorus
content in the amended soils of both species was about fourfold higher than in the nonamended soil. Amendment addition increased the aggregate stability of the rhizosphere of C. albidus (by 56% with respect to control soil) while the mycorrhizal inoculation increased only the aggregate stability of the rhizosphere of Q. coccifera (by 13% with respect to control soil). Biomass C content and enzyme activities (dehydrogenase,
urease
, protease-BAA, acid phosphatase, and beta-glucosidase) of the rhizosphere of C. albidus were increased by amendment addition but not by mycorrhizal inoculation. Both treatments increased enzyme activities of the rhizosphere of Q. coccifera. The mycorrhizal inoculation of the seedlings with S. verrucosum was the most effective treatment for stimulating the growth of C. albidus (by 469% with respect to control plants) and Q. coccifera (by 74% with respect to control plants). The combined treatment, involving mycorrhizal inoculation of seedlings and addition of the amendment directly into soil, had no additive effect on the growth of either shrub species.
...
PMID:Establishment of two ectomycorrhizal shrub species in a semiarid site after in situ amendment with sugar beet, rock phosphate, and Aspergillus niger. 1569 Feb 28
By the methods of sensitivity analysis, main component analsis and discriminant analysis, this paper screened the sensitive indicators from 32 soil attributes to assess the productivity and erosion-resistance ability of the soils in hilly Loess Plateau. The results showed that soil available
phosphorus
content, anti-scouring ability, infiltration coefficient, labile organic carbon content, organic matter content and
urease
activity were the most sensitive indicators for soil quality assessment and the main targets for soil quality management and improvement, while soil biological indicators were with high and medium sensitivity. Five soil quality factors were summed up from 29 soil chemical, physical and biological attributes, i. e., organic matter, texture,
phosphorus
, porosity and microstructure. Except the factor porosity, the other four factors were significantly different between different land use types. Eight indicators including soil organic matter content, infiltration coefficient, anti-scouring ability, CEC, invertase activity, mean weight diameter (MWD) of aggregates, available
phosphorus
, and MWD of microaggregate were identified as the assessment indicators of the soil quality in hilly Loess Plateau, with the organic matter content, infiltration coefficient and anti-scouring ability as the key indicators.
...
PMID:[Assessment indicators of soil quality in hilly Loess plateau]. 1642 59
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