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Enzyme
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Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (
urease
)
7,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Apart from urine supersaturation with respect to struvite and calcium
phosphate
, crystal retention is considered to be necessary for the formation of infection stones. This study was performed to investigate the role of the mucous coat in rat bladders in the adhesion of sterile
urease
-induced crystals and to determine to what extent the adhesion was influenced by infection. Elimination of the mucous coat with 0.1 M HCl increased the adherence of crystals six times compared to that in bladders with an intact mucous coat. Infection with Proteus mirabilis, Escherichia coli, enterococci and Ureaplasma urealyticum increased the adherence six, five, four and two times, respectively. Injury to the mucous coat may thus be one mechanism by which microorganisms can contribute to the formation of infection stones in the urinary tract.
...
PMID:Adherence of urease-induced crystals to rat bladder epithelium following acute infection with different uropathogenic microorganisms. 329 48
Apart from urine supersaturation with respect to struvite and calcium
phosphate
caused by
urease
-producing microorganisms, retention of formed crystals in the urinary tract is necessary for the formation of infection stones. This study was performed to investigate the role of the mucous coat lining the urothelium in the adhesion of
urease
-induced crystals. Removal of this glycosaminoglycan-containing layer from rat bladders increased the adherence of struvite and calcium
phosphate
crystals 5-6 times compared to that in intact rat bladders. Heparin completely restored the antiadherence capacity while chondroitin sulphate had a very weak restorative effect and human urine had no restorative effect. These findings support the view that the mucous coat is of importance in preventing retention of
urease
-induced crystals.
...
PMID:Adherence of urease-induced crystals to rat bladder epithelium. 334 64
Campylobacter pylori, a suspected agent of gastritis and peptic ulceration, rapidly hydrolyzes urea. Because
urease
serves as the basis of detection of the organism in gastric biopsies and may represent an important virulence factor, biochemical characteristics of the enzyme were determined. C. pylori was isolated from antral biopsies from 10 patients with complaints of abdominal pain or history of peptic ulcer disease. All isolates were
urease
positive, with an average rate of hydrolysis by cell lysates being 36 +/- 28 mumol of NH3 per min per mg of protein, more than twice that of Proteus mirabilis and 10 times that of other urinary tract isolates. The enzyme had an apparent molecular weight of 625,000 +/- 15,000 by column chromatography, an isoelectric point of 5.9, a Km of 0.8 +/- 0.1 mM urea, an optimal temperature of 45 degrees C, and an optimal pH of 8.2. Ten isolates tested produced ureases with identical electrophoretic mobilities on nondenaturing 5% polyacrylamide activity gels. Acetohydroxamic acid (100 micrograms/ml), hydroxyurea (85 micrograms/ml), flurofamide (0.05 micrograms/ml), and EDTA (8 mM) inhibited enzyme activity by 50%. Cell lysates retained 50% of initial
urease
activity after 6 days and 40% activity after 18 days when stored at 4 degrees C in 20 mM sodium
phosphate
, pH 6.8. At -70 degrees C for 18 days, 1 mM EDTA or 15% glycerol preserved 40 or 34%, respectively, of initial activity. The
urease
of C. pylori appears to be biochemically unique from the enzymes of other common
urease
-producing species.
...
PMID:Characterization of urease from Campylobacter pylori. 338 8
Struvite nephrolithiasis is caused by infection with bacteria that possess the enzyme
urease
, and convert urea to ammonia that raises urine pH and crystallizes with magnesium and trivalent
phosphate
ion. Of the 75 of our 1431 stone patients with struvite stones 52 were women. Struvite stones occurred almost exclusively in women; a minority of women and most men had mixed stones of struvite and calcium oxalate. Increased serum creatinine levels and reduced creatinine clearance were common in patients with struvite stones, not in those with mixed stones; both were rare in calcium stone disease. Men and women with mixed struvite, calcium oxalate stones were hypercalciuric, but women with struvite stones were not. Patients with mixed stones usually had initial symptoms of stone passage, and were less likely to need surgery, including nephrectomy, or to form contralateral stones. Patients with struvite stones usually presented with infection or no symptom, not passage. We conclude that struvite stones occur in two forms. The struvite stone is a disease of women, presumably occurring de novo from infection. The mixed stones occur in both sexes, presumably from secondary infection in hypercalciuric patients who begin with calcium-oxalate stone disease.
...
PMID:Reduced glomerular filtration rate and hypercalciuria in primary struvite nephrolithiasis. 343 Sep 61
Urine must be oversaturated with magnesium ammonium
phosphate
for struvite uroliths to form. Oversaturation of urine with magnesium ammonium
phosphate
may be associated with several factors, including urinary tract infections with
urease
-producing microbes, alkaline urine, diet, and genetic predisposition. Of the
urease
-producing microbes, staphylococci are most struvitogenic in dogs. The precise mechanisms resulting in formation of sterile struvite uroliths in dogs have not been determined.
...
PMID:Etiopathogenesis of canine struvite urolithiasis. 351 2
The stability of native and immobilized
urease
isolated from Staphylococcus saprophyticus was studied at 4 degrees and 25 degrees C. The activity yield was 20% and 1.4% on the enzyme immobilization in albumin gel and latex membrane, respectively. Inactivation of native microbial
urease
proceeded 10 times slower in the solution containing 1 mM EDTA and 30 mM sodium sulfite. This solution contributed to a great extent to stabilization of immobilized
urease
both during storage in the
phosphate
buffer solution and in case of lyophilization.
...
PMID:[Stabilization of native and immobilized urease]. 361 80
Dialysis is the conventional treatment for chronic renal failure. It is cumbersome, expensive and time-consuming and thus alternate treatments have long been sought. A compact system consisting of haemoperfusion in series with ultrafiltration can nearly replace dialysis. A urea removal system is the only step required to complete this approach. The potential of combining a microencapsulated enzyme,
urease
, with an ammonium ion adsorbent, zirconium
phosphate
, to remove urea was examined in vitro. Urease converts urea to ammonium ions which are then adsorbed onto zirconium
phosphate
. This combination would be most effective in the intestinal tract. The capacity of zirconium
phosphate
is probably not enough to effect the removal of enough urea to completely replace dialysis in patients with no renal function. However, this system could potentially 1) delay the onset of dialysis therapy in patients who still have some renal function, either alone or in combination with haemoperfusion-ultrafiltration, or 2) reduce dialysis treatment times.
...
PMID:Orally ingested microencapsulated urease and an adsorbent, zirconium phosphate, to remove urea in kidney failure. 366 78
We have purified
urease
from the Mollicutes, Ureaplasma urealyticum, using high performance liquid chromatography methods and DEAE-Sephadex chromatography. While only small amounts of material could be utilized in these methods,
urease
was purified at least 180-fold, yield a major band on SDS-PAGE of 66,000 daltons, a minor band of 64,000 daltons, and several faint bands of lower molecular mass. These results suggest that the 380,000 dalton intact
urease
is a pentamer or hexamer of these two larger subunits. The highly purified
urease
from DEAE-Sephadex retained full activity for at least 20 days at 4 degrees C in sodium
phosphate
buffer (pH 7.2) with 1% bovine serum albumin. The estimated specific activity of the DEAE peak fractions, 180 IU/micrograms, is at least 90-fold greater than that of jack bean
urease
.
...
PMID:Purification of urease from Ureaplasma urealyticum. 369 Apr 18
Undiluted human urine and synthetic urine were inoculated with
urease
. No inhibitory activity against
urease
enzymatic activity could be detected in human urine. The
urease
-induced crystallization of both calcium
phosphate
and magnesium ammonium
phosphate
differed markedly, however, between the individuals studied, and it was less pronounced in human urine than in synthetic urine. This supports the observation made in experiments using diluted urine that human urine possesses an inhibitory activity against
urease
-induced crystallization and suggests that it has a large interindividual variation.
...
PMID:The effects of urease in undiluted human urine. 373 63
Ureaplasma urealyticum lacks the conventional mechanisms for adenosine 5-triphosphate (ATP) generation, such as glycolysis or arginine breakdown, present in other mycoplasmas. The possibility that ATP may be generated in these organisms through the formation of an ion gradient coupled to urea hydrolysis has been suggested by Masover and Hayflick (Ann NY Acad Sci 225:118-130, 1973). Our data have proved that ATP is produced when urea is added to resting ureaplasmal cells and its formation requires the concomitant activity of both cytoplasmic
urease
and membrane-bound ATPase and is drastically reduced by carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazine. Analysis of the optimal conditions for ATP synthesis in ureaplasmas indicates that this energetic process depends upon
phosphate
, urea, pH and ammonium ions in the reaction mixture. Particularly ammonium ions can interfere with the production of energy only when the starting pH is kept slightly basic. We have also shown that the changes in fluorescence intensity are directly related to the concentrations of the added urea and are inhibited by the presence of acetohydroxamic acid, carbonycyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazine, and ammonium ions. It appears that urea hydrolysis can generate an electrical potential through NH4+ diffusion across the Ureaplasma membranes, but this diffusion is also dependent upon the external acidic pH of the reaction mixture.
...
PMID:Energy production in Ureaplasma urealyticum. 379 30
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