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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)

Soil available N, NH4(+)-N and NO3(-)-N contents and soil urease activity were measured after application of rave earth elements(REEs). The results showed that the contents of soil available N and NH4(+)-N were affected by application of REEs, being significantly differed from those in the control when the dosage was higher than 5 mg.kg-1 dry soil. However, soil NO3(-)-N content in treated plots did not differed from that in the control. No observed effect concentration (NOEC) for the potential influence of REEs on the chemical transformation and availability of soil available nitrogen was found to be 5 mg.kg-1 dry soil. The decrease of soil available N concentration was found closely correlated to the inhibition of soil urease activity (R2 = 0.87). It was suggested that the inhibition effect of REEs on the enzymatic nitrogen mineralization should be one of the major causes for the decline of soil available nitrogen concentration. The decrease of available nitrogen concentration occurred shortly after REEs application, indicating that there should be a self-regulation process to maintain the available nitrogen concentration in soil.
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PMID:[Influence of rare earth elements on chemical transformation of nitrogen in agricultural soil]. 1175 79

We describe the first case of cryptococcosis caused by Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii in a male Atlantic bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). The dolphin showed clinical signs of tachypnea, transient dyspnea, and mild tachycardia and developed multiple hyperechoic nodules, parenchymal consolidation, and thickening of pleura. A diagnosis of bronchopneumonia with pleuritis was made. Itraconazole therapy was implemented for 120 days, and trough levels in serum were within or above the suggested therapeutic range. Titers of cryptococcal antigen in serum increased eightfold during therapy, and the case had a fatal outcome. Necropsy examination findings included enlarged pulmonary lymph nodes and extensive coalescing granulomatous lesions throughout both lungs. Histologic examination revealed numerous, spherical to ellipsoidal, mucicarmine-positive, 3- to 14-microm, encapsulated, budding cells consistent with C. neoformans. Culture of the lung tissue yielded colonies of C. neoformans. The isolate was urease positive and nitrate negative and exhibited phenoloxidase activity. It was positive on canavanine-glycine-bromothymol blue agar. When tested by the Iatron serodiagnostic reagent kit (Iatron Laboratories, Inc.), it was shown to belong to serotype B.
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PMID:Cryptococcosis in a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) caused by Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii. 1182 7

This study investigated whether the serum nitrite concentration reflects Helicobacter pylori-induced inflammation and atrophic changes of gastric mucosa. Ninety-seven patients underwent biopsy of both antrum and fundus. Samples were analyzed by the rapid urease test and histopathological examination according to the updated Sydney system. Fasting serum samples from each subject were analyzed for specific IgG Helicobacter pylori antibodies, pepsinogen I and II concentrations, and NO2-/NO3- content. Eleven patients had H. pylori eradicated with proton pump-based triple therapy. There was a strong positive correlation between the Helicobacter pylori density in the gastric mucosa and the serum nitrite concentration, but a negative correlation existed between the atrophic grade of the gastric mucosa and both serum nitrite concentration and Helicobacter pylori density in the gastric mucosa. Serum nitrite concentrations decreased significantly after successful eradication of Helicobacter pylori. Therefore, serum nitrite concentration may be a useful marker for oxidative DNA damage and apoptosis associated with Helicobacter pylori infection.
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PMID:Does serum nitrite concentration reflect gastric carcinogenesis in Japanese Helicobacter pylori-infected patients? 1183 8

A slowly growing microaerophilic Helicobacter strain was isolated from the ceca and fecal pellets of Korean wild mice (Mus musculus molossinus). This bacterial strain possessed a pair of nonsheathed bipolar flagella, was positive for urease, catalase and oxidase, and reduced nitrate to nitrite. It proved susceptible to nalidixic acid and resistant to cephalodine, and did not hydrolyze hippurate. On the basis of phenotypic characteristics and 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, the isolate represents a new species of the genus Helicobacter, for which the name Helicobacter muricola sp. nov. is proposed; the type strain of the new species is w-06T.
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PMID:Helicobacter muricola sp. nov., a novel Helicobacter species isolated from the ceca and feces of Korean wild mouse (Mus musculus molossinus). 1200 52

Six strains of Trichophyton verrucosum were used in a test to determine effects of urea and sodium nitrate on their growth. Despite having urease activity, the strains failed to utilize the urea and sodium nitrate for their growth. Moreover, the organisms were killed if large amounts of these nitrogen compounds and ammonia were added to the medium. These nitrogen compounds, distributed in cattle breeding soil, inhibited the growth of T. verrucosum. Thus, soil in cattle breeding environments does not seem to be a reservoir of this pathogen.
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PMID:[The influence of urea, ammonia and nitrate as they affect growth and viability of Trichophyton verrucosum]. 1204 Mar 68

Fourteen ballistoconidium-forming yeast strains were isolated from leaves of plants collected in the Ogasawara Islands, which are isolated islands in the Pacific Ocean, about 1,000 km south of the Japanese mainland, in the subtropical zone. The 14 isolates were characterized by the absence of xylose in whole-cell hydrolysates, the presence of Q-10(H2) as the major ubiquinone isoprenologue, G+C contents of 47.6-52.0 mol%, the inability to ferment sugars or to assimilate nitrate and positive Diazonium blue B and urease reactions. They formed a phylogenetically coherent cluster within the Erythrobasidium lineage in the Urediniomycetes of the Basidiomycota based on 18S rDNA sequences. Analyses of the nucleotide sequences of internal transcribed spacer regions and DNA complementarity showed that four genospecies were recognized among the 14 isolates. A mating reaction was observed in one of the four genospecies, which produced one-celled basidia on dikaryotic hyphae with clamp connections. On the basis of the morphological, physiological, chemotaxonomic and phylogenetic analyses, a new teleomorphic genus, Bannoa, is proposed, in which one novel species is described, Bannoa hahajimensis gen. nov., sp. nov. (type strain OK-248(T) = JCM 10336T = CBS 9039(T)). The other three anamorphic genospecies are described as Sporobolomyces bischofiae sp. nov. (type strain OK-257T = JCM 10338T =CBS 9041T), Sporobolomyces ogasawarensis sp. nov. (type strain OK-14T = JCM 10326T = CBS 9038T) and Sporobolomyces syzygii sp. nov. (type strain OK-227T = JCM 10337T = CBS 9040T.
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PMID:Bannoa hahajimensis gen. nov., sp. nov., and three related anamorphs, Sporobolomyces bischofiae sp. nov., Sporobolomyces ogasawarensis sp. nov. and sporobolomyces syzygii sp. nov., yeasts isolated from plants in Japan. 1205 19

A facultatively anaerobic bacterium, designated strain COOI3B(T) (= ATCC BAA 136T = DSM 13966T), was isolated from the waters emitted by a bore well tapping the deep subterranean thermal waters of the Great Artesian Basin of Australia. The cells were straight to slightly curved rods (0.5-0.8 x 2-25 microm) that occurred singly and rarely in pairs or in chains. Strain COOI3B(T) was motile by peritrichous flagella. It stained gram-negative, but electron micrographs showed a gram-positive-type cell wall. Spores were never observed and cells were heat-sensitive. Yeast extract at 0.02% (w/v) was required for growth and could also be used as a sole carbon and energy source at concentrations higher than 0.1% (w/v). The strain utilized amorphous iron(III), manganese(IV), nitrate, nitrite and fumarate as electron acceptors in the presence of yeast extract, glucose, sucrose, fructose, maltose, xylose, starch, glycerol, ethanol or lactate. Electron acceptors were not obligately required and growth was better in the presence of nitrate than in its absence. Acid was not produced from growth on carbohydrates. Tryptophan deaminase, H2S, arginine dihydrolase, lysine decarboxylase, beta-galactosidase, arabinosidase, glucuronidase, glucosaminidase, nitroanilidase, xylosidase and ornithine decarboxylase were not produced. Starch and gelatin, but not casein, were hydrolysed. Aesculin and catalase, but not oxidase and urease, were produced. Strain COOI3B(T) grew optimally at temperatures between 37 and 40 degrees C (the temperature growth range was 25-45 degrees C) and at pH 7.0-9.0 (the pH growth range was 6.0 to 9.5) with 5% (w/v) NaCl (the NaCl concentration growth range was 0.9%, w/v). The DNA base composition was 43 +/- 1 mol % G+C. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that it was a member of the family Bacillaceae, Bacillus infernus and Bacillus firmus being the closest phylogenetic neighbours (having a mean similarity value of 96%); hence, strain COOI3B(T) is designated as a novel species, Bacillus subterraneus sp. nov.
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PMID:Bacillus subterraneus sp. nov., an iron- and manganese-reducing bacterium from a deep subsurface Australian thermal aquifer. 1205 51

The changes of the total nitrogen, average yearly concentration of ammonia, nitrate ions, urease activity, total amount of amino acids in humic acids (HA) and the structure of humic acids were monitored in relation to the effect of shelterbelt as biogeochemical barrier located on a mineral and mineral-organic soil. The transformation of different forms of nitrogen in the soil under shelterbelt was strongly connected with the humification process and the molecular structure of humic acids.
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PMID:Effect of shelterbelt on two kinds of soils on the transformation of organic matter. 1243 88

We report the recent isolation of Cryptococcus laurentii from the blood of a patient given the diagnosis of ganglioneuroblastoma. The organism was identified using physiological and molecular characteristics, including morphology, carbohydrate and nitrate assimilation, urease activity, inability to form melanin on appropriate media, positive staining with diazonium blue B and sequence analysis of the D1/D2 domain of 26S ribosomal DNA. The isolate was resistant to fluconazole and 5-fluorocytosine using both the Etest and a broth microdilution assay. Repeated recovery of the organism from different blood cultures, and the patient's good response to treatment with amphotericin B support its etiological role. C. laurentii has rarely been implicated as a cause of clinically significant infections. The identity of reported isolates has not always been adequately documented, and some appear to have been isolated from lesions caused by Cryptococcus neoformans, emphasizing the true rarity of disease due to this fungus.
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PMID:Fungemia in a cancer patient caused by fluconazole-resistant Cryptococcus laurentii. 1246 27

Sporotrichosis is endemic in three regions (east, north and south) in India. The colony morphology and physiological characteristics of 49 clinical isolates from these three regions (25 from north India, 17 from east India and seven from south India) were analysed in both mycelial and yeast forms. No difference in colony character was seen among the 49 isolates on three different media. Growth of all isolates was inhibited at 40 degrees C. The yeast forms were found to be more tolerant to osmotic pressure and salt concentrations. Most mycelial forms grew well between pH 3-12.0 whereas most yeast forms could tolerate a pH range of 2.4 to 9.5. Variations in assimilation of arabinose, dextrin, raffinose, rhamnose and starch was observed among strains from different geographical regions. The yeast forms did not show any urease activity but the mycelial forms of all isolates could split urea. Phenol oxidase and potassium nitrate assimilation were positive and gelatinase activity and casein hydrolysis were negative for all isolates.
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PMID:Physiological characters of Sporothrix schenckii isolates. 1247 19


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