Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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)
The saccharolytic capacity in respect to 14 carbohydrates, the lipolytic activity, the presence of
urease
,
catalase
, galactosidase, the formation of hydrogen sulphide and indol and also serological properties with the species agglutinating sera were studied in the representatives of the genus of hemoglobinophilic microbes: H. influenzae, H. parainfluenzae, H. aegiptius, H. haemolyticus, H. aphrophilus. There were revealed differences in the individual representatives of the genus by the enzymatic activity and serological properties. Thus, representatives of H. influenzae possessed
urease
activity, but all of them lacked galactosidase. H. aegiptius possessed
urease
and galactosidase, and H. parainfluenzae, H. haemolyticus and H. aphrophilus--galactosidase of high activity, but no
urease
. Representatives of each of the species were agglutinated by homologous sera only.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of some species of microorganisms related to the genus of hemoglobinophils]. 108 4
Actinomyces viscosus is a gram-positive, non-acid-fact, facultative,
catalase
-positive, filamentous, or diphtheroidal microorganism. It was isolated from six canine infections during a period of 1.5 years. The organism was cultured from exudate and flaky granules aspirated from infectious granulomas and empyemas. All cultures grew well aerobically and anaerobically with the addition of 10% carbon dioxide. They fermented lactose, produced
catalase
and acetylmethylcarbinol, reduced nitrates, hydrolyzed aesculin, and did not produce gelatinase or
urease
. These physiological characteristics distinguish A. viscosus from other morphologically similar organisms.
...
PMID:Identification of Actinomyces viscosus from canine infections. 123 70
Estimates were made of the numbers of viable bacteria in the rumens of sheep receiving different rations. Representative colonies were isolated and tested for
urease
production. Some
urease
-positive isolates were characterized and identified. The ureolytic activities of the
urease
-producing isolates were determined and compared with the activity of rumen fluid. The rations fed to the sheep did not exert a significant influence on the relative numbers of the
urease
-producting organisms in the rumen. No obligately anaerobic ureolytic bacteria were found. All
urease
-positive isolates were facultatively anaerobic, Gram-positive,
catalase
-positive cocci. Out of ten isolates, nine were identified as Staphylococcus saprophyticus and one as Micrococcus varians. The total
urease
activity of the different isolates based on the lowest numbers in which they were present in the rumen, compared favourably with the
urease
activity of rumen fluid. The facultatively anaerobic Gram-positive cocci were probably responsible for a large proportion of the
urease
activity of the rumen fluid. Conditions prevailing in the rumen were found to be conducive to
urease
production by the isolates tested.
...
PMID:Ureolytic bacteria in sheep rumen. 123 88
"Mycobacterium genavense" is a proposed new species recently reported to cause disseminated infections in 18 patients with AIDS in Europe. We have recovered "M. genavense" as slowly growing fastidious mycobacteria in blood cultures of seven patients with AIDS. In the original studies of "M. genavense," the fastidious organism grew only in BACTEC 13A vials. The Seattle, Washington, isolates of "M. genavense" also failed to grow when subcultured from 13A vials to routine solid media, but dysgonic colonies were produced on Middlebrook 7H11 agar supplemented with mycobactin J. The mycolic acid pattern of patients' isolates closely resembled that of the type strain of Mycobacterium simiae when analyzed by one- and two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography and by high-performance liquid chromatography. Whole-cell fatty acid analyses by gas-liquid chromatography distinguished the isolates from M. simiae but misidentified them as Mycobacterium fortuitum. Sequence determinations of the hypervariable regions of the 16S rRNA gene indicate that these organisms belong to the recently proposed new species "M. genavense." Growth from Middlebrook 7H11 agar supplemented with mycobactin J consistently yielded positive tests for
catalase
(semiquantitative and at 68 degrees C), pyrazinamidase, and
urease
which enable mycobacteriology laboratories to presumptively identify "M. genavense" without nucleic acid analyses. The failure of "M. genavense" to grow on conventional mycobacterial solid media suggests that mycobacterial blood cultures should include a broth medium incubated for at least 8 weeks.
...
PMID:Laboratory aspects of "Mycobacterium genavense," a proposed species isolated from AIDS patients. 128 Jun 52
Bilophila wadsworthia is an anaerobic, gram-negative, asaccharolytic,
urease
-positive, bile-resistant,
catalase
-positive bacillus, originally recovered from infections in patients with gangrenous and perforated appendicitis. Additional isolations from clinical specimens, including pleural fluid, joint fluid, blood and pus from a scrotal abscess, mandibular osteomyelitis and axillary hidradenitis suppurativa are described here. Bilophila is found as normal flora in feces and, occasionally, in saliva and in the vagina. Isolates from humans are usually beta-lactamase positive and therefore resistant to certain beta-lactam antibiotics. Two percent of strains are also resistant to clindamycin.
...
PMID:Clinical importance of Bilophila wadsworthia. 129 59
A new rapidly growing mycobacterium was isolated from human sputum. This organism grew at 22, 31, 37, and 41 degrees C and possessed
catalase
, acid phosphatase, acetamidase,
urease
, nicotinamidase, pyrazinamidase, and nitrate reductase activities. It did not produce nicotinic acid, hydrolyze Tween, or have benzamidase, isonicotinamidase, succinidamidase, and arylsulfatase activities. A mycolic acid analysis revealed a simple, unique pattern. The organism is susceptible to antituberculotic drugs. A comparative 16S rRNA sequence analysis placed this organism within the confines of the genus Mycobacterium, most closely related to the thermotolerant rapidly growing species. On the basis of the pattern of enzymatic activities and metabolic properties, as well as the unique 16S rRNA sequence, we propose that our single strain represents a new species, for which we propose the name Mycobacterium confluentis. The type strain is strain 1389/90; a culture of this strain has been deposited in the German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures as strain DSM 44017.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium confluentis sp. nov. 137 23
The role of neutrophil and its chlorinated oxidant were investigated in Helicobacter pylori-induced gastric mucosal injury in vitro. Luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (ChL) was used to detect neutrophil-derived oxidants. ChL activity was significantly elevated when neutrophils were incubated in H. pylori, indicating that H. pylori actually elicits oxidative burst of neutrophils. To assess whether H. pylori-activated neutrophils exert the cytotoxicity for gastric mucosal cells, rabbit gastric mucosal cell was monolayered in culture wells and labeled with a fluorescence dye, 2',7'-bis(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)carboxy-fluorescein, which is retained in the intracellular space as long as the cell membrane is intact. Labeled cells were coincubated with neutrophils and H. pylori. We inferred from the cytotoxicity index (specific %cytotoxicity), which was calculated from fluorometrical measurements of supernatant and lysate, that the mucosal cells were significantly damaged by H. pylori-activated neutrophils. This injury was largely attenuated by eliminating urea from the incubation mixture or by acetohydroxamic acid, a potent
urease
inhibitor. Additionally, the scavengers of neutrophil-derived oxidants, including taurine, methionine, and
catalase
, also attenuated this injury. Cultured mucosal cells that were exposed to the solution containing monochloramine (an oxidant yielded by reaction of hypochlorous acid and ammonia) were highly damaged compared with cells exposed to hypochlorous acid or hydrogen peroxide at physiological concentrations. These data suggest that H. pylori-activated neutrophils promote gastric mucosal cell injury and that monochloramine plays a unique and important role in this process.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori-associated ammonia production enhances neutrophil-dependent gastric mucosal cell injury. 144 47
A spiral shaped bacterium was seen in smears and histological sections (stained by carbolfuchsin) of gastric, ileal and caecal mucosa as well as in stool smears from mice. A significant correlation between the presence of the spiral bacterium and the occurrence of gastritis was observed but the ileal and caecal mucosa seemed unaffected. The bacterium was Gram negative and grew on BHM and Skirrow's medium, under microaerophilic conditions, at 37 degrees C. Its major biochemical characteristics included positive
catalase
and oxidase reactions and a rapidly positive
urease
test. There were 2 or 3 spiral turns per cell and a tuft of up to 12 sheathed flagella on each pointed end. Entwined, braided periplasmic fibrils covered the surface of the cell. This spiral bacterium seemed to be part of the normal intestinal flora but was associated with gastritis.
...
PMID:Spiral bacterium associated with gastric, ileal and caecal mucosa of mice. 144 7
Pasteurella multocida is a pathogen of animals and humans. Most of the patients have been associated with animals but many cases had not contacted them. The failure to diagnose P. multocida infections is mostly due to misidentification on gram stained smears and inadequate laboratory identification techniques. In order to compile detailed characteristics of the organism we studied the physical and biochemical properties of 70 isolates of P. multocida - 17 human, 23 swine and 30 poultry. All isolates produced
catalase
, oxydase, indol, nitrate reduction and ornithine decarboxylase. They failed to produce
urease
, gelatinase, methyl red, acetoin and could not grow on MacConkey agar, SS-agar, in nutrient broth with 0% or 6% NaCl. With respect to fermentable sugars, all isolates consistantly produced acid from glucose, mannitol and mannose. None of the cultures fermented lactose, maltose and dulcitol. Marked variations in the patterns of fermentation of arabinose and xylose were found. The characteristics tested are important to facilitate identification of P. multocida but could not be used to differentiate the host of the bacterium.
...
PMID:Characteristics of Pasteurella multocida isolated from humans, swine and poultry in Thailand. 148 11
Twenty-one type or other reference strains, each representing a different Campylobacter, Helicobacter, or Arcobacter taxon, and a reference strain of Staphylococcus aureus were used to assess the reproducibility of nine enzyme detection tests used in the identification of campylobacters. For five of the tests (alkaline phosphatase, DNase, and H2S production, indoxyl acetate hydrolysis, and nitrate reduction), more than one procedure was employed to determine the most suitable method. Alkaline phosphatase test results were better defined and more reproducible if read after 1 h of incubation. Detection of DNase was fully reproducible with each method (except with Helicobacter pylori), but reactions were generally weaker than those of other DNase-producing organisms. Both procedures for determining H2S production were irreproducible for the same strains. The reproducibility of indoxyl acetate hydrolysis was improved by using disks impregnated with 25 microliters of substrate. Reduction of nitrate was best determined by Cook's plate method. Results for the other tests examined (
catalase
, oxidase, and
urease
production and hippurate hydrolysis) were both pertinent and fully reproducible for all strains.
...
PMID:Assessment of enzyme detection tests useful in identification of campylobacteria. 155 96
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