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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)

Forty one strains of dematiaceous fungi from the Mycology collection of the University of Costa Rica were studied. Thirty three were pathogenic (Fonsecaea pedrosoi, Cladosporium carrionii, Xylohypha bantiana, Exophiala jeanselmei, Rhinocladiella aquaspersa, Phialophora verrucosa) and the other eight were contaminants (Hormodendrum sp.). Morphological studies were done using the slide culture technique. The physiological criteria used were: urease production, gelatin and Loeffler media liquefaction; xanthine, tyrosine, starch and casein hydrolysis; nitrate utilization; carbohydrate uptake; sensitivity to cycloheximide and thermotolerance in glucose-Sabouraud medium. The physiological tests did not provide characteristic patterns for the different genera of pathogenic fungi, even though these differences were detected in non pathogenic fungi; the tests may be useful for the quick separation of both groups. Physiological test may have a limited value in the identification of fungi and the morphological analysis cannot be substituted by physiological studies.
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PMID:[Morphologic and physiologic characteristics of Costa Rica pathogenic fungi (Dermatiaceae)]. 184 48

Recent studies showed that hyperammonaemia caused many of the metabolic changes in portacaval-shunted rats, a model of hepatic encephalopathy. These changes included a depression in the cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMRGlc), an indication of decreased brain function. 2. The purpose of the present experiments was to determine whether the depression of CMRGlc caused by ammonia is confined to certain brain structures, or whether the depression is an overall decrease in all structures, such as occurs in portacaval-shunted rats. To accomplish this objective, rats were made hyperammonaemic by giving them intraperitoneal injections of 40 units of urease/kg body wt. every 12 h; control rats received 0.154 m-NaCl. CMRGlc was measured 48 h after the first injection, by using quantitative autoradiography with [6-14C]glucose as a tracer. 3. The experimental rats had high plasma ammonia concentrations (control 70 nmol/ml, experimental 610 nmol/ml) and brain glutamine levels (control 5.4 mumol/ml). Hyperammonaemia decreased CMRGlc throughout the brain by an average of 19%. CMRGlc showed an inverse correlation with plasma ammonia, but a stronger correlation with the brain glutamine content. 4. Hyperammonaemia led to a decrease in CMRGlc throughout the brain that was indistinguishable from the pattern seen in portacaval-shunted rats. This is taken as further evidence that the cerebral depression found in portacaval-shunted rats is a consequence of hyperammonaemia. The observation that depression of CMRGlc correlated more closely with brain glutamine content than with plasma ammonia suggests that metabolism of ammonia is an important step in the pathological sequence.
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PMID:Hyperammonaemia depresses glucose consumption throughout the brain. 187 5

A new microaerophilic, spirally curved, rod-shaped bacterium was isolated from the gastric mucosa of a pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina). The gram-negative cells of this bacterium are oxidase, catalase, and urease positive and strongly resemble Helicobacter pylori (Campylobacter pylori) cells. Like H. pylori, this organism does not metabolize glucose, does not reduce nitrate or produce indole, does not produce H2S from triple sugar iron agar, does not hydrolyze hippurate or esculin, and does not grow in the presence of 1% glycine, 1.5% salt, or 1% bile. Also like H. pylori, it is resistant to nalidixic acid and susceptible to cephalothin. However, unlike H. pylori, the colorless colonies are flat and have irregular edges. This organism has a unique cellular fatty acid composition, forming a new gas-liquid chromatography group, group K, and a distinctive DNA content (24 mol% guanine plus cytosine). It exhibits less than 10% DNA-DNA homology (as determined by the nylon filter blot method at 65 degrees C) with other members of the genus Helicobacter. Although the levels of DNA relatedness between previously described Helicobacter species and the new organism are low (less than 10%) and the difference in guanine-plus-cytosine content is large (24 versus 36 to 41 mol%), the genus Helicobacter is the only genus in which it is logical to include the organism at this time. We propose that our single strain represents a new species, Helicobacter nemestrinae, and we designate strain T81213-NTB (= ATCC 49396) as the type strain.
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PMID:Helicobacter nemestrinae sp. nov., a spiral bacterium found in the stomach of a pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina) 174 3

Potential mechanisms for regulation of urease levels in Streptococcus salivarius were examined, including: induction by urea, nitrogen or carbon source repression, and effects of pH and CO2 (because CO2 enrichment enhanced urease detection on urea agar plates). Regulation by either pH or CO2 was confirmed by comparison of the urease accumulation pattern during anaerobic growth under CO2 with that under N2. Under CO2, there was an initial buffering plateau at pH 6.2 and a rate of Streptococcus salivarius urease accumulation three-fold that under N2, with a pH 7.6 plateau. With both gas phases there was also an increase in the rate of urease appearance coincident with the decrease in medium pH following the pH plateau. The effects of pH, CO2, and HCO3- on urease levels and on growth were separately assessed by culture in media containing 0, 25, 100 mmol/L KHCO3 buffered at different pH levels. There was an inverse relationship between the logarithm of the urease level after 24-hour growth and the pH during growth-the urease specific activity was 100-fold higher at pH 5.5, compared with pH 7.0 and above. HCO3-/CO2 (100 mmol/L) had little effect on urease levels, but was essential for growth at pH 5.5. There was no significant urease induction by urea, or repression by ammonia or glucose. There was also evidence of pH regulation of urease levels in some staphylococci, Klebsiella pneumonia, and Corynebacterium renale, but not in Actinomyces naeslundii and several other species. We conclude that the external pH is a major factor regulating urease levels in S. salivarius and possibly some other species-a mechanism equivalent to urease repression by OH-.
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PMID:pH regulation of urease levels in Streptococcus salivarius. 211 May 82

A new method of detecting urease activity in Enterobacteriaceae was developed. An 8.5 cm filter paper disc impregnated with 20% urea and 0.5% bromocresol purple was placed on the surface of a glucose fermentation plate after inoculation with a multipoint replicator and overnight incubation. This method was compared with the commercially prepared Mast urea agar (Multipoint) and Fuscoe's Urea Plate Medium. A total of 240 routine isolates of Enterobacteriaceae were tested for urease activity using the three methods. Sixty five isolates were positive by the three methods while 33 isolates gave differing results. The urea disc method was more sensitive for detecting urease activity in isolates of Klebsiella species, Morganella morganii, and Yersinia enterocolitica. It also overcame the problem associated with the other two media of diffusion of alkali end products through the medium.
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PMID:Use of urea filter paper disc to detect urease activity in Enterobacteriaceae by multipoint replication techniques. 221 71

Cells of Proteus mirabilis, previously grown in nutrient broth (NB), exhibited an increase in urease activity during subsequent incubation in mineral medium even when protein biosynthesis was inhibited. During growth in NB, degradation of amino acids obviously led to the formation of nickel-complexing metabolites, and nickel ions were therefore unavailable for maximal expression of enzymatically active urease; this inhibition of urease biosynthesis was overcome by the addition of nickel to the growth medium, and also by added glucose. Experiments concerning the incorporation of radioactive nickel into urease finally indicated that the observed increase in urease activity was caused by posttranslational insertion of nickel into performed apo-urease.
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PMID:Nickel availability and urease expression in Proteus mirabilis. 225 79

CDC group M-6 is the vernacular name given to a gram-negative, oxidase-positive, aerobic, nonmotile, rod-shaped bacterium. This organism is biochemically similar to Kingella denitrificans and displays a cellular fatty acid profile consistent with CDC groups M-5 and EF-4 and with Neisseria elongata. Of the 95 M-6 strains referred to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for identification, 32 (64%) of the first 50 were from the throat or sputum and only 3 (6%) were from blood; only 5 (11%) of the next 45 isolates were from the upper respiratory tract and 23 (51%) were from blood, with many of these (15 or 65%) being associated with endocarditis. The major characteristics of CDC group M-6 include reduction of nitrate and nitrite with no gas formation; positive reaction for oxidase; negative reactions for catalase, urease, indole, and motility; and no acid production from carbohydrates. Guanine-plus-cytosine content determined spectrophotometrically by thermal denaturation was 55 to 58 mol % for six M-6 strains tested: 56 mol % for the N. elongata subsp. elongata type strain and for the N. elongata subsp. glycolytica type strain. By the hydroxyapatite method, DNAs from 24 M-6 strains showed an average of 78% relatedness to M-6 reference strain B1019 in reactions at 60 degrees C and 73% relatedness in reactions at 75 degrees C. M-6 strain B1019 was 79% related to the N. elongata type strain at 60 degrees C and 71% related at 75 degrees C; it was 75% related to the type strain N. elongata subsp. glycolytica at 60 degrees C and was 66% related at 75 degrees C. DNAs from CDC group EF-4, K. denitrificans, and CDC group M-5 were all less than 14% related to CDC group M-6 at 75 degrees C. The DNA relatedness data showed conclusively that all the M-6 strains belong in the species N. elongata. M-6 is different from N. elongata subsp. elongata in that M-6 reduces nitrate and sometimes weakly acidifies D-glucose, and it is different from N. elongata subsp. glycolytica in that it reduces nitrate and is negative for glucose and catalase. Because of the apparent clinical significance of M-6 compared with the clinical significance of N. elongata subsp. elongata and N. elongata subsp. glycolytica and the ease in distinguishing it biochemically, we propose M-6 as a third subspecies of N.elongata, N. elongata subsp. nitroreducens subsp. nov.
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PMID:Neisseria elongata subsp. nitroreducens subsp. nov., formerly CDC group M-6, a gram-negative bacterium associated with endocarditis. 227 87

The biopsy urease test is a simple and rapid method for the diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection; results are obtained within 4 h to 24 h. Various modifications of the media used in this test have been tried, to improve the accuracy and speed of the test. We compared the yield obtained with two media: the standard Christensen's urea medium and a modified plain urea medium (without the nutrients glucose and peptone); the result was read upto 1 h. In the first 53 cases, culture was obtained when either of the media gave a negative result. There was no difference in false positives in the two media, while there were more false negatives with the plain urea medium (4) compared to the Christensen's medium (1). In the latter 69 patients, we determined the accuracy of the two media by obtaining culture in all cases. The Christensen's medium had a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 92.1%, while the plain urea medium had a sensitivity of 96.7% and a specificity of 92.1%. The speed of reaction in both media was similar. We conclude that the Christensen's urea medium gives accurate results even when read at 1 h; the plain urea medium gives similar results.
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PMID:Evaluation of a modified medium for the one hour urease test for Helicobacter pylori infection. 237 33

A halophilic gram-negative rod was isolated from blood and cerebrospinal fluid collected from a 70-year-old male having no known contact with seafood or salt water. Positive biochemical tests included oxidase, sensitivity to 0/129, O-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside, lysine decarboxylase and fermentation of glucose, salicin, n-inositol, sucrose, L-mannose, L-arabinose, and arbutin. Negative tests included indole, ornithine decarboxylase, arginine dihydrolase fermentation of lactose, and production of gelatinase and urease. The DNA base composition was 45.0 mol% guanine plus cytosine. Numerical taxonomy indicated 70% similarity with known reference Vibrio sp. strains. The 5S rRNA sequence for this strain has been determined: 5'-U G C C U G G C G A C C A U A G C G U U U U G G A C C C A C C U G A U U C C A U G C C G A A C U C A G U A G U G A A A C G A A A C A G C G U C G A U G G U A G U G U G G G G U C U C C C C A U G U G A G A G U A G A A C A U C G C C A G G C A U-3'. Based on the phenetic, molecular genetic, and nucleic acid sequencing data, it is concluded that Vibrio cincinnatiensis represents a new species of the genus Vibrio sensu strictu (as defined by 5S rRNA sequencing results). On a basis of 5S rRNA comparative sequence analysis, the organism appears to share a recent common ancestor with V. gazogenes (98% homology) and close ancestry with V. mimicus, V. fluvialis, and V. metschnikovii.
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PMID:Vibrio cincinnatiensis sp. nov., a new human pathogen. 242 96

An express analyzer for urea measurements has been designed on the basis of the Exan-G glucose analyzer. The measurement bases on the potentiometric analysis of urease-immobilized urea hydrolysis. The detector consists of a flat pH electrode and an enzymic membrane. The sample volume is 50 microliters of whole blood, the measurement limit is 2-40 mM; 30 samples can be analyzed in an hour; the coefficient of variations is 3%. The optimal conditions of the measurements have been defined.
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PMID:[A rapid analyzer for determining blood urea]. 247 Sep 59


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