Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (urease)
7,490 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation may induce erythema, DNA damage and suppression of immune responses. Melanin pigmentation offers protection against the first two of these effects, but immunosuppression seems to occur irrespective of the subject's pigmentation. Cis-urocanic acid (cis-UCA), produced by isomerization of trans-UCA in the stratum corneum on UV exposure, initiates some of the immunomodulatory effects of UV radiation. In the present study the relationship between skin pigmentation and UCA isomerization has been examined in 28 healthy individuals of skin types I-IV. Pigmentation is measured in five areas of not recently exposed back skin before irradiation with 0, 0.45, 0.9, 1.8 and 3.6 standard erythema dose (SED) of filtered broadband UV-B (1 SED = 10 mJ cm-2 at 298 nm). The concentration of UCA isomers is measured immediately after the irradiation. With 3.6 SED, the relative production of cis-UCA is close to the maximum obtainable, irrespective of skin type. A significant negative correlation is found between pigmentation and relative production of cis-UCA at 0.45 and 1.8 SED, and between pigmentation and absolute production of cis-UCA at 0.45 SED. At doses of 0.45 and 0.9 SED the relative and absolute production of cis-UCA are higher in the group with skin types I and II when compared with the group with skin types III and IV. The higher isomerization in the lightly pigmented subjects than in the more pigmented ones may indicate that people with fair skin are at a relatively higher risk of immunosuppression when exposed to low doses of UV radiation.
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PMID:Isomerization of urocanic acid after ultraviolet radiation is influenced by skin pigmentation. 1020 77

The Sporothrix complex members cause sporotrichosis, a subcutaneous mycosis with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. Several specific phenotypic characteristics are associated with virulence in many fungi, but studies in this field involving the Sporothrix complex species are scarce. Melanization, thermotolerance, and production of proteases, catalase, and urease were investigated in 61 S. brasiliensis, one S. globosa, and 10 S. schenckii strains. The S. brasiliensis strains showed a higher expression of melanin and urease compared with S. schenckii. These two species, however, presented similar thermotolerances. Our S. globosa strain had low expression of all studied virulence factors. The relationship between these phenotypes and clinical aspects of sporotrichosis was also evaluated. Strains isolated from patients with spontaneous regression of infection were heavily melanized and produced high urease levels. Melanin was also related to dissemination of internal organs and protease production was associated with HIV-coinfection. A murine sporotrichosis model showed that a S. brasiliensis strain with high expression of virulence factors was able to disseminate and yield a high fungal burden in comparison with a control S. schenckii strain. Our results show that virulence-related phenotypes are variably expressed within the Sporothrix complex species and might be involved in clinical aspects of sporotrichosis.
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PMID:Phenotypic characteristics associated with virulence of clinical isolates from the Sporothrix complex. 2596 Oct 5

Melanin formation is a promising target for antifungal development. We screened a collection of 727 compounds that were previously approved for clinical use in humans for inhibition of pigmentation in Cryptococcus gattii, a lethal fungal pathogen that causes damage to both immunocompetent and immunocompromised hosts. The pyrimidine analogues flucytosine (5-fluorocytosine [5-FC]), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and carmofur were identified as efficient inhibitors of pigmentation in the C. gattii model. Since melanin synthesis is enzymatically catalyzed by laccase in Cryptococcus, we investigated whether inhibition of pigmentation by the pyrimidine analogues was laccase-mediated. Enzyme activity and expression of LAC genes were not involved in the effects of the pyrimidine analogues, suggesting alternative cellular targets for inhibition of pigmentation. To address this hypothesis, we screened a collection of approximately 8000 mutants of C. gattii that were produced by insertional mutation after incubation with Agrobacterium tumefaciens and identified a gene product required for the anti-pigmentation activity of 5-FC as a beta-DNA polymerase. Reduced expression of this gene affected capsule formation and urease activity, suggesting essential roles in the cryptococcal physiology. These results demonstrate a previously unknown antifungal activity of 5-FC and reveal a promising target for the development of novel antifungals.
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PMID:Pharmacological inhibition of pigmentation in Cryptococcus. 3041 73