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)

A novel, closed-loop drug delivery system was developed where the presence or absence of an external compound controls drug delivery from a bioerodible polymer. In the described delivery system, hydrocortisone was incorporated into a n-hexyl half-ester of a methyl vinyl ehter-maleic anhydride copolymer, and the polymer-drug mixture was fabricated into disks. These disks were then coated with a hydrogel containing immobilized urease. In a medium of constant pH and in the absence of external urea, the hydrocortisone release was that normally expected for that polymer at the given pH. With external urea, ammonium bicarbonate and ammonium hydroxide were generated within the hydrogel, which accelerated polymer erosion and drug release. The drug delivery rate increase was proportional to the amount of external urea and was reversible; that is, when external urea was removed, the drug release rate gradually returned to its original value.
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PMID:Controlled drug release by polymer dissolution. II: Enzyme-mediated delivery device. 3 27

Photo-switchable ion and enzyme sensors were fabricated by the use of glassy carbon electrode coated with nonactindoped or enzyme modified poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) membranes. The ion sensor with nonactin-doped PVC membrane, which contained spirobenzopyran as the photosensitive dye, exhibited a potentiometric photoresponse to NH4+ ion in the solution. The dynamic range of the NH4+ ion sensor was 10(-7)--10(-3) M. Urea, adenosine, and asparagine sensors were prepared by coating the surface of the NH4+-ion sensor with urease, adenosine deaminase, and asparaginase membranes, respectively. These enzyme sensors could be used for determining the substrates at the micro mole level. The performance characteristics of these sensors were compared with those previously prepared membrane electrode sensors.
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PMID:Photo-switchable ion and enzyme sensors. Photoinduced potentiometric response of glassy carbon electrode coated with polymer or polymer/enzyme dual membrane. 263 77

Penicillin amidase, alpha-chymotrypsin and urease have been immobilized in water-soluble nonstoichiometric polyelectrolyte complexes (N-PEC). N-PEC are formed by modified poly(N-ethyl-4-vinyl-pyridinium bromide) (polycation) and excess poly(methylacrylic acid) (polyanion). N-PEC are a new class of polymers capable, characteristically, of phase transitions solution in equilibrium precipitate induced by slight change in pH or ionic strength. Neither the chemical structure of the carrier nor the number of cross-linkages between an enzyme and a carrier change on phase transition. That gives an unique opportunity to elucidate the difference between enzymes immobilized on water-soluble and water-insoluble supports. A detailed study of the phase transition effect on thermal stability of the enzymes and protein-protein interactions has been carried out. The following effects were found. Pronounced thermal stabilization of penicillin amidase and urease may be achieved on two conditions: the enzyme is in the precipitate; (b) the enzyme is linked to the N-PEC nucleus. Then the thermal stability of N-PEC-bound penicillin amidase increases 7-fold at pH 5.7, 60 degrees C, and 300-fold at pH 3.1, 25 degrees C, compared to the native enzyme. For urease, the thermal stabilization increases 20-fold at pH 5.0, 70 degrees C. The localization of enzyme on N-PEC has been established by titration of alpha-chymotrypsin bound to a polycation or polyanion with basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Both in solution (pH 6.1) and in N-PEC precipitate (pH 5.7), an alpha-chymotrypsin molecule bound to a polyanion is fully exposed to the solution. If the enzyme is bound to a polycation, only 20% of alpha-chymotrypsin molecules in the precipitate and 40% in solution retain their ability for protein-protein interactions. This means that a polycation-bound enzyme is localized in the hydrophobic nucleus of the complex, whereas the polyanion-bound enzyme sits on the hydrophilic shell of the complex. On pH-induced phase transition (pH decreases from 6.1 to 5.7), there occurs a stepwise decrease in penicillin amidase activity which is due to a 9.8-fold increase in the Km for 2-nitro-4-phenylacetamidobenzoic acid. Change of the catalytic activity and thermal stability of N-PEC-bound penicillin amidase is fully reversible and reproducible. Such soluble-insoluble immobilized enzymes with controllable thermal stability and activity may be used for simulating events in vivo and in biotechnology.
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PMID:Enzymes in polyelectrolyte complexes. The effect of phase transition on thermal stability. 397 68

From poly(vinyl alcohol) precursors, various reactive carriers for the immobilization of enzymes were synthesized. As insoluble starting polymers, the following products were used: poly(vinyl alcohol), gels crosslinked with terephthalaldehyde, hydrolyzed beads of crosslinked poly(vinyl acetate), poly(vinyl acetate-co- ethylene) tubes coated with poly(vinyl alcohol), and poly(vinyl alcohol)-containing synthetic pulp. Reactive groups introduced into these carriers or methods for their activation included the diazonium- and isothiocyanato group, and the glutardialdehyde-, BrCN, 2, 4, 6-trichloro-s-triazien, and p-benzoquinone methods. Furthermore, SH-specific reactive groups such as N-substituted maleimide groups or activated mixed disulfides with 2-thiopyridyl groups could be introduced into PVA-polymers. Enzymes like hydrolases (e.g. papain, trypsin, chymotrypsin, urease), oxidoreductases (e.g. glucose oxydase, catalase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) as well as the example of transferase hexokinase coimmobilized with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, were immobilized by reactive poly(vinyl alcohol) carriers. The properties of the immobilized enzymes were investigated.
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PMID:Some new reactive polymers for the immobilization of enzymes. 741 95

A membrane reactor-separator, in which an anion-exchange membrane and a urease-immobilized poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) membrane were clamped together to separate the feed solution and the stripping solution of a dialysis cell, was constructed. The urea in the feed solution passed through the anion-exchange membrane, water film, and then was hydrolyzed to ammonium carbamate in the urease-immobilized PVA membrane. The experimental results showed that no ammonium ion was found in the feed solution under either phosphate or citrate buffer systems at 0.05-0.2 mol dm-3 and pH 6-9, and various initial concentrations of urea in the feed solution (20-200 mmol dm-3). This indicates that the water film between two membranes allows the carbamate ions to decompose into ammonium and carbonate ions completely before entering the anion-exchange membrane. The device therefore can be used for the removal of urea from feed solution, while preventing the backflow of ammonium ions from the stripping solution or water film into feed solution. It has significant potential in the development of a wearable or portable artificial kidney. The properties of the urease-immobilized PVA membrane were examined. A kinetic model describing the transport-reaction behavior of urea in the membrane reactor-separator was developed, and the optimum values of the reactor parameters were obtained.
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PMID:Transport and hydrolysis of urea in a reactor-separator combining an anion-exchange membrane and immobilized urease. 776 2

A renewable urea sensor based on a carboxylic poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC-COOH) matrix pH-sensitive membrane has been proposed, in which a positively charged polyelectrolyte layer is first constructed by using a self-assembly technique on the surface of a PVC-COOH membrane, and urease, with negative charges, is then immobilized through electrostatic adsorption onto the PVC-COOH membrane, by controlling the pH of the urease solution below its isoelectric point. The response characteristics of the PVC-COOH pH-sensitive membrane and the effects of experimental conditions have been investigated in detail. Compared with conventional covalent immobilization, the urea sensor made with this self-assembly immobilization shows significant advantage in terms of sensitivity and ease of regeneration. The potential responses of the urea sensor with self-assembly immobilization increase with the urea concentration over the concentration range 10(-5) - 10(-1) mol l(-1), and the detection limit is 0.028 mmol(-1). Moreover, this type of urea sensor can be repeatedly regenerated by using a simple washing treatment with 0.01 mol l(-1) NaOH (containing 0.5 mol l(-1) NaCl) and 0.01 mol l(-1) HCl. The urease layers and the polyelectrolyte layers on the PVC-COOH membrane are removed, the potential response of the sensor to urea solutions of different concentrations returns nearly to zero, and another assembly cycle of urease and polyelectrolyte can then be carried out.
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PMID:Renewable urea sensor based on a self-assembled polyelectrolyte layer. 1199 66

Urease was immobilized in mixed monolayers of poly(N-vinyl carbazole) (PNVK) and stearic acid (SA) formed at an air-water interface. The monolayers were transferred onto indium-tin-oxide (ITO) coated glass plates using Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) film deposition technique. Urease immobilized on PNVK/SA LB films, characterized using FTIR and UV-visible spectroscopy, was found to exhibit increased stability over a wide pH (6.5-8.5) and temperature (25-50 degrees C) range. Potentiometric measurements on these urease electrodes were carried out using an ammonium ion analyzer. Two values for K(m)(app) were obtained at lower and higher concentrations of substrate urea.
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PMID:Immobilization of urease on poly(N-vinyl carbazole)/stearic acid Langmuir-Blodgett films for application to urea biosensor. 1205 55

A problem encountered in patients undergoing long-term catheterization of the urinary tract is that of encrustation and blockage of the catheter by crystalline bacterial biofilms. This is principally caused by the action of the urease-producing pathogen Proteus mirabilis. A major aim of this work is to develop materials resistant to encrustation. Here, the effects of polymer surface properties on the adhesion of P. mirabilis are examined. Spin-coated polymer films were characterized through contact angle measurements to give the Lifschitz-van der Waals, electron acceptor and electron donor terms of the surface free energy, gamma(s)LW, gamma(s)+ and gamma(s)- respectively. A parallel-plate flow cell was used to assess adhesion to these polymer films of P. mirabilis suspended in an aqueous phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, ionic strength 0.26 mol/kg. P. mirabilis was found to adhere significantly less (p < 0.02) to films of agarose, poly(2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) and cross-linked poly(vinyl alcohol) than to more hydrophobic materials. These polymer films were found to be strongly electron donating, i.e. possessing large gamma(s)-. Films examined using scanning electron microscopy mostly showed no evidence of roughness down to a scale of 1-10 microm. The better performance is thought to be due to a repulsive interaction with the bacterial surface caused by acid/base-type interactions.
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PMID:Polymer surface properties and their effect on the adhesion of Proteus mirabilis. 1288 98

A novel urea biosensor based on immobilised recombinant urease as sensitive element and ion sensitive field effect transistor as transducer was developed. Recombinant urease from E. coli with an increased Km was photoimmobilised in PVA/SbQ (poly(vinyl alcohol) containing styrylpyridinium) membrane and has demonstrated quite good performance as biosensitive element. Enzymatic field effect transistors based on such a bioselective element were studied in model buffer solutions. This biosensor demonstrated an extended dynamic range up to 80 mM, a quite good reproducibility (standard deviation of the sensor responses was approximately 2.5%, n= 20 for urea concentration 10 mM) and a high stability. Such characteristics fit with the analytical requirements needed for urea control in plasma and liquids used during renal dialysis.
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PMID:A novel urea sensitive biosensor with extended dynamic range based on recombinant urease and ISFETs. 1456 13

The microenvironments of the sol-gel-derived urease biosensors in terms of elemental ratio, surface morphology, specific surface area and pore size were investigated to characterize the physicochemical properties of poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA)-modified sol-gel materials. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and surface area analyzer were used to identify the surface species, topography and pore distribution of the organically doped sol-gel network. XPS results showed that stoichiometric ratios of oxygen-to-silicon in sol-gel materials were in the range 2.08-2.11. The sol-gel materials were partially dried and negatively charged, which retained 6-8% water content to maintain urease activity. The surface morphology of the sol-gel altered obviously when macromolecules were encapsulated, resulting in the increase in surface mean roughness from 0.207 to 2.636 nm. The specific surface area decreased dramatically after the immobilization of biomolecules and organic additives, which clearly depicts that PVA and urease were co-encapsulated into the sol-gel network. However, there still exist enough pore volumes for analytes to mass transport. The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant value (Km) of the encapsulated urease was similar to that in solution and the overall catalytic efficiency in PVA-doped sol-gel-derived glasses only decreased by a factor of 3.2 relative to the value in solution. In addition, the analytical performance of the entrapped urease in PVA-doped sol-gel materials was examined by determining the Cu(II) concentration in aqueous solution. The analytical range of Cu(II) was in the range 2x10(-6) to 2x10(-2) M with a detection limit of 1.5 microg L(-1). Results obtained in this study demonstrate a strategy for maintaining urease activity for biomedical and environmental applications.
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PMID:Preparation and characterization of urease-encapsulated biosensors in poly(vinyl alcohol)-modified silica sol-gel materials. 1747 71


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