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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous work from this laboratory has shown that the cytosine-containing T4 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) made by deoxycytidine triphosphatase (dCTPase) amber mutants is extensively degraded, and that nucleases controlled by genes 46 and 47 participate in this process. In this paper, we examine other consequences of a defective dCTPase. Included are studies of DNA synthesis and phage production, and of the control of both early and late protein synthesis after infection of Escherichia coli B with various T4 mutants defective in genes 56 (dCTPase), 42 (dCMP hydroxymethylase), 1 (deoxynucleotide kinase), 43 (DNA polymerase), 30 (polynucleotide ligase), 46 and 47 (DNA breakdown) or e(
lysozyme
). By varying the temperature of infection with a temperature-sensitive dCTPase mutant, we have been able to control intracellular dCTPase activity, and thus vary the cytosine content of the phage DNA. We have produced and characterized viable T4 phage in which cytosine replaces 20% of the 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (HMC) in the DNA. We present evidence which suggests that intact, cytosine-containing T4 DNA is much less efficient than is normal T4 DNA in directing the synthesis of tail-fiber antigen. Lysozyme production is much less affected by progressively decreasing dCTPase activity; however, complete substitution of cytosine is correlated with a
depression
of
lysozyme
synthesis greater than expected from the defective synthesis of DNA. Low but significant
lysozyme
synthesis is observed late after infection of E. coli B with T4 amber mutants defective in a number of genes controlling DNA synthesis. The "20% cytosine" T4 phage, once produced, can initiate an apparently normal infection at permissive temperatures; the synthesis of early enzymes, DNA, and phage does not appear to be impaired. Two roles for HMC in T4 DNA have been indicated previously: (i) involvement in host-controlled restriction of the phage, in which glucosylation of the hydroxymethyl group plays a crucial role (16, 29, 53, 58), and (ii) protection of vegetative DNA against phage-controlled nucleases, a protection not dependent on glucosylation (41, 66, 67). A third role is suggested by our present results: transcription of at least some late genes can occur only from HMC-containing DNA and not from cytosine-containing DNA.
...
PMID:Biological effects of substituting cytosine for 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in the deoxyribonucleic acid of bacteriophage T4. 430 78
The uptake of 14C-glu by rat renal brushborder membrane vesicles was assayed in the presence of transmembrane ionic gradients for the purpose of characterizing surface properties which influence the transport process. Preincubation of membranes with the cationic protein
lysozyme
led to a significant decrease in transport activity. Similar results were obtained with polylysine and lysine. Polycations such as
lysozyme
and polylysine were capable of aggregating membrane vesicles whereas lysine was ineffective. Neither aggregation nor membrane injury provided an explanation for the
depression
of 14C-glu transport. The cationic drug harmaline at a concentration of 2.5 mM significantly reduced sodium dependent 14C-glu uptake provided drug and membranes were pre-equilibrated prior to the transport assay. Using an indirect spectrophotometric method to estimate harmaline concentrations, no evidence was obtained for strong harmaline binding to the membrane. The effect of harmaline could be eliminated by washing membranes in drug-free buffer or diluting membranes in larger volumes of sodium chloride. Membranes pretreated with the lectin Concanavalin A or the enzyme neuraminidase transported glu at control rates, but the proteolytic enzyme papain markedly impaired the transport function without altering mean vesicle volume. The optimal temperature for the assay was 30 degrees C. No temperature discontinuities in the Arrhenius plot of glu transport rates were found between 5 and 30 degrees C. These results with glutamic acid differ from data reported by other investigators on the transport characteristics of glucose and neutral amino acids by brushborder membrane vesicles. The results enhance the possibility that dicarboxylic acid binding proteins may be present on the luminal surface of proximal tubular epithelium.
...
PMID:Surface properties of kidney brushborder membranes affecting the transport of glutamic acid. 612 41
The clinical presentation of 71 untreated patients with Hodgkin's disease was studied in relation to immunohistochemically demonstrable
lysozyme
in the lymph node biopsy material. Sixty-one patients (86%) showed a positive staining reaction of varying degree, while ten (14%) showed no demonstrable
lysozyme
. The clinical features of
lysozyme
-positive patients differed markedly from those of
lysozyme
-negative patients. Stain-positive patients were younger (29 vs. 46), were more often in clinical Stage I or II disease (69% vs. 10%, P less than 0.001), and less frequently had constitutional symptoms (34% vs. 70%, P less than 0.02). Moreover, within the stain-positive group, patients who had the most intense staining reaction (mottling pattern) also had the most favorable clinical and histopathologic features at the time of diagnosis. The observations suggest that in Hodgkin's disease the
lysozyme
secretory activity of macrophage-histiocytes may be an important element of host resistance to neoplasia and that a
depression
of this secretory activity corresponds with disseminated disease.
...
PMID:Macrophage-histiocyte lysozyme activity in relation to the clinical presentation of Hodgkin's disease. An immunohistochemical study. 616 77
Myelomonocytic myeloproliferative disease in a horse was diagnosed on the basis of hematologic, enzymatic, and histopathologic findings. It was characterized clinically by
depression
, weight loss splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, coagulopathy, and bacteremia. Hematologic findings included severe refractory anemia, thrombocytopenia, monocytosis, and pleomorphic leukocytes, with a left shift of the myeloid series. The serum
lysozyme
concentration was 14.5 microgram/ml (normal, less than 5 microgram/ml). The bone marrow contained many immature cells of the myeloid series and had a myeloid-to-erythroid ratio of 30.5 to 1. The horse died after brief hospitalization. Necropsy revealed generalized lymphadenopathy and hemorrhages throughout the body. Histopathologically, primitive cells were seen in several tissues. Cells that proliferated in the bone marrow were primarily myeloblastic, with some additional erythropoietic cells. Myeloblastic cells with evidence of normal erythropoiesis were seen in numerous lymph nodes and in the spleen, whereas primarily normal erythropoietic cells proliferated in the adrenal glands. Myeloid blast-type cells predominated in the lungs, myocardium, liver, and kidneys.
...
PMID:Myelomonocytic myeloproliferative diseases in a horse. 705 85
Inflammatory cells in lymph nodes of eighteen patients suffering from culture-proven tuberculous lymphadenitis were examined by histological and immunohistochemical techniques. Ten patients suffered from symptomatic HIV-infection and eight patients were immunocompetent individuals without HIV-1 serology. Characteristic granulomas with or without caseation were observed in eight immunocompetent and four HIV-1-infected patients with less marked lymphopenia of CD4 positive peripheral blood lymphocytes. No epitheloid cell formation was present in lymph nodes of HIV1-infected patients with more severe
depression
of CD4 positive peripheral blood lymphocyte count. Foamy macrophages were found instead of these cells. While many cells--predominantly lymphocytes--express CD25 (IL-2 receptor) in cases with typical epitheloid granulomas there is no such CD25 expression in cases without any epitheloid cell formation. This result suggest that T cell function is necessary for epitheloid granuloma formation in human tuberculosis. The phenotype of macrophages underwent progressive changes parallel to decreasing numbers of CD4 positive peripheral blood lymphocytes. Foamy macrophages in Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection represented an end-stage phenotype. They were positive for S100 protein and they did not express
lysozyme
, alpha-1-anti-chymotrypsin, L1 antigen (Mac387) and CD4, whereas positivity for HLA-DR, CD68 and Ki-M8 was preserved. In situ immunohistochemical demonstration of IFN-alpha, IFN-beta, TNF-alpha, IL-1 and IL-6 revealed that foamy cells in M. tuberculosis infection were highly active effector cells. They contained higher concentrations of the examined cytokines than epitheloid cells in the lesions of HIV+ and HIV-patients. Corresponding to these findings the histological proof of acid-fast bacilli was generally not successful in typical HIV-associated tuberculosis. The foamy appearance may result from the lipid-rich cell membranes of destroyed acid-fast bacilli. In contrast acid-fast bacilli-packed foamy macrophages in AIDS patients with M. avium-intracellulare (MAI) infection did not produce any of the examined cytokines.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of cell composition and in situ cytokine expression in HIV- and non-HIV-associated tuberculous lymphadenitis. 771 49
Abnormalities of the immune response can be secondary to old age, to several pathologic conditions (i.e. diabetes mellitus, renal failure, solid and lymphohematologic neoplasias, leukopenia, malnutrition, autoimmune diseases, AIDS), to surgical stress or to burns, and to immunosuppressive therapies, both medical (corticosteroids, cytotoxic agents, antilymphocytic globulins) and surgical (splenectomy) as well as radiant (extensive radiotherapy). Old age can affect both humoral (reduced antibody synthesis) and cell-mediated (thymus involution, diminished ratio Th/Ts,
depression
of both delayed hypersensitivity reactions and cytotoxic activity of K cells) immune response. Hyponutrition, often observed in the elderly, adds a reduced production of secretory IgA,
lysozyme
and interferon, diminished complementary activity, phagocytosis defects, and vitamin deficits. Furthermore, in some chronic diseases we can observe reduced primary antibody response or
depression
of delayed hypersensitivity reactions (renal failure, neoplasias), changes in leukocyte functions (diabetes mellitus, leukemias and lymphomas) and, in particular in solid neoplasias, increased activity of Ts lymphocytes and the presence of circulating immunocomplexes. Changes in phagocytosis, opsonization and chemotaxis are typically seen in burns, whereas surgical stress can cause some inhibition of cell-mediated immunity. Finally, after splenectomy it is possible to observe an increased synthesis of IgA and IgG and, on the contrary, reduced production of IgM and properdin.
...
PMID:[Pathogenetic mechanisms responsible for producing a secondary immunodeficiency state]. 786 Dec 9
Morphologic study of white rat periodontal tissue and assessment of nonspecific resistance of the body by whole blood antibacterial activity, skin bactericidal activity, blood serum and mixed salivary
lysozyme
activity were carried out over the course of experimental hypo- and hyperthyrosis starting from day 5 to day 90. The detected pathologic changes in the periodontium were in line with the time course of nonspecific resistance of the body. In hypothyrosis an earlier
depression
of nonspecific resistance factors was parallelled by earlier and more marked inflammatory destructive processes in the rat periodontium as compared to that in hyperthyrosis.
...
PMID:[Periodontal function and nonspecific resistance in the dynamics of experimental hypo- and hyperthyroidism]. 823
Following nephrotoxic injury, renal repair is dependent on tubular regeneration. In the case of myoglobinuric acute renal failure (ARF), persistence of myoglobin within tubular cells, or sublethal injury sustained at the height of exposure to it, might retard this process. To test this hypothesis, a human proximal tubular cell line (HK-2) was cultured for 24 hours in the absence or presence of clinically relevant myoglobin concentrations (0.5, 1, 2, 4 mg/ml). Immediately following myoglobin removal, lethal cell injury (vital dye uptake), lipid peroxidation, and DNA damage (alkaline unwinding assay) were assessed. The extent of cell proliferation was estimated over the next four days by a tetrazolium based (MTT) assay and by determining total intracellular LDH. Myoglobin's effects on protein and DNA synthesis were also assessed (35S-methionine and bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, respectively). Myoglobin induced dose-dependent lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde generation) and cell death (up to 80% vital dye uptake with the 4 mg/ml challenge). Although 1 mg/ml myoglobin caused no cell death, it induced nearly complete growth arrest. This lasted for approximately three days following myoglobin removal from the media. Neither of two control proteins (albumin;
lysozyme
) nor a second nephrotoxin (gentamicin; 1 mg/ml) reproduced this effect. The 1 mg/ml myoglobin challenge caused an 80 to 90%
depression
in protein and DNA synthesis. It also induced significant DNA damage, as assessed by the alkaline unwinding assay (P < 0.01). Iron chelation therapy (deferoxamine) mitigated myoglobin-induced cell killing. However, its addition following myoglobin loading worsened HK-2 outgrowth by exerting a direct anti-proliferative effect. These results indicate that: (1) sublethal myoglobin toxicity can induce transient proximal tubular cell growth arrest, potentially slowing recovery from ARF; (2) this effect correlates with, and could result from, heme-induced DNA damage and a blockade in DNA/protein synthesis; and (3) deferoxamine can inhibit proximal tubular cell proliferation. This possibility needs to be considered in designing clinical trials with DFO for myohemoglobinuric ARF.
...
PMID:Myoglobin inhibits proliferation of cultured human proximal tubular (HK-2) cells. 887 53
In 200 children residing permanently in a region with a high level of atmospheric pollution, indicators of humoral immunity, salivary immunity and specific IgE antibodies were determined before and after 14 days' attendance at an "outdoor school" in rural areas with a very low level of atmospheric pollution. A marked reduction of elevated albumine levels, which are characteristic of irritation or even inflammation in the oral cavity or respiratory tract, was found, as well as increasing levels of Slg A and
lysozyme
in saliva. The two-week stay in the outdoor school resulted in decreased IgE specific antibodies of the respiratory type of allergy (CAP Phadiatop). In the group of atopic children there were found high total IgE levels, with a trend of
depression
after 2 weeks in the outdoor school. Higher values of some immunoglobulins were observed, while low levels of IgA were found in some children with high frequency of respiratory diseases. The irritant effect of polluted atmosphere and the quality of indoor atmosphere influence some immunological parameters in children.
...
PMID:Immunological findings in groups of children after compensatory measures. 892 Jul 32
Conformational stability of proteins is an important factor that determines their resistance/susceptibility to proteolytic digestion. Intracellular proteolysis is the key step in antigen presentation events for protein antigens; hence, it is likely that increasing protein stability reduces the antigenicity of proteins. We prepared three hen egg white
lysozyme
derivatives possessing different stabilities by chemical modification to clarify the relationship between conformational stability and the antigenicity of the protein. One of the derivatives was conformationally unstabilized by removing one intramolecular disulfide bond, whereas the two others were stabilized by the addition of an intramolecular cross-link. The antigenicity of these derivatives was evaluated using hen egg white
lysozyme
-specific T-cell hybridoma cells and a B-lymphoma cell line, A20, as antigen-presenting cells. With an increase in conformational stability, the T-cell response decreased. However, the reduction was not derived from the inefficiency of internalization to A20 cells nor the alteration of antigenicity by chemical modifications. Moreover, from analyses of their susceptibility to proteolysis and the kinetics of presentation of the T-cell epitope, it was confirmed that increasing protein stability led to the
depression
of T-cell epitope generation by increasing resistance to proteolysis. These results have an important implication in devising a new strategy for manipulating T-cell response by the stability of protein antigen.
...
PMID:Depression of T-cell epitope generation by stabilizing hen lysozyme. 940 12
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