Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The leukocytosis-promoting factor of Bordetella pertussis was found to contain two hemagglutinins with different susceptibilities to papain and separable from each other by agarose gel filtration with Tris - HCl buffer containing 1 M NaCl. 2. One hemagglutinin, referred to as hemagglutinin HA, had a high hemagglutinating activity, but neither leukocytosis-promoting nor histamine-sensitizing activity. The other hemagglutinin, referred to as hemagglutinin LPF appeared to be identical with the leukocytosis-promoting factor and possessed a low hemagglutinating and high leukocytosis-promoting and histamine-sensitizing activities. 3. The hemagglutinating activity of hemagglutinin HA was highly sensitive to papain. The hemagglutinating, leukocytosis-promoting, and histamine-sensitizing activities of hemagglutinin LPF were fairly resistant to the enzyme. 4. The two hemagglutinins were distinct from each other in immunological and chemical properties. 5. Morphologically, hemagglutinin HA showed itself to be filamentous molecules of approx. 2 X 40 nm, while hemagglutinin LPF comprised of spherical molecules of approx. 6 nm diameter. 6. The molecular weight values of hemagglutinin HA estimated by sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and sucrose density gradient centrifugation were approx. 126 000 and 133 000, respectively. Those of hemagglutinin LPF estimated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoreis at pH 4.5, sucrose density gradient centrifugation and gel filtration on a 10% agarose column were 107 000, 103 000 and 30 000, respectively. A possible reason for obtaining such a low molecular weight value by gel filtration is discussed.
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PMID:Separation and characterization of two distinct hemagglutinins contained in purified leukocytosis-promoting factor from Bordetella pertussis. 18 6

Hydrolysis of the Bordetella pertussis endotoxin, extracted from both "phase I" and "phase IV" bacteria, with 4 M HCl for 1 h at 100 degrees C, released the disaccharide named in the title; it was isolated by paper electrophoresis or by ion-exchange chromatography in about 1% yield (w/w). The structure of the heptose could be rigorously established by chemical degradation; the facts that the glucosaminidic linkage was hydrolysed by an enzyme preparation containing both, alpha and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase activities, whereas it was resistant to cleavage by pure beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase strongly support the assumption that the disaccharide contains an alpha-D-glucosaminide linkage.
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PMID:7-O-(2-Amino-2-deoxy-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-L-glycero-D-manno-heptose. A constituent of the endotoxin of Bordetella pertussis. 18 40

The presence of bound D-glucuronic acid in the endotoxin of Bordetella pertussis was demonstrated. The branched chain trisaccharide named in the title was isolated after hydrolysis of the endotoxin with 3 M HCl for 2 h at 100 degrees C. Its structure was established by chemical and enzymic degradation.
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PMID:2-O-(beta-D-glucuronyl)-7-O-(2-amino-2-deoxy-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-L-glycero-D-manno-heptose: a constituent of the Bordetella pertussis endotoxin. 19 49

Retinal pigment epithelial cell fractions have been investigated for their capacity to induce experimental uveitis. Cells of the dark (melanotic) and light areas of the bovine RPE have subsequently been extracted by buffer, Triton X-100, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and treated with various reagents in order to study some characteristics of the antigen. The SDS-insoluble melanotic fraction, consisting of spindle-shaped, mature melanin granules, proved to be the most uveitogenic preparation. Using pertussis toxin as coadjuvant, 1 microgram of melanin-protein (3.4 x 10(6) granules) was able to induce experimental autoimmune anterior uveitis (EAAU) in Lewis rats. The pathogenic activity of the responsible pathogen (PEP-X) was not diminished by SDS, nor eliminated by mildly alkaline SDS or formic acid treatment. However, HCl-deproteinized granules were not uveitogenic. The results show that PEP-X is a highly stable melano-antigen that is probably covalently bound to the granule surface. This is the first time that a melanin-bound antigen has been demonstrated to evoke specific autoaggressive activity. EAAU could adoptively be transferred by sensitized and in vitro stimulated CD4 T-lymphocytes. The evoked inflammation started 3-4 days after injection, was similar to those induced by immunization, and consisted mainly of severe iridocyclitis accompanied by dense flare and cells in the anterior chamber. Choroiditis developed in severe cases of EAAU but no inflammation was detected in the retina, pineal gland or other organs of these rats. EAAU could not be transferred by serum. Immunized PVG rats and guinea-pigs did not develop ocular inflammation. In monkeys a high dose of antigen evoked a very mild EAAU accompanied by choroiditis. In view of its characteristics, EAAU may be a new model for human anterior uveitis.
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PMID:Experimental autoimmune anterior uveitis (EAAU). II. Dose-dependent induction and adoptive transfer using a melanin-bound antigen of the retinal pigment epithelium. 135 66

Pertussis toxin (PT), preactivated with 20 mm dithiothreitol (DTT), was incubated with different serum dilutions (1/10-1/200) before addition to the reaction mixture. Final concentrations of the reagents were: PT (50 ng/ml), dithiothreitol (DTT)(less than or equal to 0.3 mM), bovine transducin (2 micrograms/ml), ATP (1 mM). GTP (1 mM), lysophosphatidylcholine (LTC) (0.1 mg/ml), sodium acetate (NaAc) (0.1 M), Tris-HCl, pH 7.1 (0.06 M) and 32P-NAD+ (10 microCi 28 Ci/mM). The reaction was stopped by precipitation with 10% TCA (w/v), the pellet was collected and the samples were submitted to SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography. ADP-ribosylation was detected as the radiolabelling of a protein band (m.w. approximately 40 kD) corresponding to the alpha-subunit of transducin. 32P-ADP incorporation was a linear function of PT concentration. By this assay quantitative differences in PT neutralizing antibodies were found between sera which were not revealed by measuring PT neutralizing antibodies by a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell culture test or by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The conditions of the ADP-ribosylation of bovine transducin have been optimized to permit detection of the enzymic activity of as low amounts of PT as 0.5 ng. This opens the possibility of the study of the presence and avidity of neutralizing antibodies to PT in post-vaccination sera without preceding purification and concentration of the antibodies and thus may provide a useful tool for evaluation of whooping cough vaccines.
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PMID:A sensitive method for measuring neutralizing antibodies to Bordetella pertussis toxin: optimized ADP-ribosylation of transducin. 204 77

Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography on a column of trimethylsilylated silica gel (TSK-TMS 250) was utilized for the isolation of the subunit proteins of pertussis toxin (PT). Recovery up to 95% was obtained for each of the five distinct subunits with a high degree of homogeneity as revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. None of the individual subunit proteins exhibited PT-related leukocytosis-promoting activity or the ability to bind haptoglobin; however, these activities were partially restored when an equimolar mixture of the isolated subunit in 6 M guanidine-HCl was diluted from this chaotropic agent. The complex macromolecule subsequently isolated from the mixture displayed subunit composition and biological activities indistinguishable from those of native PT, indicating that the toxin molecule had been reassembled.
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PMID:Isolation of pertussis toxin subunit proteins by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and reconstitution of the holotoxin molecule. 234 43

The optimal conditions for toxoiding a pertussis toxin (PT) preparation with 1-ethyl-3(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide.HCl (EDAC) were determined. The prime factor affecting the toxoiding of PT was the EDAC to protein ratio. A ratio of 40-80: 1 EDAC to protein by weight was optimal for abolishing the acute toxicity, histamine-sensitising and leucocytosis-promoting activities associated with PT, whilst maintaining the antigenicity of the vaccine antigens. An EDAC-toxoid also manifested no late histamine-sensitising activity. Duration of exposure to EDAC, temperature and pH value of the reaction were found not to be critical for toxoiding. The data indicated that the use of EDAC for toxoiding PT in a B. pertussis extract is a simple and reproducible procedure and should be considered as a method for the production of acellular pertussis vaccines.
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PMID:Optimal conditions for the toxoiding of pertussis toxin with 1-ethyl-3(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide.HCl. 262 97

The effects of fentanyl isothiocyanate (FIT) and pertussis toxin on the binding of [3H]D-Ala2, D-Leu5-enkephalin ([3H]DADLE) to rat brain membranes were compared. The site of action of pertussis toxin was confirmed by the labeling of a 41,000 dalton protein in the presence of [alpha-32P]NAD. Both reagents produced inhibition of [3H]DADLE binding when binding was assayed in 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer alone. FIT inhibited binding 91% whereas pertussis toxin treatment resulted in 27% inhibition. However, when binding was assayed in 10 mM Tris-HCl containing SMG (100 mM NaCl, 3 mM manganese acetate, and 2 microM guanosine triphosphate), inhibition due to both reagents was attenuated markedly: 66% for FIT and 5% for toxin. In addition, both reagents markedly potentiated enhancement of binding by SMG. Thus, the effects of FIT and pertussis toxin on [3H]DADLE binding were qualitatively similar. These results suggest that FIT and pertussis toxin affect binding of [3H]DADLE to the same population of delta receptors. This was further supported by the observation that treatment of membranes with FIT prior to pertussis toxin treatment blocked the effect of toxin on [3H]DADLE binding. FIT selectively eliminates the SMG-insensitive, mu-competitive [3H]DADLE binding site [Rothman et al., Neuropeptides 4, 201 (1984); Rothman et al., Molec. Pharmac. 27, 399 (1985)]. These results indicate that this site is coupled to G protein substrates for pertussis toxin and that it mediates the inhibitory effects of delta ligands on adenylate cyclase. The FIT-insensitive, SMG-sensitive mu-noncompetitive [3H]DADLE site appears not to be coupled to G protein substrates for pertussis toxin and may mediate some other biochemical effects of delta ligands.
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PMID:Differential coupling of mu-competitive and mu-noncompetitive delta opiate receptors to guanine nucleotide binding proteins in rat brain membranes. 282 87

Free lipid A of Bordetella pertussis, Neisseria meningitidis, and Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was prepared by hydrolysis in acetate buffer (pH 4.5); in addition, lipid A from B. pertussis and E. coli was prepared by hydrolysis in mineral acid (HCl). The precipitates obtained were purified by extraction methods in toluene-methanol and are referred to as crude lipid A. Purified lipid A from N. meningitidis and B. pertussis was obtained by extraction in a mixture of chloroform-methanol-water-triethylamine. The different preparations were tested for their pyrogenicity (endogenous pyrogen; EP) and their capacity to trigger the release of interleukin-1 (IL-1; previously known as lymphocyte-activating factor; LAF) by human monocytes. Crude lipid A from E. coli and N. meningitidis were both IL-1 inducers. Crude B. pertussis lipid A (acetate buffer; pH 4.5), which contains a beta-1-6-linked D-glucosamine disaccharide, two phosphoryl groups, and five fatty acids, was pyrogenic and an IL-1 inducer (EP+/LAF+); but crude B. pertussis lipid A (0.25 N HCl), which lacked the glycosidic phosphoryl group, was 1,000-fold less pyrogenic than the diphosphorylated lipid A, yet it retained its IL-1-inducing capacity (EP-/LAF+). Purified N. meningitidis lipid A was not an inducer of IL-1 release and purified B. pertussis lipid A exhibited identical pyrogenicity as the parent LPS but was devoid of any IL-1-release inducing capacity (EP+/LAF-). These results demonstrate that for some endotoxins, purified lipid A is unable to induce IL-1 release by human monocytes; however, it is pyrogenic, supporting the hypothesis that IL-1 and EP are induced by different determinants on the LPS molecule.
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PMID:Inability of pyrogenic, purified Bordetella pertussis lipid A to induce interleukin-1 release by human monocytes. 287 60

4-O-(2-Amino-2-deoxy-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-6-O-(2-amino-2-deoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranuronyl)-D-glucopyranose, a branched-chain trisaccharide, was isolated after hydrolysis of Bordetella pertussis endotoxin with 4 M HCl for 1 h at 100 degrees C. The trisaccharide was present in both polysaccharide moieties of the two constituent lipopolysaccharides of this endotoxin. Its structure was established by analysis of the 400-MHz nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum and by chemical and enzymatic degradation.
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PMID:Isolation of a trisaccharide containing 2-amino-2-deoxy-D-galacturonic acid from the Bordetella pertussis endotoxin. 627 64


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