Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (
PBS
)
9,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several mucolytic agents were evaluated on sputum for testing their viscolytic activity and the bacterial tollerance to each of them. Proteolytic enzymes (trypsin,
pepsin
, papain, pancreatin), KJ, and dithiothreitol (or its derivatives) were better tollerated by common respiratory pathogens (H. influenzae, D. pneumoniae, Klebsiella, etc.) than other mucolytic agents, as acetil-cysteine, cisteamine-HCl, tension active substances, mercaptoethanol, and others. The dithiothreitol showed also one of the strongest viscolytic effect and therefore it was selected for the routinary sputum digestion at the concentration 0.1% in
PBS
pH 7.2. Such a solution was added to sputum specimen in different proportions according to the macroscopic "apparent" viscosity of each specimen. However researches on the comparative viscolytic activity of all the agents hereinafter considered are still in progress.
...
PMID:[Study on the viscolytic activity of the sputum (author's transl)]. 1 42
The Hedley method for DNA ploidy analysis on paraffin-embedded tissue allows retrospective studies of large numbers of common and rare tumors for which treatment, progression, and outcome are known. However, the technique is cumbersome and has many variables, only some of which can be controlled at the time of laboratory analysis. We performed DNA ploidy analyses on two blocks from two islet cell tumors and on five blocks from two colon carcinomas. Sections of 50-microns thickness were deparaffinized in xylene, rehydrated in graded alcohols and in distilled water, and disaggregated with various enzymatic treatments: 0.05%
pepsin
(30 and 90 min), 0.5%
pepsin
(30 and 90 min), 0.05% protease (60 min), and 0.1% protease (60 min). The cell suspensions obtained were filtered, washed in
PBS
, and visually evaluated in a hemocytometer. Nuclei were treated with RNAse (0.1%) and stained with 50 micrograms/ml propidium iodide. Results were evaluated with the following criteria: (a) recovery of DNA aneuploid and/or G2M cells (cell-cycle analysis and visual evaluation); (b) coefficient of variation of the major peak (DNA diploid or DNA aneuploid depending on the case); (c) amount of debris (background events and visual evaluation); (d) mean channel for the G0G1 peak; (e) event rate; and (f) G2M/G0G1 ratio. The best results were observed with 0.05% protease when there was tissue necrosis and hence cell fragility, with 0.1% protease when there was significant tissue fibrosis, and with 0.05%
pepsin
(90 min) when there were intact cellular specimens without fibrous entrapment. The original procedure using 0.5%
pepsin
for 30 min produced less cell recovery, and histogram quality similar to or worse than these modifications in all cases studied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Enzymatic treatments on paraffin blocks for DNA flow cytometry. 134 22
This paper describes the results of experiments designed to investigate the composition of immune complexes present, in the form of immune deposits, in glomeruli of NZB/NZW F1 mice. Granular deposits of mouse IgG were present along the glomerular capillary walls of 6- to 12-month-old mice. Disappearance of mouse IgG from glomerular deposits, indicating a dissociation of immune complexes, was observed following incubation of kidney sections with an excess of mouse IgG, mouse Fc fragments, rat IgG, and rat Fc fragments, but not with human and rabbit Cohn fraction-II (FII), DNA, nucleohistone, and
PBS
. Antinuclear antibody activity in mouse sera or in glomerular eluates was removed by absorption with mouse IgG or mouse Fc fragments, rat IgG or rat Fc fragments, DNA, and nucleo-histone, but not by absorption with human or rabbit FII. These results suggest that the IgG antinuclear antibodies present in the sera and in glomerular deposits possess rheumatoid factor (RF) activity. In other experiments, kidney sections were incubated with various concentrations of
pepsin
, which digests the Fc portion of the IgG. After digestion, the sections were washed and stained for mouse IgG, IgG F(ab')2, and IgG Fc. At concentration of 10 micrograms/ml,
pepsin
completely removed IgG and IgG Fc, whereas faint IgG F(ab')2 deposits persisted in glomerular deposits. At the concentration of 1 microgram/ml, deposits of mouse IgG, F(ab')2, and Fc persisted, while F(ab')2 was observed bound to nuclei of glomerular cells. At the
pepsin
concentration of 0.1 microgram/ml or 0.01 microgram/ml, IgG F(ab')2 was bound to the nuclei of glomerular and tubular cells, indicating that the digestion of the Fc portion of IgG had released F(ab')2 with nuclear reactivity from glomerular deposits. The solubilization of mouse IgG from glomerular immune deposits with mouse IgG and the demonstration that
pepsin
digestion releases mouse F(ab')2 with nuclear reactivity are consistent with the interpretation that the immune deposits present in glomeruli of NZB/NZW F1 mice contain complexes formed by antinuclear IgG and IgG RF. These two antibodies probably cross-react and form multilayer aggregates which contribute to the formation of immune deposits.
...
PMID:Composition of immune deposits present in glomeruli of NZB/W F1 mice. 193 20
The antiallergic effect of Fc fragments prepared from human polyclonal IgG was investigated in several experimental models. In an in vitro assay, isolated ileum of cynomolgus monkeys was sensitized with serum from atopic patients. In six of fifteen monkeys the subsequent addition of specific allergens reproducibly resulted in an ileum contraction measured in the Schultz-Dale apparatus. In all six positive monkeys pre-treatment of the isolated ileum with Fc (papain) before sensitization inhibited ileum contraction. Fc (plasmin) or Fc (
pepsin
) was less or not effective, aggregated IgG, monomeric IgG, sulfonated IgG, the Fc-free F(ab')2 moiety, or albumin had no significant or no reproducible inhibitory effect. In an in vivo assay passive cutaneous anaphylaxis was studied in 28 cynomolgus monkeys. Different dilutions in
PBS
of the particular specific allergens were subsequently administered to sensitized skin sites, simultaneously to i.v. injection of Evans blue. The degree of the local allergic (passive cutaneous anaphylactia) reaction was evaluated by measuring the diameter of the blue area at the dermal injection sites. About 50% of sera induced positive reaction in monkeys. Compared to the control (application of
PBS
), the degree of the positive reactions could be reduced by about 50% if Fc (papain) (optimal dose 25 mg/kg body weight) was injected i.v. either 2 h before or after local sensitization. No significant inhibitory effect could be found with the Fab moiety of IgG. Follow-up studies showed that the inhibitory effect of Fc lasted for about 10 days. The pharmacological basis of the observed antiallergic action of Fc is not yet understood.
...
PMID:Fc fragments of human IgG may influence allergic reactions. 369 38
Different fixatives and immunohistochemical methods were tested for detection of fibronectin in various paraffin embedded tissues: rat kidney, spleen, gastro-intestinal tract, muscle, normal and fibrotic liver and human skin. Using cryostat sections, localisation with immunofluorescence and peroxidase technics comparable to those obtained in unfixed tissue sections, could be obtained with the following fixatives: 10% formalin in
PBS
containing 4% sucrose; 96% ethanol; 96% ethanol + 1% acetic acid; a series of ethanol solutions of increasing strength: 70-80-96%. These fixatives also proved to be the best for paraffin embedding. Without enzyme digestion, however, satisfactory results could not be obtained with either indirect peroxidase or immunofluorescence methods in paraffin embedded tissues. Following digestions with the enzymes at the concentrations described in the literature, the alteration of tissues made the morphological localization of fibronectin difficult. The self-sandwich peroxidase method following a gentle
pepsin
digestion gave results closest to those of unfixed cryostat sections; however a slight increase in background staining was observed but without interfering with the evaluation of results.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of fibronectin using different fixatives in paraffin embedded sections. 635 96
Prokallikrein was activated by trypsin and by alpha-chymotrypsin, but not by proteases, such as plasmin, thrombin, urokinase, carboxypeptidase B, papain, elastase,
pepsin
, and cathepsin D. Moreover, rat fresh serum did not activate prokallikrein. Maximum activation of prokallikrein by trypsin was obtained at the concentration of 10 micrograms to 1 mg per ml in
PBS
and that by alpha-chymotrypsin was at the concentration of 5 mg per ml. The enzymic properties of trypsin-activated and alpha-chymotrypsin-activated kallikreins were identical with those of active kallikrein in the kidney.
...
PMID:Activation of prokallikrein in the rat kidney by proteases. 637 43
The use of chain-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against keratins in pathology is hampered by their limited staining on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. In the present study, various treatments before immunohistochemistry on paraffin sections were compared, including proteolytic enzymes and microwave antigen retrieval in various solutions. Sections of normal cervical and skin tissue were stained in a three-step immunoperoxidase method, employing a broad panel of MAbs against chain-specific keratins 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19 and pankeratin. Using microwave heating, Target Unmasking Fluid (TUF), Antigen Retrieval Solution (ARS), a simple detergent solution (DET),
PBS
, and distilled water (MiQ) were compared. Microwave heating in
PBS
or MiQ strongly improved staining results. Moreover, microwave pre-treatment in TUF or DET gave excellent and specific staining with the majority of MAbs tested, comparable with or even better than staining obtained on frozen sections. Using microwave antigen retrieval, tissue morphology remained optimal, and only in a very limited number of MAbs did immunoreactivity on paraffin sections fail to be restored. Proteolytic pre-treatment with trypsin,
pepsin
, or pronase gave moderate to strong staining with some of the MAbs. Other MAbs, for which microwave pre-treatment was able to restore the loss of immunoreactivity, failed to give appropriate staining with proteolytic pre-treatment. Our results show that microwave heating in either TUF or a simple detergent solution before immunohistochemistry is a reliable method for antigen retrieval of chain-specific keratins in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues.
...
PMID:Immunostaining of chain-specific keratins on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues: a comparison of various antigen retrieval systems using microwave heating and proteolytic pre-treatments. 753 85
The influence of tissue pretreatment on the PAP immunostaining for type I and III collagens and tenascin was studied in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded human tooth germs at the 24th and 25th weeks of fetal life. Three variables were considered: the type of buffer used (
PBS
or Tris),
pepsin
digestion and the use of normal serum as a blocking agent prior to immunostaining. All three proteins needed an enzymatic digestion to be intensely revealed. Pepsin promoted, even at low concentrations, an intracellular staining of type I collagen in the secretory odontoblasts and in the pulpal fibroblasts. Normal serum partially blocked unspecific immunoreaction when polyclonal rabbit antibodies were used. The Tris buffer increased the staining intensity of the three macromolecules and revealed an unusual tenascin-like immunoreactivity in the ameloblasts. This study demonstrated that
pepsin
digestion and the use of normal serum and different buffers may influence the immunoreactivity of ECM proteins.
...
PMID:The influence of tissue pretreatment on the immunohistochemical demonstration of type I and III collagens and tenascin in fetal human tooth germs. 769 Nov 42
Poly(lactide co-glycolide) (PLG) microparticles with a mean size of less than 2 microns, prepared by the water-in oil-in water method, exhibited a maximum surface protein (ovalbumin) content in excess of 50% of the total loading. The surface-core distribution was found to be sensitive to stabiliser concentration and the type of albumin used in the formulation. The degradation of OVA was monitored following incubation of microparticles for 14 days in
PBS
and for 2 h in simulated gastric and intestinal fluids, respectively. OVA removed from the surface of particles, following incubation in
PBS
, was found to be intact as measured by SDS-PAGE. After 7 days in
PBS
at 37 degrees C, protein extracted from the microparticles was found to be partly hydrolysed with the prevalence of an antigen fragment at 36.1 kDa. The relative amount of intact OVA in 50:50 PLG microparticles decreased more rapidly than in the slower degrading 75:25 PLG microparticles. Importantly, the degradation of extracted OVA over 14 days was similar for microparticles incubated either with regular changes of release medium or in a dialysis tube. Almost all the OVA encapsulated in PLG microparticles remained intact after incubation in simulated gastric and intestinal media for 2 h. In contrast, the surface protein was rapidly degraded by trypsin and
pepsin
and was not detected by SDS-PAGE.
...
PMID:The distribution of protein associated with poly(DL-lactide co-glycolide) microparticles and its degradation in simulated body fluids. 968 90
The degradation and erosion of solvent cast films and injection molded bars prepared from poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) and 2,2'-bis(2-oxazoline) linked poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL-O) were evaluated in simulated gastric fluid (SGF) (pH 1.2,
pepsin
present) and in simulated intestinal fluid (SIF) (pH 7.5, pancreatin present). After incubation of the polymer films (10 mg) and bars (70 mg) in the medium, the resulting decrease in molecular weight (degradation) was determined by size exclusion chromatography and the weight loss of the preparations was measured. In addition, the effect of pancreatin on FITC-dextran (MW 4400) release from PCL and PCL-O microparticles, prepared by w/o/w double emulsion technique, was studied. No degradation or weight loss was observed for either PCL or PCL-O films in SGF (12 h incubation, 37 degrees C). When compared to
PBS
pH 7.4, pancreatin hardly enhanced the weight loss of PCL films and bars. In contrast, pancreatin enhanced substantially erosion of PCL-O films and bars. Unlike PCL preparations, the PCL-O preparations showed surface erosion in SIF. Pancreatin increased considerably FITC-dextran release from both PCL and PCL-O microparticles. In conclusion, the present results demonstrate the enzyme sensitivity of the novel PCL-O polymer. In addition, the results show that pancreatin present in intestinal fluid may substantially affect drug release from PCL based preparations.
...
PMID:Pancreatin enhanced erosion of and macromolecule release from 2,2-bis(2-oxazoline)-linked poly(epsilon-caprolactone). 1252 18
1
2
3
Next >>