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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A low-molecular-weight acceptor of galactosyltransferase activity was detected in sera and effusions of patients with extensive maligant disease. This substance was purified to homogeneity from both human serum and effusion by using sequential charcoal/Celite and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The purified acceptor was shown to act as substrate for both purified normal and
cancer-associated
human galactosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.22) isoenzymes, but had a higher affinity for the
cancer-associated
isoenzyme (Km = 20 microM) than for the normal isoenzyme (Km = 500 microM). The substrate was found to be a glycopeptide with mol.wt. approx. 3600 determined by polyacrylamide-gel chromatography. Carbohyydate analysis demonstrated only the presence of glucosamine and
mannose
. Amino acid analysis revealed that the peptide moiety consisted of eight different amino acids, including two residues of asparagine and one residue of serine, but no threonine. These structural data suggest that the acceptor is a fraction of an asparagine-glucosamine type of glycoprotein.
...
PMID:Detection, purification and characterization of a human cancer-associated galactosyltransferase acceptor. 8 90
This investigation studied the effects of a shift from a mixed diet to a lactovegetarian diet on some
cancer-associated
bacterial enzymes in human feces (beta-glucuronidase, beta-glucosidase, and sulphatase). Three months after the shift to the lactovegetarian diet, there was a significant decrease in beta-glucuronidase, beta-glucosidase, and sulphatase activities per gram feces wet weight (p less than 0.05, less than 0.05, and less than 0.001, respectively). In contrast, glucuronide and
glucoside
hydrolysis remained unchanged per gram dry weight, although sulphatase activity was still significantly lowered when expressed this way (p less than 0.01). However, the fecal excretion increased significantly (p less than 0.05). Part of the explanation for the decreased enzyme activities is obviously a dilution effect, because much of the increased fecal weight after the shift in diet was associated with a higher water content. The higher water content was probably due to a higher fiber intake (p less than 0.001). Thus, the results in this paper indicate that a change from a mixed diet to a lactovegetarian diet leads to a decrease in certain enzyme activities proposed to be risk factors for colon cancer.
...
PMID:Shift from a mixed diet to a lactovegetarian diet: influence on some cancer-associated intestinal bacterial enzyme activities. 212 19
Rats bearing NMDA lesions of the lateral hypothalamus (LH) were tested for their reactions to alterations in the sensory (but not calorific) content of the diet (finickiness), to 24 h food or water deprivation, and to dehydrating injections of hypertonic saline and glucoprivic injections of 2-deoxy-
D-glucose
(2-DG). Lesioned rats lost weight following surgery but had no significant eating or drinking difficulties in the home
cage
. They were not finicky and responded normally to 24 h food or water deprivation. Responses to hypertonic saline and 2-DG challenges were significantly impaired. These data suggest a subtle motivational disorder following LH lesion, rather than motor or sensory impairment.
...
PMID:NMDA lesions of rat lateral hypothalamus: effects of dietary and physiological challenges. 212 88
Mucins synthesized in colonic cancer are known to be different from those in the normal colon; however, the biochemical differences between these mucins have not been defined. We have purified mucins from samples of nonneoplastic (normal) human colon and colon cancer and found that the carbohydrate content of the
cancer-associated
mucins is 48% of that in the normal colon, including significant reductions in
galactose
, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine, and fucose. By subjecting the mucins to alkaline degradation, we determined that there are 19% fewer oligosaccharide chains per milligram of
cancer-associated
colonic mucin than there are in mucins from normal colons. We also found a reduction in mean oligosaccharide chain length in
cancer-associated
mucin (5.83 carbohydrate residues per chain) compared with those derived from normal colons (10.2 residues). Total and individual amino acid contents were greater in
cancer-associated
mucins, with the exception of three amino acids (threonine, serine, and proline), two of which represent the O-linked glycosylation sites for glycoproteins. Thus, mucins are aberrantly glycosylated in colon cancer, both in terms of the number and mean chain length of the oligosaccharide moiety. Because of their relative abundance in colonic tissue, mucins appear to be useful molecular species in the study of the derangements in protein glycosylation that occur during neoplasia.
...
PMID:The carbohydrate composition of mucin in colonic cancer. 232 10
The glycoprotein gp51 of bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) has been included in an immunostimulating complex (ISCOM). The ISCOM was characterized biochemically in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showing the presence of proteins of estimated molecular weights of 50 and 30 kDa. Immunoblotting showed that gp51 was present in the ISCOM. The BLV-ISCOM had a S-value of 19 S and the electronmicrograph showed the
cage
-like structure as previously reported for other ISCOMs. About 17% of the total amount of gp51 in the cell culture fluid was recovered in the ISCOMs. The largest loss of gp51 was encountered during the sedimentation of the virus. An ELISA, utilizing monoclonal antibodies to defined epitopes for capture was developed to control the antigenicity of epitopes, e.g. those known to induce neutralizing antibodies. Using this device as a quality control for epitopes the following could be stated. First, ISCOMs prepared from virus solubilized with the non-ionic detergents Triton X-100 or MEGA did not react with neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. In contrast, ISCOMs prepared from virus solubilized with the non-ionic detergents Tween-20, Tween-80 or octyl
glucoside
did react with the neutralizing antibodies. Second, the neutralizing epitopes were better exposed in ISCOMs than the other epitopes of gp51. In a preliminary experiment it was shown that gp51 in ISCOMs was highly immunogenic.
...
PMID:Bovine leukaemia virus ISCOMs: biochemical characterization. 254 75
We examined whether chronic exercise prevents insulin resistance developing in the high-fat-fed (HFF) rat, a model that otherwise develops profound peripheral insulin resistance. Insulin action (euglycemic clamp plus 2-[3H]deoxy-
D-glucose
-[14C]glucose tracer technique) was examined after 3 wk in sedentary control and sedentary or wheel
cage
exercise-trained HFF rats. At the whole body level, a reduction in peripheral insulin potency in HFF rats was prevented by concomitant chronic exercise; the 30-40% reduction in insulin-stimulated whole body net glucose utilization in sedentary HFF rats was abolished. Responses in individual muscles, however, suggested that the chronic exercise effect may be a compensation for, rather than a correction of insulin resistance induced by a high-fat diet; in six of eight muscles examined it produced an upward additive shift rather than a left shift in insulin dose response. Chronic exercise increased both muscle glycolytic flux and glycogen storage rates in the HFF rats, suggesting that glucose transport may be involved. We conclude that increased physical activity is beneficial in counteracting high-fat diet-induced insulin resistance. Different processes appear to be involved in the development of diet-induced insulin resistance in muscle and its amelioration by regular exercise.
...
PMID:Chronic exercise compensates for insulin resistance induced by a high-fat diet in rats. 264 85
Colon cancer cells in culture synthesize and secrete mucin glycoproteins, which carry a number of
cancer-associated
antigens. However, the structures and mechanisms of biosynthetic processing are not well understood. Mucins synthesized and secreted by LS174T human colon cancer cells were compared to those in LS174T xenografts in athymic mice. Mucins radiolabeled with glucosamine or sulfate were purified by gel filtration and cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation. The mucins were of high molecular weight and were resistant to chondroitinase ABC, hyaluronidase and HNO2 treatment. They were, however, susceptible to pronase digestion and mild alkaline treatment. Using radiochemical precursors, the cellular mucin was shown to contain fucose,
galactose
, N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylneuraminic acid, and sulfate. Oligosaccharides released by beta-elimination had N-acetylgalactosaminitol as the reduced amino sugar and also unreduced galactosamine, indicating that there is N-acetyl-galactosamine O-glycosidically attached to protein core and also peripheral N-acetyl-galactosamine not directly linked to protein. DEAE-cellulose chromatography of mucins showed two major peaks with both intracellular and secreted mucins, but xenograft mucins also had more acidic components. Sulfate-labeled mucins were shifted to less acidic peaks by neuraminidase digestion, which indicates that the same mucin molecules are both sialylated and sulfated. We conclude that the intracellular mucins of cultured colon cancer cells, those secreted into the medium, and those in nude mouse xenografts are chemically similar, but differ in sialic acid and sulfate content. This experimental model system, LS174T cells maintained in culture and as nude mouse xenografts, may be useful for further biosynthetic and structural studies of colon cancer mucin.
...
PMID:Comparison of metabolically labeled mucins of LS174T human colon cancer cells in tissue culture and xenograft. 273 49
Mucin glycoproteins are major secretory products of the colon and contain O-linked oligosaccharides synthesized on a polypeptide backbone. The initial step in the synthesis of O-linked oligosaccharides is the addition of N-acetylgalactosamine to serine or threonine residues forming the Tn antigen. This substance can then receive additional carbohydrate residues such as sialic acid to form sialosyl-Tn antigen, or
galactose
to form T antigen. In the colon, the T antigen is an oncodevelopmental
cancer-associated
antigen but little is known about Tn and sialosyl-Tn expression. The present comparative immunohistochemical study was performed to analyze the expression of these antigens in fetal, normal adult, and malignant colorectal tissues with an aim toward elucidating whether Tn and sialosyl-Tn are also oncodevelopmental colon cancer-associated antigens and to gain insight into the earliest steps of mucin glycosylation in colonocytes. We used three reagents to detect Tn antigen (two monoclonal antibodies ETn1.01 and CU-1, and one lectin Vicia villosa), two reagents to detect sialosyl-Tn (monoclonal antibodies TKH2 and B72.3) and one to detect T antigen (monoclonal antibody AH9-16). Except for occasional reactivity with VVA and CU-1, cells of normal colonic mucosa did not express Tn, sialosyl-Tn, or T antigens. However, in the transitional mucosa immediately adjacent to cancer, all three antigens were expressed (ranging from 35 to 67% of cases depending upon the reagent). In colon cancers, the percentage of cases expressing each antigen were as follows: Tn 72-81%, sialosyl-Tn 93-96%, and T 71%. Unlike T antigen, which was preferentially expressed by moderately well- and well-differentiated adenocarcinomas, both Tn and sialosyl-Tn antigens were expressed by most histological subsets of colon cancers, including poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas and mucinous (colloid and signet ring cell type) carcinomas. The majority of cancers expressed both Tn and sialosyl-Tn, usually in association with T antigen. Only one cancer lacked all three antigens. Fetal colonic mucosal cells expressed all three antigens, particularly in goblet cell mucin. These results indicate that like T antigen, Tn and sialosyl-Tn are oncodevelopmental
cancer-associated
antigens in the colon. Moreover, Tn and sialosyl-Tn antigens appear to be useful markers of poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas and mucinous carcinomas: two histological subsets that often fail to express other
cancer-associated
antigens and that are often associated with a poor clinical outcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Expression of Tn, sialosyl-Tn, and T antigens in human colon cancer. 290 46
The
cancer-associated
antigens Ca 125 and Ca 19-9 were demonstrated by radioimmunoassay to form structural units of a mucus glycoprotein in human milk taken from healthy women four days after parturition. The glycoprotein precipitated with the casein fraction at pH 4.6 and was completely absent in the whey as judged from Ca 19-9 assay. It could be effectively enriched by phenol-saline extraction from soluble milk proteins and further purified by gel filtration on Sephacryl S300 and Sephacryl S400. The active component with a bouyant density of 1.41 g/ml in isopycnic density gradient centrifugation (CsCl) shared common physico-chemical and chemical characteristics of mucus glycoproteins. Carbohydrates representing about 68% by weight were conjugated to protein by alkali-labile linkages, exclusively and were essentially free of
D-mannose
. Activities of Ca 125 and Ca 19-9 were both destroyed by treatment with periodate, mild alkali or neuraminidase suggesting the antigens are sialylated saccharides bound to protein by alkali-labile linkages. The fraction of monosialylated saccharide alditols isolated after reductive beta-elimination from the mucus glycoprotein was shown to inhibit monoclonal antibodies anti-(Ca 125) and anti-(Ca 19-9) in radioimmunoassay.
...
PMID:Ca 125 and Ca 19-9: two cancer-associated sialylsaccharide antigens on a mucus glycoprotein from human milk. 392 59
To investigate the mechanism of circadian synchronization by oral food consumption, we tested the effectiveness of cyclic intragastric feeding in synchronizing squirrel monkeys to a 24-hour schedule. Five monkeys were prepared with intragastric catheters and were studied free-ranging within a
cage
in an environmentally controlled chamber with continuous monitoring of body temperature (every 15 min) and locomotor activity (every 30 min). A balanced mixture of
dextrose
, amino acids, fat emulsion, vitamins and minerals was infused from 0800-2000 every day via the gastrostomy, first during a 12-hour light and 12-hour dark cycle (lights on 0800-2000 hours), and then subsequently in constant illumination. Serial phase analysis was performed by computing cycle-by-cycle acrophases of best-fitting sinusoids. One animal was synchronized by the feeding regimen while four others exhibited relative coordination. We conclude from these results that the timing of intragastic feeding may have only a weak synchronizing effect on primate circadian rhythms and that pre-gastric cues associated with oral food ingestion contribute to entrainment by feeding schedules.
...
PMID:Effectiveness of cyclic intragastric feeding as a circadian zeitgeber in the squirrel monkey. 392 71
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