scholarly journals Bilirubin glucuronyltransferase. Specific assay and kinetic studies

1971 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim Ping Wong

1. Bilirubin glucuronide was synthesized in vitro in a system containing a rat liver microsomal fraction, UDP-glucuronic acid, Mg2+ and bilirubin. The enzymic synthesis was accomplished without the addition of a bilirubin carrier. 2. Azobilirubin and azobilirubin glucuronide were separated by t.l.c. and paper chromatography and the measurement of the conjugate provided a specific assay for bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17). 3. This diazo compound was labelled when [U-14C]UDP-glucuronic acid was employed in the transglucuronidation reaction. 4. Identity of the glucuronide nature of the product was further confirmed by hydrolysis with β-glucuronidase prepared from limpets and Helix pomatia. In each instance azobilirubin and glucuronic acid were liberated. 5. There was a close correlation between the bilirubin glucuronyl-transferase activity as measured by two procedures, colorimetric and radioisotopic. The specific activities so measured were 19nmol of bilirubin ‘equivalents’ conjugated/h per mg of protein and 16.9–18.4nmol of UDP-glucuronic acid incorporated/h per mg of protein, respectively. On this basis, it was concluded that the major product formed in vitro was bilirubin monoglucuronide; this represents about 77% of the total products formed. 6. The Km values for bilirubin and UDP-glucuronic acid at pH8.2 are 3.3×10−4m and 1.67×10−3m, respectively. 7. The addition of Mg2+ at a final concentration of 5mm to the reaction mixture increased the rate of conjugation by 5.6-fold in the microsomal preparation that had been subjected to overnight dialysis against 10mm-EDTA (disodium salt). 8. Diethyl-nitrosamine at a final concentration of 1–20mm has no effect on the glucuronidation of bilirubin in vitro.

1985 ◽  
Vol 227 (3) ◽  
pp. 805-814 ◽  
Author(s):  
J A Robinson ◽  
H C Robinson

beta-Galactosides were found to initiate chondroitin sulphate chain synthesis in chick-embryo cartilage in vitro and thereby relieve inhibition by cycloheximide of [3H]-acetate incorporation into chondroitin sulphate. beta-Galactosides with an apolar aglycan group such as phenyl O-beta-galactoside were active, whereas those with a charged or polar aglycan group such as pyridine 3-O-beta-galactoside or those with sulphur instead of oxygen in the glycosidic linkage (phenyl beta-thiogalactoside) were not. beta-Galactosides also serve as substrates for microsomal galactosyltransferase activity from chick-embryo cartilage. Phenyl O-beta-galactoside and pyridine 3-O-beta-galactoside were effective substrates for this enzyme, but phenyl S-beta-thiogalactoside and pyridine 2-S-beta-thiogalactoside were only slightly active. This galactosyltransferase was shown to be a separate enzyme from galactosyltransferase I, which catalyses transfer of galactose from UDP-galactose to beta-xylosides. It is proposed that the enzyme catalysing this reaction is galactosyltransferase II, responsible for transfer of the second galactose residue of the chondroitin sulphate linkage oligosaccharide. No transfer of glucuronic acid from UDP-glucuronic acid to beta-galactosides, catalysed by the microsomal preparation could be detected.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (03) ◽  
pp. 349-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Toulon ◽  
Elyane Frere ◽  
Claude Bachmeyer ◽  
Nathalie Candia ◽  
Philippe Blanche ◽  
...  

SummaryThrombin clotting time (TCT) and reptilase clotting time (RCT) were found significantly prolonged in a series of 72 HIV-infected patients drawn for routine coagulation testing. Both TCT and RCT were highly significantly correlated with albumin (r = -0.64, and r = -0.73 respectively, p<0.0001). TCT and RCT were significantly higher (p<0.0001) in a series of 30 other HIV-infected patients selected on their albumin level below 30.0 g/l (group l) than in 30 HIV-infected patients with albumin level above 40.0 g/l or in 30 HIV-negative controls; the two latter groups were not different. In vitro supplementation of plasma from group 1 patients with purified human albumin up to 45.0 g/l (final concentration) lead to a dramatic shortening effect on both TCT and RCT, which reached normal values. The TCT and RCT of the purified fibrinogen solutions (2.0 g/l final concentration) were not different in the three groups, and normal polymerization curves were obtained in all cases. This further ruled out the presence of any dysfibrinogenemia in the plasma from group 1 patients. Using purified proteins, highly significant correlations were demonstrated between the albumin concentration and the prolongations of both TCT and RCT, which were of the same magnitude order than those found in the patients plasma. These results suggest that hypo-albuminemia is responsible for the acquired fibrin polymerization defect reported in HIV-infected patients. The pathophysiological implication of the low albumin levels was suggested by the finding of decreased albumin levels (associated with prolonged TCT and RCT) in a small series of the eight HIV-infected patients who developed thrombotic complications.


1996 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 603-608
Author(s):  
Moreno Paolini ◽  
Laura Pozzetti ◽  
Renata Mesirca ◽  
Andrea Sapone ◽  
Paola Silingardi ◽  
...  

The use of sodium phenobarbital (PB, CYP2B1 inducer) combined with β-naphthoflavone (β-NF, 1A1) to induce certain Phase I reactions in S9 liver fractions is a standard method for conducting short-term bioassays for genotoxicity. However, because post-oxidative enzymes are also able to activate many precarcinogens, we tested the possibility of adapting S9 liver fractions derived from Phase II-induced rodents to the field of genetic toxicology. In this study, S9 liver fractions derived from Swiss albino CD1 mice fed 7.5g/kg 2-(3)-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyanisole (BHA; a monofunctional Phase II-inducer) for 3 weeks, show a clear pattern of induction with an approximately 3.5–9.5-fold increase in glutathione S-transferase activity. In vitro DNA binding of the promutagenic agents, [14C]-l,4-dichlorobenzene (DCB) and [14C]-1,4-dibromobenzene (DBB), is mediated by such metabolic liver preparations and showed a significant increase in covalent binding capability. In some instances, enzyme activity was more elevated when compared to that obtained with traditional (Phase I-induced) S9. Together with DNA binding, the genetic response of these chemicals in the diploid D7 strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae used as a biological test system, revealed the ability of the BHA-derived preparations to activate the promutagenic agents, as exemplified by the significant enhancement of mitotic gene-conversion (up to 5.2-fold for DCB and 3.4-fold for DBB) and reverse point mutation (up to 3.6-fold for DCB and 2.5-fold for DBB) at a 4mM concentration. This novel metabolising biosystem, with enhanced Phase II activity, is recommended together with a traditional S9, for detecting unknown promutagens in genotoxicity studies. The routine use of either oxidative or post-oxidative S9 increases the responsiveness of the test and can contribute to the identification of promutagens not detected when using traditional protocols.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zbyszko F. Grzelczak ◽  
Mark H. Sattolo ◽  
Linda K. Hanley-Bowdoin ◽  
Theresa D. Kennedy ◽  
Byron G. Lane

The most prominent methionine-labeled protein made when cell-free systems are programmed with bulk mRNA from dry wheat embryos has been identified with what may be the most abundant protein in dry wheat embryos. The protein has been brought to purity and has a distinctive amino acid composition, Gly and Glx accounting for almost 40% of the total amino acids. Designated E because of its conspicuous association with early imbibition of dry wheat embryos, the protein and its mRNA are abundant during the "early" phase (0–1 h) of postimbibition development, and easily detected during "lag" phase (1–5 h), but they are almost totally degraded soon after entry into the "growth" phase of development, by about 10 h postimbibition.The most prominent methionine-labeled protein peculiar to the cell-free translational capacity of bulk mRNA from "growth" phase embryos is not detected as a product of in vivo synthesis. Its electrophoretic properties and its time course of emergence, after 5 h postimbibition development, suggest that this major product of cell-free synthesis may be an in vitro counterpart to a prominent methionine-labeled protein made only in vivo, by "growth" phase embryos. Designated G because of its conspicuous association with "growth" phase development, the cell-free product does not comigrate with any prominent dye-stained band in electrophoretic distributions of wheat proteins. The suspected cellular counterpart to G, also, does not comigrate with a prominent dye-stained wheat protein during electrophoresis, and although found in particulate as well as soluble fractions of wheat embryo homogenates it is not concentrated in either nuclei or mitochondria, as isolated.


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 1034
Author(s):  
Joohyeong Lee ◽  
Eunhye Kim ◽  
Seon-Ung Hwang ◽  
Lian Cai ◽  
Mirae Kim ◽  
...  

This study aimed to examine the effects of treatment with glucuronic acid (GA) and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (AG), which are components of hyaluronic acid (HA), during porcine oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM). We measured the diameter of the oocyte, the thickness of the perivitelline space (PVS), the reactive oxygen species (ROS) level, and the expression of cumulus cell expansion and ROS-related genes and examined the cortical granule (CG) reaction of oocytes. The addition of 0.05 mM GA and 0.05 mM AG during the first 22 h of oocyte IVM significantly increased oocyte diameter and PVS size compared with the control (non-treatment). The addition of GA and AG reduced the intra-oocyte ROS content and improved the CG of the oocyte. GA and AG treatment increased the expression of CD44 and CX43 in cumulus cells and PRDX1 and TXN2 in oocytes. In both the chemically defined and the complex medium (Medium-199 + porcine follicular fluid), oocytes derived from the GA and AG treatments presented significantly higher blastocyst rates than the control after parthenogenesis (PA) and somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). In conclusion, the addition of GA and AG during IVM in pig oocytes has beneficial effects on oocyte IVM and early embryonic development after PA and SCNT.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (2) ◽  
pp. 427-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Bartnik ◽  
M Osborn ◽  
K Weber

To screen invertebrate tissues for the possible expression of intermediate filaments (IFs), immunofluorescence microscopy with the monoclonal antibody anti-IFA known to detect all mammalian IF proteins was used (Pruss, R. M., R. Mirsky, M. C. Raff, R. Thorpe, A. J. Dowding, and B. H. Anderton. 1981. Cell, 27:419-428). In a limited survey, the lower chordate Branchiostoma as well as the invertebrates Arenicola, Lumbricus, Ascaris, and Helix pomatia revealed a positive reaction primarily on epithelia and on nerves, whereas certain other invertebrates appeared negative. To assess the nature of the positive reaction, Helix pomatia was used since a variety of epithelia was strongly stained by anti-IFA. Fixation-extraction procedures were developed that preserve in electron micrographs of esophagus impressive arrays of IFs as tonofilament bundles. Fractionation procedures performed on single cell preparations document large meshworks of long and curvilinear IF by negative stain. These structures can be purified. One- and two-dimensional gels show three components, all of which are recognized by anti-IFA in immunoblotting: 66 kD/pl 6.35, 53 kD/pl 6.05, and 52 kD/pl 5.95. The molar ratio between the larger and more basic polypeptide and the sum of the two more acidic forms is close to 1. After solubilization in 8.5 M urea, in vitro filament reconstitution is induced when urea is removed by dialysis against 2-50 mM Tris buffer at pH 7.8. The reconstituted filaments contain all three polypeptides. The results establish firmly the existence of invertebrate IFs outside neurones and demonstrate that the esophagus of Helix pomatia displays IFs which in line with the epithelial morphology of the tissue could be related to keratin IF of vertebrates.


1977 ◽  
Vol 164 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
K P Wong

Labelled tyramine glucuronide was synthesized in vitro from UDP-[14C]glucuronic acid, [14C]tyramine or [3H]tyramine. The glucuronidation was carried out at pH9.2 in the presence of a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, trans-2-phenylcyclopropylamine. The Km values for tyramine were 69 and 125 micrometer and those for UDP-glucuronic acid were 260 and 290 micrometer respectively for guinea-pig and rat liver microsomal preparatons. The specific activities of microsomal glucuronyltransferase measured in fresh hepatic preparations of guinea pig, mouse and rat were respectively 601, 251 and 235 pmol of [14C]tyramine glucuronide/min per mg of protein. Increase in activity ranged from 2- to 6-fold in preparations which were frozen and thawed once and 5.4- to 10-fold when the freezing and thawing was repeated. Rabbit liver has very low activity, and monkey liver and intestine were completely devoid of this conjugating capacity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 2377-2387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manjunath D. Meti ◽  
Kirthi S. Byadagi ◽  
Sharanappa T. Nandibewoor ◽  
Shrinivas D. Joshi ◽  
Uttam A. More ◽  
...  

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