Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (transcriptase)
9,479 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pancreatic digestive enzymes have rarely been reported in human nonpancreatic organs. We examined their expression in the epithelial cells of the nonpancreatic gastrointestinal organs, looking for pancreatic alpha-amylase, trypsin, chymotrypsin and pancreatic lipase. Western blotting, enzyme assay and pancreatic alpha-amylase mRNA were also used in selected specimens. In normal tissues, immunoreactivity of one or more of these enzymes was frequently noted in cells of the salivary glands, stomach, duodenum, large pancreatic ducts, extrahepatic bile ducts and gall bladder. The epithelium of the normal oesophagus, small intestine and colon were consistently negative for these enzymes. In pathologic tissues, immunoreactivity for one or more enzymes was present in epithelial cells of pleomorphic adenomas of the salivary glands, oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma, gastric adenoma and adenocarcinoma, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, cholecystitis, adenocarcinoma of the gall bladder and extrahepatic bile duct, and colon adenoma and adenocarcinoma. Western blotting showed a specific band of each enzyme in some specimens of normal stomach. In situ hybridization for pancreatic alpha-amylase mRNA showed specific signals in the normal stomach, but not in the normal colon. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis for pancreatic alpha-amylase mRNA revealed specific signals in the normal stomach. Enzyme assay revealed that the stomach and gall bladder showed these activities. The data suggest that pancreatic digestive enzymes are produced by several epithelial cell types of the nonpancreatic gastrointestinal organs, that the organs positive for pancreatic enzyme have a common cell lineage, and that neoplasms continue to express or neoexpress these enzymes after neoplastic transformation.
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PMID:Expression of pancreatic digestive enzymes in normal and pathologic epithelial cells of the human gastrointestinal system. 933 41

An alpha-amylase gene product was isolated from apple fruit by reverse-transcriptase PCR using redundant primers, followed by 5' and 3' RACE. The gene is a member of a small gene family. It encodes a putative 46.9 kDa protein that is most similar to an alpha-amylase gene from potato (GenBank accession M79328). In apple fruit this new gene was expressed at low levels, as detected by reverse-transcriptase PCR, in a number of plant tissues and during fruit development. Highest levels of mRNA for this transcript were observed 3 to 9 days after placing apple fruit at 0.5 degrees C. Phylogenetic analysis of amino acid sequence places the potato and apple proteins as a distinct and separate new subgroup within the plant alpha-amylases, which appears to have diverged prior to the split between monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants. These two divergent alpha-amylases lack the standard signal peptide structures found in all other plant alpha-amylases, and have sequence differences within the B-domain and C-domain. However, comparisons with structures of known starch hydrolases suggest that these differences are unlikely to affect the enzymatic alpha-1,4-amylase function of the protein. This is the first report of upregulation of a dicotyledonous alpha-amylase in response to low temperature, and confirms the presence of a new family of alpha-amylases in plants.
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PMID:A novel alpha-amylase gene is transiently upregulated during low temperature exposure in apple fruit. 1069 68