Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (RNase)
16,360 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Variations in urinary kallikrein in pancreatic diseases were ascertained, and possible influencing factors were investigated. Serum amylase and urinary excretion of glandular kallikrein, pancreatic ribonuclease (RNase), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) and amylase were measured in 24 control subjects, 39 patients with pancreatic cancer, 49 with pancreatitis and 63 with extra-pancreatic diseases. Urinary kallikrein was found to be elevated in a substantial number of patients with pancreatitis. Higher levels were detected in patients with a relapse, which was diagnosed using clinical and biochemical examinations. RNase was also increased in a high number of patients with pancreatic diseases, but was not correlated with pancreatic damage. In patients with pancreatitis, a correlation was found between urinary kallikrein and RNase excretions. No correlations were found between kallikrein and serum or urinary amylase and GGT. We can conclude that urinary kallikrein excretion increases in pancreatitis, especially when a phlogistic involvement of the pancreas is present; this condition may lead to a release of this ultrafiltrable enzyme in the circulation. Renal tubular damage, which determines a reduced reabsorption of this enzyme, seems to play a concomitant but minor role in this process.
...
PMID:Urinary kallikrein excretion in chronic pancreatic diseases. 172 73

Tissue kallikrein gene expression in rat kidney was examined by in situ hybridization histochemistry. A rat tissue kallikrein cDNA probe, 534 bases in length and complementary to the 3' end of kallikrein mRNA was first used in Northern blot analysis to demonstrate the existence of tissue kallikrein mRNA in rat kidney. Then, kallikrein mRNA's localization in rat kidney sections was studied in situ hybridization histochemistry using the same probe. Positive signals were concentrated in the renal cortex at the vascular pole of the glomeruli and to a lesser degree, the distal tubular cells. Prehybridization with the unlabeled probe can abolish the positive signal; the same result can also be achieved by pretreatment of the tissue section with ribonuclease. By using the same technique, tissue kallikrein mRNA was also localized in granular convoluted tubule and striated duct cells of rat submandibular gland. The results suggest a new site of renal kallikrein synthesis at the vascular pole of the glomerulus. These findings, coupled with the previous studies that tissue kallikrein can participate in activation and releasing of renin, raise a potential physiological role of kallikrein in renin release or prorenin processing at juxtaglomerular cells.
...
PMID:Renal kallikrein mRNA localization by in situ hybridization. 277 Jan 12

The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is a mediator of intestinal inflammation induced by peptidoglycan-polysaccharide from group A streptococci (PG-APS) in rats. In this study we investigated the participation of intestinal tissue kallikrein (ITK). Lewis rats were injected intramurally with PG-APS. ITK was visualized by immunohistochemical staining. Cecal ITK concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay, and gene expression was evaluated by RNase protection assay. Kallikrein-binding protein (KBP) was evaluated in plasma by ELISA. Tissue kallikrein was identified in cecal goblet cells in both control and PG-APS-injected rats and in macrophages forming granulomas in inflamed tissues. Cecal ITK was significantly lower in acute and chronic phases of inflammation and in supernatant from in vitro cultures of inflamed cecum. ITK mRNA levels were not significantly different. Plasma KBP levels were significantly reduced in inflamed rats. The presence of tissue kallikrein in macrophages suggests participation in experimental colitis. The decrease of ITK in the inflamed intestine associated with unchanged mRNA levels suggests ITK release during intestinal inflammation.
...
PMID:Localization and secretion of tissue kallikrein in peptidoglycan-induced enterocolitis in Lewis rats. 975 18

To characterize the role of the kallikrein-kinin system in diabetic cardiopathy, we studied the effect of streptozotocin (STZ) on the regulation of the myocardial bradykinin (BK) receptors, the B1 and B2 type, and two tissue kallikrein genes, rat kallikrein 1 (rKLK1) and rKLK7, in severely hyperglycemic rats. Experiments were performed in STZ-induced diabetic male Wistar rats (n = 7) and compared to controls (n = 7). After extraction of myocardial total RNA, specific oligonucleotides were used to generate reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) products from myocardial rKLK1 and rKLK7 mRNA. Southern blot analyses of these RT-PCR products were hybridized with appropriate gene-specific oligonucleotide probes. Myocardial B1 and B2 receptor expression were analyzed by RNase protection assays using specific probes from the coding region of the receptor genes. Twelve weeks after diabetes induction, the rats were normotensive and hyperglycemic and polyuric. We observed an impairment of the main myocardial kinin-forming enzymes, indicated by a reduction of the expression of both, rKLK1 and rKLK7. At this time the myocardial expression of the B1 receptor was not detectable in either group. Thus, the B1 receptor does not play a regulatory role in either the healthy or in STZ-diabetic heart. In contrast, the B2-receptor expression was detectable but did not differ significantly in either group. The reduced synthesis of myocardial tissue KLK implies a reduced capacity to generate BK in diabetic rats. This reduction is not compensated by elevated BK receptor levels. We suggest that alterations of the KKS may contribute to myocardial dysfunction in diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Myocardial expression of rat bradykinin receptors and two tissue kallikrein genes in experimental diabetes. 1060 22

Bradykinin coronary outflow, left ventricular performance and left ventricular dimensions of transgenic rats harboring the human tissue kallikrein-1 gene TGR(hKLK1) were investigated under basal and ischemic conditions. Bradykinin content in the coronary outflow of buffer-perfused, isolated hearts of controls and TGR(hKLK1) was measured by specific radioimmunoassay before and after global ischemia. Left ventricular function and left ventricular dimensions were determined in vivo using a tip catheter and echocardiography 6 days and 3 weeks after induction of myocardial infarction. Left ventricular type I collagen mRNA expression was analyzed by RNase protection assay. Compared to controls, basal bradykinin outflow was 3.5 fold increased in TGR(hKLK1). Ischemia induced an increase of bradykinin coronary outflow in controls but did not induce a further increase in TGR(hKLK1). However, despite similar unchanged infarction sizes, left ventricular function and remodeling improved in TGR(hKLK1) after myocardial infarction, indicated by an increase in left ventricular pressure (+34%; P<0.05), contractility (dp/dt max. +25%; P<0.05), and in ejection fraction (+20%; P<0.05) as well as by a reduction in left ventricular enddiastolic pressure (-49%, P<0.05), left ventricular enddiastolic diameter (-20%, P<0.05), and collagen mRNA expression (-15%, P<0.05) compared to controls. A chronically activated transgenic kallikrein kinin system with expression of human kallikrein-1 gene counteracts the progression of left ventricular contractile dysfunction after experimental myocardial infarction. Further studies have to show whether these results can be caused by other therapeutically options. Long acting bradykinin receptor agonists might be an alternative option to improve ischemic heart disease.
...
PMID:Cardiac function and remodeling is attenuated in transgenic rats expressing the human kallikrein-1 gene after myocardial infarction. 1702 64