Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.1 (chymotrypsin)
10,938 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ovarian carcinoma contains an antigen (TA) which is stable at 100 degrees. Rabbit antisera to glycoprotein-rich extracts of tumors detect TA in 70 per cent of ovarian malignancies, in some benign ovarian cysts, certain normal lung preparations, normal cervix, and squamous-cell carcinoma of the cervix. Highest levels may be associated with mucin secretion. No detectible antigen was present in normal ovary, plasma, A, B, and O erythrocytes, leukocytes, placenta, brain, heart, liver, corpus uteri, spleen, skeletal muscle, or kidney. Prolonged digestion of boiled tumor extracts with papain, trypsin, chymotrypsin, on Sephadex G-150 corresponding to a globular protein of 27,000 to 36,000 molecular weight. A beta-globulin mobility is seen in immunoelectrophoresis. It appears that TA differs in tissue specificity and molecular size from other known ovarian cancer associated antigens.
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PMID:A thermostable antigen associated with ovarian cancer. 6 15

A cationic polypeptide growth factor, isolated from human serum and purified to homogeneity, has stimulated the replication of density-inhibited BALB/c 3T3 cells. It has a molecular weight of 1.3 x 10(4) daltons and an isoelectric point of 9.7. Trypsin or chymotrypsin digestion reduces the growth-stimulatory activity by 75%, whereas 2-mercaptoehanol completely abolishes it. The growth factor is heat-stable (100 degrees C X 10 min) and free of insulin-like activity. The highly purified serum growth factor has been labeled with 125I, and an antiserum to the growth factor was produced in the rabbit. A specific, highly sensitive radioimmunoassay has been developed. Factors with growth-stimulating activity have also been detected in human platelets and human pituitary gland extracts. Platelets and pituitary glands have antigenic determinants that are recognized by antibodies to the serum growth factor. The platelet and pituitary gland growth factors are also cationic and heat stable, and are destroyed by 2-mercaptoethanol. Thus the human serum, platelet, and pituitary gland growth factors have similar properties.
Natl Cancer Inst Monogr 1978 May
PMID:Growth factors derived from human serum, platelets, and pituitary: properties and immunologic cross-reactivity. 8 59

The tyrosinase activity in two sucrose gradient isolated melanosome fractions from a melanotic hamster melanoma was found to increase after alpha-chymotrypsin treatment. The enhancement in tyrosinase activity had its maximum at a concentration of 1 mg/ml alpha-chymotrypsin after 120 min incubation at 37 degrees C. No direct activating effect of alpha-chymotrypsin was found either on the soluble tyrosinase fraction from freshly prepared untreaed whole-tumor homogenate or on purified mushroom tyrosinase. The activating effect of alpha-chymotrypsin upon the melanosome tyrosinase is believed to be due to the endopeptidic hydrolysis of the--CO--NH--bound existing between tyrosinase and tyrosine and phenylalanine residues in the melanin molecule. Although alternative interpretations are not excluded, the observed enhancement in tyrosinase activity after alpha-chymotrypsin treatment of melanosomes might indicate the existence of an "enzyme liberating" mechanism in the melanosomes.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol 1979 Oct
PMID:Chymotrypsin activation of melanosome tyrosinase in hamster melanotic melanoma. 11 73

Cancer-related urinary glycoprotein EDC1 inhibits the action of trypsin and chymotrypsin on casein and synthetic substrates. The amino acid and carbohydrate compositions of EDC1 are different from those reported for pregnancy-related urinary trypsin inhibitors.
Cancer Res 1978 Feb
PMID:Antitryptic property of cancer-related glycoprotein EDC1. 14 94

Mechanical and enzymatic methods of disaggregating tumors were studied with the goals of (1) minimizing cell losses while (2) maintaining functional and surface membrane markers needed to objectively identify inflammatory cells (IC)1 in resultant suspensions. Application of the principles and methods described makes accurate estimation of the percentage of each IC type present in neoplasms possible for the first time. Compared to purely mechanical means of disaggregating tumors, all enzyme mixtures tested markedly increased yields of viable cells/g neoplasm. Best results were obtained with a combination of collagenase and a protease of broader substrate range (alpha chymotrypsin, papain, pronase or trypsin). The combination of enzymes that gave the highest yields with the least effect on inflammatory cell markers was trypsin, collagenase and DNAse (TCD). Because mechanical injury appeared to be the greatest single cause of cell loss (the enzymes themselves had little direct effect), potential sources were identified and either eliminated or minimized. With TCD, depending on the tumor system, cell recovery (measured as DNA recovered in cell suspensions) was as high as 50% and yields were as much as 6.9 X 10(8) viable cells/g tumor. Complete disaggregation was not required to obtain representative IC populations from tumor fragments. Neutrophils, eosinophils and mast cells from disaggregated neoplasms were counted in Giemsa stained cytocentrifuge preparations based on their unique morphologic appearances. Macrophages were identified by their capacity to phagocytose zymosan, a function which proved highly resistant to the effect of enzymes. Flourescent microscopic identification of brain associated thymus antigen (BATA) allowed quantification of T lymphocytes, since this marker was virtually unchanged by enzyme exposure. Surface immunoglobulin (Ig) was stripped from B lymphocytes most rapidly by pronase and chymotrypsin, slowly by trypsin and papain, and not at all by collagenase. Ig positive cells therefore could be quantified in suspensions generated by collagenase or very short (20 min) exposure of fragments to trypsin.
Int J Cancer 1976 Sep 15
PMID:Inflammatory cells in solid murine neoplasms. I. Tumor disaggregation and identification of constituent inflammatory cells. 18 47

The physicochemical properties of nuclear and cytosolic glucocorticoid-binding components from corticoid-sensitive (CS) and corticoid-resistant (CR) mouse lymphoma P1798 cells have been compared. Nuclei or cytosol fractions were prepared from lymphocytes that had been labeled at 37 or 4 degrees, respectively, with 30 nM [3H]triamcinolone acetonide ([3H]TA). [3H]TA was extracted with 0.6 M KCl, 10 mM spermidine, or 4.5 mM MgCl2 from CS nuclei and with 0.6 M KCl or 10 mM spermidine from CR nuclei. As reported previously, nuclear-associated [3H]TA in CR cells was resistant to extraction with mM concentrations of MgCl2. Loss of bound steroid during extraction with 0.6 M KCl was minimized by including the chymotrypsin inhibitor, carbobenzoxy-L-phenylalanine, in the extraction buffer. The inhibitor was not required during extraction with spermidine or MgCl2. Nuclear and cytosolic extracts were examined by analytical agarose gel filtration and glycerol density gradient centrifugation under high salt (0.6 M KCl) conditions. The glucocorticoid-binding component in KCl, spermidine, and MgCl2 extracts from CS nuclei was considerably larger and more asymmetrical [Stokes radius, 57 to 59 A; sedimentation coefficient, 3.64 to 3.70S; molecular weight, 90,000 daltons; frictional ratio, 1.8; axial ratio (prolate ellipsoid), 15] than the [3H]TA-macromolecular complex in KCl and spermidine extracts from CR nuclei[Stokes radius, 29 A; sedimentation coefficient, 3.23 to 3.30S; molecular weight, 40,000 daltons; frictional ratio, 1.25; axial ratio (prolate ellipsoid), 5]. Control experiments showed that the smaller size of the glucocorticoid-binding component in CR nuclei was probably not due to cleavage of a larger, CS-like complex during the extraction procedure. The larger size of the CS [3H]TA complex did not appear to result from aggregation of s a smaller species. No difference in physicochemical parameters of the binding component was observed if cells were labeled with [3H]dexamethasone instead of [3H]TA. However, [3H]dexamethasone complexes were less stable than those formed with [3H]TA as indicated by considerable dissociation of [3H]dexamethasone during gel filtration and gradient centrifugation. This may be due to the 3- to 5-fold lower relative binding affinity of [3H]dexamethasone. Analysis of [3H]TA-labeled cytosol by gel filtration and gradient centrifugation revealed the presence of a single binding component with physicochemical properties similar to those of nuclear [3H]TA complexes from the same strain of tumor. These results suggest that previously described differences in extractability of nuclear-associated [3H]TA between the CS and CR strains of mouse lymphoma P1798 and the lack of response of CR P1798 to glucocorticoid administration may be due, at least in part, to the presence of an altered glucocorticoid-binding component in the resistant tumor cells.
Cancer Res 1979 Oct
PMID:Physicochemical differences between glucocorticoid-binding components from the corticoid-sensitive and -resistant strains of mouse lymphoma P1798. 47 39

Enteropeptidase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin activity in basal and secretin-stimulated duodenal juice of 20 normal adult volunteers and 15 patients with gastrotestinal disease were determined. All enzyme concentrations showed skew distributions, but fluctuations in the secretin-stimulated juices were less pronouced than in the basal secretions. Secretin administration had no influence on the release of enteropeptidase from human duodenal mucosa, but resulted in a very small increase in secretion of pancreatic enzymes. Six out of seven patients with chronic alcoholic pancreatitis or cancer of the pancreas exhibited highly significant elevations of enteropeptidase in their basal as well as secretin-stimulated duodenal juice. It is suggested that raised luminal enteropeptidase activity may be the result of pancreatic insufficiency or elevated blood glucagon concentrations.
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PMID:Enteropeptidase levels in duodenal juice of normal subjects and patients with gastrointestinal disease. 66 28

Any research which has shed light on the nature of disease or opened new ways to its prevention or cure is here termed relevant, and the question will be asked whether the research could have been planned with these aims in mind. Examples will be taken from the chemistry and X-ray analysis of proteins and from molecular genetics. Blow and Hartley determined the amino acid sequence and atomic structure of the digestive enzyme chymotrypsin in order to solve the problem of enzymic catalysis. They succeeded but what they found has proved to be of much wider improtance than could have been foreseen at the outset: it gives the key to the mechanism of blood clotting and suggests new methods for its control. X-ray analysis of haemoglobin was started at a time when the structure of proteins was regarded as the central problem of biology, but it did not seem likely then that the results would shed light on the molecular pathology of inherited diseases. Ames made a life-long study of the genetic control of histidine biosynthesis in Salmonella because it represents an example of a widely used biological mechanism, but without expecting it to have any practical applications. Yet his recent exploitation of the system for the rapid and sensitive detection of chemical carcinogens may represent a breakthrough in cancer prevention. This unpredictable relationship of molecular biology to medicine is symptomatic of the subject's youth.
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PMID:Fundamental research in molecular biology: its relevance to medicine. 80 69

Regression of MTW9 mammary carcinoma, which consistently follows withdrawal of mammotropic hormones, was characterized by a rapid decrease of thymidine incorporation into DNA but only a slight reduction or uridine incorporation into RNA and amino acid incorporation into proteins. Within 24 hr of hormone withdrawal, cytosol proteins of MTW9 became more easily degraded by trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin, or subtilisin BPN'. Labilization of cytosol proteins occurred much earlier than any change in the level of protein synthesis or lysosomal enzyme activity. The data showing increased susceptibility to proteolysis could not be explained either by the presence of endogenous proteases, by the destruction of the exogenous proteases used in the assay, or by the existence of protease inhibitors. Nor were any differences detected either in the distribution of radioactive precursor among the cytosol proteins from growing or regressing tumors or in the electrophoretic pattern of the same proteins. Preincubation of the cytosol proteins with dithiothreitol or with prolactin, 17 beta-estradiol, progesterone, and hydrocortisone did not modify the susceptibility to proteolysis. However, after heat denaturation, cytosol proteins of regressing and growing tumors became equally susceptible to proteolysis. It is suggested that regression of MTW9 mammary carcinoma occurs not only because cell reproduction is arrested, but also because susceptibility of cytosol proteins to proteolysis is increased.
Cancer Res 1977 Mar
PMID:Increased susceptibility of cytosol proteins to proteolytic digestion during regression of a hormone-dependent mammary tumor. 83 67

Pancreatic secretory abnormalities develop in most persons with pancreatic cancer and have been attributed to ductal obstruction. These experiments investigated whether abnormal secretion results instead from carcinogen-induced changes in the secreting cells. Fifty male Syrian Golden hamsters (40 to 100 grams) received weekly injections of di-isopropyl-nitrosamine (250 mg/kg, subcutaneously), and survivors and age-matched controls were studied after 3.5 to 6.5 months of treatment. Pancreatic secretion was stimulated by secretin or cholecystokinin (2 units/kg, intravenously, as a bolus). After each stimulus four 15-minute collections of pancreatic juice were analyzed for HCO3- and Cl- or total protein, amylase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin. The organs were examined histologically. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma developed in 30% of the animals at 5 months, 56% at 5.5 months, and 100% at 6.5 months. The animals without cancer either had hyperplasia of the duct epithelium or were histologically normal. The histologic appearance of acinar tissue and protein secretion were normal in all groups. The tumors did not obstruct the major ducts. In all treated animals the pancreatic secretory response to secretin was of low volume, low maximal [HCO3-] and HCO3- output, and low [Cl- + HCO3-]; these changes progressed with time. The secretory abnormalities antedated the appearance of the neoplasms and were not caused by obstruction.
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PMID:Pancreatic secretion in hamsters with pancreatic cancer. 87 54


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