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)

Stable, potent, highly specific, time-dependent monocyclic beta-lactam inhibitors of human leucocyte elastase (HLE) are described. The heavily substituted beta-lactams are stable under physiological conditions including in the presence of enzymes of the digestive tract. The beta-lactams were unstable in base. At pH 11.3 and 37 degrees C they were hydrolyzed with half-lives of 1.5-2 h. Hydrolysis produced characteristic products including the substituent originally at C-4 of the lactam ring, a substituted urea, and products resulting from decarboxylation of the acid after ring opening. The most potent beta-lactam displayed only 2-fold less activity versus HLE than alpha 1PI, the natural proteinaceous inhibitor. The compounds were more potent against the human and primate PMN elastases than versus either the dog or rat enzymes. Differences in the structure-activity relationships of the human versus the rat enzymes suggest significant differences between these two functionally similar enzymes. The specificity of these compounds toward HLE versus porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) is consistent with the differences in substrate specificity reported for these enzymes [Zimmerman & Ashe (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 480, 241-245]. These differences suggest that the alkyl substitutions at C-3 of the lactam ring bind in the S1 specificity pocket of these enzymes. The dependence of the stereochemistry at C-4 suggests additional differences between HLE and PPE. Most of the compounds do not inhibit other esterases or human proteases. Weak, time-dependent inhibition of human cathepsin G and alpha-chymotrypsin by one compound suggested a binding mode to these enzymes that places the N-1 substitution in the S1 pocket.
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PMID:Specificity, stability, and potency of monocyclic beta-lactam inhibitors of human leucocyte elastase. 152 56

Cultures of Candida albicans yeast cells do not normally aggregate, but extensive aggregation accompanies the induction of mycelial growth, indicating the occurrence of cell surface changes during the yeast to mycelial transition. Aggregation correlated with the formation of germ tubes as did changes in surface charge determined by attachment to ion exchange sepharose beads. Yeast cells of all strains examined were negatively charged and attachment to positively charged (DEAE) sepharose beads increased following germ tube formation. If Mg2+ was present during germ tube formation, a high degree of clumping occurred that could only be dispersed by treatment with protein-disrupting agents. Trypsin, chymotrypsin, SDS, urea, guanidine HCl and dithiothreitol but not EDTA or EGTA caused irreversible dispersal of aggregates, although germ tube aggregates dispersed by treatment with buffers at high pH reaggregated if neutralized or if calcium ions were added. Germ tube cultures produced in divalent cation-deprived medium formed aggregates that were readily dispersed by washing. However, the addition of Mg2+ or other divalent cations (Ca2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, Fe2+) caused immediate aggregation of these cultures. These results suggest that divalent cation crossbridging between opposing anionic sites and protein interactions act synergistically to promote aggregation of C. albicans germ tube cells.
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PMID:Mechanisms of aggregation accompanying morphogenesis in Candida albicans. 152 22

1. A latent form of multicatalytic proteinase (MCP) was purified to apparent homogeneity from white croaker muscle by DEAE-Sephacel, Mono-Q, Sephacryl S-300 and second Mono-Q chromatographies. 2. The enzyme preparation was electrophoretically and immunologically similar to MCP purified from the same source by a different method (Folco et al., 1988b, Archs Biochem. Biophys. 267, 599-605) but showed much lower chymotrypsin- and trypsin-like activities. 3. These activities responded to sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), urea and heat treatments in different ways: SDS stimulated both activities, urea stimulated the former and inhibited the latter and heating stimulated the former and did not affect the latter. 4. The stimulation of chymotrypsin-like activity by the three treatments was irreversible. 5. Exposure of MCP to SDS or urea in the absence of substrate rapidly inactivated it, whereas heat activation took place irrespective of the presence of substrate. 6. The stimulating effect of SDS on chymotrypsin-like activity was lost in the presence of urea. 7. These results suggest that the enzyme may be activated by different mechanisms.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a latent form of multicatalytic proteinase from fish muscle. 161 38

A major cytoskeletal polypeptide (Mr approximately 46,000; protein IT) of human intestinal epithelium was characterized by biochemical and immunological methods. The polypeptide, which was identified as a specific and genuine mRNA product by translation in vitro, reacted, in immunoblotting after SDS-PAGE, only with one of numerous cytokeratin (CK) antisera tested but with none of many monoclonal CK antibodies. In vitro, it formed heterotypic complexes with the type II CK 8, as shown by blot binding assays and gel electrophoresis in 4 M urea, and these complexes assembled into intermediate filaments (IFs) under appropriate conditions. A chymotrypsin-resistant Mr approximately 38,000 core fragment of protein IT could be obtained from cytoskeletal IFs, indicating its inclusion in a coiled coil. Antibodies raised against protein IT decorated typical CK fibril arrays in normal and transformed intestinal cells. Four proteolytic peptide fragments obtained from purified polypeptide IT exhibited significant amino acid sequence homology with corresponding regions of coils I and II of the rod domain of several other type I CKs. Immunocytochemically, the protein was specifically detected as a prominent component of intestinal and gastric foveolar epithelium, urothelial umbrella cells, and Merkel cells of epidermis. Sparse positive epithelial cells were noted in the thymus, bronchus, gall bladder, and prostate gland. The expression of protein IT was generally maintained in primary and metastatic colorectal carcinomas as well as in cell cultures derived therefrom. A corresponding protein was also found in several other mammalian species. We conclude that polypeptide IT is an integral IF component which is related, though somewhat distantly, to type I CKs, and, therefore, we propose to add it to the human CK catalogue as CK 20.
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PMID:Identification of protein IT of the intestinal cytoskeleton as a novel type I cytokeratin with unusual properties and expression patterns. 169 64

In order to study the antigenic structure of histone H1(0) the purified protein from mouse liver was subjected to different chemical and enzymatic treatments (CNBr, acetic acid, trypsin, chymotrypsin). The resulting peptides were fractionated in SDS-containing or acid-urea polyacrylamide gels, transferred by electroblotting onto nitrocellulose paper and probed with specific rabbit anti-H1(0) antiserum. The C-terminal fragments 99-193 (obtained following acetic acid hydrolysis) and 107-193 (obtained by chymotrypsin digestion) also exhibited strong immunoreactivity. Fragment 1-30 (CNBr cleavage) contained antigenic determinants while the shorter fragments 1-22 and 1-28 (acetic acid hydrolysis) failed to show any detectable reactivity. It was concluded that, in contrast to histone H5 whose reactivity is mainly concentrated to the globular domain of the molecule, the antigenic determinants in histone H1(0) are more or less evenly distributed along the polypeptide chain with the possible exception of the short unstructured N-nose.
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PMID:Antigenic structure of histone H1(0). 172 85

Human zeta-thrombin, a catalytically competent serine proteinase, arises from a single chymotryptic cleavage at Trp-148 in alpha-thrombin to generate two nonconvalently associated polypeptide segments designated zeta 1-thrombin (the 36-residue A-chain disulfide linked to B-chain residues B1-148) and zeta 2-thrombin (B149-259). We report here the expression of recombinant zeta 2-thrombin in Escherichia coli and the reconstitution of catalytically competent zeta-thrombin by combination of zeta 1-thrombin with recombinant zeta 2-thrombin. A DNA fragment encoding zeta 2-thrombin was cloned into a pATH2 expression vector as a trpE-zeta 2 fusion gene, in which a factor Xa cleavage site was inserted between the trpE and the zeta 2-thrombin gene. High-level expression of this fusion protein was achieved under the control of the E. coli trp promoter. The expressed zeta 2-thrombin was liberated from the fusion protein by factor Xa cleavage, reduced with DTT, and purified to homogeneity by reverse-phase HPLC. Oxidation of the reduced zeta 2-thrombin in the presence of 80 microM CuSO4 and 6 M urea at pH 8.15 yielded material that was indistinguishable on HPLC from zeta 2-thrombin isolated by resolution of human zeta-thrombin. Catalytically active zeta-thrombin was generated by combination of recombinant zeta 2-thrombin with zeta 1-thrombin that was isolated by resolution of human zeta-thrombin. Recombinant zeta-thrombin displayed catalytic activities, toward a small chromogenic substrate and fibrinogen, that were similar to those of alpha-thrombin prepared from human blood plasma and zeta-thrombin obtained by treatment of alpha-thrombin with chymotrypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Reconstitution of catalytically competent human zeta-thrombin by combination of zeta-thrombin residues A1-36 and B1-148 and an Escherichia coli expressed polypeptide corresponding to zeta-thrombin residues B149-259. 175 88

A protease inhibitor specific to trypsin and chymotrypsin was purified from horsegram (Dolichos biflorus) with the inhibition index 0.24 micrograms/micrograms for trypsin and 0.36 micrograms/micrograms for chymotrypsin. In SDS-PAGE, the inhibitor protein was seen as a single band with apparent molecular mass Mr = 15,500. However, on fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) or non-denaturating PAGE, the inhibitor resolved into four components revealing the existence of isoinhibitors. Data on amino acid analysis indicate that the isoinhibitors are closely related. The major amino acids in the inhibitor are half cystine (18.9 mole %), aspartic acid (12.7 mole %) and serine (14.3 mole %). The inhibitor was partially stable to 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulphate, 8M urea or 6M guanidine hydrochloride. The inhibitory activity was lost on reduction or carboxamidomethylation or acetylation. Modification of the arginine groups or CNBr cleavage of the protein did not result in significant loss of either tryptic or chymotryptic inhibitory activities. The isoinhibitors separated by FPLC reacted with polyclonal antibody raised in rabbits and had pI values ranging from 4.8-5.1. The horsegram inhibitor thus resembles other Bowman-Birk protease inhibitors.
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PMID:Nature of the tryptic/chymotryptic inhibitor from horsegram (Dolichos biflorus). 181 76

Penicillin acylase (EC 3.5.1.11) was completely inactivated with equimolar phenylmethane [35S]sulphonyl fluoride (PhMe35SO2F); the stability of the sulphonyl group in the modified protein was determined by measurement of the radioactivity in ultrafiltrates. In 8 M urea, the rate of loss of the sulphonyl group was similar to that observed in PhMeSO2F-inactivated chymotrypsin [Gold, A.M. & Fahrney, D. (1964) Biochemistry 3, 783-791]. Incubation of the PhMeSO2F-inactivated acylase with 0.7 M potassium thioacetate yielded an acetylthiol enzyme which was subsequently converted to a thiol-enzyme during incubation with 10 mM 6-aminopenicillanic acid. 4-Pyridyl-ethylcysteine was released by acid hydrolysis after reaction of the thiol-protein with 4-vinylpyridine. The rates of reaction of thiol-penicillin acylase with iodoacetic acid and 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide were consistent with the presence of an incompletely accessible cysteinyl sidechain. After carboxymethylating the thiol-enzyme with iodo[2-3H]acetic acid, the label was shown by SDS/PAGE and sequencing analysis to be associated exclusively with the beta-chain NH2-terminal residue, indicating conversion of Ser290 to S-carboxymethyl-cysteine. Near-ultraviolet CD spectra showed the conformation of thiol-penicillin acylase to be indistinguishable from that of the native protein but the catalytic activity was less than 0.02% of that of the normal enzyme. The possibility that Ser290 acts as a nucleophile in catalysis is discussed.
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PMID:Site-directed chemical conversion of serine to cysteine in penicillin acylase from Escherichia coli ATCC 11105. Effect on conformation and catalytic activity. 184 24

The conformation of estrogen receptor (ER) and its in vitro transformation by RNase, Urea and ATP were analysed using the uteri of young (16 weeks) and old (92 weeks) rats. Following the digestion of ER with proteolytic enzymes like trypsin and chymotrypsin and the analysis of cleaved fragments by SDS-PAGE, similar pattern is observed in both ages. In vitro transformation of ER by RNase, Urea and ATP shows that the degree of transformation is lower in old than young. Furthermore, the transformed ER from old is less capable of binding to DNA than that from young. Thus our results show that the conformation of ER probably does not change with age, but the degree of transformation and the ability of transformed receptor to bind to DNA decrease with age.
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PMID:Analysis in vitro of uterine estrogen receptor conformation of young and old rats. 192 11

A variety of solutions were tested in vitro to find a suitable solvent of cholesteatoma debris for use in clinical practice. The specimens were taken during surgery from the patients of otitis media with cholesteatoma. They were divided in pieces and put in test tubes. Each tube was then admixed with one of the test solutions and incubated at 37 degrees C for 48 hours. Hydrochloric acid (1N) and sodium hydroxide (1N) had no substantial effect to solve the debris. Urea (10N), acetylcysteine (20%) and chymotrypsin (1%) had a weak such effect. Proteolytic agents such as diiodosalitylic acid (0.1N), sodium dodecyl sulfate (0.1N) and cholic acid (0.1N) showed a stronger effect but not enough for clinical use. In contrast, a detergent which contains interfacial active agents and a proteolytic enzyme (alkaline cellulase), such as Attack and Hi-Top, proved to be more effective to solve the debris. However, biological effect of such detergent on the ear is not clear. Further study will be necessary before actual application in the patients.
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PMID:[Experiment study on solubilization of cholesteatoma debris]. 201 13


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