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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)
Electrophoretic measurements on Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospores indicated the presence of a surface protein layer which can be removed by papain,
chymotrypsin
or 8 m
urea
.
...
PMID:Evidence for a surface protein layer on the Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospore. 491 57
The flagellar complex of the unusual motile spermatozoon of the fungus gnat, Rhynchosciara sp, does not conform to the usual "9 + 2" filament pattern but rather consists of over 350 pairs of filaments (doublet microtubules) distributed in a spiral array. Experiments were designed to disrupt and extract flagellar microtubular components from spermatozoa of the fungus gnat. Pepsin,
chymotrypsin
, potassium iodide,
urea
, and heat were used to extract specific portions of microtubule walls Such experiments provide information on the composition of the wall and the existence of wall sites selectively sensitive to various treatments Results obtained include: (a) doublet microtubules are comprised at least in part of protein, and all subunits are probably not identical; (b) a portion of the B subfiber is apparently more sensitive to disruption than other portions of the doublet microtubule; and (c) the ac cessory singlet microtubules may be chemically different from the doublet microtubules
...
PMID:Electron microscope studies of spermatozoa of Rhynchosciara Sp. I. Disruption of microtubules by various treatments. 504 61
An inhibitor of transepithelial sodium transport was found in a low molecular weight fraction obtained from serum of patients with far advanced chronic renal disease. In 18 nondialyzed patients, the mean inhibition of short circuit current (SCC) was 24.9 +/-2.2% (SE). With a comparable fraction from 11 normal subjects. SCC decreased by only 5.3 +/-1.5%. There was significantly greater inhibition with the serum fractions of patients with end stage renal disease being maintained on chronic hemodialysis than in the normal control group; but the degree of inhibition in the dialyzed population was significantly less than that observed in the nondialyzed chronically uremic patients. The inhibition of SCC produced by the serum fractions of a group of seven patients with acute renal failure was not significantly different from the control group despite the presence of high grade uremia in the former. The inhibitory fraction has characteristics identical with the uremic serum fraction which previously has been shown to inhibit p-aminohippurate (PAH) uptake by rabbit kidney cortical slices. With gel filtration through Sephadex G-25, the active fraction appears after the major peaks of substances as small as
urea
and sodium; hence it may have been retarded on the column. But its ultrafiltration characteristics suggest that its molecular weight may be less than 1000. The inhibitory capability was not destroyed by boiling, freezing, or digestion with
chymotrypsin
or pronase. Neither methylguanidine nor guanidinosuccinic acid in concentrations well above those present in the serum of uremic patients inhibited sodium transport in the frog skin. The data suggest that there is an inhibitor of sodium transport in the serum of patients with chronic uremia. The role of this material in the regulation of sodium excretion in uremia as well as its possible role as a uremic toxin are subjects of both theoretical and practical interest.
...
PMID:Inhibition of transepithelial sodium transport in the frog skin by a low molecular weight fraction of uremic serum. 554 Jan 68
The sequence around the thiol group in lens proteins has been investigated. The proteins were converted into their carboxy[(14)C]methyl derivatives and submitted to partial acid hydrolysis, or digested with proteolytic enzymes. Acid hydrolysis of bovine alpha-crystallin gives N-seryl-(S-carboxymethyl)cysteine, Ser-CMCys (Waley, 1965a), but this dipeptide is not obtained from beta-crystallin or gamma-crystallin. Trypsin and
chymotrypsin
also give different peptides from the three crystallins. The radioactive peptide from alpha-crystallin and
chymotrypsin
has the sequence Ser-CMCys-Ser-Leu; another peptide, Asp-Leu-Leu-Phe, was also identified. The radioactive peptides obtained from bovine alpha-crystallin are probably also obtained from human alpha-crystallin, and from bovine and human albuminoid (the insoluble lens protein). alpha-Crystallin has been fractionated by chromatography in
urea
on DEAE-cellulose. Comparison of the fractions by peptide ;mapping', and immunochemically, shows that they fall into two classes. The fraction eluted first differs from the later fractions, but the later fractions resemble each other The first fraction may represent impurities, or it may be a structurally different sub-unit of alpha-crystallin.
...
PMID:Structural studies on lens proteins. 603 5
1. A solution of Bombyx mori silk fibroin was digested with
chymotrypsin
. Amino acid analyses of the chymotryptic precipitate showed in addition to the main constituents Gly, Ala, Ser and Tyr, very small amounts of Lys, His, Arg, Asp, Thr, Glu, Pro, Cys, Val, Met, Ile, Leu, Phe and Trp. 2. A stable solution of the chymotryptic precipitate in 6m-
urea
was obtained by dialysing a solution in 50% (w/v) lithium thiocyanate against 6m-
urea
. 3. The dinitrophenylated chymotryptic precipitate in 6m-
urea
was fractionated by gel filtration and by ion-exchange chromatography. On Dowex 1 (X2), a main fraction I(d) and three further fractions with different amino acid compositions and molecular weights were obtained. 4. Specific rearrangement and fission of the bonds involving the serine nitrogen atoms of fraction I(d) and fractionation of the resulting mixture by gel filtration yielded five fractions. Two of these fractions had the compositions DNP-Ser-(Gly(6),Ala(4),Ser) and DNP-Ser-(Gly(4),Ala(2) or Ala(3),Ser) and are presumably double repeating units according to the proposed formula of Lucas, Shaw & Smith (1957), namely [Ser-Gly-(Ala-Gly)(n)](2), for n values of 2 and 1 respectively.
...
PMID:Fractionation of the chymotryptic precipitate of Bombyx mori silk fibroin. 604 53
Macrophage cytotoxicity factor (MCF) was purified in 3 consecutive steps including adsorption chromatography on Matrex Gel Red A, hydrophobic chromatography on phenylalanine-Sepharose, and isoelectric focusing. MCF was characterized as a protein with a m.w. of approximately 30,000 by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 with 2 isoelectric points at 7.4 and 8.4 in the presence of
urea
. The unpurified supernatant was fairly stable provided that manipulations favoring adsorption to membrane materials used for dialysis or ultrafiltration were omitted. The partially purified preparation was highly unstable. Trypsin treatment did not affect MCF activity, whereas
chymotrypsin
destroyed it. Treatment with glycosidases and neuraminidase or cultivation of cells in the presence of 2-deoxy-D-glucose or tunicamycin did not impair the MCF activity. MCF was separated from migration inhibitory factor (MIF) by 2 methods: first, isoelectric focusing in the presence of
urea
, and second by gel filtration on Ultrogel. MCF could be separated from interferon by chromatography on poly(I)-Sepharose.
...
PMID:Partial purification and chemical characterization of macrophage cytotoxicity factor (MCF, MAF) and its separation from migration inhibitory factor (MIF). 616 71
The production of
urea
and ornithine is increased greatly in spleen cell cultures of an allograft recipient in the presence of donor cells (secondary MLC) in comparison to that of primary MLC (without previous allograft). This phenomenon appears after 24 hr of culture and reaches its maximum at 48 hr. The greatest increase in
urea
production is observed when the recipient spleen cells are collected at the time of allograft rejection. To obtain this extra production of
urea
, the stimulating cells in MLC should specifically be of the donor type or at least bear one homology with donor cells at the K or D locus. The increased production of
urea
and ornithine during MLC results from the action of a lymphokine released by recipient cells in the presence of donor cells. This factor acts upon cells present in bone marrow, spleen, and elicited peritoneal cells but is absent or is present in smaller quantities in thymus and lymph node cells. Target cells of this factor possess numerous macrophage features and could be immature cells of the macrophage line. The lymphokine responsible for this phenomenon is heat-stable, destroyed by trypsin,
chymotrypsin
, and neuraminidase, and has a m.w. around 32,000. It acts upon its target cells by increasing arginase activity, which results in the production of a large amount of ornithine, an important precursor of polyamine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Evidence for a lymphokine enhancing arginase activity during allograft rejection. 618 26
A model showing the topological distribution, functions, and serological specificities of eight distinct, monoclonal antibody-defined epitopes on the tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus glycoprotein has been presented in a previous publication (F. X. Heinz, R. Berger, W. Tuma, and Ch. Kunz (1983). Virology 126, 525-537.) In the present report the influence of conformational change, chemical modification, and fragmentation on the antigenic reactivity of each epitope has been analyzed by the use of blocking enzyme immunoassays and "Western blotting." One of the two major antigenic domains (A), composed of three different epitopes, completely lost its antigenicity upon incubation at pH 5.0 or by treatment with guanidine-HCl/
urea
, SDS, reduction and carboxymethylation, as well as by proteolytic (trypsin,
alpha-chymotrypsin
, thermolysin) and chemical (CNBr) fragmentation. The second major antigenic domain (B), however, defined by four distinct monoclonal antibodies, three of which are hemagglutination (HA)-inhibiting, neutralizing, and protective, was shown to be resistant to low pH, guanidine-HCl/
urea
treatment, and proteolytic cleavage of the native protein. Also, polyclonal immune sera from mice and rabbits contained antibody populations reactive with antigenic determinants which are resistant and others which are sensitive to conformational change and fragmentation. Glycoprotein fragments with molecular weights of about 9000, generated by proteolysis of the native protein, were immunoreactive with neutralizing and protective monoclonal antibodies (defining domain B) as well as with a polyclonal mouse immune serum. Thus, these fragments appear to contain antigenic determinants which are immunodominant on the native protein and play an important role in the induction of a protective immune response against TBE virus. In addition, these results show that antibody binding to antigenic domains which are topologically and structurally completely unrelated may result in neutralization and/or HA inhibition. As the presence of two receptor-binding sites is unlikely, different effector mechanisms may account for the effects of these antibodies. The antigenic reactivity of domain A is sensitive to the same treatments which also inactivate HA activity of TBE virus, whereas domain B is resistant. These treatments include a change of domain A induced by incubation at slightly acidic pH which also results in inactivation of virus infectivity. Antibodies to domain A therefore presumably block viral activities by direct binding at or near the putative receptor-binding site whereas antibodies to domain B may cause loss of biological activities by inducing a conformational change of the receptor-binding site.
...
PMID:Location of immunodominant antigenic determinants on fragments of the tick-borne encephalitis virus glycoprotein: evidence for two different mechanisms by which antibodies mediate neutralization and hemagglutination inhibition. 619 9
A method to detect and analyze the proteins transferred to a collagen substrate following interaction of normal human keratinocytes with a collagen substrate is described. Keratinocytes are allowed to attach to a collagen substrate for 1 hour, and the attached cells are lysed with 0.1 N NaOH. When the keratinocytes are prelabeled with 3H-amino acids, cell surface proteins are transferred from the keratinocyte to the collagen substrate. The transferred proteins cannot be removed from the substrate by sulfhydryl reducing reagents, high concentrations of
urea
, or metal chelators. Treatment of the attached proteins with proteolytic enzymes (trypsin
chymotrypsin
) or with 2 M NaBr partially releases the proteins. More specific labeling of the attachment proteins can be obtained using 3H-tyrosine instead of a complete amino acid mixture. 3H-fucose is also incorporated and transferred, suggesting that one of the components of the attachment protein(s) is a glycoprotein. Antibodies prepared in rabbits to the attachment proteins inhibit the adherence of both primary and first-passaged keratinocytes, suggesting that these proteins may be a part of the protein glycoprotein complexes on the surface of keratinocytes involved in the adherence of keratinocytes to basement membranes.
...
PMID:Substrate adherence of newborn and adult human keratinocytes. 619 50
Microsomal membranes form human placenta, which bind 5-20 pmol of 125I-epidermal growth factor (EGF) per mg protein, have been affinity-labeled with 125I-EGF either spontaneously or with dimethylsuberimidate. Coomassie blue staining patterns on SDS polyacrylamide gels are minimally altered, and the EGF-receptor complex appears as a specifically labeled band of 180,000 daltons which is not removed by
urea
, neutral buffers, or chaotropic salts but is partially extracted by mild detergents. Limited proteolysis by alpha
chymotrypsin
and several other serine proteases yields labeled fragments of 170,000, 130,000, 85,000, and 48,000 daltons. More facile cleavage by papain or bromelain rapidly degrades the hormone-receptor complex to smaller labeled fragments of about 35,000 and 25,000 daltons. These fragments retain the binding site for EGF, are capable of binding EGF, and remain associated with the membrane. Alpha chymotryptic digestion of receptor solubilized by detergents yields the same fragments obtained with intact vesicles, suggesting that the fragments may represent intrinsic proteolytic domains of the receptor.
...
PMID:Proteolytic domains of the epidermal growth factor receptor of human placenta. 626 4
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