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

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.
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PMID:Inflammatory cells in solid murine neoplasms. I. Tumor disaggregation and identification of constituent inflammatory cells. 18 47

(1) In order to determine the cellular localization of the secretin- and pancreozymin-sensitive adenylate cyclase in rat pancreas, the occurence of this enzyme system has been investigated in isolated pancreatic cells. (2) Digestion of rat pancreatic lobules with collagenase yields a preparation of isolated cells which upon differential morphological analysis appears to consist for 97% of acinar cells and to contain for fewer centro-acinar and ductal cells than undissociated lobules. (3) Expressed per mg protein, the isolated cells contain the same amount of DNA, chymotrypsin and lactic dehydrogenase as the undissociated tissue. The stimulated adenylate cyclase activity is nearly entirely recovered in the isolated acinar cells, as is also the case for the low Km adenosine 3',5-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase activity and the adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) content. Marked losses are noted for the basal adenylate cyclase and the high Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities. (4) Washing the isolated acinar cells in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate medium containing 10 mM 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine causes a cyclic AMP level 2.6 times that in cells washed in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate alone. The cyclic AMP level is further increased by subsequently incubating the cells for 10 min in the presence of 3-10(-7) M pancreozymin-C-octapeptide or secretin to values 1.7 or 4.7 times the control level in cells incubated for 10 min with 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine alone. (5) It is suggested that the adenylate cyclase of the acinar cells may be involved, with another factor, in the stimulation of enzyme secretion, whereas a ductular cyclase would function in the regulation of the bicarbonate-dependent fluid secretion.
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PMID:Rat pancreas adenylate cyclase V. Its presence in isolated rat pancreatic acinar cells. 18 46

Despite ingenious concepts, there are no unequivocal clues as to what, when, and how some undefined biochemical factor(s) or constituent(s) that localizes in the arterial wall can precipitate a thromboatheromatous lesion or arterial disease. The present study focused on the extraction, partial purification, and characterization of a collagen-active platelet stimulator from the aortas of aged burros. The aggregator moiety in the aorta extracts invariably had a higher affinity for platelets in citrated platelet-rich plasma of human beings than for platelets of homologous burros. The platelet-aggregating factor(s) in the aorta extract was retained by incubation with alpha-chymotrypsin. Platelet-aggregating activity was rapidldy abolished after incubation with collagenase, as determined by plateletaggregometry tests. Evidence based on light microscope and polysaccharide histochemical reactions indicates a probability that the intracellular amorphous matrix (PAS-positive) and filamentous components (PTAH-positive) expelled from smooth muscle cells disrupted during homogenization of the aorta may be a principle source of a precursor collagen species which is a potent inducer of platelet aggregation.
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PMID:Platelet affinity for burro aorta collagen. 20 Nov 88

Bone explants from foetal and newborn rabbits synthesize and release a collagenase inhibitor into culture media. Inhibitor production in the early days of culture is followed first by latent collagenase and subsequently active collagenase in the culture media. A reciprocal relationship exists between the amounts of free inhibitor and latent collagenase in culture media, suggesting strongly that the inhibitor is a component of the latent form of the enzyme. Over 90% of the inhibitory activity of culture media is associated with a fraction of apparent mol.wt. 30000 when determined by gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44. The inhibitor blocks the action of rabbit collagenase on both reconstituted collagen fibrils and collagen in solution. It inhibits the action of either active collagenase or latent collagenase activated by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. Latent collagenase activated by trypsin is usually much less susceptible to inhibition. The activity of the inhibitor is destroyed by heat, by incubation with either trypsin or chymotrypsin and by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. Collagenase activity can be recovered from complexes of enzyme (activated with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate) with free inhibitor by incubation with either trypsin or 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate, at concentrations similar to those that activate latent collagenase from culture media. The rabbit bone inhibitor does not affect the activity of bacterial collagenase, but blocks the action of collagenases not only from a variety of rabbit tissues but also from other mammalian species.
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PMID:Identification and partial characterization of an inhibitor of collagenase from rabbit bone. 20 52

We have observed that treatment of rabbit synovial fibroblasts with proteolytic enzymes can induce secretion of collagenase (EC 3.4.24.7) and plasminogen activator (EC 3.4.21.-). Cells treated for 2-24 hr with plasmin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, pancreatic elastase, papain, bromelain, thermolysin, or alpha-protease but not with thrombin or neuraminidase secreted detectable amounts of collagenase within 16-48 hr. Treatment of fibroblasts with trypsin also induced secretion of plasminogen activator. Proteases initiated secretion of collagenase (up to 20 units per 10(6) cells per 24 hr) only when treatment produced decreased cell adhesion. Collagenase production did not depend on continued presence of proteolytic activity or on subsequent cell adhesion, spreading, or proliferation. Routine subculturing with crude trypsin also induced collagenase secretion by cells. Secretion of collagenase was prevented and normal spreading was obtained if the trypsinized cells were placed into medium containing fetal calf serum. Soybean trypsin inhibitor, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, bovine serum albumin, collagen, and fibronectin did not inhibit collagenase production. Although proteases that induced collagenase secretion also removed surface glycoprotein, the kinetics of induction of cell protease secretion were different from those for removal of fibronectin. Physiological inducers of secretion of collagenase and plasminogen activator by cells have not been identified. These results suggest that extracellular proteases in conjunction with plasma proteins may govern protease secretion by cells.
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PMID:Proteases induce secretion of collagenase and plasminogen activator by fibroblasts. 20 72

Isolated pancreatic acini were prepared by a new method from mouse and rat pancreases by digestion with purified collagenase and chymotrypsin followed by mechanical shearing. Acini were structurally similar to those of the intact pancreas, having a normal luminal structure but with the basal acinar cell membranes exposed to the incubation medium. Amylase release in response to both cholinergic analogues and the cholecystokinin analogues caerulein and pentagastrin was comparable to that of the intact pancreas, but was much greater than previously reported for isolated acinar cells. Cholinergic-stimulated release was inhibited by atropine with a Ki value of 1.4 nM which is comparable to other muscarinic receptors. All agonists tested, when added at supramaximal concentrations, produced a submaximal release of amylase even though ATP levels and the release of slowly exchanging 45Ca2+ were normal or increased. Acini releasing amylase submaximally after being exposed to supramaximal concentrations of carbachol failed to respond to a maximal amount of caerulein or to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. It is concluded that the decreased response (desensitization) is a postreceptor phenomenon and possibly mediated by Ca2+ itself.
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PMID:Action of secretagogues on a new preparation of functionally intact, isolated pancreatic acini. 21 42

Twenty lenses from cataractous eyes have been subjected to enzymatic breakdown by collagenase and alpha-chymotrypsin in order to remove part of the lens capsule and the zonular apparatus. Twelve of the lenses had clinical fibrillopathia epitheliocapsularis (FEC syndrome). In addition four FEC lenses and four ordinary cataractous lenses served as controls. A characteristic fibrillar substance was found in the FEC lenses located to circular epithelium-near areas varying in size from 10 micrometers to 150 micrometers. The circular areas were found in zona germinativa in front of the bow region and corresponded to the discoid plaques of the deep layer. The ultrastructure of the finely fibrillar material of the deep layer were indistinguishable from that of the surface material of the peripheral band and the central disc. A connection between the discoid plaques of deep layer and the peripheral granular band were demonstrated in the form of radial "cobble-stone" sectors seen in partially digested FEC capsules. An increased amount of age dependent spindleshaped formed bodies were also found in FEC lenses. The evidence presented points towards a lenticular origin of the Busacca-bushes in the peripheral ganular band of the lens capsule.
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PMID:Histopathology of the lens capsule in fibrillopathia epitheliocapsularis (FEC) or so-called senile exfoliation or pseudoexfoliation. An electron microscopic study. 22 39

The collagenase from the larvae Hypoderma lineatum, with a molecular weight of 24 000 and isoelectric point of 4.1, was obtained in homogeneous form by ion-exchange chromatography. It is stoichiometrically inhibited by diisopropylfluorophosphate. On the other hand it is unaffected by ethylenediaminetetraacetate, p-chloromercuribenzoate, dithiothreitol, N-tosyllysine chloromethyl ketone, N-tosylphenylalanine chloromethyl ketone and ovomucoid trypsin inhibitor. The enzyme which degrades native collagen in its helical parts, has a specific activity on thermally reconstituted collagen fibrils of 150 micrograms collagen degraded x min-1 x (mg enzyme)-1 at 37 degrees C. It hydrolyses casein but has no esterolytic activity characteristic of trypsin, chymotrypsin nor elastase. It has no action on the synthetic peptide 4-phenylazobenzyloxycarbonyl-L-prolyl-L-leucyl-L-glycyl-L-prolyl-D-arginine. The amino acid composition of Hypoderma collagenase indicates a distinct similarity with the serine proteinases of the trypsin family and with another athropode serine collagenase, that of the fiddler crab Uca pugilator. This suggests that eucaryotic collagenases with digestive rather than morphogenic function represent a new category of members of the trypsin family.
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PMID:Chemical and enzymatic characterization of the collagenase from the insect Hypoderma lineatum. 23 30

Three cationic proteins from the granules of human neutrophil granulocytes were obtained in a high degree of purity be means of affinity chromatography on 4-phenylbutylamine-Sepharose. Together with lysozyme, the three cationic proteins exhibit the highest electrophoretic mobility toward the cathode in acrylamide gels at moderately acid pH, among the granule constituents that are solubilized in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, containing 1 M NaCl. The three cationic proteins represent a group of "neutral proteases" distinct from elastase and collagenase. They hydrolyze casein, azocasein and the chymotrypsin substrate N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester. Optimal activity is found at pH 7.4-7;5. The enzymes are inhibited by the specific chymotrypsin inhibitor N-tosyl-L-phenylalanylchloromethane and by the naturally occurring inhibitors alpha-antichymotrypsin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, as well as by the trypsin inhibitors from soy beans and limabeans.
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PMID:Cationic proteins from human neutrophil granulocytes. Evidence for their chymotrypsin-like properties. 23 18

Proteolytic digestion of the human T lymphoblastoid cell line (Molt-4) and of peripheral blood lymphocytes by trypsin, chymotrypsin, and pronase results in a progressive, time-and dose-dependent diminution of T lymphocyte-sheep red bloock cell (SRBC) rosette formation, whereas thrombin, plasmin, collagenase, DNAse, and phospholipase have not effect. Complete abrogation of SRBC binding is achieved when lymphocytes (1 x 108/ml) are incubated with either trypsin or chymotrypsin at 10 mug/ml for 30 min, and greater than 50% abrogation is observed between 3 to 10 min. Preincubation of SRBC with the 10 min and 20 min lymphocyte digest supernatants inhibited their subsequent binding by normal T lymphocytes by as much as 64%. Thirty-minute digests were less inhibitory. Equivalent digests from several human B lumphoblastoid cell lines and from a non-rosetting clone of Molt-4 cells were not inhibitory. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by elution of serial gel slices revealed four distinct inhibitory bands (I-IV) in the 20-min digest supernatant whereas only bands I-III and band IV were present in the 10-min and 30-min digest supernatants, respectively, suggesting progressive proteolysis of a distinct receptor. These experiments indicate that the binding of SRBC by human T lymphocytes represents a receptor-ligand interaction rather than a nonspecific electrical charge phe nomenon and that the receptor is a discrete molecular species which can be isolated from the surface of T but not B lymphocytes by limited enzymatic proteolysis.
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PMID:Recovery of soluble sheep erythrocyte receptor from the T lymphocyte surface by proteolytic cleavage. 30 Mar 98


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