Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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)
This study was designed to compare, on a molar basis, the effect of chronic bombesin,
gastrin-releasing peptide
(
GRP
) and caerulein on pancreatic growth in the rat. These 3 peptides were administered s.c. 3 times daily for 4 days at the following concentrations: 0.036, 0.36, 3.6 and 7.2 nmol/kg of body weight. Bombesin and
GRP
induced pancreatic growth in a dose-dependent manner from 3.6 nmol/kg. This growth was characterized by an increase in pancreatic weight, its protein and RNA contents but not in DNA content suggesting cellular hypertrophy. Caerulein exerted a biphasic effect on pancreatic growth, inducing cellular hypertrophy at low doses since 0.36 nmol/kg and atrophy with the highest dose (7.2 nmol/kg). Bombesin and caerulein (until 3.6 nmol/kg) increased the pancreatic content in
chymotrypsin
more than in amylase. The 7.2 nmol/kg caerulein treatment depressed all enzyme activities while the same dose of
GRP
increased pancreatic lipase content. It is concluded that (1) bombesin and
GRP
are equipotent trophic factors for the pancreas; (2) caerulein is the most potent factor and exerts a biphasic effect on pancreatic growth; (3) pancreatic growth and synthesis and/or secretion of enzymes are not regulated through the same mechanism.
...
PMID:Comparative effect of chronic bombesin, gastrin-releasing peptide and caerulein on the rat pancreas. 245 59
Immunoreactivity to the amphibian peptide bombesin was found in instant nonfat dry milk (ca. 0.7 ng/ml) and in the whey of whole or skim bovine milk (ca. 1.2 ng/ml) even after ultracentrifugation. The soluble immunoreactivity was associated with a peptide exhibiting the following characteristics: (i) parallel displacement in an immunoassay using an antiserum recognizing bombesin amino acid residues 5-8; (ii) separation from both
gastrin-releasing peptide
and amphibian bombesin by gel filtration--the approximate Mr was 3,200; (iii) denaturation in urea, reduction by dithiothreitol, and acetylation by iodoacetamide had no effect on its elution profile by gel-filtration chromatography and the aggregation of added bombesin to milk proteins or peptides was not observed; (iv) reversed-phase HPLC separated milk immunoreactivity from
gastrin-releasing peptide
and bombesin; (v) digestion by trypsin yielded a smaller immunoreactive peptide fragment, whereas nearly all immunoreactivity was lost by treatment with
alpha-chymotrypsin
; and (vi) the level of immunoreactivity was unaffected by boiling. These data show that milk is an exogenous source of bombesin-like immunoreactivity, which may account for the increase of gastric acid and gastrointestinal hormone levels after the consumption of milk.
...
PMID:A bombesin immunoreactive peptide in milk. 658 13
We have developed a method to rapidly identify the antigenic determinant for an antibody using in situ proteolysis of an immobilized antigen-antibody complex followed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI/TOF). A mouse anti-bombesin monoclonal antibody was immobilized to agarose beads and then the antigen,
gastrin-releasing peptide
(
GRP
), was allowed to bind. Direct analysis of the immobilized antigen-antibody complex by MALDI/TOF is demonstrated and allows identification of ca. 1 pmol of the bound
GRP
. To identify the epitope, the immobilized antigen-antibody complex was subjected to proteolysis with trypsin,
chymotrypsin
, thermolysin, and aminopeptidase M. Following proteolysis, the part of the antigen in contact with the antibody and protected from proteolysis was identified directly by MALDI/TOF. Subsequently, the epitope was eluted from the immobilized antibody with 0.1 M glycine buffer (pH 2.3), separated by reversed-phase HPLC, and its identity confirmed by MALDI/TOF. Using this approach, the epitope for the anti-bombesin monoclonal antibody was shown to comprise the last 7-8 residues (HWAVGHLM-NH2) of
GRP
.
...
PMID:Epitope mapping of the gastrin-releasing peptide/anti-bombesin monoclonal antibody complex by proteolysis followed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry. 753 May 43
The effects of a potent specific gastrin-releasing peptide receptor antagonist, BIM 26226 ([D-F5 Phe6, D-Ala11] bombesin (6-13) OMe), and the long-acting somatostatin analogue, lanreotide (BIM 23014), on the growth of an acinar pancreatic adenocarcinoma growing in the rat or cultured in vitro were investigated. Lewis rats bearing a pancreatic carcinoma transplanted s.c. in the scapular region, were treated with
gastrin-releasing peptide
(30 microg/kg per day), BIM 26226 (30 and 100 microg/kg per day) and lanreotide (100 microg/kg per day) alone or in combination for 14 successive days. Chronic administration of BIM 26226 and lanreotide significantly inhibited the growth of pancreatic tumours stimulated or not by
gastrin-releasing peptide
(
GRP
), as shown by a reduction in tumour volume, protein, ribonucleic acid, amylase and
chymotrypsin
contents. This effect was more pronounced with 100 microg/kg per day BIM 26226 than with 30 microg/kg per day. However, BIM 26226 and lanreotide, given together, did not exert any additive effect on
GRP
-treated and -untreated tumours. In cell cultures, both BIM 26226 and lanreotide (10(-6) M) inhibited [3H]thymidine incorporation in tumour cells induced or not by
GRP
, but no increased effect was observed after combined treatment with both agents. Binding studies showed that BIM 26226 had a high affinity for
GRP
receptors in tumour cell membranes (IC50 = 6 nM). These results from in vivo and in vitro experiments suggest that BIM 26226 and lanreotide are able to reduce the growth of an experimental acinar pancreatic tumour. Thus, these agents represent interesting steps toward the development of new approaches for treatment of pancreatic carcinomas.
...
PMID:Effect of the gastrin-releasing peptide antagonist BIM 26226 and lanreotide on an acinar pancreatic carcinoma. 965 Aug 51