Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.37 (neutrophil elastase)
4,078 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is clear that alpha 1AT deficiency leads to early onset pulmonary emphysema. With the lead provided by the deficiency state, studies aimed at the linkage between alpha 1AT and its target enzyme, neutrophil elastase, have provided useful information about the pathogenesis of emphysema due to cigarette smoking. alpha 1AT represents the predominant antielastase of the lower respiratory tract. This observation implicates neutrophil elastase as the enzyme responsible for lung destruction, since affinity studies demonstrate that alpha 1ATs physiologically relevant function is the inhibition of neutrophil elastase. However, because of the inexorably slow nature of the emphysema process, demonstration of the protease-antiprotease imbalance in the lungs of smokers has been difficult. Studies using sensitive assays for alpha 1AT function and for neutrophil elastase's presence have added new support for the protease-antiprotease theory, and evaluation of related disorders such as the adult respiratory distress syndrome and cystic fibrosis have provided corraborative evidence. Finally, studies that have indicated that the major site of the protease-antiprotease imbalance is the microenvironment of protease-producing cells offer a new direction for future research into the pathogenesis of emphysema.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of emphysema. Assessment of basic science concepts through clinical investigation. 278 6

Airway secretions of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) contain large amounts of alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT), yet elastase activity is also often detectable, suggesting that airway alpha 1-AT may not be functional in some CF patients. It is unknown whether in CF sputum alpha 1-AT is inactivated by oxidants, neutrophil metalloproteinases, bacterial elastase, or neutrophil elastase. To investigate the mechanism(s) by which alpha 1-AT may be inactivated in CF airway secretions, sputum samples were obtained from nine patients during respiratory physiotherapy. alpha 1-AT was measured by radial immunodiffusion. Sputum-alpha 1-AT was purified by antibody affinity chromatography. Electrophoresis of alpha 1-AT from seven patients with acute infectious exacerbations revealed two distinct components: a minor band corresponding to an elastase/alpha 1-AT complex and a major band typical of proteolysed alpha 1-AT (Mr = 48 kD). Each patient had large amounts of sputum elastase activity. In contrast, two patients without free sputum elastase activity had intact sputum alpha 1-AT; however, alpha 1-AT was partially truncated by porcine pancreatic elastase suggesting that the alpha 1-AT may have been partially oxidized. Adding alpha 1-AT purified from normal serum to alpha 1-AT-depleted sputum containing elastase activity resulted in a small alpha 1-AT/elastase complex with most alpha 1-AT being truncated. The serine proteinase inhibitor phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride but not the metalloproteinase inhibitor EDTA prevented alpha 1-AT proteolysis, thus granulocyte elastase can mediate alpha 1-AT degradation in CF. Apparently, the large granulocyte elastase burden in some acutely ill patients with cystic fibrosis can proteolytically inactivate alpha 1-AT.
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PMID:Granulocyte elastase-mediated proteolysis of alpha 1-antitrypsin in cystic fibrosis bronchopulmonary secretions. 278 57

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is equated with chronic bronchitis and emphysema as one disease entity. In COPD airflow limitation is relatively persistent--unlike asthma. Tests for "small-airways disease" form no part of routine practice, for their accuracy in detecting pathological change is debatable. The proteolytic theory of the pathogenesis of emphysema highlights the role of neutrophil elastase, antielastases, oxidants, antioxidants, and thus of potential new treatments. Clinical features of COPD include breathlessness, cough, and sputum, with airflow obstruction and lung hyperinflation. The differential diagnosis includes bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis, and pulmonary hypertension, but pulmonary fibrosis, etc., is distinguished by radiological infiltrates. Plain chest radiography cannot reliably diagnose emphysema in life, but a new method measuring lung density from the computed tomographic (CT) scan allows location, quantitation, and diagnosis of emphysema (defined by enlargement of distal air spaces) in humans in life. "Pink puffers" with breathlessness, hyperinflation, mild hypoxemia, and a low PCO2 are contrasted with "blue bloaters" with hypoxemia, secondary polycythemia, CO2 retention, and pulmonary hypertension and cor pulmonale. Antismoking measures are a major aim in management. A bronchodilator regimen combining a slow-release oral theophylline with an inhaled beta 2-agonist, ipratropium, and high-dose inhaled steroids is proposed because even modest improvement in obstruction can help these patients. In acute exacerbations with purulent sputum, antimicrobials against Streptococcus pneumoniae and Hemophilus influenzae are used with controlled oxygen therapy aiming to keep the arterial PO2 over 50 mm Hg without the pH falling below 7.25. Influenza prophylaxis is recommended, but pneumococcal vaccination remains debatable. Chronic under-nutrition in "emphysema" implies controlled trials of feeding regimens--but these remain to be assessed. Long-term oxygen therapy is the only treatment known to prolong life in blue bloaters, and oxygen concentrators and transtracheal oxygen delivery are discussed. Pulmonary vasodilators (e.g., beta 2-agonists, hydralazine, nifedipine, angiotensin-converting enzyme [ACE] inhibitors, etc.) have not yet been proved to provide long-term reduction in pulmonary arterial pressure. Blue bloaters have severe nocturnal hypoxemia in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep that is corrected by oxygen or the investigational drug almitrine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 304 40

In cystic fibrosis, colonization of the airways with Pseudomonas aeruginosa follows colonization with Staphylococcus aureus and is related to accelerated deterioration of pulmonary function. Because P. aeruginosa adheres better to cell surfaces devoid of fibronectin, we searched for fibronectin-cleaving activity in bronchial secretions and saliva from 24 patients with cystic fibrosis who were followed up for 4.5 y and from two control groups. Proteolytic activity against 125I-labeled fibronectin was continuously present in cystic fibrosis bronchial secretions; significantly higher fibronectin-cleaving activity was found in older vs. younger patients, in patients with advanced disease stages determined by a five-stage scoring system, and in those colonized with P. aeruginosa. The fibronectin-cleaving activity was due to neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G. Cystic fibrosis bronchial secretions had proteolytic activity against surface fibronectin of airway mucosal cells. Thus fibronectin-cleaving activity of bronchial secretions rather than of saliva may favor P. aeruginosa colonization of the upper respiratory tract in individuals with cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:Fibronectin-cleaving activity in bronchial secretions of patients with cystic fibrosis. 329 66

Large amounts of free granulocyte elastase (GE), an enzyme capable of mediating airway damage, have been found in bronchial secretions of patients with cystic fibrosis who are infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This finding indicates an imbalance between GE and its antiproteases, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1-PI) and bronchial mucosal inhibitor (BMI), in the airways of these individuals. The effect of intravenous antimicrobial treatment against P. aeruginosa on activity and concentration of GE, BMI, and alpha 1-PI was evaluated in 30 treatment courses of 20 patients with cystic fibrosis. Although sputum volume and level of immunoreactive GE decreased and concentrations of alpha 1-PI and BMI increased significantly (P less than .05), a high level of free GE persisted. No active alpha 1-PI and BMI were detectable after treatment. High levels of GE correlated with a poor pulmonary condition (rs = .98, P less than .001). In vitro, elastolytic activity of bronchial secretions from patients with cystic fibrosis was significantly inhibited by eglin C and an oxidation-resistant variant of alpha 1-PI, both compounds currently produced by recombinant DNA technology.
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PMID:Levels of free granulocyte elastase in bronchial secretions from patients with cystic fibrosis: effect of antimicrobial treatment against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 348 35

Elastase in plasma was determined as a complex of granulocyte elastase and alpha 1-antiproteinase (GEC) by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 67 patients with cystic fibrosis. The patients were observed for 1 years, when clinically infected and noninfected. Although noninfected patients had GEC levels within the normal range, the mean value was significantly higher than the mean values in patients in an optimal noninfectious state (P less than 0.01) and in healthy controls (P less than 0.001). Clinical signs of (in most cases) low-grade infection were paralleled by significant increases in GEC levels (P less than 0.001). There was no correlation with different types of bacteria or age of patients. No cross reaction to Pseudomonas elastase could be found in vitro or in vivo. Significant decreases of GEC values were seen after intravenously administered antimicrobial therapy (P less than 0.001), and although the white blood cell count and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were rarely increased above the normal range, they decreased congruently (P less than 0.001), and lung function improved (P less than 0.001). The sensitivity of GEC was significantly higher than that for erythrocyte sedimentation rate (P less than 0.01) and white blood cell count (P less than 0.05). Determination of GEC values seems to be a simple and sensitive measurement for monitoring treatment in cystic fibrosis, especially of low-grade infections in patients with normal standard blood tests.
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PMID:Granulocyte elastase-alpha 1-antiproteinase complex in cystic fibrosis: sensitive plasma assay for monitoring pulmonary infections. 349 50

Experiments performed in vitro have demonstrated that leukocyte neutral proteases produce an important mediator of inflammation, C5a, by proteolysis of the C5 component of the complement system. Cystic fibrosis (CF) lung fluids were characterized by high levels of neutrophils (39% of total cells versus 2% in normals) and contained significantly elevated amounts of elastolytic activity (mean 17.7 ng/micrograms total protein) compared to the lung fluids obtained from normal volunteers (0.2 ng elastolytic activity/micrograms protein, p = 0.001). The objective of these studies was to determine if complement activation and complement-derived chemotactic activity are present in CF lung fluids. C3c peptide representing activation of C3 could not be identified in the bronchial-alveolar lung lavage fluids of normal subjects but was readily identified by means of crossed immunoelectrophoresis in CF lung fluids (n = 9, mean 49% of C3); the mean level of C3 was decreased in CF lung specimens. Chemotactic activity was significantly elevated in lung fluids of the CF patients when compared to normal lung fluids. Using gel-filtration chromatography and a sensitive radioimmunoassay the chemotaxin present in CF specimens was identified as the anaphylatoxin C5a. C5a levels in the bronchial-alveolar lavage fluids of CF patients was inversely related to volume in liters expired in 1 s of a forced expiratory maneuver expressed as a percent of vital capacity determined from a forced expiratory maneuver (r = -0.72). Because there was a direct relationship between the total elastolytic activity present in CF airways and the concentration of C5a (r = 0.97, p = 0.03), it was postulated that airway proteases with elastolytic activity also cleave C5, nonimmunologically producing C5a. Detailed inhibition assays revealed that much of the total elastolytic activity had the inhibition profile of a serine proteinase. The levels of the serine proteinases were closely correlated with the numbers of neutrophilic leukocytes present per ml of lavage fluid (r = 0.7, p = 0.05). However, inhibitors of leukocyte serine proteases did not prevent the generation of additional chemotactic activity and the proteolysis of radiolabeled C5 substrate was not prevented by inhibitors of neutrophil elastase. Although the purified metalloelastase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa was active on cell-bound and free C5 yielding C5a, inhibition of this bacterial protease in CF lung fluids only partially blocked cleavage of the alpha- and beta-chains of C5.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Complement activation in cystic fibrosis respiratory fluids: in vivo and in vitro generation of C5a and chemotactic activity. 354 Aug 28

We investigated the role of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzymes in cystic fibrosis lung infection in the presence and absence of specific serum antibodies. In sputa of 21 cystic fibrosis patients, concentrations of P. aeruginosa proteases and exotoxin A were determined by sensitive radioimmunoassays. In all sputa, detection of exoenzymes was negative (less than or equal to 10 ng). Positive serum antibody titers to bacterial exoenzymes were found in the majority of patients. Purified immunoglobulin G (IgG) preparations from the sera of two patients revealing specific antibody titers to the bacterial proteases neutralized these enzymes at ratios of 1,000:1 to 5,600:1 (wt/wt). Above the neutralizing capacity of IgG, proteases caused cleavage of IgG; below that level, no enzymatic activity was observed. In vitro incubation of P. aeruginosa elastase, alkaline protease, or exotoxin A with elastase derived from polymorphonuclear leukocytes showed that polymorphonuclear leukocyte elastase: (i) was cleaved by bacterial elastase, (ii) was not inactivated by alkaline protease, and (iii) inactivated exotoxin A. The results suggest that soon after the onset of P. aeruginosa lung infection in cystic fibrosis patients, bacterial proteases, but not exotoxin A, become important virulence factors. The results also suggest that exoenzymes do not directly contribute to lung damage after immune response to bacterial antigens has begun.
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PMID:Role of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzymes in lung infections of patients with cystic fibrosis. 392 91

We studied the possible role of granulocyte neutral proteases as mediators of airway destruction in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) who were infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We measured the enzymatic activities of bronchial secretions on purified radioactively labeled complement component three (C3), elastin, and a granulocyte elastase-specific substrate. Bronchial secretions from 18 patients with CF who were infected with P aeruginosa had a significantly higher mean value for C3 cleaving, elastolytic, and granulocyte elastase-like activity than did two control groups. High enzymatic activities were observed in patients with CF who have advanced bronchial disease (that had been determined by a clinical scoring system). Kinetics of proteolysis of radioactively labeled C3 and inhibition profiles of the activities of the three enzymatic activities studied suggest that they are mainly derived from granulocytes. In addition, 20 of 31 strains of P aeruginosa isolated from patients with CF inactivated purified alpha 1-antiprotease in vitro. We postulate that granulocyte neutral proteases and P aeruginosa may act synergistically in the airways of patients with CF and may contribute to the destruction of elastin and inactivation of C3.
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PMID:Granulocyte neutral proteases and Pseudomonas elastase as possible causes of airway damage in patients with cystic fibrosis. 642 60

We used a whole-gut perfusion technique to study subclinical gut inflammation in children with cystic fibrosis (18 elective tests, three lavages to treat distal intestinal obstruction syndrome); and in 12 control children with constipation or pre-colonoscopy. We assayed for haemoglobin, IgG, albumin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, granulocyte elastase, interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and IL-8 concentrations in whole-gut lavage fluid. Results for two children with distal intestinal obstruction syndrome, the only children in the series taking Nutrizym 22, were strikingly abnormal. This new test has revealed subclinical gut mucosal inflammation in a minority of CF children, for which distal intestinal obstruction syndrome, Nutrizym 22 treatment, or both, may be risk factors.
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PMID:Gut inflammation in children with cystic fibrosis on high-dose enzyme supplements. 856 82


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