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)

Human inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor has been found to inactivate human trypsin, chymotrypsin, neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G. The protein was cleaved into two major fragments without loss of activity by incubation with Serratia marcescens metalloproteinase, and these were separated by ion-exchange chromatography. Inhibitory activity was found in only one of the fragments, the amino-terminal sequence of which was found to be identical with that of the native protein, as well as with that reported earlier for the urinary trypsin inhibitor. It may thus be concluded that the reactive site of the inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor is located in the amino-terminal region.
...
PMID:The reactive site of human inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor is in the amino-terminal half of the protein. 389 Aug 90

Human alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1-PI) is responsible for the tight control of neutrophil elastase activity which, if down regulated, may cause local excessive tissue degradation. Many bacterial proteinases can inactivate alpha1-PI by hydrolytic cleavage within its reactive site, resulting in the down regulation of elastase, and this mechanism is likely to contribute to the connective tissue damage often associated with bacterial infections. Another pathway of the inactivation of alpha1-PI is reversible and involves oxidation of a critical active-site methionine residue that may influence inhibitor susceptibility to proteolytic inactivation. Hence, the aim of this work was to determine whether this oxidation event might affectthe rate and pattern of the cleavage of the alpha1-PI reactive-site loop by selected bacterial proteinases, including thermolysin, aureolysin, serralysin, pseudolysin, Staphylococcus aureus serine proteinase, streptopain, and periodontain. A shift of cleavage specificity was observed after alpha1-PI oxidation, with a preference for the Glu354-Ala355 bond by most of the proteinases tested. Only aureolysin and serralysin cleave the oxidized form of alpha1-PI faster than the native inhibitor, suggesting that bacteria which secrete these metalloproteinases may specifically take advantage of the host defense oxidative mechanism to accelerate elimination of alpha1-PI and, consequently, tissue degradation by neutrophil elastase.
...
PMID:Comparative cleavage sites within the reactive-site loop of native and oxidized alpha1-proteinase inhibitor by selected bacterial proteinases. 1059 84