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)

Extracts of rheumatoid synovial tissue obtained at surgical synovectomy contained neutral proteinases as well as cathepsin D. The neutral proteinase activity was particle-bound but could be solubilized by 1 M MgCl2. About half of the solubilized activity adsorbed to aproptinin-Sepharose at pH 7.5 and was desorbed at pH 3.3. This activity was shown to be due to leukocyte elastase and cathepsin G by enzymological and immunological criteria. The neutral proteinase activity that did not adsorb to aprotinin-Sepharose was not due to elastase or cathepsin G. It was able to hydrolyse proteoglycan and was inhibited by diisopropylfluorophosphate, soybean and lima bean trypsin inhibitors. It was, therefore, a serine proteinase. Its inhibition characteristics were different from those of plasmin, kallikrein or thrombin. All of the neutral proteinase activity of synovial extracts was attributable to serine proteinases, no evidence of metallo-proteinases was found. The possible role of the neutral proteinases in the degradation of the matrix of cartilage is discussed. A simple procedure for purifying leukocyte elastase and cathepsin G is described as well as the raising of specific antisera to these enzymes.
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PMID:Identification of proteinases in rheumatoid synovium. Detection of leukocyte elastase cathepsin G and another serine proteinase. 615 6

1. Proteolytic enzymes are likely to play the main role on the proteoglycan (PG)-degrading activity of rheumatoid synovium. In this paper, the presence of cathepsin D, cathepsin B, lysosomal elastase and cathepsin G in rheumatoid synovium is established by isolation, purification, and characterization of these proteases. 2. The degradation of MgCl2-extracted PG from bovine nasal cartilage was performed by using these proteases and the property of the products was studied by the viscosity, Sepharose CL-4B chromatography, Agarose/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, hexosamine analysis and amino acids analysis. 3. These proteases reduced the viscosity of PG solutions and the reaction was inhibited by addition of pepstatin, antipain, elastatinal and chymostatin for each protease. 4. The size and chemical composition of the degradation products varied with the different proteases. Of the four proteases, cathepsin G produced the largest glycosaminoglycan multi-chain peptides and cathepsin B produced the smallest contained chondroitin single-chain peptide. Each protease specifically split PG core protein and the degradation products particularly indicated the characteristic structure of core peptides. 5. The results suggest that these proteases may be contributed to the breakdown of cartilage PG in rheumatoid arthritis.
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PMID:[Studies on degradation of cartilage proteoglycan by rheumatoid synovial tissue. Part II: On the property of acid and neutral proteases obtained from rheumatoid synovial tissue (author's transl)]. 703 96