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)

Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) is released from an inactive precursor by a proteolytic cleavage. A monocytic protease has been identified that appears to be involved in the physiological activation of this cytokine. Two situations have been found in which precursor IL-1 beta exists without the monocytic processing enzyme, and in these cases other proteases, such as neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G and cathepsin L, may be involved in generating the active cytokine.
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PMID:The proteolytic activation of interleukin-1 beta. 178 25

During their development, mononuclear phagocytes express a changing profile of proteinases that may participate in the degradation of elastin and other extracellular matrix components. Neutrophil elastase is produced and stored in azurophil-like granules in immature mononuclear phagocytes. Monocytes contain small amounts of neutrophil elastase but do not synthesize the enzyme. Macrophages neither synthesize nor contain neutrophil elastase, but they can internalize and secrete scavenged neutrophil elastase. Human alveolar macrophages synthesize cysteine proteinases including cathepsin L, a lysosomal enzyme with elastolytic activity at an acidic pH. Macrophages from several animal species synthesize an approximately 22-kD metalloelastase that, in the mouse, is secreted as a zymogen of about 36 kD. In addition to its direct elastolytic properties, this metalloelastase may also promote elastolysis by cleaving alpha 1-antiproteinase and thus protecting neutrophil elastase from inhibition. A human counterpart of this enzyme has not yet been purified; however, the elastolytic activity of human macrophages appears to depend predominantly on the activity of one or more metalloproteinases. Because elastin is intertwined with other matrix components in natural matrices, degradation of elastin in vivo probably involves cooperation of multiple proteinases to uncover macromolecules that mask the elastic fibers. Degradation of matrix may be localized to pericellular sites, where proteinases are protected from inhibitors and where potentially surface-bound enzymes may be concentrated. Complete breakdown of matrix may be completed within the cells after partially cleaved molecules are internalized. Growth and remodeling of the extracellular matrix must involve highly coordinated interactions between cells, cytokines, proteinases, proteinase activators and inhibitors, as well as the matrix itself. The intrapulmonary process resulting in emphysema probably involves equally complex interactions. Mononuclear phagocytes accumulate in large numbers in the lung in response to cigarette smoking, and they may play a role in the pathogenesis of the alveolar septal injury that characterizes pulmonary emphysema.
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PMID:Elastin degradation by mononuclear phagocytes. 206 50

Limited proteolysis of T-kininogen by heterologous and homologous endopeptidases (bovine trypsin, human leukocyte elastase, rat submaxillary gland endopeptidase k, and rat mast cell chymase) produced similar fragmentation. Amino-terminal sequence analysis of whole T-kininogen lysates and purified proteolytic fragments identified four susceptible regions which contained all the preferential cleavage sites for these proteinases. Two of these susceptible regions were close to the junction between heavy chain cystatin-like domains, the third was in the kinin-containing region, and the fourth was close to the carboxyl terminus of the T-kininogen light chain. There was only one primary site for each proteinase in the kinin-containing region, which explains why catalytic amounts of these proteinases did not release immunoreactive kinin from this kininogen. However, preferential cleavage of T-kininogen close to the junction between cystatin-like domains released fragments which, provided they included cystatin-like domains 2 and/or 3, strongly inhibited papain and cathepsin L. The fragments were inhibitory even when parts of the amino-terminal ends of the domains were lacking. The highly conserved glycyl residue, thought to be involved in the inhibitory reactive site of cystatin-like inhibitors, was not required in purified domain 3 for inhibition of cathepsin L.
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PMID:Limited proteolysis of T-kininogen (thiostatin). Release of comparable fragments by different endopeptidases. 264 33

The lysosomal cysteine proteinases cathepsin L and cathepsin B were examined for their effect on the neutrophil elastase inhibitory activity of human alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1PI). Human cathepsin L catalytically inactivated human alpha 1PI by cleavage of the bonds Glu354-Ala355 and Met358-Ser359 (the serine proteinase inhibitory site). Cathepsin B did not inactivate alpha 1PI, even when equimolar amounts of enzyme were employed. Cathepsin L is the first human proteinase shown to catalytically inactivate alpha 1PI. These findings, in conjunction with other reports, suggest that alpha 1PI contains a proteolytically sensitive region encompassing residues 350-358. Taken together with the discovery of the elastinolytic activity of cathepsin L (Mason, R. W., Johnson, D. A., Barrett, A. J., and Chapman, H. A. (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 925-927), the present findings emphasize the possible importance of cathepsin L in the pathological proteolysis of elastin and diminish the role that can be attributed to cathepsin B in such processes.
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PMID:Cathepsin L inactivates alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor by cleavage in the reactive site region. 349 Apr 78

Human lung macrophages express all four of the known lysosomal thiol proteases: cathepsins B, H, L, and S. These enzymes share a similar size and targeting mechanism for lysosomal accumulation and all have relatively indiscriminate substrate specificity in comparison with such highly selective serine proteases as urokinase or thrombin. These enzymes do have distinctive properties: only cathepsin B has C-terminal dipeptidase activity, only cathepsin H has potent aminopeptidase activity, and only cathepsin L and S are elastolytic. Cathepsin S is unique in that it is stable at neutral pH; indeed, at neutral pH it has elastolytic activity roughly comparable with that of neutrophil elastase. Recent studies of the differential expression of these cathepsins suggest they not only cooperate in terminal degradation of endocytized protein but also have specific functions such as proenzyme activation, antigen processing, and tissue remodeling, especially bone matrix resorption. Lysates of lung macrophages degrade elastin at neutral pH, suggesting that necrosis of macrophages at sites of macrophage accumulation, e.g., caseation necrosis, could contribute to tissue destruction. Tissue destruction and remodeling by thiol proteases expressed by live macrophages, however, is limited by tight compartmentalization of cathepsins to lysosomes. Nonetheless, macrophages accumulate at sites of known injury in cigarette smokers. Because these cells contain potent elastases, and because lysosomal enzyme release and cell surface acidification are regulated events, dysregulation of thiol protease expression in stimulated macrophages may contribute to the injury observed in cigarette smokers with non-alpha-1-protease inhibitor-type emphysema.
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PMID:The role of thiol proteases in tissue injury and remodeling. 795 52

This study examined the role of cysteine proteinases and their inhibitor in the development of emphysema in comparison with neutrophil elastase (NE) complexed with alpha1-protease inhibitor (NE-alpha1-PI), which was previously demonstrated to be increased in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from subjects with subclinical emphysema. Eight nonsmokers and 31 current smokers with (n=17) and without (n=14) emphysema, as evidenced by lung computed tomographic scans, were studied. The concentrations of immunologically detected cathepsin L and cystatin C, but not cathepsin B, were significantly increased in BAL fluid from the smokers with emphysema compared with those without emphysema, although the activity of cathepsin L, measured using a synthetic substrate and cathepsin L, released from cultured alveolar macrophages at 24 h, did not show any significant difference between the two groups. When comparison was made only for the subjects aged <60 yrs, the difference between the two groups disappeared for cathepsin L, but remained for NE-alpha1-PI. There was no significant correlation between the level of cathepsin L and that of NE-alpha1-PI in BAL fluid from the subjects with emphysema. In conclusion, increased levels of cathepsin L and cystatin C were demonstrated in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from subjects with subclinical emphysema. However, the roles of cathepsin L and neutrophil elastase in the development of emphysema may vary between subjects and between the young and the old.
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PMID:Cysteine proteinases and cystatin C in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from subjects with subclinical emphysema. 986 93

Recent studies have shown that the bovine cysteine proteinase inhibitor, cystatin C, is synthesized as a preprotein containing a 118-residue mature protein. However, the forms of the inhibitor isolated previously from bovine tissues had shorter N-terminal regions than expected from these results, and also lower affinity for proteinases than human cystatin C. In this work, we report the properties of recombinant, full-length bovine cystatin C having a complete N-terminal region. The general characteristics of this form of the inhibitor, as reflected by the isoelectric point, the far-ultraviolet circular dichroism spectrum, the thermal stability and the changes of tryptophan fluorescence on interaction with papain, resembled those of human cystatin C. The affinity and kinetics of inhibition of papain and cathepsins B, H and L by the bovine inhibitor were also comparable with those of the human inhibitor, although certain differences were apparent. Notably, the affinity of bovine cystatin C for cathepsin H was somewhat weaker than that of human cystatin C, and bovine cystatin C bound to cathepsin L with about a four-fold higher association rate constant than the human inhibitor. This rate constant is comparable with the highest values reported previously for cystatin-cysteine proteinase reactions. The full-length, recombinant bovine cystatin C bound appreciably more tightly to proteinases than the shorter form characterized previously. Digestion of the recombinant inhibitor with neutrophil elastase resulted in forms with truncated N-terminal regions and appreciably decreased affinity for papain, consistent with the forms of bovine cystatin C isolated previously having arisen by proteolytic cleavage of a mature, full-length inhibitor.
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PMID:The affinity and kinetics of inhibition of cysteine proteinases by intact recombinant bovine cystatin C. 1036 30

A number of serine proteases, matrix metalloproteases, and cysteine proteases were evaluated for their ability to cleave and inactivate the antiprotease, secretory leucoprotease inhibitor (SLPI). None of the serine proteases or the matrix metalloproteases examined cleaved the SLPI protein. However, incubation with cathepsins B, L, and S resulted in the cleavage and inactivation of SLPI. All three cathepsins initially cleaved SLPI between residues Thr(67) and Tyr(68). The proteolytic cleavage of SLPI by all three cathepsins resulted in the loss of the active site of SLPI and the inactivation of SLPI anti-neutrophil elastase capacity. Cleavage and inactivation were catalytic with respect to the cathepsins, so that the majority of a 400-fold excess of SLPI was inactivated within 15 min by cathepsins L and S. Analysis of epithelial lining fluid samples from individuals with emphysema indicated the presence of cleaved SLPI in these samples whereas only intact SLPI was observed in control epithelial lining fluid samples. Active cathepsin L was shown to be present in emphysema epithelial lining fluid and inhibition of this protease prevented the cleavage of recombinant SLPI added to emphysema epithelial lining fluid. Taken together with previous data that demonstrates that cathepsin L inactivates alpha(1)-antitrypsin, these findings indicate the involvement of cathepsins in the diminution of the lung antiprotease screen possibly leading to lung destruction in emphysema.
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PMID:Cathepsin B, L, and S cleave and inactivate secretory leucoprotease inhibitor. 1143 27

Bauhinia bauhinoides cruzipain inhibitor (BbCI) and Bauhinia bauhinioides kallikrein inhibitor (BbKI) are cysteine and serine proteinase inhibitors structurally homologous to plant Kunitz-type inhibitors, but are devoid of disulfide bridges. Based on cDNA sequences, we found that BbKI and BbCI are initially synthesized as a prepropeptide comprising an N-terminal signal peptide (19 residues), the mature protein (164 residues) and a C-terminal targeting peptide (10 residues). Partial cDNAs encoding the mature enzymes plus N-terminal His-tags and thrombin cleavage sites were expressed in E. coli and the soluble proteins were purified by one-step nickel affinity chromatography. After thrombin cleavage, both proteins exhibited potent inhibitory activities toward their cognate proteinases like the wild-type proteins. BbCI inhibits human neutrophil elastase ( K i(app) 5.3 nM), porcine pancreatic elastase ( K i(app) 40 nM), cathepsin G ( K i(app) 160 nM) and the cysteine proteinases cruzipain ( K i(app) 1.2 nM), cruzain ( K i(app) 0.3 nM) and cathepsin L ( K i(app) 2.2 nM), while BbKI strongly inhibits plasma kallikrein ( K i(app) 2.4 nM) and plasmin ( K i(app) 33 nM). Circular dichroism spectra of BbCI and BbKI were in agreement with the beta-trefoil fold described for Kunitz inhibitors. The inhibitory potency of both BbCI- and BbKI-type inhibitors suggests that other, non-covalent interactions may compensate for the lack of disulfide bridges.
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PMID:Kunitz-type Bauhinia bauhinioides inhibitors devoid of disulfide bridges: isolation of the cDNAs, heterologous expression and structural studies. 1600 43

Several BPTI-Kunitz-type serine proteinase inhibitors were described in tick Boophilus microplus and Rhipicephalus sanguineus species. In this work, we present a synthetic gene based on two tick BPTI-Kunitz-type serine proteinase inhibitors, the first domain of B. microplus trypsin inhibitor-A (BmTI-A) and the carrapatin, the inhibitors were named BmTIsint and BmTIsint Mut. Our present results showed that BmTIsint and BmTIsint Mut inhibited trypsin (K(i) 3.3 and 1.0 nM) and human plasma kallikrein (K(i) 16.5 and 35 nM), but in contrast to BmTI-A, the inhibitors did not inhibit human neutrophil elastase. BmTIsint was able to produce immunological response in mice but not in bovines. In addition, it is the first description of a BPTI-Kunitz-type inhibitor as a cysteine proteinase inhibitor, BmTIsint apparent dissociation constant (K(i)) for cathepsin L was 108 nM. Our findings open the possibility up to obtain new molecules as potent serine or cysteine proteinase inhibitors using BmTIsint as a model.
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PMID:An unexpected inhibitory activity of Kunitz-type serine proteinase inhibitor derived from Boophilus microplus trypsin inhibitor on cathepsin L. 1641 23


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