Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In all neonates delivered at the Steyr Landeskrankenhaus from 1987 to 1989, immunreactive
trypsin
(IRT) in the umbilical cord blood was determined to enable early diagnosis of
mucoviscidosis
(
cystic fibrosis
, CF). Amongst 4,507 neonates 75 were found in whom the IRT was over the cut-off value of 1,204 ng/ml. Of these babies, 69 were presented at the age of six weeks for determination of elecrolytes in their sweat.
Mucoviscidosis
could be diagnosed in two patients. The sensitivity of our test is likely to be 100%. There is no question that the specificity (98.38%) requires improvement. The incidence of
mucoviscidosis
in our catchment area is 1: 2,254. The hypertrypsinemia detected was probably transient in 73 babies. Ten of these patients showed a one-minute Apgar score of less than seven.
...
PMID:[Regional mucoviscidosis screening using immunoreactive trypsin in umbilical cord blood]. 179 95
Pancreatic endocrine function was studied in 50 patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) and 15 healthy controls by measuring glucose, insulin, C-peptide, glucagon and gastro-inhibitory polypeptide responses to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Biochemical and clinical parameters were also measured, including glycosylated hemoglobin A1, serum immunoreactive
trypsin
, fasting urinalysis, pulmonary function, percentage body fat and 3-day dietary records. According to National Diabetes Data Group (NDDG) criteria, 6 CF patients had impaired glucose tolerance (ICF), with elevated serum glucose concentrations and reduced and delayed insulin secretion compared with control (CON) subjects, although none were overtly diabetic. Although the remaining 44 CF patients (NCF) did not meet NDDG criteria for impaired glucose tolerance, mean area under the concentration curve (AUC) for glucose was greater than control values and AUC for insulin diminished. HbA1 levels in the 2 CF groups were greater than that of controls subjects, but there was little difference between ICF and NCF groups. C-peptide levels paralleled those of insulin for the 3 groups throughout OGTT. There was little difference in GIP secretion between groups, and the enteroinsular axis was intact in the control and NCF groups and slightly increased in the ICF group. Basal glucagon concentrations and AUC for glucagon during OGTT were similar for the 3 groups, but glucose-induced glucagon suppressibility i.e., basal to nadir change in each subject, was reduced in the ICF group. Serum IRT concentration was significantly lower in the ICF and NCF groups compared to control subjects, and was lowest in the ICF group. A strong correlation was observed in the ICF group between FEF25-75 and AUC for insulin, as well as HbA1 level and AUC for glucose. The prevalence of impaired glucose tolerance in 50 CF patients was 12%. Despite extensive comparisons of biochemical and clinical parameters with endocrine function in this population, we were unable to define reliable criteria for predicting glucose intolerance.
...
PMID:Postprandial hyperglycemia and pancreatic function in cystic fibrosis patients. 184 15
To investigate the hypothesis that mast cell and neutrophil proteases stimulate airway gland secretion, we studied the effects of two mast cell proteases (
tryptase
and chymase) and two neutrophil enzymes (human neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G) on secretion of 35S-labeled macro-molecules from cultured bovine airway gland serous cells. Tryptase had no effect, but the other three enzymes stimulated secretion. Threshold concentrations of the enzymes (greater than or equal to 10(-10) M) were lower by two orders of magnitude than other agonists (e.g., histamine, prostaglandins, beta-adrenergic agonists). Only proteases induced maximal secretory response (greater than or equal to 80% depletion of 35S-labeled macromolecules), and these responses were greater than 10-fold larger than those of other agonists. The active catalytic sites of the enzymes are required for their secretory activities. These findings suggest a role for these enzymes in the pathogenesis of inflammatory airway diseases associated with hypersecretion, and they suggest that the use of selective site-directed inhibitors of these enzymes may provide a novel strategy for intervention in inflammatory diseases of the airways associated with hypersecretion (e.g.,
cystic fibrosis
, chronic bronchitis).
...
PMID:Role of mast cell and neutrophil proteases in airway secretion. 189 27
Cystic fibrosis
(CF) patients frequently malabsorb nutrients because of pancreatic failure. Standard therapy entails oral administration of porcine pancreatic enzymes, with meals. Porcine enzymes contain in excess of 25 potentially antigenic proteins. To evaluate antigenicity of one of these (porcine
trypsin
), we developed ELISA techniques capable of measuring total immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgG directed against porcine
trypsin
in patient sera. Cross-sectional evaluation of sera from 12 controls and 41 CF patients showed that IgG directed against porcine
trypsin
was detectable in 12/17 CF patients receiving porcine enzymes (50.6 +/- 56.0 ng/ml; range 0-154.0 ng/ml), while none was detected in controls or the 26 CF subjects not receiving enzymes. In the 17 CF patients receiving enzymes, porcine
trypsin
binding IgG contributed 0.85 +/- 0.83% of the total IgG pool. Levels of porcine
trypsin
binding did not correlate with total IgG. Longitudinal evaluation was then performed in 26 CF patients, before and after commencement of enzyme therapy. Prior to commencing therapy, porcine
trypsin
binding IgG was undetectable in sera from 24/26 patients. Within 4.2 years of commencing therapy, 25/26 patients (96%) developed porcine
trypsin
binding IgG. Thus, serum IgG responses to porcine
trypsin
appear to be common in CF patients receiving porcine enzymes and contribute considerably to total IgG levels. Other individual enzymes in porcine extracts are likely to elicit similar antigenic response.
...
PMID:Serum immunoglobulin G directed against porcine trypsin in pancreatic insufficient cystic fibrosis patients receiving pancreatic enzyme supplements. 194 13
Screening of the newborn for
cystic fibrosis
by measurement of immunoreactive
trypsin
has been undertaken on alternate weeks in Wales and the West Midlands for five years since 1985 to evaluate the possible clinical benefits of early diagnosis. Patients detected by screening and those diagnosed by clinical symptoms alone were assessed annually for differences in clinical, anthropometric, and biochemical variables. Fifty eight infants not considered to be at risk of
cystic fibrosis
(they did not present with meconium ileus and do not have a sibling with
cystic fibrosis
) have been detected by screening and they have been compared with 44 children who were diagnosed clinically. This latter group includes nine children whose screening was negative but who were recognised subsequently to have
cystic fibrosis
. The mean age at diagnosis of the screened group was significantly lower than that of the group diagnosed clinically. Excluding admissions for diagnostic tests for
cystic fibrosis
, the screened group spent a significantly shorter time in hospital during the first year of life. The results of all other comparisons made between the screened group and those diagnosed clinically were similar up to the age of 4 years.
...
PMID:Neonatal screening for cystic fibrosis in Wales and the West Midlands: clinical assessment after five years of screening. 199 88
1. Labeled glycoconjugates released by
trypsin
from cell surfaces of control and
cystic fibrosis
(CF) skin fibroblasts were purified and fractionated by column chromatography on Sephadex G-50 and Concanavalin A Sepharose. Based on chemical analysis and specific enzymatic digestions: (1) Glycoconjugates were characterized as O-linked glycopeptides consisting predominantly of glycosaminoglycan type and N-linked glycopeptides with glycans of complex type. Their relative proportions were similar between the two groups. (2) The N-linked glycopeptides exhibited an increased molar ratio of fucose to galactose in CF fibroblasts. (3) When pericellular glycoconjugates were metabolically labeled with [14C]glucosamine and [3H]fucose, incorporation and degradation kinetics were similar between the two groups.
...
PMID:Pericellular glycoconjugates of cultured fibroblasts from control and cystic fibrosis patients. 202 96
The chronic, progressively destructive bronchitis of patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) is characterized by an important imbalance between tissue destroying granulocyte proteases such as granulocyte elastase (GE) and its physiological inhibitors in bronchial secretions. Recent in vitro studies suggest, that proteases derived from bacteria or endogenous proteases may contribute to inactivation of physiological inhibitors of GE. Since only
trypsin
-unreactive alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1-PI) was detected in CF bronchial secretions, we attempted to identify the mechanism of inactivation of alpha 1-PI. We found a heat stable, serine protease-like enzymatic activity capable of degrading 125I-labelled alpha 1-PI extensively in 22 infected but not in one non-infected CF bronchial secretion. In infected secretions, only degraded alpha 1-PI, which did not migrate like oxidized alpha 1-PI in tandem-crossed immunoelectrophoresis, was detectable. We conclude, that free GE in excess as well as GE bound to bronchial mucosal inhibitor may partly account for the alpha 1-PI-cleaving activity, but that other yet unknown bacterial or host serine proteases also contribute to alpha 1-PI inactivation.
...
PMID:Proteolytic inactivation of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor in infected bronchial secretions from patients with cystic fibrosis. 202 37
Mucus glycoproteins (mucins) were isolated from sputum of patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) after separation into sol and gel phases. The mucus gel was solubilized with gentle stirring in 6 M-guanidinium chloride supplemented with proteinase inhibitors, and purification of mucins was subsequently achieved by isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation in CsCl/guanidinium chloride. Density-gradient centrifugation also revealed a heterogeneity of the macromolecules, the pattern of which varied between individuals, and mucins from the gel phase was pooled as 'heavy' and 'light' fractions. Gel chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B showed that the heavy fraction contained a larger proportion of smaller species than the 'light' fraction and that the gel phase mucins were much larger than those from the sol. An apparently homogeneous high-Mr mucin population from one individual contained approx. 70% (w/w) carbohydrate, the major sugars being N-acetylglucosamine (17.8%), N-acetylgalactosamine (6.7%), galactose (20.7%), fucose (13.2%) and sialic acid (11.4%). These mucins had an S020.w of 47 S, and an Mr of 15 x 10(6) -20 x 10(6), and rate-zonal centrifugation revealed a polydisperse size distribution [range (5-30) x 10(6)] with a weight-average Mr of 17 x 10(6). The whole mucins were visualized with electron microscopy as linear and apparently flexible threads, disperse in size. Reduction produced subunits which were included on Sepharose CL-2B, and subsequent
trypsin
digestion yielded high-Mr glycopeptides which were further retarded. The size distributions and fragmentation patterns of mucin from two other CF patients were the same, as studied by gel chromatography, rate-zonal centrifugation and electron microscopy. We conclude that CF mucins are heterogeneous in both size and buoyant density and that the various populations, though differing in buoyant density, share the same architecture and macromolecular properties and are, in this respect, similar to mucins from normal respiratory secretions [Thornton, Davies, Kraayenbrink, Richardson, Sheehan & Carlstedt (1990) Biochem. J. 265, 179-186] and human cervical mucus [Carlstedt & Sheehan (1989) SEB Symp. XLIII 289-316].
...
PMID:Mucus glycoproteins from cystic fibrotic sputum. Macromolecular properties and structural 'architecture'. 206 5
High blood
trypsin
levels during early days of life are found in newborns subsequently diagnosed to be affected by
cystic fibrosis
. The authors compared the validity of the traditional meconium test with the blood immunoreactive
trypsin
(IRT) assay, carried out in parallel on 113,302 neonates from three regions of North-eastern Italy. The meconium test showed a sensitivity of 57.7%. The sensitivity of the IRT test was higher (96.1%). It was possible to identify by IRT 10 out of 11 false negative CFs at the meconium test. A shortcoming of neonatal IRT, however, is its low specificity; 1.6% of the newborns had to be retested. A new screening policy was therefore proposed and carried out on 69,640 newborns: the Lactase test (LACT) on meconium was introduced as a complementary assay in IRT positive newborns. If LACT exceeded 2 U/g dry meconium, a confirmatory sweat test was immediately requested; if LACT test was negative and IRT exceeded 85 micrograms/l, IRT was repeated. Postneonatal retesting values above 25 micrograms/l required a sweat test. As a result, the estimated prevalence of CF was 1:4,352, the sensitivity was 93.3%; the specificity turned out to be 99.6%, considering all false positive newborns investigated with retesting and/or direct sweat test.
...
PMID:Development of a screening system for cystic fibrosis: meconium or blood spot trypsin assay or both? 212 72
Over a 5 year period in Newcastle, 18 new cases of
cystic fibrosis
(CF) were diagnosed in children who had been screened in the newborn period. In six of these children, the screening programme failed. Four of these children had a normal screen and an additional two had elevated immunoreactive
trypsin
(IRT), but there were problems with the notification procedure. Three of the children missed by the screening process had a significantly delayed diagnosis; in all three cases the diagnosis of CF was suspected clinically, but a sweat test was delayed because of false reassurance from the fact that the child had been screened for CF. In a fourth case, multiple elevated sweat electrolyte levels were obtained, but the diagnosis of CF was considered to be in doubt because of the normal IRT assay. A sweat test should be performed on any child in whom there is clinical suspicion of CF.
...
PMID:False negative results on newborn screening for cystic fibrosis. 220 15
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