Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The structural polypeptides of egg grown mumps virus were analysed by SDS-polyacrylamide-slab-gel electrophoresis. Mumps virions contained eight major polypeptides with mol. wt. of 75, 73, 71, 61, 47, 44, 42 and 40 X 10(3). The 75 K and 61 K polypeptides were glycosylated. In virions treated with pronase and trypsin, the 75 K glycoprotein was removed more readily from the virus than the 61 K glycoprotein. The gradual removal of the 75 K glycoprotein was paralleled by a decrease of haemagglutinating activity. The large glycoprotein was cleaved into a 40 K glycoprotein by trypsin treatment. Pronase and trypsin treatment also removed the smallest 40 K non-glycosylated polypeptide. Thus this polypeptide appears to be located on the outside of the virion and probably represents a cleavage product of the large glycoprotein. Treatment of virions with 2% Triton-X 100 under alkaline conditions in the absence or presence of 2 M-KCl solubilized the two glycoproteins and a fraction of the 71 and 44 K polypeptides, but not the 73 and 47 K polypeptides. The two smallest polypeptides were solubilized by treatment with 2% Triton X-100 in the presence of 2 M-KCl. Since the 40 K polypeptide was interpreted to represent a cleavage product of the large surface glycoprotein the 42 K polypeptide was proposed to represent the membrane protein of mumps virus. The 44 K polypeptide co-migrated with Vero cell actin. The nature of the 47 K polypeptide could not be determined, but it is probably located in the central part of the virus. The 73 K polypeptide and in some experiments also the 71 K polypeptide were found in purified nucleocapsid preparations. It is concluded that mumps virus has a general polypeptide composition similar to other paramyxoviruses. However, the molecular weights of the different polypeptides of mumps virus differ markedly from the corresponding polypeptides in Newcastle disease virus and Sendai virus.
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PMID:Structural polypeptides of mumps virus. 21 49

The capacity of human lymphocytes to adhere to paramyxovirus-infected monolayers and their capacity to kill paramyxovirus-infected cells was investigated. A large fraction of human lymphocytes was found to adhere firmly to the paramyxovirus-infected monolayers. Predsorption of lymphocytes on mumps virus-infected cells impaired their adsorption to a second cell monolayer of the same type. The cytotoxic activity of lymphocytes against mumps virus-infected cells was also reduced after predsorption on mumps virus- or Newcastle disease virus-infected (NDV) cell monolayers. Exposure of lymphocytes to trypsin did not significantly decrease either adsorption or cytotoxicity. Pretreatment of lymphocytes with neuraminidase (NANase) partly inhibited adsorption whereas cytotoxicity was not decreased. Cell fractionation experiments after rosetting of the lymphocytes with sheep erythrocytes (E) indicated that T cells were equally or better adsorbed than "non-T" cells. Taken together with previous experiments which showed that the majority of T lymphocytes are not cytotoxic against mumps virus-infected cells these results suggest that adherence of lymphocytes to infected cells and cytotoxicity may be unrelated phenomena.
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PMID:Interactions between human lymphocytes and paramyxovirus-infected cells: adsorption and cytotoxicity. 30 Mar 97

Serum immunoreactive trypsin (SIT) concentrations were measured in 244 patients with infectious illnesses and in 281 children with diabetes of recent onset. Results were compared with reference ranges established in 107 patients with non-infectious, non-diabetic illnesses, in whom SIT concentrations were found to increase with advancing age. Reduced or undetectable concentrations of SIT were associated with diabetes in children and with a few cases of severe childhood infection. Increased SIT concentrations were associated with virologically confirmed cases of infection with mumps and Coxsackie B virus infection, and with clinical diagnoses of mumps, PUO, and meningitis in children, and with Bornholm disease, cardiac infection, and respiratory infection in adults. It is suggested that silent invasion of the exocrine pancreas with elevation of the SIT concentration may accompany infection by Coxsackie B, mumps, and, possibly, other viruses.
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PMID:Serum immunoreactive trypsin concentrations in infectious and non-infectious illnesses and in juvenile diabetes. 51 51

Renal cell carcinoma cells produced the substance(s) which killed them (suicide factor(s)) after co-culture with mumps virus. The suicide factor(s) were heat-sensitive and were degraded with trypsin. Furthermore, actinomycin D inhibited the production of the substance(s) by cancer cells. Considering these facts, the substance(s) were thought to be protein(s) derived from de novo synthesis in cancer cells. It was demonstrated that renal cell carcinoma cells proliferated with the autocrine loop of interleukin-6 (IL-6). Mumps virus almost completely inhibited the IL-6 production in several hours. Because of these two facts, the suicide process might be initiated in renal cell carcinoma cells after encountering mumps virus, i.e. inhibition of the autocrine growth loop of IL-6 followed by the induction of an autocrine killing loop of unknown substance(s).
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PMID:Suicide process of renal cell carcinoma cells encountering mumps virus. 199 9

Primary rhesus monkey kidney (MK) cells have long been the cells of choice for isolation and propagation of the human paramyxoviruses (parainfluenza 1, 2, 3, 4A, 4B, and mumps). However, problems with the supply and cost of MK cells and the presence of endogenous viruses, including herpes B virus and SV-5, necessitated a search for an alternative cell line. Continuous cell cultures of human origin (L132, A-549, HuT-292, HEK, G-293, G-401, A-498, A-704, CAKI-1, RD) and simian origin (LLC-MK2, BSC-1, MA-104, Vero) were evaluated for their capacity to support the growth of the human paramyxoviruses, as followed by cytopathic effect, hemadsorption, hemagglutination, and EIA. NCI-H292 (HuT-292) human lung mucoepidermoid carcinoma cells (ATCC # CRL-1848) proved to be the most sensitive line for cultivating all serotypes and strains of the paramyxoviruses. These cells were also shown to be a suitable substitute for MK in primary isolation of paramyxoviruses from clinical specimens. RPMI-1640 with 1.5 micrograms/ml trypsin was the preferred maintenance medium; alternatively, Eagle's MEM supplemented with 1.5 micrograms/ml trypsin and 0.1% ITS was satisfactory. NCI-H292 cells are a continuous line with excellent growth characteristics, although the genetic polyploidy of the cells may limit the number of passages of usable cells.
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PMID:NCI-H292 as an alternative cell line for the isolation and propagation of the human paramyxoviruses. 226 Sep 24

The hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein (HN) of mumps virus was purified by immunoaffinity chromatography and fragmented by the combined action of CNBr and trypsin. The resulting peptides were separated by HPLC and sequenced by automated Edman degradation. Using this HN-specific amino acid sequence data, a degenerate oligonucleotide was produced and subsequently used to screen a mumps virus cDNA library to isolate HN-specific clones. The complete nucleotide sequence of the HN gene was determined. The monocistronic HN mRNA is approximately 1900 nucleotides long and encodes a single open reading frame of 582 amino acids. The HN protein has a unique hydrophobic stretch of 19 amino acids at its N-terminus that apparently anchors the protein in the viral envelope. A comparison of the mumps virus HN protein sequence with the sequences of the other known paramyxovirus HNs indicates that mumps virus is most closely related to SV-5, followed in decreasing order by NDV, parainfluenza virus 3, and Sendai virus.
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PMID:Sequence determination of the mumps virus HN gene. 336 84

Immunoenzymatic, clinical and follow up study of 3500 patients suffering from nervous forms of epidemic parotitis was performed. It is concluded that the adaptive humoral enzymes, ribonuclease and trypsin, the persistence of antigen to epidemic parotitis virus in CSF lymphocytes as well as the immunologic status of the patient at the disease onset play the leading role in the pathogenesis of its acute phase. It advisable to examine the factors enumerated in order to predict the clinical course of the disease. The treatment with adaptive enzymes was of great efficacy in 660 patients.
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PMID:[Various mechanisms of the pathogenesis and etiotropic therapy of neurologic forms of epidemic parotitis]. 398 4

Fasting serum concentrations of trypsin and amylase activity have been compared in 107 subjects, including 18 controls and patients with mumps, acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, cancer of the pancreas, and chronic renal failure. There was no significant correlation between amylase activity and trypsin concentrations in any of these groups. In all 12 patients with acute pancreatitis and all 16 with chronic renal failure the serum immuno-reactive trypsin concentrations were elevated. Amylase activity was increased in 87% (20 out of 23) of patients with mumps, but only 13% (3 out of 23) had hypertrypsinaemia suggesting subclinical pancreatitis. In 18 patients with chronic pancreatitis low levels of serum trypsin were measured in 11 (61%), reflecting a decrease in pancreatic acinar mass. In contrast, serum amylase was normal or raised in all 18. Subnormal values of the trypsin to amylase ratio was obtained in 15 (83%). Trypsin levels in 20 patients with carcinoma of the pancreas were abnormal in 11 (55%). Six (30%) had abnormal amylase levels. It is concluded that it is more useful to measure the serum trypsin concentration than the amylase activity in the diagnosis of both mumps-pancreatitis and chronic pancreatic disease and that the trypsin to amylase ratio is more sensitive than either enzyme alone in the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:The relative values of serum immuno-reactive trypsin concentration and total amylase activity in the diagnosis of mumps, chronic renal failure, and pancreatic disease. 615 6

The clinical value of plasma trypsin determination by radioimmunoassay has been investigated in children. In newborns (1-7 days), plasma trypsin levels are significantly higher than in older children, whose values do not differ from the adults' age. Variation between 15 days and 18 years is negligible. In ten cases of mumps without pancreatic symptomatology, results are within the normal range, even when amylase levels are high. In cystic fibrosis plasma trypsin has been found undetectable or very low in 13, normal in 2 and high in 1 of 15 cases. Plasma trypsin levels have also been found undetectable in 18 of 29 diabetic children, some of whom had been diagnosed for less than a year. We conclude that plasma trypsin determination by radioimmunoassay is of interest in pancreatic function testing of children.
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PMID:[Interest in pediatrics in the value of trypsin by the radioimmunologic method]. 703 Oct 21

By immunoprecipitation analysis using antisera against oligo peptides synthesized based on the deduced N-terminal and C-terminal amino acid sequences of the SH proteins of the mumps virus, the SH protein was detected in mumps virus-infected cells. The SH protein expressed from cDNA by the vaccinia-T7 expression system was recovered in the membrane fraction. Association of the SH protein with the membrane was resistant to high salt, EDTA, and alkaline treatment but sensitive to detergents. Indirect immunofluorescence experiments showed that the SH protein is involved in the exocytotic pathway. These data indicate that the SH protein is a membrane protein. Treatment of microsomes with TPCK-trypsin suggested that the SH protein is oriented in the membrane with its C-terminal facing the cytoplasm. Furthermore the SH protein was not detected in a particular strain (Enders strain) of mumps virus, indicating that the mumps virus SH protein is not essential for virus replication.
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PMID:The mumps virus SH protein is a membrane protein and not essential for virus growth. 891 42


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