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)

Stimulation of normal rat splenic T cells with pertussigen (lymphocytosis-promoting factor, LPF, from Bordetella pertussis) resulted in the release of a soluble factor that enhanced the glycosylation of IgE-binding factors during their biosynthesis. The soluble factor was detected by the ability of a culture filtrate of LPF-stimulated spleen cells to switch a T cell hybridoma, 23A4, from the formation of unglycosylated IgE-binding factor to the formation of glycosylated IgE-binding factor. The glycosylation-enhancing factor (GEF) had affinity for D-galactose, and the binding of the factor to hybridoma cells via a cell surface galactose was essential for modulation of IgE-binding factors. The GEF was inactivated by irreversible inhibitors of serine proteases such as phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, diisopropylfluorophosphate, and p-nitrophenyl ethylpentylphosphonate but was not affected by nonphosphorylating analogues of the organophosphorus compounds. Benzamidine, a competitive and reversible inhibitor of trypsin, also inhibited the glycosylation of IgE-binding factors by GEF. The factor could be purified by absorption to p-aminobenzamidine agarose followed by elution with benzamidine. The capacity of GEF to enhance the glycosylation of IgE-binding factors was inhibited by synthetic substrates of trypsin but not by substrates of chymotrypsin, indicating that GEF is a trypsin-like enzyme. Indeed, trypsin, plasmin, and kallikrein enhanced the glycosylation of IgE-binding factors during their biosynthesis. An inhibitor of trypsin-like enzyme(s), N-alpha-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethylketone (TLCK), inhibited trypsin and plasmin but not kallikrein, and TLCK failed to inhibit the GEF-mediated enhancement of glycosylation. It was also found that bradykinin, the biologically active product of cleavage of kininogen by kallikrein, enhanced the glycosylation of IgE-binding factors. The results indicate that GEF is a kallikrein-like enzyme.
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PMID:Modulation of the biologic activities of IgE-binding factor. IV. Identification of glycosylation-enhancing factor as a kallikrein-like enzyme. 655 15

Proteins to be used as vaccines are frequently treated with formaldehyde, although little is known about the effects of this treatment on protein antigenicity. To investigate the effect of formaldehyde treatment on antigen recognition by T cells, we compared the in vitro T-cell response to proteins that have been formaldehyde treated with the response to untreated proteins. We found that peripheral blood mononuclear cells from individuals vaccinated with three formaldehyde-treated proteins (pertussis toxin, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin) of Bordetella pertussis showed little or no response to the formaldehyde-treated proteins but proliferated very well in response to the corresponding untreated protein. These findings were further confirmed with CD4+ T-cell clones specific for defined epitopes of the bacterial proteins. We found that some epitopes are presented poorly or not at all when formaldehyde-treated proteins are used, whereas other epitopes are equally presented to T-cell clones when either formaldehyde-treated or untreated antigens are used. However, T-cell recognition could be restored by either antigen degradation before formaldehyde treatment or heat denaturation after such treatment. Parallel digestion with trypsin of both formaldehyde-treated and untreated proteins showed that fragments generated from the two forms of the same antigen were different in size. These results demonstrate that formaldehyde treatment can constrain antigen presentation to T cells and that this may be due to an altered proteolytic processing of formaldehyde-treated proteins.
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PMID:Formaldehyde treatment of proteins can constrain presentation to T cells by limiting antigen processing. 751 7

Microbial adherence to epithelial cell surfaces has been implicated as the first step in the initiation of several infectious diseases. The ability of antibiotics to affect the properties of bacterial adherence to cell surfaces may be a criterion in selecting antibiotics for therapy. This study was performed in order to investigate the activity of amoxicillin, chloramphenicol, and clarithromycin in modifying the adhering activity of Bordetella pertussis to human epithelial cells. The actions of antibiotics, alone or combined with aprotinin, were compared with that of trypsin, aprotinin and trypsin+aprotinin, to investigate the chemical nature of the ligand where antibiotics could act. The adhering activity was evaluated on human epithelial cells, collected from the oral mucosa, challenged with B. pertussis A2963 previously incubated in the presence of the tested substances for 1 h at 37 degrees C in a shaker incubator. After staining, the percentage of mucosal cells with more than 50 adhering bacteria was evaluated. Under the described experimental conditions, trypsin significantly reduced the adherence of B. pertussis. Aprotinin had no effect but was able to counteract the inhibitory action of trypsin. Both clarithromycin and chloramphenicol markedly reduced adhering activity and their actions were not counteracted by aprotinin. Amoxicillin was without effect. It was hypothesized that chloramphenicol and clarithromycin, exerting their antimicrobial action by inhibiting bacterial protein synthesis, affected bacterial adhesion through an unknown mechanism without proteolytic effect.
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PMID:Effect of antibiotics on Bordetella pertussis adhering activity: hypothesis regarding mechanism of action. 751 82

We previously reported that kappa opioids stimulated the release of human placental lactogen (hPL) from trophoblastic cells and that this effect was prevented by co-incubation with naloxone. We also reported that adenylate cyclase was not directly involved in this process. In order to understand the post-receptor events mediating hPL release by opioids in the human placenta, we studied the role of extracellular calcium. Human trophoblastic cells obtained by trypsin digestion were cultured for 48 h in Ham's F-10 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 200 U/ml penicillin, and 200 micrograms/ml streptomycin. 45Ca2+ influx was then measured by filtration on glass-fiber filters. We observed a time- and dose-dependent stimulation of 45Ca2+ influx by ethylketocyclazocine (EKC) with an EC50 of 0.5 nM and a maximal stimulation of 196% over control. This effect was completely blocked by naloxone, a non-specific opioid antagonist, and by nor-binaltorphimine, a specific kappa antagonist. We also demonstrated that U-50,488 (kappa agonist) had the same stimulatory effect as EKC (221 +/- 25% of control). D-Ala2,NMe-Phe4,Gly-ol5)-enkephalin (DAGO) (mu agonist) slightly stimulated Ca2+ influx (128 +/- 5% of control, p > 0.05) whereas D-Ser2,Leu,Thr6)-enkephalin (DSLET) (delta agonist) had no effect. Pre-incubation of trophoblastic cells with pertussis toxin (PTX) did not affect the EKC-induced 45Ca2+ influx, suggesting that this placental opiate effect is not coupled with PTX-sensitive G proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The modulation of placental lactogen release by opioids: a role for extracellular calcium. 768 40

Filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA) is a major adhesin produced by Bordetella pertussis, the etiologic agent of whooping cough. FHA has been shown to be surface associated but is also secreted by virulent bacteria. Microscopic observations of lungs of mice infected with B. pertussis showed that the bacteria grow as clusters within the alveolar lumen. When B. pertussis was cultivated in vitro with chemically defined medium, bacteria grew as aggregates, mimicking growth observed in vivo. This aggregation was abolished by the addition of cyclodextrin (CDX) to the growth medium and depended on the production of FHA, because a mutant lacking the FHA structural gene failed to form aggregates in a CDX-free medium. Western blot (immunoblot) analyses revealed that, in the absence of CDX, FHA was attached to the bacterial surface and was not efficiently released into the growth medium. Hydrophobic chromatography of FHA showed that CDX drastically reduced the hydrophobicity of FHA, suggesting a direct binding of CDX to FHA, which was further supported by the partial protection of FHA from trypsin digestion in the presence of CDX. In addition, free FHA can interact in a CDX-inhibitable manner with solid phase-immobilized FHA. It can therefore be postulated that the B. pertussis aggregates are most likely due to direct FHA-FHA interaction.
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PMID:Surface-associated filamentous hemagglutinin induces autoagglutination of Bordetella pertussis. 792 83

The cyclic GMP mediated non-adrenergic non-cholinergic (NANC) relaxation in field stimulated bovine mesenteric artery and its modulation by various factors was studied. Electrical field stimulation of precontracted (Phe 2.5 microM or histamine 5 microM) bovine mesenteric arteries resulted in relaxations varying between 10-70% in different preparations. Tetrodotoxin (3 microM) completely blocked the inhibitory NANC response. Preincubation with high concentrations (100 microM-1 mM) of NG-nitro-L-arginine for 15 min. significantly reduced the relaxation induced by electrical field stimulation. Blockade of cyclooxygenases and prostaglandin synthesis by indomethacin had no effect on the relaxatory response to electrical field stimulation. Neither the alpha 2-adrenoceptor selective antagonist yohimbine (1 microM) nor the alpha 2-adrenoceptor selective agonist UK 14,304 (1 microM) had any significant effect on the electrical field stimulation-induced relaxation. Pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml) was without effect on relaxations elicited by electrical field stimulation. GTP in the concentration range 10 microM-1 mM slightly potentiated the relaxant response. N-carboxymethyl-Phe-Leu (an inhibitor of enkephalinase) or aprotinin (an inhibitor of several proteases) had no significant effect on the electrical field stimulation response. Addition of trypsin (100 U/ml) in combination with chymotrypsin (20 U/ml) significantly reduced the electrical field stimulation-induced relaxation. In the present study we have found indications for the involvement of nitric oxide and possibly also peptides in mediating the inhibitory NANC response (relaxation) in bovine mesenteric arteries.
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PMID:Involvement of nitric oxide and peptides in the inhibitory non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) response in bovine mesenteric artery. 810 66

The molecular basis for direct bacteria-macrophage interactions that distinguishes nontypeable (NT) Haemophilus influenzae from type b organisms is not known. Because of similarities between filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA) adhesin of Bordetella pertussis and high-molecular-weight (HMW) proteins commonly expressed by NT H. influenzae, the role that HMW proteins play in determining NT H. influenzae-macrophage interactions was assessed. In tests with genetically engineered organisms, HMW protein-expressing bacteria bound significantly better than isogenic HMW protein-deficient bacteria to macrophages. HMW protein-dependent binding to macrophages is trypsin-sensitive, is independent of divalent cations, does not occur via the leukocyte integrin CD11b/CD18, and is not affected by galactose-containing carbohydrates. Organisms bound via HMW proteins remain largely extracellular and viable. Like FHA of Bordetella organisms, HMW proteins mediate binding of NT H. influenzae to macrophages. However, unlike the interaction determined by FHA, this interaction is characteristically one of adhesion and requires additional serum opsonization for efficient killing of bacteria by macrophages.
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PMID:High-molecular-weight surface-exposed proteins of Haemophilus influenzae mediate binding to macrophages. 810 76

cDNAs coding for three types of alpha-subunits of GTP-binding proteins Gs and G0 (a short form of alpha s with Asp-Ser in positions 71 and 72, a long form of alpha s with the insertion of 16 amino acid residues instead of Asp-Ser (71-72)--both from bovine brain, and alpha 0 from bovine cerebellum as well as some chimeric alpha s/alpha 0 genes were cloned into a modified pGEM-2 plasmid vector under the control of the SP6 promoter. All the genes were in vitro transcribed and translated, and some functional properties of the resulting proteins were determined, such as adenylyl cyclase activation, ADP-ribosylation with pertussis toxin, limited nucleotide-dependent trypsin proteolysis. Parts of the alpha s polypeptide chain necessary for the activation of adenylyl cyclase were mapped. The alpha s domain interacting with adenylyl cyclase is formed by the alpha s polypeptide chain fragments 235-294 and 337-356 (numbering as of the alpha s long form).
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PMID:[Localization of segments in the Gs protein interacting with adenylate cyclase using a Gs/G0-chimera]. 811 36

The catalytic domain of Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase, a calmodulin-activated enzyme with toxic properties, is a modular construct cleaved by trypsin into two subdomains of 224 (T25) and 175 (T18) amino acids. The calmodulin-binding locus of the bacterial enzyme consists of approximately 70 amino acids and overlaps the C-terminus of T25 and the N-terminus of T18. This region, exposed to the solvent or proteases, also exhibits an unusual high flexibility and allows, as demonstrated in this study, reconstitution in the presence of calmodulin of active species of adenylate cyclase from overlapping inactive fragments of the enzyme. Moreover, several combinations of inactive variants of the bacterial enzyme obtained by site-directed mutagenesis can yield active species. Heterodimers, resulting from a few selected combinations of inactive species of adenylate cyclase, exhibit specific activity similar to that of the native enzyme. Productive complementation from inactive fragments is a unique phenomenon among calmodulin-activated enzymes and represents a new and helpful tool in the understanding of the molecular mechanism of activation of B. pertussis adenylate cyclase upon binding of calmodulin.
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PMID:Structural flexibility of the calmodulin-binding locus in Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase. Reconstitution of catalytically active species from fragments or inactive forms of the enzyme. 822 1

Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is a potent and efficacious mitogen for growth-arrested cultured human aortic smooth muscle cells, stimulating an increase in cell number at 0.3-30 nM concentration. Double-chain t-PA is as efficient as single-chain t-PA in stimulating smooth muscle cell mitogenesis, whereas single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) or u-PA and plasmin or plasminogen are ineffective. Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, Pefabloc-TPA, diisopropyl fluorophosphate or alpha 1-anti-trypsin inhibit the mitogenic effect of t-PA for smooth muscle cells in a dose-dependent manner, showing that it is dependent on the enzymatic activity. t-PA activated phosphoinositide turnover in smooth muscle cells through a pertussis toxin-insensitive pathway and stimulated proto-oncogene c-fos and c-jun mRNA levels. These findings indicate that t-PA stimulates vascular human smooth muscle cell proliferation and suggest for the first time that it may contribute to intimal smooth muscle cell proliferation after vascular injury as a result of angioplasty or vascular compromise during atherogenesis.
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PMID:Tissue-type plasminogen activator is a potent mitogen for human aortic smooth muscle cells. 830 Jun 42


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