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)
The presence of liver IgG Fc receptor sites was demonstrated in the liver tissue from 23 patients with liver diseases and 2 patients without liver lesions by the localization of soluble immune complexes of peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP). Cryostat sections of liver tissues were incubated with the complexes and the peroxidase activity was revealed histochemically. In the normal liver tissue, PAP were localized on the liver cell membrane, the Kupffer cells, and some of the sinusoidal walls. In acute hepatitis, a strongly positive reaction on swollen Kupffer cells was remarkable but positive reaction on the liver cell membrane was very weak. In chronic aggressive hepatitis, PAP were strongly positive on multiplied Kupffer cells and many PAP-positive infiltrated cells were observed at the area of piecemeal necrosis. However, the positive reaction on the liver cell membrane in patients with chronic aggressive hepatitis was generally fainter than in the normal cases without liver diseases. These results correlated well with the severity of liver cell necrosis. In
chronic persistent hepatitis
, the number of PAP-positive infiltrated cells in the portal area and positive Kupffer cells were fewer than in chronic aggressive hepatitis. Similar results were obtained with liver cirrhosis, and in particular, the liver cell membrane with regenerative nodules gave a positive reaction. A negative result was obtained by incubation with PAP-F(ab')2 alone. PAP reaction was significantly inhibited by pretreatment with aggregated human IgG,
trypsin
, and pronase but not with neuraminidase.
...
PMID:Detection of liver IgG Fc receptors using soluble immune complexes of peroxidase-antiperoxidase. I. Detection in liver tissue from patients with liver diseases. 701 47
Sinusoidal "inclusion-containing endothelial cells" were studied histopathologically and immunohistochemically in various liver diseases, and their clinical importance was investigated. A total of 498 needle liver biopsies were examined. Endothelial inclusions inside the cells were recognized as eosinophilic granules in hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections. Electron microscopy showed that these inclusions corresponded to round cytoplasmic dense bodies with a single limiting membrane. The contents of these bodies were generally homogeneous, but sometimes heterogeneous. The inclusions appeared to contain protein, but were resistant to
trypsin
digestion, and immunohistochemistry failed to identify any immunoglobulins or hepatocyte-derived proteins. These endothelial cells also contained an increased number of micropinocytotic vesicles when compared with ordinary cells. The inclusion-containing endothelial cells appeared frequently in chronic hepatitis, but were relatively rare in other liver diseases. The incidence was higher in chronic aggressive hepatitis than in
chronic persistent hepatitis
or inactive cirrhosis. Although the density of these cells varied considerably even among patients with the same histological diagnosis and the phenotypical changes of these endothelial cells, assessed by monoclonal antibodies, were not apparent, the serum gamma globulin level tended to increase in relation to the density of inclusion-containing endothelial cells and the correlation was significant in hepatitis C.
...
PMID:Appearance of sinusoidal inclusion-containing endothelial cells in liver disease. 752 15
Exocrinous performance of the pancreatic gland under secretin-pancreozymin stimulation was studied in 76 patients with chronic diffuse diseases of the liver who were distinguished into 6 groups: those who suffered from
chronic persistent hepatitis
of viral and alcohol origin, chronic active hepatitis of viral origin, cirrhosis of the liver of viral and alcohol origin, primary biliary hepatocirrhosis. The results obtained were correlated with those from 11 normal persons (controls). Out of 76 examinees the disorders of exocrinous performance of the pancreatic gland were revealed in 75 persons. The most characteristic features were: a decrease in the basal and an increase in the stimulated volume of the pancreatic juice; a reduction of both basal and stimulated production of bicarbonates; a decrease in the
trypsin
and amylase fasting levels and their increment in the stimulated juice of the pancreatic gland. Disorder in the production of bicarbonates was stated as a most characteristic feature in the patients both with viral and alcohol origin of the disease but it was mostly manifest in the patients with hepatocirrhosis. Pronounced elevation of the activity of amylase and
trypsin
in the pancreatic juice was observed in patients with very high activity of disease development and in the patients who continuously used large amounts of alcohol. The authors suspected that alcohol abuse and the effect of hepatitis virus had an equal pathogenic impact on the liver and pancreatic gland.
...
PMID:[Exocrine function of the pancreas in patients with chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis of various etiologies]. 814 1