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)

Two infants are described with a fulminant disorder characterised by profound circulatory collaps and shock, generalised convulsions and unremitting coma, bleeding due to severe DIC, fever, diarrhoea, metabolic acidosis and renal and hepatic failure. Both infants died shortly after onset of the symptoms. Autopsy mainly revealed haemorrhages in different organs, anoxaemic lesions in the brain and a normal structure of liver and pancreas. No causative agent could be demonstrated. We believe that both patients suffered from haemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy, a mostly fatal disorder which has recently been described. Although the clinical and biochemical features are very distinctive, this syndrome is probably heterogeneous and its differentiation from some other disorders may be difficult. Its pathogenesis is unknown but there are some indications that intravascular activity of trypsin may play a role. During a study of the two families we obtained abnormal results of immunologic tests in most members: the interpretation of this finding remains conjectural. Haemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy may occur more frequently than the restricted literature on this subject suggests. Future studies will have to deal with the question of identity and pathogenesis.
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PMID:Haemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy. 373 33

The ability of cell extracts and culture filtrates of various strains of C. perfringens to produce ileal loop fluid accumulation and overt diarrhea in rabbits was tested. Good correlation was obtained in the ability of whole cells and a toxic factor (present in cell extracts and concentrated culture filtrates) to produce both fluid accumulation in ileal loops and diarrhea when injected into the normal ileum of the rabbit. The toxic factor was present in cell-free preparations when cells were grown in a sporulation medium, but not when they were grown in an asporogenic medium. The factor was shown to be heat labile, nondialyzable, and was inactivated by Pronase but not by trypsin, lipase, or amylase. Loss of activity occurred at pH 1.0, 3.0, 5.0, and 12.0.
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PMID:Ileal loop fluid accumulation and production of diarrhea in rabbits by cell-free products of Clostridium perfringens. 431 83

Microneutralization tests for detection of antibody in bovine serum to three bovine viruses are described. The Madin-Darby bovine kidney cell line was used with parainfluenza 3 virus (PI 3), whereas serially cultivated bovine embryonic kidney cells were used for infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus and bovine virus diarrhea virus. Comparison of micro-hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) with micro-serum-neutralization (SN) tests for PI 3 showed the SN test to be more sensitive, more specific, and therefore more useful than the HI test for detecting antibody. Although the effect of trypsin-periodate treatment of serum was to reduce the HI titer of numerous sera by a twofold dilution, sufficient evidence could not be found to indicate that nonspecific HI inhibitors to PI 3 are present in bovine sera.
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PMID:Microtiter tests for detecting antibody in bovine serum to parainfluenza 3 virus, infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus, and bovine virus diarrhea virus. 432 32

In the past year, ten infants have been admitted to hospital with a new or previously unrecognised disorder, characterised by an acute onset of encephalopathy, fever, shock, watery diarrhoea, severe disseminated intravascular coagulation, and renal and hepatic dysfunction. Seven of the infants died. No specific causative agent has been identified, but preliminary studies suggest that the pathophysiology of the disease may involve release of proteolytic enzymes (such as trypsin) into the circulation, with destruction of the microcirculation.
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PMID:Haemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy: a new syndrome with a high mortality in young children. 613 58

Cytopathic porcine rotavirus was isolated in roller tube cultures of MA-104 cells. Faeces of a piglet suffering from diarrhoea, were treated with trypsin which was also added to the maintenance medium. Using stationary cultures, virus was not isolated from the same materials. The cytopathic effect was clearly observed after 8 serial passages and the virus titer at the 14th passage level was 10(7) median tissue culture infective doses per ml, or higher. At the 27th passage, rotavirus particles were seen by negative contrast electron microscopy at a density of 1.36 to 1.38 g/cm3 in CsCl centrifugation gradients. There are partial cross-neutralization between the Lincoln strain of bovine rotavirus and porcine rotavirus from pigs or tissue cultures. Gnotobiotic piglets were inoculated with pig-passaged virus and viral antigen was detected in epithelial cells of small intestinal villi by immunofluorescence. The highest titer of virus was detected in faeces 72 hours after inoculation. The cell culture adapted virus which produce a cytopathic effect was designated the strain S 80 of porcine rotavirus.
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PMID:Isolation of cytopathic porcine rotavirus in cell roller culture in the presence of trypsin. 627 Oct 98

Expressed breast milks (EBMs) were collected from mothers of rotavirus (RV)-excreting babies and from mothers whose babies were RV free during an outbreak of asymptomatic RV infection in a newborn nursery to determine the role of lacteal anti-RV neutralising activity, alpha1-anti-trypsin activity, and nonimmunoglobulin antiviral factor in protection of neonates from RV infection, and although all of the above factors were present in the majority of the EBMs, no correlation could be found between their presence in EBM and protection from RV infection. A significant rise in both neutralising activity and subgroup 2 antibodies, was demonstrated in the EBM of one mother who experienced a subgroup 2 RV-associated diarrhoea during lactation. However, the alpha1-anti-trypsin activity and the nonimmunoglobulin antiviral levels remained the same. The importance of these factors in passive immunity with reference to virus dose is discussed.
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PMID:Neonatal rotavirus infection: role of lacteal neutralising alpha1-anti-trypsin and nonimmunoglobulin antiviral activity in protection. 629 Jun 1

Nine cytopathic bovine rotavirus strains were isolated in MA-104 cell cultures from fecal specimens of dairy calves suffering from diarrhea. Isolation of the virus was accomplished from three outbreaks which occurred on dairy farms located in Central and Southern Italy. Fecal suspensions were treated with a high concentration (1000 micrograms/ml) of trypsin, and inoculated into MA-104 cell cultures grown out in Eagle's minimum essential medium (MEM) containing 5 micrograms/ml of the enzyme. Cytopathic effects (CPE), characterized by intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies of different sizes and shapes, were observed on the 1st passage with five of the strains and on the 2nd (2 strains) or the 3rd (2 strains) passage for the others. The presence of trypsin and the use of MA-104 cells appeared to be essential for the occurrence of CPE, inasmuch as no CPE was detected when trypsin was omitted in the MA-104 cell system. Replication failed to occur when primary bovine embryo kidney cell cultures with or without trypsin were used. Electron microscopy revealed the presence of particles with a typical rotavirus morphology. In MA-104 cells, the titre of virus reached its maximum 48 hr after inoculation. Small, clear-cut plaques were produced by the isolates in MA-104 cells under the overlay of MEM containing carboxymethyl cellulose, trypsin and DEAE-dextran. The nine rotavirus strains were antigenically related, whereas the relationship to either the Nebraska or the Compton rotaviruses was quite weak.
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PMID:A study of cytopathic rotavirus strains isolated from calves with acute enteritis. 631 89

From 105 field cases of diarrhea in neonatal or young foals, rotavirus was detected by electron microscopy (EM) and/or by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the feces of 65 foals on 16 different premises. ELISA was performed with Rotazyme test kits developed by Abbot and Company for the detection of rotaviruses. Twenty-four field isolates from the feces of diarrheic foals with equine rotavirus infection as ascertained by EM were placed in MA-104 cell cultures after pretreatment of the viral suspension with 10 micrograms ml-1 of trypsin and incorporation of 0.5 micrograms ml-1 or 1 microgram ml-1 of trypsin in Earle's minimal essential medium (MEM), 2% lactalbumen hydrolysate, and antibiotics. The isolates that replicated in cell culture produced varying degrees of cytopathic effect. After the 24 isolates had been transferred 5 or 7 times in cell culture, viral particles were observed in 17 by EM, and 22 had positive ELISA tests as determined by visual color chart and spectrophotometric readings. Concentrated tissue-cultured viral antigen of 9 isolates fixed complement using Nebraska calf diarrhea rotavirus calf antiserum while four isolates gave negative results. The same 13 tissue-cultured viral suspensions failed to fix complement using reovirus antiserum. The 9th passages of two isolates (EID1 and EID2) yielded titers of 10(4.45) ml-1 TCID50 and of 10(4.95) ml-1 TCID50, respectively, as measured by cytopathic effect. After 13 tissue-cultured passages, 2 other isolates, EID3 and EID4, each had titers of 10(6.2) ml-1 TCID50 and of 10(5.95) ml-1 TCID, respectively. Cytoplasmic or intranuclear inclusions were not seen in any cells of the MA-104 infected cell cultures. Small, but distinct, plaques in MA-104 cell cultures were produced by the EID1 isolate. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis tests of EID1 and EID2 isolates at the 9th cell passage and EID3 and EID4 isolates at the 13th cell passage each showed that the RNA genome had 11 segments with a migrating pattern that was identical for each isolate and characteristic of rotaviruses. These 4 equine tissue-cultured isolates when tested by ELISA, utilizing a monoclonal antibody serum pool that cross-reacted with many rotavirus isolates, each gave positive values comparable to rotavirus antigen controls.
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PMID:The isolation, propagation and characterization of tissue-cultured equine rotaviruses. 632 75

We report a 13-mo-old patient with isolated congenital enterokinase deficiency and review the clinical features, diagnostic approach, and management of all 8 reported patients. Our patient presented with failure to thrive, diarrhea, and hypoproteinemia since birth. A normal sweat chloride with small intestinal histology, and nondetectable trypsin activity in the duodenal fluid should alert the physician to the possibility of isolated enterokinase deficiency. All reported patients, including our own, responded favorably to pancreatic enzyme replacement. In vitro studies of the small intestinal mucosal biopsy specimen suggest that enterokinase deficiency at least in part is due to altered enzymes with low enterokinase activity.
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PMID:Isolated congenital enterokinase deficiency. Recent findings and review of the literature. 634 1

Immunoreactive trypsin (IRT) and pancreatic lipase were measured in serum from 37 geriatric in-patients (median age 77.5 years) without history of diarrhoea, pancreatic disease, diabetes or acute or chronic alcoholic intake. IRT and pancreatic lipase concentrations/activity were strongly correlated and were markedly elevated when compared with a control population of 22 subjects (median age 27 years). Such elevations in pancreatic enzymes indicate a subclinical damage of exocrine pancreatic tissue. Assessment of exocrine pancreatic function in the geriatric age group should not be based on pancreatic enzyme levels in serum.
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PMID:Serum pancreatic enzymes in the elderly. 671 39


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