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)

Cell motility has been associated with metastatic ability in the Dunning R3327 rat prostatic adenocarcinoma model. Cancer cell motility promoters but not inhibitors have been described by many investigators. Serum-containing and serum-free media conditioned by the nonmotile, nonmetastatic G Dunning subline inhibited the motility of the highly motile, highly metastatic MAT-LyLu subline. Motility inhibition by the G subline-conditioned serum-free media was lost upon heating to 100 degrees C and by treatment with trypsin. The motility inhibitory protein(s) had a molecular weight exceeding 50,000 as determined by diafiltration. G subline-conditioned RPMI 1640 contained several proteins with molecular weights of between approximately 53,000 and 116,000 when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. One of these bands may represent the first inhibitor of cancer cell motility identified.
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PMID:Cancer cell motility-inhibitory protein in the Dunning adenocarcinoma model. 155 38

Normal Copenhagen rat bone marrow was assayed for growth inhibition of cultured MAT LyLu rat prostate tumor cells. A marrow-derived factor was identified that had significant growth inhibitory activity in vitro against MAT LyLu as well as against DU-145 human prostate tumor and MBT-2 mouse bladder tumor cells but that was noninhibitory to normal rat fibroblasts. The factor was stable to degradation by acid, heat, freezing, trypsin, and carboxypeptidase B. The factor was nonreactive with Coomassie blue, and the molecular weight was estimated as less than 620 daltons. A similar factor was identified in normal human and normal rat sera. The presence of this factor in bone marrow may explain the absence of osseous metastases in the Dunning rat prostate tumor model.
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PMID:In vitro growth inhibition of Dunning rat prostate tumor by bone marrow factor. 356 48

MAT-B1 and MAT-C1 ascites sublines of the 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma both contain sialomucin as a major cell surface component and are resistant to cytolysis by normal rat spleen lymphocytes [3 +/- 2% (SD) and 0 +/- 1%, respectively]. Susceptibility to lysis did not increase following treatment of cells with neuraminidase, fucosidase, or alpha- or beta-galactosidase. Treatment with trypsin significantly increased the susceptibility of MAT-B1 (14 +/- 3%) but not MAT-C1 (5 +/- 2%). Following 1 month in culture, the sialomucin content of MAT-B1 cells dropped from 30% to 8% (determined by glucosamine labeling) and natural cell-mediated cytolysis increased to 16 +/- 4%, whereas the sialomucin content and susceptibility of MAT-C1 cells did not change. The results indicate that the relatively minor changes associated with removal of cell surface sialic acid or fucose residues do not result in increased susceptibility of the ascites cells to cytolysis. However, susceptibility of MAT-B1 cells to lysis by normal rat spleen lymphocytes was inversely correlated with the amount of major glycoprotein (r = -0.96).
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PMID:Cell surface sialomucin and resistance to natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity of rat mammary tumor ascites cells. 373 Nov 8

The complete nucleotide sequence of the extracellular glucoamylase gene STA1 from the yeast Saccharomyces diastaticus has been determined. A single open reading frame codes for a 778-amino-acid protein which contains 13 potential N-glycosylation sites. In the 5'- and 3'-flanking regions of the gene, there are striking sequence homologies to the corresponding regions of ADH1 for alcohol dehydrogenase and MAT alpha 2 for mating type control in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The putative precursor begins with a hydrophobic segment that presumably acts as a signal sequence for secretion. The presumptive signal sequence showed a significant homology to that of Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase precursor. The next segment, of ca. 320 amino acids, contains a threonine-rich tract in which direct repeat sequences of 35 amino acids exist, and is bordered by a pair of basic amino acid residues (Lys-Lys) which may be a proteolytic processing signal. The carboxy-terminal half of the precursor is a presumptive glucoamylase which contains several peptide segments showing a high degree of homology with alpha-amylases from widely diverse organisms including a procaryote (B. subtilis) and eucaryotes (Aspergillus oryzae and mouse). Analysis of both the nucleotide sequence of the STA1 gene and the amino acid composition of the purified glucoamylase suggested that the putative precursor is processed to yield subunits H and Y of mature enzyme by both trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like cleavages.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence of the extracellular glucoamylase gene STA1 in the yeast Saccharomyces diastaticus. 391 17

Membranes from erythrocytes or MAT-A 13762 tumor cells were labeled with the fatty acid spin probe I(5,10) or ANS and examined by spin resonance (ESR) or fluorescence polarization in the presence or absence of the perturbants EDTA, trypsin, glutaraldehyde, and dodecylsulfate. Extraction of cell membranes with hypotonic EDTA produced fragments in which the order parameters and fluorescence polarization values increased. Fluorescence polarization values using membranes labeled with diphenylhexatriene showed an apparent increase in membrane fluidity. A large portion of both I(5,10) and both fluorescence probes coextract with the peripheral membrane proteins in both membrane systems. Paramagnetic quenching of tryptophan fluorescence with I(5,10) and the spectral characteristics of ANS in these membranes indicated further that significant amounts of both probes bind either at or near the protein-lipid interface or directly to protein moieties. Trypsinization of cell membranes, which preferentially cleaves the large cytoskeletal proteins, fragmented the membranes and reduced the ESR order parameter. Glutaraldehyde immobilized I(5,10) in both types of membranes. These studies suggest that the association of cytoskeletal proteins with the membrane does not have any pronounced, consistent effect on biophysical properties of the bilayer. Attempts to apply these same probes to studies of the plasma membranes of intact cells were not successful because of the diffusion of the probes into the cells. These studies also point out some difficulties in using probe-group techniques to determine the nature of changes in bilayer structural parameters and emphasize the need for a better understanding of probe-group localization and behavior in such studies.
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PMID:Electron spin resonance and fluorescence observations on erythrocytes, erythrocyte membranes, 13762 MAT-A ascites adenocarcinoma cells, and their membranes, effects of membrane perturbations. 624 7

The spontaneous capillary tube migration of metastatic MAT 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma cells has been measured and compared with that of a non-metastatic variant, TGR. MAT 13762 cells migrated to a greater extent in the presence than in the absence of serum, and in both cases migration areas were considerably greater than for TGR cells. Different clones of hybrids, formed by fusing metastatic and non-metastatic variants, showed migration areas ranging from those of the metastatic to those of the non-metastatic parent cells. Despite their differing migrations, all of these clones were either non or only slightly metastatic. Treatment of TGR cells with trypsin enhanced their migration to that of MAT 13762 cells, whereas trypsin-treated MAT 13762 cells showed a slightly decreased migration. Although MAT 13762 cells, unlike TGR cells, produced large amounts of plasminogen activator (PA), no evidence was obtained for the direct involvement of PA in the high migration rate of MAT 13762 cells.
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PMID:Spontaneous capillary tube migration of metastatic rat mammary adenocarcinoma cells. 653 58

The MAT-C1 subline of the 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma has highly stable, branched microvilli and immobile cell surface receptors. A membrane- and microfilament-associated 58-kDa protein (p58) in the MAT-C1 microvilli has been implicated in the stabilization of the microvilli and microfilament-membrane interactions. This protein is associated with a high M(r) glycoprotein complex containing the (proto)oncogene p185neu and other signal transduction components in a putative microfilament-associated signal transduction particle. Amino acid sequences were obtained from two trypsin peptides of p58. Screening a MAT-C1 cDNA library with a degenerate oligonucleotide derived from the larger peptide and polymerase chain reaction amplification of cDNA ends permitted the isolation of overlapping cDNAs encoding the 427-amino acid open reading frame of p58. In vitro transcription and translation using a full-length cDNA gave a protein of approximately 55 kDa, which reacts with anti-p58 antiserum and reconstitutes into a complex with actin and glycoproteins from the membrane-microfilament interaction site. When COS-7 cells were transfected with the full-length cDNA, p58 was localized in a punctate distribution. In addition, the transfected cells exhibited fewer microfilament cables than untransfected neighboring cells. The amino acid sequence showed a surprising similarity to mammalian retroviral Gag proteins and included regions corresponding to p15, p12 and the N-terminal 80% of p30. Comparisons of p58 and the corresponding regions of the Gag proteins for Moloney murine leukemia virus indicated that about 60% of their amino acid residues were identical. These studies suggest that p58 is the product of an endogenous retroviral gene whose expression as a cellular protein alters the properties of the tumor cell to provide a selective advantage for tumor growth in the animal.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and sequencing of a 58-kDa membrane- and microfilament-associated protein from ascites tumor cell microvilli with sequence similarities to retroviral Gag proteins. 819 43

In cattle, antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii infection are frequently detected, but evidence for the presence of T. gondii tissue cysts in cattle is limited. To study the concordance between the presence of anti-T. gondii IgG and viable tissue cysts of T. gondii in cattle, serum, liver and diaphragm samples of 167 veal calves and 235 adult cattle were collected in Italy, the Netherlands, Romania and the United Kingdom. Serum samples were tested for anti-T. gondii IgG by the modified agglutination test and p30 immunoblot. Samples from liver were analyzed by mouse bioassay and PCR after trypsin digestion. In addition, all diaphragms of cattle that had tested T. gondii-positive (either in bioassay, by PCR on trypsin-digested liver or serologically by MAT) and a selection of diaphragms from cattle that had tested negative were analyzed by magnetic capture quantitative PCR (MC-PCR). Overall, 13 animals were considered positive by a direct detection method: seven out of 151 (4.6%) by MC-PCR and six out of 385 (1.6%) by bioassay, indicating the presence of viable parasites. As cattle that tested positive in the bioassay tested negative by MC-PCR and vice-versa, these results demonstrate a lack of concordance between the presence of viable parasites in liver and the detection of T. gondii DNA in diaphragm. In addition, the probability to detect T. gondii parasites or DNA in seropositive and seronegative cattle was comparable, demonstrating that serological testing by MAT or p30 immunoblot does not provide information about the presence of T. gondii parasites or DNA in cattle and therefore is not a reliable indicator of the risk for consumers.
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PMID:The relationship between the presence of antibodies and direct detection of Toxoplasma gondii in slaughtered calves and cattle in four European countries. 3110 97