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

Preincubation of membranes with various concentrations of pronase, trypsin, lipase, phospholipase A from Vipera russelli and from Crotalus durissus terrificus, phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus and from Clostridium welchii, acetic anhydride, 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene and tetranitromethane resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of 125I-labeled human choriogonadotropin binding. At the submaximal concentrations of enzymes and at both submaximal and maximal concentrations of protein-modifying reagents, the losses were always greater with 125I-labeled human choriogonadotropin than with 125I-labeled human lutropin. The inhibition of binding was a consequence of changes in the membranes rather than changes in the hormone caused by the agents being carried over to the final incubation. Inhibition of binding was non-competitive and irreversible. In untreated membranes, the 125I-labeled human choriogonadotropin binding was homogeneous (Kd = 1.7.10(-10) M; N = 60 fmol/mg protein). Treatment of membranes with various enzymes and protein-modifying reagents except tetranitromethane resulted in heterogeneous binding. The number of available high affinity receptors was greatly reduced in every case. However, the affinity of these sites were either unchanged (trypsin, lipase, phospholipase A from V. russelli, dinitrofluorobenzene and the tetranitromethane) or decreased (pronase and acetic anhydride). The newly appeared second receptor site had a Kd which varied from 3.2.10(-10) to 7.1.10(-9) M depending on the agent used, and the receptor numbers were low in all cases except acetic anhydride. Receptor occupancy conferred the receptors with marked protection against various hydrolytic enzymes, dinitrofluorobenzene and tetranitromethane. These data suggest that inhibition of binding by the above agents was primarily a consequence of changes in the receptor molecules themselves.
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PMID:Effect of hydrolytic enzymes and protein-modifying reagents on gonadotropin receptors in bovine corpus luteum cell membranes. 20 34

In vitro studies revealed that the hatching of oncospheres of Moniezia expansa requires the mechanical breakage of the eggshell and subshell membrane and enzymic digestion of the pyriform apparatus. Removal of the outer two egg membranes elicits the activation of most oncospheres. Between pH 5.0-7.8, there is no significant difference in numbers of oncospheres activated by eggshell removal and the addition of sodium bicarbonate has no effect. Solutions of more extreme pH values (2.0 and 10.0) are harmful and render oncospheres immobile. The subshell membrane forms a barrier to the passage of water in an osmotic gradient and to several molecular and ionic substances. Between the eggshell and subshell membrane is a layer of droplets which have a strong affinity for Sudan stains and which are partially removed by lipase. The eggshell is resistant to a variety of proteolytic enzymes, amylases and lipase. The pyriform apparatus is digested by chymotrypsin and pepsin, though not by trypsin. Both eggshell and pyriform apparatus are dissolved by solutions of sodium sulphide and sodium hypochlorite, indicating that their structures are stabilized by disulphide bonds and other covalent linkages.
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PMID:In vitro hatching of the tapeworm Moniezia expansa (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) and some properties of the egg membranes. 23 60

The effects of storage pH and temperature on pancreatic amylase, lipase and trypsin in duodenal fluid were studied. All the enzymes were most stable when stored at --20 degrees C, while the optimum storage pH was found to depend on the particular enzyme under investigation.
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PMID:Studies on the stability of pancreatic enzymes in duodenal fluid to storage temperature and pH. 24 18

An experimental xenogeneic immune pancreatitis was induced in AB-mice by repeated intraperitoneal injections of rabbit immune sera directed against purified pancreatic enzymes (alpha-amylase, lipase, trypsin) for 3 hours up to 8 days. Histologically, the immune pancreatitis is characterized by three different findings: 1. Multiple acinar cell necroses on the 2nd, 3rd and 5th day of immune serum application. 2. A dedifferentiating acinar cell atrophy with development of pseudocanalicular acini on the 5th and 9th day. 3. An increasing interstitial histiolymphoplasmocytic pancreatitis on the 5th and 9th experimental day. Ultrastructurally, the acinar cell necroses proved as the final stage of a step-by-step developing acute lethal cell damage. The dedifferentiating acinar cell atrophy corresponds to a chronic sublethal cell injury with alteration of different cytoplasmic components. The interstitial pancreatitis in immune serum treatment is characterized by differently activated histiocytes and lymphocytes as well as by mature plasma cells. Because of immune histological findings (peri- and intraacinar deposition of rabbit globulin, specific fixation of guinea-pig complement, and appearance of mouse globulin in the mouse exocrine pancreas) and control experiments with rabbit and mouse normal serum as well as with physiological saline, the pathogenesis of the induced xenogeneic immune pancreatitis is regarded as a twophase process: 1. The acinar cell necroses are mainly due to a cytotoxic immune reaction (possibly in combination with an immune complex reaction) caused by specific anti-pancreatic enzyme antibodies of the applied immune sera. The dedifferentiating acinar cell atrophy may be the result of a specific action of the anti-enzyme antibodies against the corresponding pancreatic enzymes in the apical secretion granules of the pancreatic acinar cells. 2. The interstitial histiolymphoplasmocytic pancreatitis is mainly the morphologic substrate of an extravascularly (intraperitoneally) induced serum sickness reaction (immune complex reaction) due to the foreign proteins applied with the xenogeneic immune sera.
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PMID:Experimental immune pancreatitis in the mouse by rabbit immune sera directed against purified enzymes of the exocrine pancreas. 30 66

In order to characterize the response of the pancreas to undernutrition during the critical neonatal growth phase, acquired postnatal malnutrition was induced in the rat, using the expanded litter. An experimental nursing litter of 16 rats and control litters of 7 to 8 rats were formed. At 19 days of age, the pups were killed. Mean pancreatic wet weight was decreased in the malnourished rat to a greater extent than the decrease in total body weight (49 versus 60%). Decreased organ weight was predominantly the result of a decrease in DNA content and cell number. Enzyme activities expressed per total organ were all diminished; lipase to the greatest extent; trypsin and amylase to an intermediate extent; followed by chymotrypsin and the carboxypeptidases. The specific activities of lipase and trypsin were decreased with lipase, the most severely effected. The low trypsin levels can be attributed to trypsin inhibitor. It is possible therefore, that only the specific activity of lipase is significantly decreased. The decrease in enzyme activities, expressed both as specific activities and as total organ activities were decreased in a nonparallel fashion.
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PMID:Effect of postnatal malnutrition on pancreatic zymogen enzymes in the rat. 31 98

Complamine (xanthinol-nicotinate) injected intravenously in a dose of 300 mg caused in patients with diabetes mellitus a significant, although short-lived improvement of the indices of intrahepatic circulation (by the rheohepatographic criteria). By itself complamine failed to influence the pancreatic secretion of amylase, lipase, and trypsin, but regularly intensified the stimulating action of pancreosimine on the pancreatic secretion of the enzymes in the patients with diabetes. In addition to the known influence of complamine on the circulation in the lower limbs of the patients with diabetes mellitus, information presented in the given work widened the circle of indications to the therapeutic use of complamine in patients with diabetes mellitus with disturbances of intrahepatic hemodynamics and the enzyme-secretory insufficiency of the pancreas. Complamine should be administered after meals at the period of the greatest release of the endogenous pancreosimine, for the intensification of the pancreatic enzymes secretion.
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PMID:[Effect of Complamin on the intrahepatic blood flow and pancreatic secretion of enzymes in diabetes mellitus]. 34 35

The single polypeptide chain of about 460 amino acids of porcine pancreatic lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) has been fragmented into five peptides by cyanogen bromide cleavage [Rovery, M., Bianchetta, J. & Guidoni, A. (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 328, 391--395]. The sequence of the first three cyanogen bromide peptides (CNI, CNII, CNIII), including a total of 234 amino acids, was fully elucidated. Automatic or manual Edman degradation was performed on the different peptides. Fragmentations of the CN peptides were accomplished by digestions with trypsin (after citraconylation or 1,2-cyclohexanedione treatment), chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus external protease. Hydrolysis of unreduced material by pepsin and thermolysin, performed in order to determine the S-S bridge positions, provided useful overlapping peptides. The glycan moiety of lipase is bound to Asn-166. The non-essential tyrosine specifically blocked by diisopropylphosphorofluoridate is Tyr-49 in a cluster of asparagine and glutamine residues. The existence of a highly hydrophobic sequence (206--217) at the C terminus of the CNII fragment is noteworthy.
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PMID:Porcine pancreatic lipase. Sequence of the first 234 amino acids of the peptide chain. 38 Sep 92

Precise relationships between pancreatic ductal obstruction and pancreatic secretory capacity have not been established. In this study, we describe the quantitative relationships between the lengths of opacified ducts obtained at retrograde pancreatography and the secretory capcity of the gland for volume, bicarbonate, lipase, and trypsin. Forty-five patients (17 with pancreatic cancer, 6 pancreatitis, 5 other malignancies, and 17 nonmalignant, nonpancreatic disease found at laparotomy) were studied with a method of duodenal intubation and perfusion with basal saline perfusion alone or with continuous intravenous infusion of secretin or of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin. Secretory outputs of volume, bicarbonate, and enzymes compared with the length of opacified ducts showed a significant (P less than 0.05) linear relationship for patients with pancreatic cancer, pancreatitis, and other cancers. The resulting data imply that obstruction of the pancreatic duct is important in decreasing secretion of the pancreas in pancreatic disease. The relationship between obstruction and pancreatic secretion demonstrates that a decrease in exocrine pancreatic secretion cannot be detected until more than 60% of the total length of the main pancreatic duct has been obstructed.
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PMID:The relationships between pancreatic ductal obstruction and pancreatic secretion in man. 43 Nov 21

Agarose gel electrophoresis (at pH 8.6) was used for qualitative determination of pancreatic enzymes in duodenal juice. The various enzymes were identified by staining techniques with specific chromogenic substrates, by quantitative determination of enzymes in eluates of gel slices, and by immunoelectrophoresis. The various protein bands corresponded to the following enzymes (from the anode to the cathode): chymotrypsin, trypsin, carboxypeptidase A, chymotrypsin, amylase (around the slit), lipase, elastase, and trypsin. The method was applied to a study of exocrine pancreatic function in 10 adults and 83 children suspected of having malabsorption. The duodenal juice, also analyzed for trypsin and amylase content, was collected in fasting condition and after a test meal of water. In patients with normal pancreatic function, all the enzyme bands were present and easy to recognize. In 87 patients carboxypeptidase A was present as two bands in 68 (80%), anodal trypsin as two bands in 39 (45%), and cathodal trypsin as two bands in 85 (97%). Electrophoresis of duodenal juice gave as much information from the fasting sample as after the test meal. Six children with pancreatic insufficiency (cystic fibrosis and Shwachmar's syndrome) had no or only faintly stained enzyme bands and a strongly stained albumin-containing band most anodally. The method is simple, rapid, and useful in routine work. The combination of this qualitative test with a quantitative one (e.g. trypsin determination) provides good information about exocrine pancreatic function.
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PMID:Agarose gel electrophoresis of duodenal juice in normal condition and in children with malabsorption. 43 37

The activities of amylase, lipase, phospholipase and trypsin of twelve commercial pancreatic enzyme preparations were measured under identical conditions. Human small intestinal juice was chosen as incubation medium. A wide variation of enzymatic activities was found in preparations in tablet form contrary to preparations in granulated form. A prerequisite for a successful therapy is enzymically potent pancreatic extracts with high enzyme content per table, capsule or recommended dose of granulated preparation. Therefore, some preparations seem to be preferable to others for clinical purposes.
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PMID:Pancreatic enzymic activities of commercial pancreatic enzyme preparations incubated in human small intestinal juice. 45 68


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