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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
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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)
Secretion of
trypsin
, chymotrypsin,
lipase
and amylase was measured in male rats under urethane anaesthesia using a method of continuous perfusion of the duodenum. Prolonged infusion of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK-PZ) over a period lasting 200-360 min was administered either alone or together with a submaximal dose of secretin (1 unit/100 g - 10 min). Infusion of CCK-PZ was carried out using maximal doses (1--1.5 unit/100 g - 10 min) with and without secretin. Supramaximal doses of CCK-PZ (2 and 4 units/100 g - 10 min) were used only in combination with secretin. In all experiments secretion of enzymes showed a triphasic pattern including an initial peak followed by a plateau secretion after 10--20 min (phase 1), a decreasing second phase and finally base-line secretion (phase 3), thus demonstrating exhaustion of enzyme output from the gland with time. With increasing and supramaximal dose of CCK-PZ the cumulative output of enzymes from start to baseline secretion decreased progressively. Under the same conditions the levels of peak and plateau secretion were lower, the duration of plateau secretion was longer and the decreasing phase of secretion was shortened. These features indicate inhibition of secretion with increasing supramaximal doses of CCK-PZ infusion. Whereas the proteolytic enzymes and
lipase
reacted in a parallel way always amylase secretion was sustained on a higher level, implicating an alternative pathway for secretion.
...
PMID:Effect of prolonged infusion of maximal and supramaximal doses of pancreozymin on pancreatic enzyme secretion in the rat--exhaustion or inhibition? 94 24
Preincubation of normal rat soleus muscles in vitro with homogenates prepared from mixed leg muscles which had been denervated 4 days previously resulted in an increase in the contracture response to acetylcholine. After 30 min incubation a 1.5-fold increase was observed. Homogenates of normally innervated muscles did not increase the response. The active principles of the denervated muscles were found to reside in the "cytosol" fraction. An approximately 2-fold increase was observed upon incubation with the cytosol for 30 min; incubation for longer periods resulted in a subsequent decrease in the response. The effect of the denervated muscle cytosol was concentration-dependent and heat-labile. Normal muscle cytosol also increased the soleus muscle response to acetylcholine but this fraction was less effective than denervated muscle cytosol. The response of control muscles incubated in Krebs-Henseleit solution was found to decrease with time. Commercially obtained phospholipases C and D increased the response of normal soleus muscles approximatley 2-fold. Phospholipase A,
lipase
,
trypsin
, collagenase and a bacterial protease had no effect, lysozyme produced a small but consistent increase in the response to acetylcholine.
...
PMID:The effect of muscle extracts on the contracture response of skeletal muscle to acetylcholine. 94 50
Cycloheximide, even in a dose of 0.25 mg/kg administered s.c. to rats stimulated by pancreozymin and secretin, inhibited
lipase
activity in pancreatic juice. Lipase activity in serum of control animals was inhibited by cycloheximide. The secretion of
trypsin
and chymotrypsin was also decreased.
...
PMID:Exocrine pancreatic enzymes in cycloheximide treated rats. 95 74
In 40 patients with acute pancreatitis, examined 3-2 and 18-24 hours following the onset of the disease, benzoylarginine-amidase activity in blood serum and plasma was determined, as well as the activity of
lipase
and amylase in blood serum. A correlative dependence was found between the activity of amylase and
lipase
in blood serum, the activity of amylase in blood serum and
trypsin
-like activity in blood plasma of patients investigated in different time.
...
PMID:[Benzoylarginine amidase activity of blood serum and plasma in acute pancreatitis]. 96 Apr 69
Forty-seven strains of Streptococcus bovis were tested for bacteriocin production. Fourteen were found to produce bacteriocins, while all 47 were sensitive to at least one of these bacteriocins. The bacteriocins, on the basis of their host range on S. bovis strains, formed six groups. A representative of each group was selected and characterized by temperature stability, sensitivity to
trypsin
and
lipase
, sedimentation by centrifugation, ability to pass through dialysis tubing, host range on other bacterial species, and conditions for production in liquid media. A correlation between mannitol fermentation and bacteriocin production was noted.
...
PMID:Bacteriocins of Streptococcus bovis. 96 12
A study of the exacrinous function of the pancreas made in 205 healthy persons aged from 18 to 90 has evidenced that in ageing there takes place in the duodenal mixture of juices a statistically significant decline in the activity of
trypsin
and of its inhibitor,
lipase
, amylase, in the level of bicarbonates and in the volume of the juice along with an increase in the content of chlorides. In ageing more marked changes become apparent following application of the agents stimulating the pancreatic secretion of the secretin and pancreozymin mechanism of action, and then the greatest changes are seen to occur on the level of
lipase
and
trypsin
and the least -- on the level of the amylase activity and the bicarbonate alkalinity content. Note has also been taken of an age-specific statistically significant decline in the activity of the studied pancreatic enzymes in the blood (
trypsin
, its inhibitor,
lipase
, amylase) and in the urine (
lipase
, amylase).
...
PMID:[State of the exocrine function of the pancreas during human aging]. 96 54
In acute and chronic tests with dogs the effect of feeding the animals on meat, bread, or butter upon the pancreatic enzymes incretion was studied. The activity of the amylase,
lipase
,
trypsin
and of its inhibitor was determined during an acute test in the thoracic duct lymph, in the blood plasma of the portal and jugular veins, the amylase and
lipase
being also determined in the urine. The incretion of the pancreatic enzymes is adapted to the type of the food stimulant, viz. after feeding on bread it is the amylase incretion that increases to the most, on meat--it is that of
trypsin
and its inhibitor and on butter - of
lipase
. Most informative as to the level of the hydrolases increation adaptability is separation of corresponding enzymes forming part of the lymph, less so - their content in the plasma of the portal and still less - in the peripheral venous blood and the least - the content and segregation of the hydrolases from the urine.
...
PMID:[Lymph, plasma and urinary hydrolases during animal feeding with different types of food]. 98 43
The thesis is composed of two parts, the first part is concerned with experiments in rats, the second part confirms the findings in human beings. After administration of oxytetracycline, chloramphenicol and cyclophosphamide, respectively, to rats an approximately dose-dependent decrease in the pancreatic secretion of proteins and enzyme activities was demonstrable in vivo under exogenous stimulation. The exocrine pancreatic function was studied in humans by performing a secretin-pancreocymin test before and after treatment with oxytetracycline or chloramphenicol and before and after massive-dose therapy with cyclophosphamide or combined cytotoxic treatment (as outlined by De Vita). The investigations further included an examination of the exocrine pancreatic function in subjects on maintenance therapy with cyclophosphamide or busulfan and a comparison with the exocrine pancreatic function in a group of controls. In the oxytetracycline-treated humans there was a depression of the amylase and
lipase
activities in the duodenal secretion. Administration of chloramphenicol produced a decrease in the amylase output only. In the patients on massive-dose or continued therapy with cyclophosphamide the pancreatic function remained essentially unchanged. In contrast, cytotoxic combination treatment resulted in decreased activities of amylase and
lipase
. After maintenance treatment with busulfan a reduction of the
trypsin
and amylase activities was detectable. The volume and electrolyte outputs were found to remain essentially unchanged in all investigations. An impairment in enzyme synthesis is suggested as the major cause of the observed changes of pancreatic secretion after antibiotic and cytotoxic treatment.
...
PMID:[Behavior of exocrine pancreatic function during treatment with antibiotics and antineoplastic agents]. 99 58
Intestinal perfusion methods with a nonabsorbable marker allow an exact quantitative determination of intestinal absorption and secretion provided that methodological pitfalls are avoided. A modified technique is applied to the simultaneous measurement of biliary and pancreatic secretion during and depending on emptying of a mixed test meal. A duodenal segment was perfused with an isotonic polyethyleneglycol solution (PEG). Reinjection of duodenal aspirates maintained a normal enterohepatic circulation of bile acids (interruption less than 10%). The perfusion was performed in healthy volonteers over a period of 12 to 24 hours, with three mixed formula meals containing 51CrCl3 as a marker ingested at conventional feeding hours. Influence of meal size was studied by means of a high caloric (40 Kcal/b. wt. per day) test meal. Patients with cholesterol gallstones and cirrhosis of the liver only received one formula test meal of 300 Kcal. Instead of concentrations output of
trypsin
,
lipase
, bile acids and cholesterol (the latter corrected for duodenal absorption) was calculated from the dilution of PEG in the duodenal juice and gastric emptying was determined by following quantitatively the flow of 51CrCl3. Gastric emptying can be expressed by a single exponential function over most of the time. Only the last 60-100 Kcals were expelled by the stomach at a faster rate. The daily biliary and pancreatic secretion depend indirectly on the amount of food ingested. But during the day light hours (with continuous meal flow), secretion was similar in high and low caloric subjects, while a significant difference became obvious during night hours corresponding to differences in gastric emptying time. Mean hourly output of bile acid, biliary cholesterol,
trypsin
and
lipase
is independent from meal size and secretion of pancreatic enzymes reaches the values close to those after maximal stimulation by i.v. CCK-PZ. Output of pancreatic enzymes does not differ in health and gallstone disease or cirrhosis of the liver respectively. Since during digestion in normals approximately one forth of the bile acid pool is secreted hourly into the gut, the number of daily enterohepatic cycles of bile acids can be calculated by 4-6. Patients with cholesterol gallstones maintain normal bile acid output by enhanced cycling of the small pool: An average of 50% of the pool passed the duodenum per hour. A decreased bile acid pool is also present in cases of advanced cirrhosis of the liver. However, hourly output of bile acids in these patients is significantly less than in mild cirrhosis (with normal bile acid pool) or normal controls. Therefore the hourly fraction of the pool secreted is similar to healthy subjects. These findings provide an important information to explain abnormalities in bile acid metabolism in cirrhosis.
...
PMID:[Simultaneous determination of gastric emptying and bile and pancreatic enzyme secretion]. 106 80
During bacteriophage studies on Haemophilus influenzer, it was observed that encapsulated type b and unencapsulated Rb strains released a bactericidal substance acitve against types a, c, d, e, and f H. influenzae, non-typable H. influenzae strains, other Haemophilus species, and certain members of the Enterobacteriaceae. The bactericidal activity was assayed by a plaque test utilizing an Rd strain as an indicator lawn and was also demonstrated in mixed broth cultures of a producer strain and an indicator strain. Immediately lysis of sensitive bacteria by the factor was not evident. The factor is sensitive to
trypsin
but resistant to deoxyribonuclease, treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol,
lipase
, alpha-amylase, and heating in a 100 degrees C water bath for 20 min. The activity is not dependent upon increased Ca2+ or Mg2+ concentration as is necessary for HP1C1 and S2 phage propagation. The bactericidal factor is not pelleted by high-speed centrifugation at 150,000 X g for 6 h. Treatment with ultraviolet light or mitomycin C does not result in observable phage, phage-like particles, or increased bactericidal activity. T-HE BACTERICIDAL FACTOR IS NOT A TYPICAL SMALL MOLECULAR WEIGHT "COLICIN-LIKE" BACTERiocin in that it is not inducible, has a wider range of activity, and does not kill by "single-hit" kinetics. On preliminary characterization, it is a thermostable protein toxic to certain bacterial strains.
...
PMID:Bactericidal substance produced by Haemophilus influenzae b. 108 28
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