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 effect of 1.8 mg/liter (LC50) of mercuric chloride exposure on the activities of alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase, amylase, pepsin,
trypsin
, tripeptidase
glycyl-glycine dipeptidase
and carnosinase has been examined in Channa punctatus. The three phosphatases have been inhibited in the liver but showed an increase in activity in the intestine and pyloric caeca. Amylase, pepsin and
trypsin
have also shown a slight increase in activity. There has been no significant alteration in the activites of the peptidases. The results show that mercury inhibits the activites of phosphatases in the liver but has no significant effect on the digestive enzymes within the experimental period of 96 hours.
...
PMID:Effect of mercuric chloride on the digestive system of a teleost fish, Channa punctatus. 21 48
The aminopeptidase A of the porcine intestinal brush-border membrane has been purified following solubilization by
trypsin
(p-form) or Emulphogen (d-form). Full purification of d-amino-
peptidase A
required the use of anti-impurities immunoabsorbant chromatography. The d-amino-
peptidase A
constitutes about 4% of the total proteins of the membrane, compared to 8-12% for another, already characterized, brush-border aminopeptidase N. Both d-form and p-form of aminopeptidase A have been clearly shown to be dimeric. Experimental evidence is presented favoring the view that they are symmetrical dimers, with the consequence that each of the two subunits of the d-form possesses an hydrophobic anchor holding them at the membrane surface. As already demonstrated for several other brush border hydrolases, the hydrophobic anchor is N-terminal in porcine intestinal aminopeptidase A. The molecular weight of the peptide including the anchor liberated by
trypsin
during the conversion of the d-form into the p-form has been estimated by an isotopic dilution method to be about 4500 (42 residues). This value which compares well with those recently obtained in the case of rabbit aminopeptidase N (3700-3800; 36-38 residues), indicates that the anchor is much shorter than believed earlier. A preliminary survey of the specificity of both aminopeptidases A and N towards four synthetic amino acid p-nitroanilides confirms that aminopeptidase A mostly cleaves acidic residues. Its activity towards neutral residues is much lower, but probably significant in certain cases.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of an aminopeptidase A from hog intestinal brush-border membrane. 610 77
After twenty weeks of continuous dosing with Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae substantial, but declining, numbers of worms had persisted in most of the lambs examined, although there were wide inter-individual variations. Mucosal lesions were found in the proximal small intestines of all the infected animals, their severity being directly related to worm burden. Representative brush border enzyme activities analysed in intestinal mucosal extracts from the same lambs showed differing responses. Alkaline phosphatase and
glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase
were significantly depleted, whereas maltase activity was only marginally reduced, and leucine aminopeptidase activity was normal. Mucosal acetylcholinesterase activity was significantly elevated in the parasitised animals and, interestingly in view of the postulated role of this enzyme in nematode pathogenicity, the level of activity was directly correlated with individual worm burdens. Intestinal
trypsin
and chymotrypsin activities were unaffected and the level of superoxide dismutase, an enzyme associated with the inflammatory response, was normal. There were also no consistent changes in the mucosal activities of several enzymes including lactic dehydrogenase, creatine phosphokinase, aldolase, and glutamic oxaloacetate transaminase, whose leakage from damaged or necrotic tissues has been well defined in terms of the concomitant increase in their activity in the circulation. Lambs treated orally with fenbendazole five and/or ten weeks before slaughter either in the presence or absence of continued larval intake, had negligible worm burdens, and showed little evidence of intestinal damage at post mortem. Brush border enzyme levels, with the exception of alkaline phosphatase and, in two cases dipeptidase, were normal in these animals. The activity of alkaline phosphatase was approximately double that in the continuously infected, untreated lambs, but remained markedly lower than in the uninfected controls. The activities of the other enzymes studied, including acetylcholinesterase, were within the control range. In summary, in chronic trichostrongylosis even relatively low nematode burdens were associated with marked pathological and biochemical damage in the intestine with both lesion severity and mucosal acetylcholinesterase activity being directly related to worm numbers. Although morphological integrity was completely restored after anthelmintic treatment, the persistent low activity of brush border alkaline phosphatase coupled with the enzymological findings in untreated, infected animals suggests that recovery of the full functional capability of the intestinal mucosa may take longer.
...
PMID:Intestinal enzyme activity in lambs chronically infected with Trichostrongylus colubriformis: effect of anthelmintic treatment. 634 11
Amylase, alpha- and beta-glucosidase, alpha- and beta-galactosidase, beta-fructosidase,
trypsin
, aminotripeptidase, leucine-aminopeptidase,
prolinase
, prolidase
glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase
and glygylglycine dipeptidase are present in the 3rd instar larvae of Chilo auricilius.
...
PMID:Digestive enzymes in the gut and salivary gland of the larvae of Chilo auricilius Ddgn. 698 21
In the crewmembers of four Salyut-6 long-term flights, enzyme excretory function of the gastro-intestinal tract was investigated. These studies included: gastric proenzyme, pepsinogen, and pancreatic enzymes, amylase and lipase, in blood and urine,
trypsin
in blood, intestinal enzymes, invertase and
glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase
in feces, and lipids in feces. The results obtained demonstrated a correlation between changes in enzyme excretion and space flight duration and profile. After the 140- and 175-day flight the most marked changes in the digestive organs were seen; they manifested as a simultaneous increase in secretory function of the stomach and the pancreas. However, after the 185-day flight, in which advanced countermeasures were used, the above changes were less distinct.
...
PMID:[Digestive system status after prolonged space flights]. 707 32
The pathology and enzymology of the intestinal mucosae of lambs dosed daily with 2500 Trichostrongylus vitrinus larvae and killed at five, nine or 14 weeks were compared with worm-free animals. The proximal small intestines of the infected lambs exhibited extensive mucosal damage at five and nine weeks, but only isolated lesions were found at 14 weeks. Activities of the brush border enzymes alkaline phosphatase, leucine amino-peptidase, maltase and
glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase
were all significantly depleted during infection, although the magnitude, time of onset and duration of the individual enzyme responses varied. Mucosal activities of the pancreatic enzymes,
trypsin
and to a lesser extent chymotrypsin were also markedly decreased particularly during the first nine weeks of infection. Specific acetylcholinesterase activity was significantly increased throughout the study, maximal levels being observed at five weeks. In contrast 'pseudo'-cholinesterase levels were consistently within the control range. During the early stages of infection (five weeks) glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activity was significantly decreased, while aldolase and creatine phosphokinase levels were significantly elevated. At nine weeks low glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activities were again detected and lactate dehydrogenase activity was also markedly reduced. At 14 weeks the mean activities of all four enzymes were within the normal range as were superoxide dismutase levels throughout. Significant correlations were found between alkaline phosphatase,
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, aldolase and glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activities and the degree of mucosal damage within the individual lambs.
...
PMID:Changes in the intestinal enzyme activity of lambs during chronic infection with Trichostrongylus vitrinus. 710 Jun 47
During the last larval stage, corpora allata (CA) of Manduca sexta are inactivated by a factor from the brain. Apparently the same factor (allatinhibin, AI) is secreted by day 4 Vth instar brains kept overnight in Grace's medium. AI is rapidly inactivated by heat or acid but withstands exposure to alkali and can be recovered after freezing and lyophilization. Exposure to pronase, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidases-A and -Y, as well as leucine aminopeptidase eliminated AI activity completely, whereas after exposure to
trypsin
and protease XVII-S, some residual activity remained. Inactivation by pyroglutamate aminopeptidase is interpreted as being due to
prolinase
activity of this enzyme. Incubation of CA with gentamicin, an aminoglycoside antibiotic, affects neither their ability to produce JH in vitro nor their viability in implantation assays. However, AI did not inactivate CA in the presence of low concentrations of gentamicin. This effect was used to guard against false positive assay results possibly produced by allatotoxic contamination. AI was purified by chromatography on Sephadex G-25. All activity recovered emerged from the columns in intermediate fractions with an apparent M(r) of 1,000-2,000.
...
PMID:Partial characterization of allatinhibin, a neurohormone of Manduca sexta. 811 51