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)

Alterations in the activities of alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase amylase, trypsin, pepsin, aminotripeptidase, glycylglycine dipeptidase and carnosinase due to exposure of Channa punctatus to a sublethal concentration (0.30 mg/L) of mercuric chloride by bath for 20 days have been studied in the different parts of the digestive system. Afall in the activities of the three phosphatases was recorded except for alkaline phosphatase which showed a slight elevation in activity in intestine and pyloric caeca. An increase in the activity of amylase and the two proteases was observed in all the portions of the digestive system. The three peptidases revealed a decrease in activity.
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PMID:The in vivo effect of mercuric chloride on some digestive enzymes of a fresh water teleost fish, Channa punctatus. 22 1

Aqueous extracts from 5 plants used widely in Kenya as chewing sticks (mswaki) for the control of oral hygiene were tested for their ability to inhibit extracellular peptidase and glycosidase enzyme activities produced by the periodontopathic bacteria Porphyromonas gingivalis (formerly Bacteroides gingivalis), Bacteroides intermedius and Treponema denticola. The plants studied were Rhus natalensis, Cupressus hisitanica, Sida cordifolia, Olea africana and Euclea divinorum. Protease activities, including glycylprolyl dipeptidase and trypsin-like activities of P. gingivalis, chymotrypsin-like and glycylprolyl dipeptidase activities of B. intermedius and the trypsin-like activity of T. denticola, were particularly affected by extracts from Rhus natalensis and Euclea divinorum. Glycosidase activities were generally less affected with the notable exceptions of the inhibition of beta-mannosidase activity of P. gingivalis by all extracts and the inhibition of neuraminidase activity of T. denticola by Rhus natalensis and Euclea divinorum. Generally, these same proteolytic and glycosidic activities were inhibited by tannic acid and to lesser extents by gallic acid and gallic acid methyl ester. An inhibitory component, present in all extracts, exhibited physical and chemical properties identical to those of tannic acid. The inhibition of these enzyme activities is likely to reduce the virulence of these periodontophathic bacteria and to reduce the rate of dental plaque formation.
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PMID:Inhibition of peptidase and glycosidase activities of Porphyromonas gingivalis, Bacteroides intermedius and Treponema denticola by plant extracts. 132 83

The chemical properties of human renal dipeptidase (hrDP) purified from the membrane fraction of kidney have been characterized. When treated with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, hrDP was released from renal membrane fractions. After digestion with trypsin, carboxyl-terminal peptide was isolated employing anhydrotrypsin-agarose column chromatography and reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The amino acid sequence of the peptide was identified at positions 363-369 in the primary structure deduced from the cDNA sequence (Adachi, H., Tawaragi, Y., Inuzuka, C., Kubota, I., Tsujimoto, M., Nishihara, T., And Nakazato, H. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3992-3995). Further examination of the chemical composion of the peptide showed that it contained, respectively, 2, 1, 5, 1, and 1 mol of ethanolamine, glucosamine, mannose, inositol, and phosphate in addition to amino acids. These results suggest that the mature hrDP molecule lacks the carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic peptide extension predicted from the cDNA sequence and is anchored at Ser369 via glycosylphosphatidylinositol to the membrane. To characterize further the action of the enzyme, we have established expression systems for both secretory and membrane anchored forms of hrDP using COS-1 cells and found that both recombinant forms were as active as natural enzyme. Our expression system made it possible to prepare large amounts of soluble enzyme, and will contribute toward elucidation of the physiological roles of the enzyme.
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PMID:Identification of membrane anchoring site of human renal dipeptidase and construction and expression of a cDNA for its secretory form. 216 7

These activities were measured simultaneously, using synthetic fluorescent protease substrates, in gingival crevicular fluid collected at 6 pre-determined sites from 10 individuals with mild to moderate gingivitis. The three enzyme activities were detected in 85, 18 and 93% of the sites, respectively. The volume of fluid collected from discrete sites was significantly correlated with the total amount of substrate hydrolysed, but not with the specific rate of substrate hydrolysis. Log10 (total trypsin-like activity) was significantly correlated with the Gingival Index, Plaque Index and probing depth (r = 0.319, 0.423 and 0.336), while total glycylprolyl dipeptidase activity was significantly correlated with probing depth (r = 0.381). These findings add to knowledge of the biochemistry of gingival crevicular fluid, but the usefulness of such assays for diagnostic or monitoring purposes in periodontal diseases needs to be determined.
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PMID:Trypsin-like, chymotrypsin-like and glycylprolyl dipeptidase activities in gingival crevicular fluid from human periodontal sites with gingivitis. 269 44

Full-value diets of similar composition were given to male rats weighing 207-230 g, by intravenous (group 1) or intragastric (group 2) routes. The proportion of amino acids, fats and carbohydrates was 9.9:15.7:74.4 (with regard to their calorific value). The diet calorific value comprised 60.6 kcal/rat/day. An average mass increase in group 1 was 2.44 +/- 0.14 g/day, in group 2 - 1.75 +/- 0.11 g/day. The protein content and activities of alpha- and gamma-amylase, invertase, maltase, and glycil-L-leucine dipeptidase were assayed in the intestinal mucosa of the proximal portion of the small intestine in group 1 rats, while a decreased alpha-amylase activity in the distal portion of the small intestine was recorded in the animals of group 2. The mass of the pancreas in the rats of group 1 and 2 was authentically lower than in the control rats which received oral feeding with natural foods. The lowest mass of the pancreas was observed in the rats of group 1. Specific activity of trypsin, lipase and RNase in the pancreatic tissues of rats in groups 1 and 2 was similar. The results of the study have evidenced a lowered function of the digestive system under conditions of artificial feeding, especially in case of intravenous nutrition.
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PMID:[Digestive function of the small intestine and pancreas in rats on artificial feeding]. 309 Jul 82

A Co2+-dependent dipeptidase from E. coli strain AJ005, a peptidase-deficient mutant, was purified with streptomycin sulfate, ammonium sulfate and DEAE-cellulose. The purified dipeptidase increased by about 106-fold in specific activity, with dilysine as a substrate. The dipeptidase cleaved dilysine to two lysines among the lysine homopolymers, the possibility remaining that it is active toward peptides other than dilysine, since it was investigated in the present study only for activity toward lysine homopolymers. Activity was inhibited 54% by 10(-3) M KCN and completely by 10(-3) M PCMB, EDTA and benzethonium chloride, but not at all by soybean trypsin inhibitors. 78% and 95% of its activity was lost with 30 minutes' treatment at 45 degrees C and 50 degrees C, respectively. The apparent Km value was 6.7 X 10(-4) M for dilysine. It is probable that the dipeptidase differs from dipeptidase DP.
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PMID:Purification and properties of dipeptidase from Escherichia coli AJ005. 352 11

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.
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PMID:Intestinal enzyme activity in lambs chronically infected with Trichostrongylus colubriformis: effect of anthelmintic treatment. 634 11

The paper deals with the applications of Na2S2O4 as reducing agent in the preparation of 99mTc-labelled compounds. The reduction of pertechnetate can advantageously be carried out in neutral solutions of pH 7. Using this procedure, DTPA, HEDSPA, MDP, gluconate, citrate and trypsin were successfully labelled. In HEDSPA and MDP labelling, a high as cumulation of 99mTc in rat bones (50%) was obtained. In gluconate labelling, under various reaction temperatures, two types of complexes were prepared. Complex I shows a 99mTc biodistribution which is comparable with the kidney diagnosticum 99mTc-Sn-gluconate (24% of 99mTc in kidneys). Complex II, on the other hand, exhibited a reduced affinity of 99mTc to kidneys (2.2%) which, however, increases in bone to 15.4%. The experimental results indicated that Tc(V) is bound in Complex I. In technetium complexing no "mixed complex" is formed technetium being complexed directly by chelate-forming groups on the labelled compound.
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PMID:99mTc-labelled compounds prepared with sodium dithionite as reducing agent. 646 Feb 22

Dengue type 2 virus (D2V) infection in cultured human monocytes was studied. D2V permissiveness of the monocytes was enhanced when the cells were inoculated with D2V in the presence of either polyclonal or type-specific monoclonal anti-dengue antibody. The enhancement of D2V permissiveness mediated by the antibodies was more clearly demonstrated when the monocytes had been treated with trypsin before virus inoculation, though treatment of the cells with trypsin alone decreased D2V permissiveness. The enhancement of infection by type-specific neutralizing monoclonal antibody suggests that the D2V particles possess at least two antigenic determinants closely associated with virus infectivity. Infectious center assays revealed that the infection enhancement in the presence of the antibodies was due primarily to an increase in the number of D2V-infected cells, and that only a small proportion of the monocyte population supported D2V replication. The virus-permissive monocytes did not bear HLA-DR antigens on their cell surface. The presence of nonadherent lymphocytes in the monocyte cultures before D2V inoculation did not affect the D2V permissiveness of the monocytes. Treatment of cultured monocytes with the synthetic adjuvants N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanyl-D-isoglutamine (MDP) and its lipophilic derivative, [B30]-MDP, did not significantly affect the D2V permissiveness of the cells.
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PMID:Dengue type 2 virus infection in human peripheral blood monocyte cultures. 652 66

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.
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PMID:Digestive enzymes in the gut and salivary gland of the larvae of Chilo auricilius Ddgn. 698 21


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