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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously demonstrated an increase in plasma met-enkephalin levels during the pain attacks in episodic cluster headache. The present study was undertaken in order to clarify the source of the plasma met-enkephalin increase. Recent evidence has shown that peripheral blood polymorphonuclear cells contain peptides derived from the proenkephalin A system, which can be released by specific stimuli. We studied neutrophil met-enkephalin containing peptides (NMECP) in 27 episodic cluster headache patients: 24 in a cluster period (6 of them during a pain attack), and 3 in the remission period. Neutrophil met-enkephalin containing peptide levels (after sequential enzymatic digestion with
trypsin
and
carboxypeptidase B
) were determined by radioimmunoassay with specific antiserum. Neutrophil peptide concentration (pmol/mg prot) was lower (p less than 0.01) in patients during the pain attack (14.4 +/- 0.36) than after their pain had subsided (36.7 +/- 0.31) and lower than in the remission period patients (35.8 +/- 0.4). We conclude that neutrophil met-enkephalin containing peptides decrease during pain in episodic cluster headache, and that they may be involved in the concomitant plasma met-enkephalin increase.
...
PMID:Changes in neutrophil met-enkephalin containing peptides in episodic cluster headache. 188 84
Since 2-fluoro-beta-alanine (FBAL) conjugates of bile acids (BA), the primary biliary metabolites of fluoropyrimidine (FP) drugs, have been suggested to be related to the hepatotoxicity which develops in patients receiving FP chemotherapy by intrahepatic arterial infusion (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 5439-5443, 1987), it was important to determine whether they undergo enterohepatic circulation and hence accumulate in the liver and biliary system. In initial studies, sensitivity of FBAL-BA conjugates to hydrolysis by pancreatic enzymes was examined. In subsequent in vivo studies, a model FBAL-BA conjugate, FBAL-chenodeoxycholate (FBAL-CDC), was introduced into the lumen of the small intestine of anesthetized rats with biliary fistulas to quantitate the intestinal absorption, metabolism and tissue distribution of the conjugate. The results indicated that: (1) FBAL-BA conjugates were resistant to hydrolysis by pancreatic enzymes (carboxypeptidase A,
carboxypeptidase B
and
trypsin
) and by human pancreatic juice, but were completely hydrolyzed by cholyglycine hydrolase. (2) At least one-half of the administered FBAL-CDC was deconjugated during the process of intestinal absorption, as shown by HPLC analysis of the radioactivity in portal venous blood. (3) Deconjugated FBAL or CDC was reconjugated in liver with other bile acids or amino acids (glycine and taurine), respectively, as shown by radiochromatography of bile. (4) FBAL, formed as a result of hydrolysis of FBAL-CDC, had a wide tissue distribution. In conclusion, FBAL-CDC has a rapid turnover during its enterohepatic circulation due to deconjugation in the intestine and reconjugation in the liver.
...
PMID:Disposition and metabolism of 2-fluoro-beta-alanine conjugates of bile acids following secretion into bile. 190 18
The present study was undertaken to determine the extent of COOH-terminal proteolytic processing in matrix Gla protein (MGP), a 10-kDa protein which contains 5 residues of the vitamin K-dependent Ca2+ binding amino acid, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla). Two forms of MGP were isolated from demineralization and urea extracts of bovine cortical bone, one 79 residues in length with the COOH terminus Phe-Arg-Gln and the other 83 residues in length with the COOH terminus Phe-Arg-Gln-Arg-Arg-Gly-Ala. The 84-residue form of bovine MGP predicted from the message structure could not be detected in the bone extracellular matrix extracts, and it therefore seems probable that the lysine at position 84 was removed by the action of a
carboxypeptidase B
-like enzyme prior to secretion. A plausible sequence of proteolytic cleavages that could generate the 79-residue form of MGP would be a
trypsin
-like cleavage at Arg80-Arg81 or Arg81-Gly82 followed by
carboxypeptidase B
-like cleavage to remove COOH-terminal arginine(s). Since essentially equal amounts of the 79- and 83-residue forms of MGP were also detected in bovine articular cartilage and plasma, it seems likely that the COOH-terminal processing events identified in bone apply to many of the other tissues which synthesize this protein. Only one form of MGP was detected in human bone extracts, a 77-residue protein that lacks the COOH-terminal residues Arg-Lys-Arg-Arg-Gly-Thr-Lys. This shortened version of human MGP is consistent with the proposed model for COOH-terminal processing, since the amino acid substitution in the COOH terminus of the human protein, Lys79 for Gln79, would allow removal of the additional basic residues from the human MGP COOH terminus by the action of the
carboxypeptidase B
-like enzymic activity. Recent studies have shown that MGP is strongly induced by retinoic acid in fibroblasts, chondrocytes, and osteoblasts, a response which suggests that MGP mediates an action of retinoic acid on an aspect of cell growth or differentiation. If this hypothesis is true, the present evidence for complex COOH-terminal processing events could provide a means to regulate the as yet unknown activity of MGP in the extracellular environment in a mechanism similar to the activation of hormones such as anaphlotoxins and kinins.
...
PMID:Carboxyl-terminal proteolytic processing of matrix Gla protein. 193 57
A novel plasminogen-binding protein has been isolated from human plasma utilizing plasminogen-Sepharose affinity chromatography. This protein copurified with alpha 2 antiplasmin when the plasminogen affinity column was eluted with high concentrations of epsilon-aminocaproic acid (greater than 20 mM). Analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate suggests this protein has an apparent Mr of 60,000. The amino-terminal amino acid sequence showed no similarity to other protein sequences. Based on the amino-terminal amino acid sequence, oligonucleotide probes were designed for polymerase chain reaction primers, and an approximately 1,800 base pair cDNA was isolated that encodes this Mr 60,000 protein. The deduced amino acid sequence reveals a primary translation product of 423 amino acids that is very similar to carboxypeptidase A and B and consists of a 22-amino acid signal peptide, a 92-amino acid activation peptide, and a 309-amino acid catalytic domain. This protein shows 44 and 40% similarity to rat procarboxypeptidase B and human mast cell procarboxypeptidase A, respectively. The residues critical for catalysis and zinc and substrate binding of carboxypeptidase A and B are conserved in the Mr 60,000 plasminogen-binding protein. The presence of aspartic acid at position 257 of the catalytic domain suggests that this protein is a basic carboxypeptidase. When activated by
trypsin
, it hydrolyzes
carboxypeptidase B
substrates, hippuryl-Arg and hippuryl-Lys, but not carboxypeptidase A substrates, and it is inhibited by the specific
carboxypeptidase B
inhibitor (DL-5-guanidinoethyl)mercaptosuccinic acid. We propose that the Mr 60,000 plasminogen-binding protein isolated here is a novel human plasma carboxypeptidase B and that it be designated pCPB.
...
PMID:Isolation, molecular cloning, and partial characterization of a novel carboxypeptidase B from human plasma. 193 7
Previous immunochemical investigations have demonstrated various opioid peptides in the pancreas. However, controversies exist related to the cellular localization of these peptides in the endocrine pancreas. Therefore, the guinea pig endocrine pancreas was immunohistochemically investigated for the presence of opioid peptides derived from pro-dynorphin, pro-enkephalin or pro-opiomelano-cortin. Immunoreactivities were demonstrated on serial semithin sections by the peroxidase anti-peroxidase technique. In routinely immunostained sections, immunoreactivities for dynorphin A and alpha-neo-endorphin were localized in pancreatic enterochromaffin cells, but not in islet cells. Immunoreactivity for Met-enkephalin was confined exclusively to B-cells and was localized only in some secretory granules. However, pre-treatment of semi-thin sections with
trypsin
and
carboxypeptidase B
led to a marked increase of Met-enkephalin immunoreactivity in B-cells. In addition, immunoreactivities for Met-enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu and bovine adrenal medulla dodecapeptide could be demonstrated in B- and A-cells, and beta-endorphin immunoreactivity was localized in A-cells. In no case, however, were immunoreactivities detected for bovine adrenal medulla docosapeptide, peptide F, corticotropin, melanotropin or dynorphin 1-32. The immunohistochemical findings indicate that opioids of different peptide families are present in the guinea pig endocrine pancreas. Since several opioid peptides of the corresponding pro-hormones could be demonstrated in the reference organs but not in the pancreas, it is concluded that the biosynthetic pathways of the respective precursors are different from those in the adrenal medulla or in the pituitary.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemistry of opioid peptides in the guinea pig endocrine pancreas. 197 Sep 50
Procarboxypeptidase B is converted to enzymatically active
carboxypeptidase B
by limited proteolysis catalysed by
trypsin
, removing the long N-terminal activation segment of 95 amino acids. The three-dimensional crystal structure of procarboxypeptidase B from porcine pancreas has been determined at 2.3 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.169. The functional determinants of its enzymatic inactivity and of its activation by limited proteolysis have thus been unveiled. The activation segment folds in a globular region with an open sandwich antiparallel-alpha antiparallel-beta topology and in a C terminal alpha-helix which connects it to the enzyme moiety. The globular region (A7-A82) shields the preformed active site, and establishes specific interactions with residues important for substrate recognition. AspA41 forms a salt bridge with Arg145, which in active carboxypeptidase binds the C-terminal carboxyl group of substrate molecules. The connecting region occupies the putative extended substrate binding site. The scissile peptide bond cleaved by
trypsin
during activation is very exposed. Its cleavage leads to the release of the activation segment and to exposure of the substrate binding site. An open-sandwich folding has been observed in a number of other proteins and protein domains. One of them is the C-terminal fragment of L7/L12, a ribosomal protein from Escherichia coli that displays a topology similar to the activation domain of procarboxypeptidase.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of porcine procarboxypeptidase B: a structural basis of its inactivity. 198 78
The subcellular distribution of enkephalin (EK) precursor proteins was investigated to clarify the intracellular site of biosynthesis of EK in rat dental pulp tissue. The contents of met-EK-like peptides in nuclear, microsomal, and supernatant fractions of the pulp tissue were markedly increased after sequential digestion with
trypsin
and
carboxypeptidase B
, indicating the enrichment of the precursors in these fractions. Sephadex G-100 gel filtration showed a common peak of the precursor proteins in the homogenate and its microsomal and supernatant fractions, and the molecular weight was determined to be about 58,000 by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Both the partially purified precursor protein from the supernatant fraction and N alpha-benzoyl-DL-arginine-beta-naphthylamide (BANA) were used as substrates for a lysosomal enzyme separated by Sephadex G-75 gel filtration. The major peak of EK-producing activity of the enzyme was identical with that of BANA-degrading activity of the enzyme. These results demonstrate the EK-producing activity of lysosomal proteinase, and also indicate the usefulness of the two substances as substrates for the enzyme.
...
PMID:Subcellular distribution of enkephalin precursor proteins in rat dental pulp and the usefulness as a substrate for enkephalin-producing enzymes. 199 Feb 37
The molecular events which lead to the proteolytic transformation of porcine procarboxypeptidase B (PCPB) in
carboxypeptidase B
(
CPB
) have been determined. Among pancreatic and other tested proteinases,
trypsin
is the only one capable of generating
carboxypeptidase B
activity from the zymogen, in vitro. In the first step of this process,
trypsin
produces cleavage at the boundary between the activation region and the
CPB
region. Subsequently, a definite sequence of cleavages occurs at the C-terminal end of the released activation segment of 95 residues, giving rise to characteristic intermediates and to a proteolytically resistant activation fragment of 81 residues. In this process, the newly formed
CPB
participates in the quick-trimming of the released activation peptides. Only a single
CPB
species is formed in the activation process. This fact and the inability of the released activation peptides to inhibit
CPB
--and, therefore, their inability to slow down the kinetics of appearance of
CPB
activity--are two important characteristics differentiating between the activation processes of procarboxypeptidases A and B. The sequence of the 95 residues (MW = 12,835) of the activation region of porcine PCPB has also been deduced, largely from the information obtained by Edman degradation of its fragments and in part by considerations of homology with the rat precursor. The porcine PCPB activation region contains a high percentage of acidic residues, lacks cysteines, methionines, and side-chain posttranslational modifications, and presents a low but significant homology (31%) with the corresponding sequence of porcine procarboxypeptidase A.
...
PMID:Analysis of the activation process of porcine procarboxypeptidase B and determination of the sequence of its activation segment. 201 74
The oligosaccharide chains in human and swine trachea and Cowper's gland mucin glycoproteins were completely removed in order to examine the subunit structure and properties of the polypeptide chains of these glycoproteins. The carbohydrate, which constitutes more than 70% of these glycoproteins, was removed by two treatments with trifluoromethanesulfonic acid for 3 h at 3 degrees and periodate oxidation by a modified Smith degradation. All of the sialic acid, fucose, galactose, N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylgalactosamine present in these glycoproteins was removed by these procedures. The deglycosylated polypeptide chains were purified and characterized. The size of the monomeric forms of all three polypeptide chains were very similar. Data obtained by gel filtration, release of amino acids during hydrolysis with
carboxypeptidase B
and gel electrophoresis in the presence of 0.1% dodecyl sulfate showed that a major fraction from each of the three mucin glycoproteins had a molecular size of about 67 kDa. All of the deglycosylated chains had a tendency to aggregate. Digestion with carboxypeptidases showed that human and swine trachea mucin glycoproteins had identical carboxyl terminal sequences, -Val-Ala-Phe-Tyr-Leu-Lys-Arg-COOH. Cowper's gland mucin glycoprotein had a similar carboxyl terminal sequence, -Val-Ala-Tyr-Leu-Phe-Arg-Arg-COOH. The yield of amino acids after long periods of hydrolysis with carboxypeptidases showed that at least 85% of the polypeptide chains in each of the deglycosylated preparations have these sequences. These results suggested that the polypeptide chains in these deglycosylated mucin glycoprotein preparations were relatively homogeneous. The deglycosylated polypeptide chains as well as the intact mucin glycoproteins had blocked amino terminii. The purified polypeptide chains were digested with
trypsin
-TCPK, and S. aureus V8 protease and the resulting peptides were isolated by gel electrophoresis in the presence of 0.1% dodecyl sulfate and by HPLC. Two partial amino acid sequences from swine trachea mucin glycoprotein, two partial sequences from human trachea mucin glycoprotein and three partial sequences from Cowper's gland mucin glycoprotein were determined. The partial amino acid sequences of the peptides isolated from swine trachea mucin glycoprotein showed more than 70% sequence homology to a repeating sequence present in porcine submaxillary mucin glycoprotein. Five to eight immunoprecipitable bands with sizes ranging from about 40 kDa to 46 kDa were seen when the polypeptide chains were digested with S. aureus V8 protease. All of the bands had blocked amino terminii and differed by a constant molecular weight of about 1.5 kDa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Subunit structure of deglycosylated human and swine trachea and Cowper's gland mucin glycoproteins. 205 1
Adrenal vein (AD), portal vein (PV), and femoral artery (FA) plasma levels of immunoreactive (IR) Met-enkephalin pentapeptide (ME) and extended ME-IR forms, obtained after sequential incubation of plasma with
trypsin
and
carboxypeptidase B
, were examined in 4 cats during splanchnic artery occlusion shock at baseline (S1), during early shock (S2), late shock (S3), and after naloxone (1 mg/kg, i.v.) administration (S4). Early shock (S2) led to a significant increase in levels of extended and fully processed Met-enkephalin IR at all 3 collection sites (AD, PV, FA) without a change in proportional levels of extended Met-enkephalin IR to the pentapeptide IR (ME). Naloxone administration during late shock (S4), however, resulted in a disproportionate increase (150-fold from baseline) in adrenal vein plasma levels of extended Met-enkephalin IR forms, as compared to ME IR (23-fold). In contrast, no changes in plasma levels occurred in PV and FA.
...
PMID:Cryptic Met-enkephalin in adrenal and portal vein during splanchnic artery occlusion shock in cats. 224 19
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