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)

Limited proteolysis of T-kininogen by heterologous and homologous endopeptidases (bovine trypsin, human leukocyte elastase, rat submaxillary gland endopeptidase k, and rat mast cell chymase) produced similar fragmentation. Amino-terminal sequence analysis of whole T-kininogen lysates and purified proteolytic fragments identified four susceptible regions which contained all the preferential cleavage sites for these proteinases. Two of these susceptible regions were close to the junction between heavy chain cystatin-like domains, the third was in the kinin-containing region, and the fourth was close to the carboxyl terminus of the T-kininogen light chain. There was only one primary site for each proteinase in the kinin-containing region, which explains why catalytic amounts of these proteinases did not release immunoreactive kinin from this kininogen. However, preferential cleavage of T-kininogen close to the junction between cystatin-like domains released fragments which, provided they included cystatin-like domains 2 and/or 3, strongly inhibited papain and cathepsin L. The fragments were inhibitory even when parts of the amino-terminal ends of the domains were lacking. The highly conserved glycyl residue, thought to be involved in the inhibitory reactive site of cystatin-like inhibitors, was not required in purified domain 3 for inhibition of cathepsin L.
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PMID:Limited proteolysis of T-kininogen (thiostatin). Release of comparable fragments by different endopeptidases. 264 33

Isocoumarins are potent mechanism-based heterocyclic irreversible inhibitors for a variety of serine proteases. Most serine proteases are inhibited by the general serine protease inhibitor 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin, whereas isocoumarins containing hydrophobic 7-acylamino groups are potent inhibitors for human leukocyte elastase and those containing 7-alkylureidogroups are inhibitors for procine pancreatic elastase. Isocoumarins containing basic side chains that resemble arginine are potent inhibitors for trypsin-like enzymes. A number of 3-alkoxy-4-chloro-7-guanidinoisocoumarins are potent inhibitors of bovine thrombin, human factor Xa, human factor XIa, human factor XIIa, human plasma kallikrein, porcine pancreatic kallikrein, and bovine trypsin. Another cathionic derivative, 4-chloro-3-(2-isothiureidoethoxy) isocoumarin, is less reactive toward many of these enzymes but is an extremely potent inhibitor of human plasma kallikrein. Several guanidinoisocoumarins have been tested as anticoagulants in human plasma and are effective at prolonging the prothrombin time. The mechanism of inhibition by this class of heterocyclic inactivators involves formation of an acyl enzyme by reaction of the active site serine with the isocoumarin carbonyl group. Isocoumarins with 7-amino or 7-guanidino groups will then decompose further to quinone imine methide intermediates, which react further with an active site residue (probably His-57) to form stable inhibited enzyme derivatives. Isocoumarins should be useful in further investigations of the physiological function of serine proteases and may have future therapeutic utility for the treatment of emphysema and coagulation disorders.
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PMID:Mechanism-based isocoumarin inhibitors for serine proteases: use of active site structure and substrate specificity in inhibitor design. 265 46

The homozygote deficit of alpha 1 antitrypsin (alpha 1 PI-ZZ) in patients frequently results in a premature development of emphysema in the lung due to incomplete protection against proteases. An active inhibitor substitution appears to be useful. The presented study proves the biological effect of alpha 1 antitrypsin infused into 8 patients. The results were an activity increase of leukocyte elastase and trypsin inhibition in serum as well as doubling of alpha 1 antitrypsin in sputum. This therapeutical conception (with a dose of 60 mg/kg body weight/week) results in an efficient protection. Inhibitors specific for mucosa are not influenced. An improvement of lung function during 6 weeks of intravenous therapy was not achieved. The progressive destruction of lung parenchyma can be probably prevented, however.
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PMID:Biochemical reaction of alpha 1 antitrypsin during the substitution therapy of patients with homozygote PI-ZZ deficit. 278 32

The effects of several neurohumoral agents and serine proteases on glycoconjugate release from hamster tracheal organ cultures were assessed. The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol inhibited glycoconjugate release, and its effect was abolished by the specific beta-blocking agent propranolol. A cholinergic agonist, pilocarpine, marginally increased glycoconjugate release, and its effect was abolished by the antagonist atropine. Human neutrophil elastase and porcine pancreatic trypsin consistently increased glycoconjugate release by 1.8 to 2.8-fold. When the proteases were inactivated, they were no longer effective in stimulating glycoconjugate release. Histologic and electron microscopic analysis of the protease-treated organ cultures revealed no discernible toxic reaction. In addition, organ cultures prelabeled with chromium 51 did not release an increased amount of radioactivity when treated with the proteases. Biochemical analysis of the glycoconjugates released into the culture medium showed them to be of high molecular weight (90% eluted in the void volume of a Sepharose 6B column) and to be resistant to digestion with hyaluronidase and heparinase, properties consistent with mucous glycoproteins. The mechanism of protease-induced glycoconjugate release is unknown. We speculate that stimulation of airway secretory cells by serine proteases of neutrophilic or other inflammatory cell origin may play a role in the increased airway secretion that is characteristic of acute tracheobronchitis.
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PMID:Serine proteases stimulate mucous glycoprotein release from hamster tracheal ring organ culture. 287 41

Treatment of platelets with human leukocyte elastase causes a rapid loss in response to von Willebrand factor and a biphasic loss in response to thrombin, first rapid then more slowly. The rapid phase corresponds to cleavage of a 45-kDa glycopeptide from the extracellular end of membrane glycoprotein GPIb. Longer treatment removes 80-kDa and 90-kDa glycopeptides and a glycopeptide corresponding to the major part of GPV. The 45-kDa and 90-kDa species could be obtained by elastase treatment of glycocalicin, the major proteolytic cleavage product of GPIb. Polyclonal rabbit antibodies against the purified 45-kDa glycopeptide had the same effect on the action of von Willebrand factor and thrombin on platelets as cleavage of GPIb by elastase. These results indicate that both the von Willebrand factor and thrombin binding sites on GPIb are located in the same region on the outside of the molecule. Thrombin activation of platelets involves at least two receptors, one on the 45-kDa glycopeptide, which when occupied causes an increase in the speed of response of the platelets to the cleavage of the second. GPV, a candidate for the second receptor, is a hydrophobic glycoprotein that is cleaved from the platelet membrane by several proteases. Proteases that do not activate platelets but degrade the second receptor remove larger fragments from GPV than do proteases such as thrombin or trypsin which activate platelets.
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PMID:Structure and function of platelet membrane glycoproteins Ib and V. Effects of leukocyte elastase and other proteases on platelets response to von Willebrand factor and thrombin. 293 56

Because platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) may be released at sites where neutrophil proteinases may also be released, we examined the effects of neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G upon the chemotactic and mitogenic activities of PDGF. Elastase abolished the chemotactic activity of PDGF for fibroblasts but had no effect on its chemotactic activity for monocytes, or on its mitogenic activity for 3T3 cells or its capacity to bind to 3T3 cells. Cathepsin G had no effect upon the chemotactic or mitogenic activities of PDGF. In contrast, trypsin eliminated the chemotactic activity of PDGF for monocytes and fibroblasts and the mitogenic activity of PDGF. After reduction and alkylation, PDGF retained full chemotactic activity for fibroblasts and monocytes but exhibited no mitogenic activity and only limited binding to 3T3 cells. These results indicate separate domains on PDGF for fibroblast chemotactic and mitogenic activity and for monocyte and fibroblast chemotactic activity and raise the possibility that the biological activities of PDGF may be modified selectively in vivo. The findings further suggest that the majority of PDGF receptors on fibroblasts mediate mitogenic activity and that only a minority of the PDGF receptors on fibroblasts are responsible for chemotactic activity.
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PMID:Dissociation of the chemotactic and mitogenic activities of platelet-derived growth factor by human neutrophil elastase. 298 84

Studies on the effect of leukocyte elastase on the metabolism of chondrocytes in culture have demonstrated that these cells possess a specific cell surface receptor for leukocyte-derived elastase. Purified elastase from rabbit and human leukocytes is capable of modulating the metabolism of the cell by causing a marked decrease in both proteoglycan and protein biosynthesis. Addition of 125I-labeled elastase to chondrocytes maintained in suspension culture has shown that binding occurs, and that it is saturable and is inhibited by the addition of unlabeled enzyme. We ascertained that the active site of the enzyme was necessary for binding to the chondrocyte, since phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride-inactivated leukocyte elastase failed to bind. Pancreatic elastase had only a slight affinity for the receptor, whereas trypsin and bovine serum albumin failed to bind to any significant extent. Autoradiographic studies and the use of inhibitors of endocytosis, such as dansyl cadaverine, confirmed that endocytosis of elastase was the secondary event after cell binding.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated binding of leukocyte elastase by chondrocytes. 303 97

An acid-stable, low molecular mass proteinase inhibitor, bronchial mucus proteinase inhibitor (BMPI), has been isolated from sputum and partially characterised. A single band with a modal molecular mass of 18 700 was observed following SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. BMPI inhibited human leukocyte elastase, cathepsin G, trypsin and chymotrypsin, but not porcine pancreatic elastase. Although BMPI had a molecular mass close to the similarly isolated inhibitor of Girard et al. (Girard, F., Tournier, J.M., Polu, J.M. & Sadoul, P. (1980), Bull. Eur. Physiopathol. Respir. 16 (Suppl.) 237-245), and although it showed immunological cross reactivity to the low molecular mass inhibitor of Kramps et al. (Kramps, J.A., Franken, C., Meyer, C.J.L.M. & Dijkman, J.H. (1981) J. Histochem. Cytochem. 29, 712-719), it was found to have an amino-acid profile different to any previously described inhibitor. BMPI was detectable in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collected from healthy and diseased human lungs. The median molar ratio of BMPI/alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1 PI) observed in these lavage samples was 0.7, which is generally higher than those derived from the data of other authors. This suggests that BMPI is a different protein to those previously described, although its exact relationship to other low molecular mass proteinase inhibitors remains to be determined.
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PMID:Acid-stable low molecular mass proteinase inhibitors in human lung lavage. 308 87

Strong activity of acid-stable trypsin inhibitor (ASTI) was confirmed in some clinical thrombin preparations. Thrombin preparations of human plasma origin had no detectable ASTI activity, whereas some preparations of bovine plasma origin revealed more than 5,000 U/vial (5,000 thrombin units), indicating a higher content of ASTI than of thrombin in terms of protein concentration. Contamination by other biologically active substances was also suggested by variations in amidolytic activity with several synthetic substrates (S-2238, S-2251, S-2444, S-2266 and Bz-L-Arg-pNA). On isoelectric focussing, the ASTI activities migrated in acidic positions with pI values of 3.9, 4.5, 5.0, 5.9 and 6.5, respectively. They were almost parallel to the thrombin Bz-L-Arg-pNA hydrolytic activity, and differed from that of the purified thrombin preparation (pI = 7.0). By gel filtration on Sephadex G-100, the molecular weights of the inhibitors as calculated using standard proteins were 140,000 (main), 70,000 and less than 10,000 (minor), respectively. An immunological difference between the main inhibitor (pI = 3.9, mol wt 140,000) and previously reported plasma ASTI was also confirmed with goat anti-UTI serum by the double immunodiffusion and ELISA methods. The inhibitor exerted a strong inhibitory effect not only on trypsin and chymotrypsin, but also on non-plasmic fibrinolysis with human leukocyte elastase, and to a lesser extent on the blood coagulation system (lengthening of APTT and PT). Clearly, when using thrombin preparations and analyzing the data obtained after their administration, the effects of this and other contaminant biologically active substances must be taken into account.
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PMID:Strong activity of acid-stable trypsin inhibitor in bovine thrombin for clinical use. 314 Oct 90

The objective of this study was to investigate the elastin repair process in the rat aortic smooth muscle cell culture after proteolytic injury. Although little studied in vivo, elastin repair is thought to occur through a sequential process involving enzymatic removal (debridement) of damaged fibers followed by synthesis of tropoelastin, its subsequent processing, and eventual incorporation into new insoluble elastin. A second repair mechanism of proteolytically damaged elastin in a culture system is reported here. Repair in this system relates directly to restoration of resistance to elastin solubilization by hot alkali. As expected, severe injuries were observed with porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE). Using PPE, only 6% of the elastin, relative to control, was resistant to hot alkali immediately after elastase treatment. 4 wk later, resistance to hot alkali had increased dramatically to a mean of 90%. Repair took longer after injury with 75 micrograms of PPE as compared with 50 micrograms of PPE. The limited elastic fiber proteolysis induced by either human neutrophil elastase or porcine trypsin was repaired in culture within 2 wk. Elastin that had been radiolabeled with [3H]lysine 4-5 wk before injury was converted from a hot NaOH-susceptible to a NaOH-resistant elastin fraction during recovery from PPE injury. At the same time, the frayed elastic fibers that were seen with the electron microscope immediately after PPE treatment were replaced by continuous bands of elastin that resembled those in control cultures. Restoration of NaOH resistance did not require a net increase in total cell layer elastin, suggesting that relatively little new tropoelastin incorporation into the cell layer was required for this type of repair. These results suggested a salvage repair mechanism for proteolytically damaged elastin.
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PMID:Repair of protease-damaged elastin in neonatal rat aortic smooth muscle cell cultures. 314 80


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