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)

A heat-stable polypeptide has been detected in Saccharomyces carlsbergensis which inhibits specifically proteinase B from yeast. This proteinase B inhibitor IB3 differs substantially in chemical, physical and antigenic properties from the earlier described proteinase B inhibitors IB1 and IB2 from yeast. The inhibitor IB3 has been purified from S. carlsbergensis and appears to be homogeneous by disc gel electrophoresis and sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight has been estimated at 11 500, with no evidence for the existence of subunits. The amino acid analysis shows the absence of tryptophan. No compounds other than amino acids could be detected. The isoelectric point is 4.6. The inhibitor is not affected by incubation with proteinase B but is inactivated by proteinase A and carboxypeptidase Y from yeast and by trypsin from bovine pancreas. The proteinase B inhibitor association constant was calculated to be 3.3 x 10(9) M-1 and the enzyme inhibitor complex is stable at 25 degrees C in the pH range 5--10. The inhibitor does not exhibit immunological cross-reactivity with IB1 and IB2. After centrifugal fractionation at 40 000 x g of a metabolic lysate from spheroplasts the inhibitor was found to be localized in the supernatant, i.e. the extravacuolar soluble fraction.
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PMID:Isolation, characterization and localization of the proteinase B inhibitor IB3 from Saccharomyces carlsbergensis. 11 2

Three assays of cell-mediated cytotoxicity in mice, involving release of either 51Cr (CRA), 125iododeoxyuridine (IRA), or [3H]proline (PRA), were compared under identical test conditions. Experiments were performed with effector cells from mice immunized with FBL-3 tumor cells, a syngeneic Friend virus-induced leukemia, or with allogeneic normal spleen cells. With established tissue culture cells as targets, similar results were obtained in all three assays. The cytotoxicity produced by cells from in vivo-immunized mice and the induction of cytotoxicity in vitro were T-cell-dependent. When short-term culture target cells were used, the IRA gave a more selective pattern of cytotoxicity than did the other two assays. However, when remaining target cells at the end of the assay were treated with trypsin, higher levels of 125iododeoxyuridine (125IUDR) release were seen, and the results were then comparable to those in the CRA and PRA. These results indicated that 125IUDR, a nuclear label, could only be released after lysis of cells. In contrast, 51Cr or [3H]proline, which are cytoplasmic labels, could also be released from damaged but unlysed cells. These fundamental differences could give different results in these assays, which could determine their correlation with in vivo transplantation immunity.
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PMID:Comparison of three isotopic assays of cell-mediated cytotoxicity against mouse tumor cells. II. Sensitivity and specificity of the assays and characteristics of effector and sensitizing cells. 83 81

The differential cleavage of surface proteins of Borrelia burgdorferi IRS strains by several proteases was examined. Proteinase K, trypsin, chymotrypsin and thermolysin all cleaved the outer surface protein B (OspB) to undetectable levels by Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining, whereas some residual protein was detected by immunoblotting with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. Not even antigenic fragments were detectable by immunoblotting with 1A8 monoclonal antibody reactive with OspB. Less effective or ineffective was the cleavage of OspB by V8 protease and proteinase A, respectively. The outer surface protein A was cleaved only by proteinase K. The effect of trypsin on borreliae viability and adhesion to cultured cells was also studied. The trypsin treatment of borreliae did not impair the viability of organisms which continued to synthesize the cleaved OspB. The attachment of B. burgdorferi to HEp-2 cells was reduced by 41% after treatment with trypsin, whereas preincubation of borreliae with monoclonal antibody 1A8 and guinea pig immune serum reduced the adhesion of borreliae to the cells by 32% and 87%, respectively.
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PMID:Differential cleavage of surface proteins of Borrelia burgdorferi by proteases. 160 94

Prorenin determination in rat plasma has been problematic from the outset. Consequently, its existence is questioned by some and its quantity by others, making it difficult for knowledge to advance as to its function relative to the renin system. The present study examines major variables in the determination of rat plasma prorenin and renin, notably different prorenin activation protocols involving blood samples obtained under various conditions from animals under different anesthetics. We found that a trypsin activation step with 5 mg/mL plasma, 60 min at 23 degrees C, followed by a PRA step of 10 min at 37 degrees C, resulted in the highest prorenin estimates, up to approximately 400 ng.mL-1.h-1 in terms of angiotensin I, as compared with published values of 0-190, based on other protocols. These estimates were obtained despite considerable destruction of angiotensinogen (renin substrate) by trypsin. Cryoactivation of prorenin was much less effective than in human plasma but, when followed by trypsin, it facilitated greater activation than with trypsin alone. Comparable fresh and fresh-frozen plasmas had similar prorenin-renin values, but lower values were observed in plasmas that had been repeatedly frozen and thawed. Conscious rats and those anesthetized with Inactin or ether had higher renins and prorenins than those anesthetized with methoxyflurane or halothane. Rats with kidneys in place during blood collection had higher renins (but not prorenins) than those whose kidneys were clamped off, suggesting that last-minute renin release during blood collection had occurred. We conclude that (i) trypsin generates increased renin, or renin-like, activity in plasma, suggesting activation of a precursor; (ii) on this basis, high prorenin levels exist in normal rat plasma; (iii) renin and prorenin levels are variously influenced by different anesthetics and blood handling procedures; (iv) variation in prorenin levels suggests that it is a dynamic (functional?) component of the renin system; (v) prorenin measurements are heavily influenced by methodological variations during the trypsin step or the subsequent PRA step; (vi) using standardized methodology, the rat can serve as a model for investigating the function of prorenin in normotension and hypertension.
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PMID:Activation and measurement of plasma prorenin in the rat. 175 34

Although heparin was reported in the 1960s to inhibit renin activity, this has not always been confirmed by other investigators. Hence, we re-examined whether heparin really inhibits renin or not. Renin activities were determined by radioimmunoassay of angiotensin I generated at pH 7.4. (i) No significant difference was found between the two kinds of plasma samples obtained with heparin and with EDTA as anticoagulant, in ARC (renin activity with addition of sheep renin substrate), TRC (ARC after activation of inactive renin by trypsin), or PRA (plasma renin activity without additional substrate). (ii) Even in higher concentrations of heparin up to 500 U/mL, neither PRA, ARC, nor TRC of plasma was affected significantly. (iii) Heparin, in concentrations up to 500 U/mL, exerted no significant effect on TRC of the media of human vascular smooth muscle cell culture. In conclusion, heparin does not exert any significant inhibitory effect on human renin nor does it affect activation of inactive renin by trypsin in the range of concentration of practical use, under the conditions employed in this study.
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PMID:Does heparin inhibit renin activity? 175 38

Although many in vitro and animal studies indicate the existence of a local renin--angiotensin system, data regarding its physiological role are quite controversial, and moreover, evidence suggesting inactive and active renin release from vascular tissue in vivo is lacking both in animal and humans. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether beta-adrenoceptor stimulation, a well-known stimulus to renin production, through isoproterenol might cause local renin production from vessels of the forearm of hypertensive patients. Drugs were infused into the brachial artery at systemically ineffective rates, while forearm blood flow (FBF, venous plethysmography), mean intra-arterial pressure, and heart rate were monitored throughout. Active and inactive vessel renin production was measured by calculating venous-arterial (V-A) differences by simultaneous sampling from brachial artery and an ipsilateral deep vein. Active renin (PRA) and total renin (Sepharose bound trypsin activation) were measured by radioimmunoassay while inactive renin was calculated as the difference between total and active renin. V-A differences were corrected for FBF to calculate renin extraction or production. In a group of 10 patients, isoproterenol, which was infused at increasing cumulative rates (0.03, 0.1, 0.3 micrograms.100 mL-1 forearm tissue.min-1 for 5 min each), caused a dose-dependent increment in FBF that was blunted by intra-arterial propranolol (n = 5) pretreatment (10 micrograms.100 mL-1 forearm tissue.min-1 for 10 min). beta-Adrenoceptor stimulation caused a dose-dependent outflow of both active and inactive renin, an effect antagonized by propranolol. In conclusion, our data represent the first evidence in humans of tissue active and inactive renin production in the forearm vascular bed.
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PMID:Active and inactive renin in human forearm of hypertensive patients. 175 44

A 54-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for the treatment of a tumor of the right chest wall. Clinical examination revealed hypertension, hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hyperaldosteronism and hyperreninemia. Computed tomography and an abdominal echogram indicated a tumor in the right phrenic area and two tumors in the retroperitoneum near the pancreas head. After the surgical resection of these tumors, the primary reninism was diminished. The pathological diagnosis of these tumors was leiomyosarcoma. Plasma active and inactive (trypsin-activated) renin activities (PRA) were 85.7 and 38.9 ng angiotensin I/ml/h, respectively. These PRA did not respond to either postural stimulation or suppression by the volume expansion. Active and inactive renin activities in a right phrenic area tumor were 208 and 32 ng angiotensin I/mg protein /h, respectively. Those of an abdominal tumor were 196 and 30 ng angiotensin I/mg protein/h, respectively. Renin mRNA identical in molecular size to that of the human kidney was identified by northern blot analysis. This is the first case report of renin producing leiomyosarcoma derived from the lung, which is characterized by relatively lower plasma prorenin concentrations.
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PMID:A case of renin producing leiomyosarcoma originating in the lung. 182 28

The complete amino acid sequence of the acid proteinase A, a non-pepsin type acid proteinase from the fungus Aspergillus niger var. macrosporus, was determined by protein sequencing. The enzyme was first dissociated at pH 8.5 into a light (L) chain and a heavy (H) chain, and the L chain was sequenced completely. Further sequencing was performed with the reduced and pyridylethylated or aminoethylated derivative of the whole protein, using peptides obtained by digestions with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and lysylendopeptidase. The location of the two disulfide bonds was determined by analysis of cystine-containing peptides obtained from a chymotryptic digest of the unmodified protein. These results established that the protein consists of a 39-residue L chain and a 173-residue H chain that associate noncovalently to form the native enzyme of 212 residues (Mr 22,265). This is, to our knowledge, the first time that such a protein with a rather short peptide chain associated noncovalently has been found. No sequence homology is found with other acid or aspartic proteinases, except for Scytalidium lignicolum acid proteinase B, an enzyme unrelated to pepsin by sequence, which has about 50% identity with the present enzyme. These two enzymes, however, are remarkably different from each other in some structural features.
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PMID:The primary structure of Aspergillus niger acid proteinase A. 191 59

The primary structure of malt carboxypeptidase III has been determined. The enzyme is a single N-terminally blocked polypeptide chain containing 411 amino acid residues. The sequence of these amino acid residues was deduced from analysis of fragments of the polypeptide chain obtained by chemical cleavages with either cyanogen bromide or hydroxylamine and by enzymatic cleavages with either trypsin, S. aureus V8 protease or proteinase A from yeast. A glycosylated asparagine was found in position 71. The determined sequence was 97% homologous with the amino acid sequence derived from the nucleotide sequence of a gene coding for a wheat protein postulated to be a carboxypeptidase. The malt carboxypeptidase III sequence showed 34% homology with the amino acid sequence of the single-chain carboxypeptidase Y, and about 25% homology with the combined A- and B-chains of malt carboxypeptidase I and II as well as wheat carboxypeptidase II.
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PMID:Primary structure of carboxypeptidase III from malted barley. 263 82

The physiological role of inactive renin, especially the question of whether and how a conversion to active renin takes place in vivo, remains controversial. In order to show the dynamic alterations from inactive to active renin following acute ACE-inhibition, both forms of renin were investigated in both renal veins and the peripheral circulation of 20 patients with essential hypertension and 20 patients with renovascular hypertension before and 1 h after 25 mg of captopril. Active and inactive renin were determined indirectly as plasma renin activity (PRA, unit: ng/ml x h). In vitro activation of inactive renin was achieved with trypsin (1 mg/ml plasma), followed by a further determination of PRA (= total renin). Subtraction of the active renin from the total renin yields the amount of inactive renin. In patients with essential hypertension, the mean values of active renin increase equally in both renal veins (1.4 and 1.3 before, 1.9 and 1.8 after captopril) and the peripheral circulation (0.9 and 1.3) (p less than 0.002), whereas the inactive renin decreases correspondingly. Renal veins: 7.6 and 8.2 before, 7.2 and 7.6 after captopril; peripheral circulation: 7.7 before and 7.0 after captopril (p less than 0.05). In all patients with renovascular hypertension, there is basally a marked lateralization of active renin (6.4 vs 3.5; p less than 0.01) and inactive renin (20.5 and 18.9, p less than 0.03) towards the side of the ischemic kidney. After captopril, the values for total renin and active renin increase (p less than 0.001), and the side difference for active renin becomes still more pronounced (33.0 vs 14.2; p less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Conversion of inactive renin to active renin following acute angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition in essential hypertension and renovascular hypertension]. 265 7


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