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)

In vitro studies indicate that [(57)Co]cobalamin (Cbl) is preferentially bound to salivary R protein as opposed to intrinsic factor (IF) and that [(57)Co]Cbl bound to R protein is not transferred to IF at either pH 2 or pH 8. Incubation of R protein-[(57)Co]Cbl with pancreatic proteases causes a partial degradation of the R protein moiety and a rapid transfer of [(57)Co]Cbl to IF. We have postulated that the etiology of Cbl malabsorption in pancreatic insufficiency is an inability to partially degrade R protein because of a lack of pancreatic proteases. We have tested this hypothesis by determining the ability of a nonradioactive Cbl analogue, bound with high affinity by R protein but not by IF, to correct the malabsorption of [(57)Co]Cbl in patients with pancreatic insufficiency.R protein bound the Cbl analogue known as cobinamide with affinities that were the same and only 14-fold lower than those for Cbl at pH 8 and pH 2, respectively. Cobinamide was bound by IF with affinities that were 600,000- and 10,000-fold lower than those for Cbl at pH 8 and 2, respectively. The addition of 125 pmol of nonradioactive cobinamide to 0.5 pmol of [(57)Co]Cbl before being added to 1 pmol of R protein and 1 pmol of IF, markedly inhibited the ability of R protein to compete with IF for binding the [(57)Co]Cbl. Similar results were obtained with freshly aspirated gastric juice. This change was essentially indistinguishable from that observed previously when R protein or R protein-[(57)Co]Cbl was incubated in vitro with trypsin. The oral administration of 100 nmol of nonradioactive cobinamide in Schilling tests was equivalent to trypsin in its ability to completely correct the malabsorption of 0.4 nmol of [(57)Co]Cbl in three patients with pancreatic insufficiency. The fact that both trypsin and nonradioactive cobinamide inhibit the ability of R protein to compete with IF for [(57)Co]Cbl binding in vitro, and correct the mal-absorption of [(57)Co]Cbl in patients with pancreatic insufficiency in vivo, supports our hypothesis that the primary defect in Cbl absorption in this disease is an inability to partially degrade R protein because of a lack of pancreatic proteases.
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PMID:Correction of cobalamin malabsorption in pancreatic insufficiency with a cobalamin analogue that binds with high affinity to R protein but not to intrinsic factor. In vivo evidence that a failure to partially degrade R protein is responsible for cobalamin malabsorption in pancreatic insufficiency. 65 18

It is now known that nonphysiological cobalamin analogs exist in the gastrointestinal tract, but their metabolic behavior is unclear. In this study, [57Co]cobinamide was used to study its affinity to hog intrinsic factor-cobalamin (IF-Cbl) receptor which has no species specificity against human IF-Cbl receptor, and its relation to human saliva R binder. Cobinamide was prepared from [57Co]cyanocobalamin and separated by paper chromatography. Human IF-Cbl complex was bound to IF-Cbl receptor but free cyanocobalamin was not. Although R binder-cobinamide was not bound to the IF-Cbl receptor, free cobinamide was bound to the IF-Cbl receptor to a significant extent (about one-half of IF-cyanocobalamin binding to the IF-Cbl receptor). We then investigated the binding of cobinamide to R binder and trypsin-treated R binder. Association constant of cobinamide binding to the IF-Cbl receptor was 1.0 X 10(9) M-1 which was much lower than that of cobinamide binding to trypsin-treated R binder and to untreated R binder. Further study indicated that cobinamide binding to the IF-Cbl receptor was blocked by the addition of R binder and also by trypsin-treated R binder. We conclude that one of the roles of R binder is to prevent binding of free cobalamin analogs to the IF-Cbl receptor in the gut.
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PMID:Binding of cobalamin analogs to intrinsic factor-cobalamin receptor and its prevention by R binder. 302 87