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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)
Studies were conducted to identify neural cells that synthesize and/or process cerebral amyloid using antisera and monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised to synthetic peptides based on the first 28 amino acids of the amyloid beta-protein. Using rabbit and mouse antisera, and 7 MAbs, sections of neocortex, hippocampus, cerebellum, and spinal cord from Alzheimer's disease (AD), Down's syndrome (DS), and control cases were probed. The antibodies produced 3 distinct immunohistochemical patterns: 1) staining restricted to neuritic plaque and blood vessel amyloid only (antisera, 1 of 7 MAbs); 2) immunoreactivity confined to cytoplasmic granules in diverse neuronal, glial (astrocytes, ependyma) and other (leptomeningeal, perivascular, choroid plexus) cells (1 of 7 MAbs); 3) a summation of these 2 patterns (5 of 7 MAbs). Controls resembled the AD and DS cases, except for a paucity of immunoreactive plaques and blood vessels in the controls. Immunoreactivity was reduced or removed by the peptides used to produce these antibodies.
Formalin
- and Bouins-fixed tissues reacted weakly or not at all with these antibodies while microwave denatured tissues reacted very intensely with them. Specific staining was enhanced by treatment of the tissue sections with Triton X-100, NaDodSO4, or
trypsin
. These studies significantly extend earlier studies that localized amyloid beta-protein precursor mRNA to human brain cells, and they suggest that the beta-protein, its precursor, and/or fragments thereof may exist in diverse neural cell types in AD, DS, and control brains.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to a synthetic peptide homologous with the first 28 amino acids of Alzheimer's disease beta-protein recognize amyloid and diverse glial and neuronal cell types in the central nervous system. 252 64
Human urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) binds rapidly and with high affinity to a number of human cell types; this localizes plasmin generation to the close environment of the cell surface. uPA binding to HeLa and U937 cells is mediated by a single class of sites with an affinity of 3.4 +/- 1.3 x 10(-10) M. Binding is abolished by treatment of the cells with
trypsin
. Chemical cross-linking of Mr 55,000 125I-uPA to the surface of HeLa and U937 cells with disuccinimidyl suberate or with
formaldehyde
results in the formation of a labeled complex of Mr 100,000, suggesting a Mr of 45,000 +/- 5,000 for the receptor or a subunit thereof. When cells solubilized in Triton X-114 are subjected to heat-induced phase separation, unoccupied receptor, receptor-bound 125I-uPA, and cross-linked 125I-uPA-receptor complex all partition in the detergent phase, whereas the unbound ligand remains in the aqueous phase; similar phase partitioning is observed with endogenous uPA-receptor complexes from cultured human and murine cells. Thus, uPA bound at the cell surface is tightly associated with an amphiphilic membrane protein. Interaction of uPA with this plasma membrane receptor is species-specific, since human uPA fails to bind to murine cells, and murine uPA does not bind to human cells. Finally, incubation of HeLa cells in the presence of epidermal growth factor or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate results, over a period of 24 h, in a progressive change in uPA binding: an approximately 10-fold increase in the number of sites is accompanied by a 10-fold decrease in their affinity. Cross-linking and phase partitioning of 125I-uPA bound to epidermal growth factor- or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-treated cells indicate that, as in control conditions, it is associated with a Mr 45,000 cell surface amphiphilic polypeptide.
...
PMID:Characterization of the cellular binding site for the urokinase-type plasminogen activator. 253 17
Bacteroides fragilis is associated with the formation of intra-abdominal abscesses, whereas other Bacteroides species are rarely involved. Since bacterial clumping may contribute to the survival of bacteria in the face of host defence mechanisms, the hypothesis has been put forward that differences in aggregation between fragilis and non-fragilis strains of Bacteroides may account for their differences in survival in vivo. All seven B. fragilis strains tested formed aggregates within 4 h, but strains not associated with intra-abdominal sepsis--B. vulgatus, B. thetaiotaomicron and B. distasonis--did not form aggregates in vitro. Aggregation occurred at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C or 20 degrees C. Treatment with pronase partially inhibited aggregation. Periodate treatment killed the cells and caused them to form clumps which were distinguishable from the control aggregates. Heat-killed B. fragilis cells formed similar distinct clumps, but cells killed by glutaraldehyde and
formaldehyde
did so to a lesser degree. No inhibition was found upon addition of carbohydrates, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid or after treatment with
trypsin
. These results demonstrate that aggregate formation occurs with B. fragilis strains alone, and that surface proteins probably mediate this interaction.
...
PMID:Aggregation by fragilis and non-fragilis Bacteroides strains in vitro. 253 42
Fibrobacter succinogenes subsp. succinogenes S85, formerly Bacteroides succinogenes, adheres to crystalline cellulose present in the culture medium. When the cells are suspended in buffer, adhesion is enhanced by increasing the ionic strength. Heat, glutaraldehyde,
trypsin
, and pronase treatments markedly reduce the extent of adhesion. Treatment with dextrinase, modification of amino and carboxyl groups with
Formalin
or other chemical agents, and inclusion of either albumin (1%) or Tween 80 (0.5%) do not decrease the degree of adhesion. Adherence-defective mutants isolated by their inability to bind to cellulose exhibited different growth characteristics. Class 1 mutants grew on glucose, cellobiose, amorphous cellulose, and crystalline cellulose. Class 3 mutants grew on glucose and cellobiose but not on amorphous or crystalline cellulose. No substantial changes were detected in the endoglucanase, cellobiosidase, and cellobiase activities of the wild type and the mutants. These data suggest that adhesion to crystalline cellulose is specific and that it involves surface proteins.
...
PMID:Factors affecting adhesion of Fibrobacter succinogenes subsp. succinogenes S85 and adherence-defective mutants to cellulose. 261 2
A novel replicating agent (IFDO) was isolated from ileal fluid. Growth occurred in vitro under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, and was faster at 37 degrees C than at room temperature. The doubling time was 15.8 min. Colonies were dark brown in colour and occurred beneath the surface of agar after conventional surface inoculation. Provisional data indicate that the agent may be a normal intestinal commensal. The agent was remarkably resistant to inactivation by steam at 134 degrees C,
formaldehyde
and glutaraldehyde; it was relatively resistant to ionising radiation, and it was filterable through membranes with a nominal pore diameter of 10 nm. Such properties, with the exception of growth in cell-free medium, are shared by "unconventional agents" such as those of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and scrapie. Further comparison of the properties of the intestinal agent and of slow viruses revealed additional shared characteristics, including resistance to proteinase K and
trypsin
, and inactivation by guanidine thiocyanate, diethyl pyrocarbonate, phenol and sodium hydroxide. The agent differs from that of scrapie in being inactivated by ethidium bromide, zinc nitrate, EDTA, hydroxylamine in the presence Sarkosyl, and, under certain circumstances, by ribonuclease. Broth cultures of the agent contained particles possessing considerable size heterogeneity. The smaller filterable particles were generally more susceptible to inactivation, did not survive autoclaving, and were inactivated by papaya protease and lipase. It is possible that the replicating agent may be formed by crystallisation from constituents of the medium, and not by a biological process. This does not exclude the postulated relationship to slow viruses.
...
PMID:A novel replicating agent isolated from the human intestinal tract having characteristics shared with Creutzfeldt-Jakob and related agents. 265 97
Two collagen-coated grafts were studied: Hemashield (bovine collagen cross-linked with
formaldehyde
vapours and softened by exposure to glycerol) and Tascon (collagen fibres cross-linked with glutaraldehyde solution). The weight of the coating was 310 +/- 5 mg/g for Hemashield and 45 +/- 2.5 mg/g for Tascon. However, notwithstanding these differences, both coatings were efficient in making the walls of the grafts impervious to blood. The water permeabilities for the Hemashield and the Tascon were 8.7 and 5.9 ml.min-1.cm-2 at 120 mmHg respectively. The Hemashield collagen coating was rapidly eroded in vitro (4 h) after exposure to buffer,
trypsin
or pancreatin solutions, whereas the Tascon collagen coating remained well preserved after 7 d incubation. Both coatings were safe and did not interfere with the physical properties of the graft which was used as a skeleton. The healing properties of the Hemashield were similar to that observed with preclotted polyester prostheses, except in the early hours following graft implantation. On the other hand, the absence of erosion in the coating of the Tascon seemed to contribute to early antithrombogenicity. It also induced marked inflammatory reactions in the surrounding tissues and thus the healing appeared to be delayed.
...
PMID:Collagen coatings as biological sealants for textile arterial prostheses. 261 16
Benign and malignant fibrous histiocytomas are composed of an admixture of fibroblast-like and histiocyte-like cells and of a changing amount of fibre structures which tend to be arranged in a so-called storiform pattern. In order to study the organization of the extracellular matrix, the distribution of fibronectin was investigated immunohistochemically. Using the PAP technique and the indirect immunofluorescence method, paraffin sections of
formaldehyde
fixed tissue specimens of 25 tumours (12 benign fibrous histiocytomas, 12 malignant fibrous histiocytomas, and 1 atypical fibroxanthoma) were studied. A pretreatment with hyaluronidase and proteolytic enzymes (
trypsin
, pronase, pepsin) was performed to unmask the antigen. Best results were obtained with pronase E or, sometimes even better, by employing a combination of pronase E and hyaluronidase. Generally fibronectin could be demonstrated in the matrix substances of fibrohistiocytic tumours, but the immunohistochemical staining patterns of benign and malignant tumours differed. In benign fibrous histiocytomas, a regular distribution of fibronectin was found in cellular areas. Parallel to formation of collagen fibres, the reaction decreased and in dermatofibromas showing abundant hyalinized collagen the staining proved to be quite weak. In malignant fibrous histiocytomas, the immunostaining was very irregular. In cellular areas consisting of spindle cells, an intense reaction could be observed. Tumours with storiform or fascicular fields exhibit a delicate network of fibronectin encircling individual fibroblast-like cells. In the course of fibre formation, the matrix staining for fibronectin revealed a distribution similar but not identical with that obtained with the reticulin stain. Simultaneous to the occurrence of collagen fibre bundles, fibronectin decreased and in areas of hyalinization the staining was considerably diminished. In areas of undifferentiated small cells, in myxoid zones as well as foci of xanthoma cells, and in pleomorphic portions the immunostain was negative. The distribution in atypical fibroxanthoma is similar to that observed in storiform and pleomorphic variants of malignant fibrous histiocytomas. The results support the suggestion that fibronectin is the first sign of the typical basic pattern of fibrohistiocytic tumours preceding the formation of reticulin and collagen fibres. The expression of fibronectin on cell surfaces as well as in intercellular matrix may be closely related to the organization of the growth patterns of fibrohistiocytic tumours.
...
PMID:Fibronectin in relation to growth patterns of fibrohistiocytic tumours--an immunohistochemical study of benign and malignant fibrous histiocytomas. 282 24
Formaldehyde
-treated serum albumin (f-Alb) is known to be taken up and degraded by sinusoidal liver cells via receptor-mediated endocytosis. We report that 125I-labeled f-Alb (125I-f-Alb) binding to human placental brush-border membranes also occurs. This binding reached equilibrium within 40 min at 37 degrees C. Kinetic studies demonstrated the presence of saturable binding with an apparent Kd of 2.1 micrograms of f-Alb/ml and a maximal binding of 2.3 micrograms/mg of membrane protein at pH 7.5. Maximal binding was observed at between pH 7.5 and 8.0. 125I-f-Alb binding to the membranes was little inhibited by a 1000-fold molar excess of ovalbumin, human apo-transferrin and native bovine serum albumin. No binding was observed with membranes which had been pretreated with proteinase or
trypsin
. This f-Alb receptor was extremely heat-stable, since the binding was not abolished even by pretreatment of the membranes at 78 degrees C for 30 min. EDTA, Ca2+ and Mg/4 had no effect on 125I-f-Alb binding, so the binding was independent of divalent cations. These data suggest that a receptor specific for f-Alb exists on human placental brush-border membranes of syncytial trophoblasts.
...
PMID:A receptor for formaldehyde-treated serum albumin on human placental brush-border membrane. 284 91
Extracted human deciduous teeth undergoing physiological root resorption were fixed with a mixture of
formaldehyde
and glutaraldehyde and processed for scanning (SEM) and analytical transmission electron microscopy, as well as acid trimetaphosphatase cytochemistry. The granulated tissues, which are rich in multinucleated odontoclasts and capillary vessels, formed various resorption lacunae on the resorbing dentin surfaces. SEM observations of dentin surfaces treated with sodium hypochlorite revealed two types of resorption lacunae: deep, round lacunae in which the peritubular matrix of dentinal tubules was strongly dissolved; and shallow, irregular lacunae with intact peritubular matrix. In
trypsin
-treated materials, the resorption surfaces were characterized by the presence of numerous collagen fibers in both the peritubular and intertubular matrices, suggesting demineralization of the surface dentin. Odontoclasts were characterized by the presence of abundant mitochondria, perinuclear stacks of Golgi membranes, various lysosomes, numerous endocytotic vacuoles, and a well-developed ruffled border against the resorption lacunae. Most endocytotic vacuoles were distributed in the cytoplasm between the ruffled border and the nuclei. In undemineralized ultrathin sections, the surface dentin of resorption lacunae consisted of collagen fibers and apatite crystals and had a lower packing density than those in unresorbed, deeper dentin. Many apatite crystals were demonstrated to be present in the extracellular channels of the ruffled border and in adjacent endocytotic vacuoles derived from it. Lysosomes located in the perinuclear cytoplasm of odontoclasts contained amorphous dense material and/or a small amount of crystals. An energy-dispersive x-ray microanalysis of apatite crystals in undemineralized sections indicated that the energy spectrum peaks of Ca and P detected from crystals in resorbing dentin were much lower than those in unresorbed dentin. Similarly, lower spectrum peaks of Ca and P were obtained from crystals found in the ruffled border and endocytotic vacuoles of odontoclasts. A slight trace Ca peak also was detected in the amorphous dense material in lysosomes of odontoclasts. The enzyme cytochemistry of lysosomal acid trimetaphosphatase indicated that odontoclasts had intense enzymatic activity in the Golgi membranes, endoplasmic reticulum cisternae, lysosomes, and endocytotic vacuoles. Dense reaction precipitates of enzymatic activity also were found along the dentin surfaces of resorption lacunae occupied by odontoclast ruffled borders.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dentin resorption mediated by odontoclasts in physiological root resorption of human deciduous teeth. 285 Dec 63
Bhanja virus is acid-labile, relatively thermostable, resistant to
trypsin
and heparin; a complete inactivation was achieved with chloramine B or
formaldehyde
, while phenol was ineffective, and UV radiation only partially effective.
...
PMID:Some physical and chemical properties of Bhanja virus. 287 92
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