Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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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)
Two fractions of gastric mucosal membranes obtained by Ficoll-sucrose density gradient centrifugation were studied by a variety of techniques to localize the polypeptides. Gel electrophoresis showed the presence of five major polypeptides and several minor ones. Only one of these, 82,000 daltons, was available for iodination in the intact tissue. The two membrane fractions differed in their accessibility to peroxidase. The denser fraction showed two major defined iodination peaks at 82,000 and 102,000 daltons. Freeze-thawing and iodinating with 131-I produced additional labeling of peaks as well as relabeling the 82,000-dalton component, showing it was accessible from both sides of the membrane. The two major components were also sensitive to cross-linking, the 102,000 polypeptide being especially sensitive to --SH oxidation. Proteolysis with
trypsin
removed both components in the denser membrane fraction, in addition to inhibiting the K+-ATPase and K+-p-nitrophenylphosphatase of that fraction. Phosphorylation with [gamma-32-P]ATP labeled the 102,000-dalton component and K+,
HCO3
- minus and p-nitrophenylphosphate reduced the level of labeling. Hence the 102,000 region contains a subunit of the ATPase, is readily iodinated in inside-out vesicles, and is the most available for interpeptide S--S cross-linking.
...
PMID:Characterization of gastric mucosal membranes. VIII. The localization of peptides by iodination and phosphorylation. 16 6
Pancreatic secretory abnormalities develop in most persons with pancreatic cancer and have been attributed to ductal obstruction. These experiments investigated whether abnormal secretion results instead from carcinogen-induced changes in the secreting cells. Fifty male Syrian Golden hamsters (40 to 100 grams) received weekly injections of di-isopropyl-nitrosamine (250 mg/kg, subcutaneously), and survivors and age-matched controls were studied after 3.5 to 6.5 months of treatment. Pancreatic secretion was stimulated by secretin or cholecystokinin (2 units/kg, intravenously, as a bolus). After each stimulus four 15-minute collections of pancreatic juice were analyzed for
HCO3
- and Cl- or total protein, amylase,
trypsin
, and chymotrypsin. The organs were examined histologically. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma developed in 30% of the animals at 5 months, 56% at 5.5 months, and 100% at 6.5 months. The animals without cancer either had hyperplasia of the duct epithelium or were histologically normal. The histologic appearance of acinar tissue and protein secretion were normal in all groups. The tumors did not obstruct the major ducts. In all treated animals the pancreatic secretory response to secretin was of low volume, low maximal [
HCO3
-] and
HCO3
- output, and low [Cl- +
HCO3
-]; these changes progressed with time. The secretory abnormalities antedated the appearance of the neoplasms and were not caused by obstruction.
...
PMID:Pancreatic secretion in hamsters with pancreatic cancer. 87 54
The effect of bombesin on external pancreatic secretion was studied in seven healthy volunteers and intwo patients with a two-thirds gastrectomy and a pancreatic fistula. After bombesin infusion (15 ng/kg/min), gastrin levels were significantly raised in all volunteers, but remained at basal levels in the gastrectomized patients. Bombesin was effective in stimulating pancreatic secretion in all patients. The volume of secretion increased tow-fold when compared with basal volume. Amylase and
trypsin
concentrations and outputs in the duodenal juice were greatly agumented (amylase concentration: basal, 70 dye U/ml; post-bombesin, 620 dye U/ml. Amylase output: basal, 1000 dye U/15 min; post-bombesin, 15,800 dye U/15 min). Secretin, when administered in conjunction with bombesin, partially inhibited its secretory effect.
Bicarbonate
secretion was slightly stimulated by bombesin, but at a very low level. A similar pattern of results was obtained in the two gastrectomized patients. In man, bombesin exerts an effect on pancreatic secretion that mimics the effect of CCK-PZ, thus confirming the results obtained in the experimental animal. Gastrin does not play a fundamental role in this phenomenon.
...
PMID:External pancreatic secretion after bombesin infusion in man. 121 23
Gourd seed inhibitors were purified in the following manner: gourd seeds were ground and extracted with 10 mM ammonium
carbonate
, pH 7.8. The extract was precipitated with 65-90% acetone and the acetone precipitates were gel filtered in a Cellulofine GCL-90-m column. Fractions of 3000 Da showing
trypsin
inhibitory activity were combined and purified further by ion exchange and reversed phase chromatographies. Three inhibitors, LLTI-I, II, and III were thus purified to homogeneity and the amino acid sequences of these inhibitors were: [sequence: see text] The exact sequences are unique but very similar to proteinase inhibitors belonging to the squash family. Based on the sequence, it is assumed that the peptide bond (Arg-Ile) found in the three inhibitors is the reactive site for
trypsin
. The Ki values estimated for complexes of LLTI-I, II, and III with bovine
trypsin
were 3.6 x 10(-10) M, 6.5 x 10(-11) M, and 3.0 x 10(-11) M, respectively.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of serine proteinase inhibitors form gourd (Lagenaria leucantha Rusby var. Gourda Makino) seeds. 136 3
A study was made with different doses of cerulein (2, 4, 10 and 20 micrograms/kg) administered subcutaneously to rats by four injections at intervals of 1 hr; the aim of this work was to study exocrine pancreatic secretion of the rat under cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis, analyzing enzyme and hydroelectrolyte secretion of pancreatic juice. A further aim was to study the relationship between the dose of cerulein and the plasma levels of peptides controlling hydroelectrolyte secretion of the pancreas, like secretin and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). At the lowest dose schedule, the amounts of total protein and enzymes (amylase and
trypsin
) in pancreatic juice decreased significantly, plasma amylase increased, and the pancreas became edematous. Higher doses magnified these effects. By contrast, ductular function (flow and
HCO3
-) was well preserved in cerulein-treated rats, and this was probably due to the significant increase in plasma levels of immunoreactive secretin whereas VIP levels were unchanged. The secretin released by treatment with cerulein is able to palliate the lack of flow from acinar origin that is affected in the process of acute pancreatitis, being a beneficial response to the cerulein treatment.
...
PMID:Cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in the rat. Study of pancreatic secretion and plasma VIP and secretin levels. 137 Sep 34
Pancreatic juices were collected by selective reverse catherism of the chief pancreatic duct in two patients, one free from pancreatic disease and the other having a pancreas cancer. They were analysed in detail especially in order to get information on the mechanism of enzyme excretion. The variations of the digestive enzyme activities (amylase, lipase,
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase A and B) were not superimposable among them or with the fluctuations of the protein concentration in the pancreatic juice samples. These results agree with a non-parallel enzyme-excretion mechanism by the pancreas. However deep electrophoresis analyses of pancreatic juice samples showed that the ratio of each digestive enzyme concentration remained almost constant in the same patient. This observation disagrees with the above conclusion and suggests that the data obtained by using classical methods for estimating digestive enzyme activities have to be considered prudently. By another way, two main significant differences were reported by analysing the ionic composition of the pancreatic juice samples following their origin. The pancreatic juice samples of the patient having a pancreas cancer had a lower and more variable Na+ concentration than those coming from the patient who was free from pancreas disease. They had a
HCO3
- concentration which was almost constant, contrary to what was observed for the pancreatic juice secreted by the other patient.
...
PMID:[Detailed analysis of human pancreatic secretions collected by retrograde catheterization. Parallel or non-parallel excretion of digestive enzymes?]. 138 69
The peptide pattern obtained after proteolysis of S-1 with
trypsin
was different in the absence or presence of anions. The affinity of tryptic and undigested S-1 for anions (CN-, SCN- or
HCO3
-) was different, as reflected by the altered values of Ki or Ka obtained from ATPase activity measurements. Anions CN-, SCN-,
HCO3
-, or PPi induced dissociation of actomyosin when added to acto-S-1 or acto-heavy-meromyosin. Among nucleoside di- and triphosphates, only triphosphates were effective with regard to the dissociation. The results suggest the existence of a regulatory site of cationic nature on S-1, which might be involved in the dissociation of actin from myosin.
...
PMID:Conformational changes of S-1 related to its dissociation from actin. 141 Jul 69
Adenylate cyclase (AC) toxin from Bordetella pertussis penetrates eukaryotic cells and upon activation by calmodulin generates unregulated levels of intracellular cAMP. The process of toxin penetration into sheep erythrocytes was resolved into three consecutive steps including insertion, translocation, and intracellular cleavage. Insertion of the toxin into the cell membrane occurred over a wide temperature range (4-36 degrees C). In contrast, translocation of the toxin, i.e. transfer of the NH2-terminal catalytically active fragment across the membrane, occurred only above 20 degrees C and was highly temperature-dependent. While a single exposure of the toxin to Ca2+ was sufficient for its insertion into the plasma membrane, toxin translocation required exogenous Ca2+ at mM concentrations. Translocation was not affected by pretreatment of cells with
trypsin
, N-ethylmaleimide, and sodium
carbonate
at alkaline pH. The NH2-terminal fragment of the toxin was cleaved in the cell releasing the 45-kDa active AC into the cytosol. The cleavage was blocked by treatment of cells with N-ethylmaleimide. It is hypothesized that the COOH-terminal portion of the toxin creates in the membrane a channel through which the NH2-terminal fragment is translocated.
...
PMID:Distinct steps in the penetration of adenylate cyclase toxin of Bordetella pertussis into sheep erythrocytes. Translocation of the toxin across the membrane. 142 10
Organic molecules both coexist and interact with inorganic crystal lattices in biomineralizing tissues. Mineral precipitation and crystal morphology are tightly regulated by the actions of these molecules. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis studies on water soluble extracts from the cuticle of Callinectes sapidus (Atlantic blue crab) reveal the presence, in unmineralized nascent premolt cuticle, of proteins which are absent in the mineralized postmolt cuticle. In the present studies, homogenates from both premolt and postmolt C. sapidus cuticles have been tested for their effect on the in vitro precipitation of calcium
carbonate
. The role of protein in this process was determined by heat pretreatment and
trypsin
pretreatment of the cuticle homogenates prior to the precipitation assay. The results from these experiments indicate that proteins, with molecular weights of approximately 75,000 and between 10,000 and 20,000, concentrated in the C. sapidus premolt cuticle, inhibit calcium
carbonate
precipitation in vitro. The inhibitory activity of these proteins appears to be a result of specific interactions since
trypsin
, myoglobin, and ovalbumin are not inhibitory. The presence of lower amounts of these inhibitory proteins in C. sapidus postmolt cuticle may be responsible for the subsequent mineralization of this tissue.
...
PMID:Novel protein inhibits in vitro precipitation of calcium carbonate. 149 56
Sera from patients with halothane hepatitis contain immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies to trifluoroacetylated liver microsomal proteins of 100, 76, 59, 57 and 54 kDa, which are produced as a consequence of metabolism of halothane to trifluoroacetyl halide by cytochrome(s) P450. In the present study, the membrane topographies of the various antigens in rat liver microsomal fractions were investigated. Liver microsomal fractions from rats treated with halothane in vivo, and rat liver microsomal fractions which had been incubated with halothane in vitro, were used as the source of trifluoroacetyl antigens. The antigens were detected by immunoblotting. Whereas the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens were solubilized from the microsomal membrane by either 0.1 M sodium
carbonate
or 0.1% (w/v) sodium deoxycholate, the 54 kDa antigen was not solubilized by 0.1% (w/v) sodium deoxycholate. In intact microsomal fractions, the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens were not degraded appreciably by
trypsin
unless detergent was added to permeabilize the microsomal membrane. These results indicate that the 54 kDa antigen is an integral membrane protein, whereas the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens are peripheral membrane proteins situated within the lumen of microsomal vesicles, and hence presumably located within the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum in vivo.
...
PMID:The topography of trifluoroacetylated protein antigens in liver microsomal fractions from halothane treated rats. 151 Jul 11
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