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)

1. Rat lymph chylomicrons were exposed to soluble and to immobilized trypsin. This treatment caused no detectable changes in the chylomicron structure or lipid composition, but did result in virtually total depletion of all their tetramethylurea-soluble apoproteins. 2. The capacity of these apoprotein-depleted chylomicrons to act as substrate for lipoprotein lipase in vitro and in situ (i.e. isolated perfused rat heart) was decreased by about 90 and 75% respectively, compared with intact chylomicrons. 3. On incubation with rat plasma high-density lipoproteins, trypsin-treated chylomicrons readily acquired a full apoprotein complement. This resulted in the complete restoration of their capacity to act as substrate for lipoprotein lipase both in vitro and in situ. 4. It is suggested that with the use of try,sin-treated chylomicrons it is now possible for the first time to investigate the physiological role that individual apoproteins play in the catabolism of triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins by lipoprotein lipase.
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PMID:Action of liproprotein lipase on apoprotein-depleted chylomicrons. 21 49

Human plasma very low density apolipoproteins C-I, C-II and C-III were recombined in vitro with triolein. The lipid-protein complexes were analyzed by ultracentrifugal flotation, agarose gel electrophoresis, immunoelectrophoresis and electron microscopy. Maximal protein/triolein ratios for apoprotein C-I, C-II, C-III-1 and C-III-2 were 50, 45, 95 and 55 microgram/mg, respectively. Electron micrographs exhibited spherical particles with diameters ranging from 200--2000 A comparable to native VLDL and chylomicrons. On agarose gel electrophoresis these complexes showed alpha-mobility. Kinetics of triolein hydrolysis by purified human plasma lipoprotein lipase were studied using these artificial lipoprotein substrates with different apoprotein/triolein ratios. The reaction followed the Michaelis-Menten equation. With increasing amounts of apo C-II, the apparent Km decreased from 0.60 to 0.11 mM. Incubation of the substrate with either rabbit anti-apo C-II gamma-globulins or digestion with trypsin prior to hydrolysis reversed this lowering effect on apparent Km. V was not altered significantly. Increasing amounts of apo C-I, apo C-III-1 or apo C-III-2 without apo C-II caused inhibition of triolein hydrolysis. In the presence of apo C-II, however, similar kinetic parameters were obtained as described above.
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PMID:Activation and inhibition of lipoprotein lipase. Studies with artificial lipoproteins. 21 31

Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), hepatic lipase, and pancreatic lipase show high sequence homology to one another. The crystal structure of pancreatic lipase suggests that it contains a trypsin-like Asp-His-Ser catalytic triad at the active center, which is shielded by a disulfide bridge-bounded surface loop that must be repositioned before the substrate can gain access to the catalytic residues. By sequence alignment, the homologous catalytic triad in LPL corresponds to Asp156-His241-Ser132, absolutely conserved residues, and the homologous surface loop to residues 217-238, a poorly conserved region. To verify these assignments, we expressed in vitro wild-type LPL and mutant LPLs having single amino acid mutations involving residue Asp156 (to His, Ser, Asn, Ala, Glu, or Gly), His241 (to Asn, Ala, Arg, Gln, or Trp), or Ser132 (to Gly, Ala, Thu, or Asp) individually. All 15 mutant LPLs were totally devoid of enzyme activity, while wild-type LPL and other mutant LPLs containing substitutions in other positions were fully active. We further replaced the 22-residue LPL loop which shields the catalytic center either partially (replacing 6 of 22 residues) or completely with the corresponding hepatic lipase loop. The partial loop-replacement chimeric LPL was found to be fully active, and the complete loop-replacement mutant had approximately 60% activity, although the primary sequence of the hepatic lipase loop is quite different. In contrast, replacement with the pancreatic lipase loop completely inactivated the enzyme. Our results are consistent with Asp156-His241-Ser132 being the catalytic triad in lipoprotein lipase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional topology of a surface loop shielding the catalytic center in lipoprotein lipase. 151 Sep 14

Lipoprotein lipase was expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with human lipoprotein lipase cDNA. The lipoprotein lipase retained tributyrin, water-soluble substrate, hydrolyzing activity (esterase activity). The catalytic action of this enzyme was studied by monitoring the esterase activity. The esterase activity was enhanced 4.5-fold by the addition of triolein emulsified with Triton X-100. This process was named interfacial activation. Treatment of LPL with trypsin (100 micrograms/ml, 37 degrees C for 10 min) caused the loss of the triolein hydrolyzing activity without that of the esterase activity. The esterase activity of trypsin-treated LPL was not enhanced by the addition of the triolein emulsion. The trypsin-treated LPL retained the ability to bind to very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). These results are consistent with the idea that LPL has a catalytic site and a lipid interface recognition site, and that the enzyme undergoes interfacial activation, in which the concealed catalytic site is revealed after the enzyme binds to the surface. Based on this hypothesis, the results obtained suggest that trypsin nicking may impair the interfacial activation process and cause the loss of the lipase activity.
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PMID:Trypsin treatment may impair the interfacial activation action of lipoprotein lipase. 161 42

In avian-cultured adipocytes 76% of the newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase is degraded before release into the medium (Cupp, M., Bensadoun, A., and Melford, K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 6383-6388). The same group (Cisar, L. A., Hoogewerf, A. J., Cupp, M., Rapport, C. A., and Bensadoun, A. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 1767-1774) has proposed that the interaction of lipoprotein lipase with a class of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans is necessary for degradation to occur. To test further this hypothesis, the binding capacity of the plasma membrane for the lipase was decreased by inhibiting the sulfation of glycosaminoglycans with sodium chlorate, an inhibitor of sulfate adenyltransferase. Chlorate decreased sulfate incorporation into trypsin-releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycans to 20% of control levels. The amount of uronic acid in the trypsin-releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycans remained constant. Therefore, chlorate decreased sulfation density on heparan sulfate chains by approximately 5-fold. In the same fractions, chlorate increased the median heparan sulfate Mr measured on Sephacryl S-300. Chlorate decreased the maximum binding of 125I-lipoprotein lipase to adipocytes by 4-fold, but no significant effects on the affinity constants were observed. Chlorate increased lipoprotein lipase secretion in a dose-dependent relationship up to 30 mM. Utilizing a pulse-chase protocol, it was shown that lipase synthesis in control and chlorate-treated cells was not significantly different and that the increased secretion could be accounted for by a decreased lipoprotein lipase degradation rate. In control cells 77 +/- 11% of the synthesized enzyme was degraded whereas in chlorate-treated cells degradation was reduced to 42 +/- 9% of the synthesized amount. The present study shows that decreased sulfation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans decreases the maximum binding of the lipase for the adipocyte cell surface. Consistent with the model that binding of lipoprotein lipase to cell surface heparan sulfate is required for lipase degradation, degradation is reduced in chlorate-treated cultures. In this report it is also shown that chlorate inhibits lipoprotein lipase sulfation and that desulfation of the enzyme has no effect on its catalytic efficiency or on its binding to cultured adipocytes.
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PMID:Effect of chlorate on the sulfation of lipoprotein lipase and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Sulfation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans affects lipoprotein lipase degradation. 188 87

Using the dynamic fluorescence quenching method, it was shown that very low density (VLDL) apoproteins (apo B, E and C) tryptophanyls exhibit a lower accessibility towards water-soluble quenchers as compared to apo B LDL chromophores. The efficiency of proteolytic degradation by trypsin of VLDL-associated apo E and apo C was much lower than that of apo B. These results may be due to the cluster arrangement of amphipatic apo E and apo C on the VLDL surface and/or to their partial shielding by apo B. Treatment of VLDL particles with sub-lytic concentrations of the detergent, Tween-20, did not change the relaxation characteristics of amphipatic apoprotein tryptophanyl microenvironment, but resulted in a reversible structural transition registered by a "red" shift of the emission spectrum maximum as well as by change of the iodine quenching pattern. The detergent-induced increase of the VLDL tryptophanyl accessibility to acrylamide and the decrease of the quenching constant at the partial and complete particle solubilization were related to a change of the apo B molecular package. Treatment of VLDL with Tween-20 or cow milk lipoprotein lipase resulted in the appearance of tryptophanyl population that was not involved in the resonance energy transfer to the lipid phase-localized fluorescent probe pyrene, which is indicative of the protein dissociation. Treatment of VLDL particles with sub-lytic concentrations of Tween-20 revealed a lower (compared to apo C) relative affinity of apo E for the VLDL lipid surface. Inhibition of the lipoprotein lipase activity by apoprotein C-III was found to be non-competitive. It was concluded that lipolysis is a self-regulatory process which involves changes in the effector apoprotein concentration on the surface of triglyceride-rich particles.
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PMID:[Dynamic behavior of apoproteins of human plasma very low density lipoproteins and lipolysis regulation]. 216 Aug 40

High concentrations of pregnenolone and its sulfate have been found in several areas of rat and human brain and seem to be controlled by local mechanisms. In the present experiments we have demonstrated pregnenolone binding sites in the cytosolic fraction of the rat olfactory bulb. The pregnenolone binding component showed a Kd = 2.34 +/- 0.66 x 10(-7) M and Nmax = 7.25 +/- 1.20 pmol/mg protein. Pregnenolone, pregnenolone sulfate and 17OH-pregnenolone competed equally for the binding sites while other steroids were less competitive. Protease and trypsin inhibited binding by 48 and 60% respectively. Sucrose density gradient analysis showed a minor peak at 4.6 s and a major one at 3.6 s. After gel filtration chromatography the pregnenolone binding component appeared as 2 peaks corresponding to molecular weights of approximately 150 and 220 kDa. Heating at 60 degrees C increased binding by 150%. These results indicate that the olfactory bulb pregnenolone binding component is complex in nature. Rat plasma also bound pregnenolone. Plasma binding sites could be partially differentiated from those in the olfactory bulb on the basis of susceptibility to lipoprotein lipase, effect of heating and mobility during polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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PMID:Pregnenolone binding sites in the rat olfactory bulb. 232 15

We have studied the binding and metabolism of 125I-labeled bovine lipoprotein lipase (LPL) by use of isolated, perfused rat livers. Our data suggest the presence of two types of binding sites, i.e., heparin-sensitive sites that bind primarily the catalytically active form of the lipase and are present at the endothelium in all blood vessels and heparin-insensitive sites that bind both active and inactive forms and are present only within the sinusoids. Forty minutes after uptake by the liver, approximately 50% of the LPL had lost its catalytic activity or been degraded. Three processes were evident: 1) colchicine-sensitive degradation to acid-soluble products, 2) partial proteolysis to fragments similar to those formed by limited digestion with trypsin or plasmin, and 3) a conformational change leading to loss of catalytic activity. Exogenous LPL bound in the liver caused a dramatic increase in the utilization of a perfused triacylglycerol emulsion (Intralipid), with rapid formation of free fatty acids and water-soluble metabolites. When the liver was flushed with heparin, it lost its ability to utilize the fat emulsion. Measurement of the hepatic extraction showed that rat livers take up 100-200 mU endogenous LPL per hour.
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PMID:Lipoprotein lipase uptake by the liver: localization, turnover, and metabolic role. 328 86

Subcellular localization of lipoprotein lipase has been examined in differentiated Ob17 adipose cells. No patent activity is detectable in carefully homogenized cells. All latent activity can be unmasked by disrupting membrane structures with neutral detergents. The sequestration of lipoprotein lipase in closed membrane structures is supported by experiments of immunotitration with anti-lipoprotein lipase antibodies and by experiments showing a full protection of the masked activity against proteolytic attack by trypsin. The intracellular distribution of lipoprotein lipase investigated by immunofluorescence staining and by isopycnic centrifugation indicates that a large proportion of the enzyme is located in the Golgi apparatus, in which the activation of the enzyme is likely to take place (C. Vannier et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 4424-4431). Altogether, the results are in favor of a localization of lipoprotein lipase in adipose cells as being typical of that of a secretory protein and underline the absence of lipoprotein lipase in the cell cytoplasm.
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PMID:Intracellular localization of lipoprotein lipase in adipose cells. 351 Jun 68

Lipoprotein lipases from human, bovine or guinea-pig milk were purified, judged for domain relationships by characterization of sites sensitive to proteases, and structurally compared. The subunit of human lipoprotein lipase migrated slightly slower than those of bovine or guinea-pig lipoprotein lipases on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Bovine lipoprotein lipase is known to be a dimer of two non-covalently linked subunits of equal size, and the lipases from all three sources now yielded homogeneous N-terminal amino acid sequences (followed for 15-27 residues). The results indicate that the two subunits are identical. Bovine lipoprotein lipase had two additional N-terminal residues, Asp-Arg, compared to the human and guinea-pig enzymes, and the next two positions revealed residue differences, but further on homologies were extensive between all three enzymes as far as presently traced. Exposure of bovine lipoprotein lipase to trypsin led to production of three fragments (T1, T2a, and T2b), suggesting cleavage at exposed segments delineating domain borders. Time studies gave no evidence for precursor-product relationships between the fragments, and prolonged digestion did not lead to further cleavage. Fragments T2a and T2b had the same N-terminal sequence as intact lipase. Fragment T1 revealed a new sequence, and represents the C-terminal half of the molecule. Plasmin caused a similar cleavage as trypsin, whereas thrombin, factor Xa, and tissue plasminogen activator did not cleave the enzyme. Chymotrypsin cleaved off a relatively small fragment from the C-terminal of the molecule, after which exposure to trypsin still resulted in cleavage at the same sites as in intact lipase. Tryptic cleavage of guinea-pig lipoprotein lipase yielded two fragments. One had a similar size as bovine fragment T2b; the other had a similar size as bovine fragment T1 and an N-terminal sequence homologous with that of T1. Thus, trypsin recognizes the same unique site in guinea-pig lipoprotein lipase as in the bovine enzyme. This confirms the conclusion that this segment is the border between two domains in the subunit. The binding site for heparin was retained after both tryptic and chymotryptic cleavages and was identified as localized in the C-terminal part of the molecule.
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PMID:Lipoprotein lipases from cow, guinea-pig and man. Structural characterization and identification of protease-sensitive internal regions. 353 11


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