Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Procedures were developed for preparing partially purified beta cell monolayer cultures. Neonatal rat pancreases were dissociated with a
trypsin
-collagenase solution. Beta cells were separated from denser acinar cells by centrifuging the initial suspension in a two layer discontinous Ficoll gradient (20, 25%). Resultant cultures, highly enriched in beta cells, were further purified by incubation with cystine-free medium. This caused necrosis of the majority of fibroblastoid cells within two days, while beta cells were considerably less affected. The resultant cultures contained an average of 72% beta cells compared to 10% in untreated control cultures.
Insulin
release by purified monolayers remained responsive to changes in the glucose concentration of the culture medium.
...
PMID:Pancreatic beta cell culture: preparation of purified monolayers. 111 78
Trypsin and elastase isolated from the pancreas of the moose (Alces alces), a member of the Cervidae (deer) family, were characterized with respect to their amino acid composition and specificity towards polypeptides. Moose
trypsin
possessed 234 residues, based on alanine recoveries equal to 16.0 residues, with a molecular weight calculated at 24 476. Moose
trypsin
readily hydrolysed peptide bonds in which the carbonyl group was contributed by arginine, lysine and S-2-aminoethylcysteine as indicated by the peptides isolated following hydrolysis of the oxidized and the S-aminoethylated B-chain of
insulin
. Moose elastase possessed 231 residues, based on alanine recoveries equal to 17.0 residues, with a molecular weight calculated as 24 201. The high lysine (9 residues), low arginine (3 residues) content was in contrast to the opposite situation with porcine elastase and the elastase-like, alpha-lytic protease from Sorangium. The hydrolysis of the oxidized B-chain of
insulin
by moose elastase was similar to that produced by porcine elastase with major cleavages occurring at Val-12-Glu-13, Ala-14-Leu-15 and Val-18-Cys(O-3H)-19 and minor cleavages occurring at Ser-9-His-10 and Arg-21-Gly-22. The hydrolysis of glucagon with moose elastase produced major cleavages at Thr-7-Ser-8, Ser-11-Lys-12, Val-23-Gln-24 and Leu-26-Met-27. The facile hydrolysis of Arg-17-Arg-18 was also observed and attributed, in part, to
trypsin
.
...
PMID:Characterization of trypsin and elastase from the moose (Alces alces). I. Amino acid composition and specificity towards polypeptides. 112 77
In 11 juvenile diabetics and 13 control subjects, the secretin-pancreozymin test was performed. Duodenal-volume losses were corrected by use of radioactive vitamin B12 as marker substance. As compared to normal subjects, juvenile diabetics had significantly decreased pancreatic outputs of amylase,
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, and to a lesser degree, of bicarbonate. Clinical evidence of disease of the exocrine pancreas was missing. There was no discernible relationship between the abnormality of external pancreatic function and the duration of diabetes mellitus or the dose of
insulin
required. Possible factors that may be responsible for the exocrine deficiency of the pancreas in juvenile diabetics are discussed.
...
PMID:Exocrine pancreatic function in juvenile diabetics. 113 Mar 59
The effect of highly purified gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) on immunoreactive
insulin
(IRI) secretion in the conscious fasted dog was investigated. Significant increases in IRI release were observed with intravenous administration of three different doses of GIP. These were accompanied by depression in fasting serum-glucose levels. Preliminary studies were undertaken to determine whether this insulinotropic action of GIP could be attributed to a particular segment of the GIP molecule. GIP fragments produced by cleavage with cyanogen bromide and
trypsin
showed no significant stimulation of IRI release. The possibility that GIP might itself enhance glucose uptake or potentiate
insulin
-induced glucose uptake was studied with the rat hemidiaphragm preparation. No such effect was observed. In the light of this and other recent work, it is concluded that GIP is a strong candidate for an active principle in the enteroinsular axis.
...
PMID:The insulinotropic action of gastric inhibitory polypeptide. 113 19
The interaction of concanavalin A (Con A) with isolated adipocytes was studied using Con A-Sepharose beads in the affinity binding buoyant density method previously used to study
insulin
receptors. Free Con A-Sepharose beads could be separated from the bound beads (cell-bead complexes) by sedimentation of the high density beads and floatation of the low density complexes. Sedimented and total beads could be determined by counting the radioactivity associated with [-125I]Con A coupled in tracer amounts to the beads. Various lines of evidence demonstrated the high specificity of binding. Soluble Con A, but neither
insulin
nor any of the other proteins tested, inhibited and reversed the binding of Con A-Sepharose to the cells. Whereas treatment of Con A- (and
insulin
-) derivatized beads with anti-
insulin
antiserum, and cells with
trypsin
, readily inhibited binding of
insulin
-Sepharose to cells, neither treatment inhibited Con A-Sepharose binding. According to the relative extents of inhibition and reversal of binding exhibited by 15 different carbohydrates, the saccharide binding sites on Con A-Sepharose appeared virtually identical with the known sites on free Con A. Protein-containing components of cell ghosts that were solubilized with Triton X-100 appeared to correspond to the Con A-Sepharose receptor sites on the basis of their ability to bind to Con A-Sepharose columns, be eluted with methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside (MeMan) and be precipitated by the free lectin and redissolved by MeMan. According to (a) Normarski interference contrast microscopic examination of the topographical distribution of Con A-Sepharose beads and cells surrounding and bound to each other, and (b) absence of any apparent morphological changes in the cells due to binding, it is suggested that extensive clustering ("cap" or "macropatch" formation) of Con A receptors did not occur on the adipocyte as a consequence of the interaction of the cells with the Con A-Sepharose beads.
...
PMID:Interaction of carbohydrate binding sites on concanavalin A-agarose with receptors on adipocytes studied by buoyant density method. 113 60
The formation of the protein-protein interface by the
insulin
dimer, the
trypsin
-PTI complex and the alphabeta oxyhaemoglobin dimer removes 1,130-1,720 A2 of accessible surface from contact with water. The residues forming the interface are close packed: each occupies the same volume as it does in crystals of amino acids. These results indicate that hydrophobicity is the major factor stabilising protein-protein association, while complementarily plays a selective role in deciding which proteins may associate.
...
PMID:Principles of protein-protein recognition. 115 6
Influences of fat on release of
insulin
, growth hormone and pancreatic enzyme secretion were studied in 35 metabolically healthy subjects. A fat solution containing 40 g of soy bean oil was administered, I.V., orally and intraduodenally. In all cases there was a similar increase of
insulin
but the rise in serum
insulin
after oral or intraduodenal fat administration was not related to the changes in plasma free fatty acids, free glycerol and triglyceride levels. Blood surgar responded according to
insulin
secretion. The route of fat administration may possibly influence growth hormone secretion. Following intraduodenal fat administration volume and bicarbonate contents of the duodenal juice rose slightly whereas
trypsin
and bilirubin content increased considerably. These results suggest that
insulin
secretion after oral or intraduodenal administration of fat is influenced by intestinal factors. Cholecystokinin-pancroezymin and gastric inhibitory polypeptide are qualified to serve as such factors.
...
PMID:Effect of lipids on insulin, growth hormone and exocrine pancreatic secretion in man. 120 69
The hydrophobic nature of proteins is characterized by a degree of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate (TNS) affinity to them and is pronounced quantitatively in the semi-saturated (C1/2) concentrations. This index correlates directly with the position of TNS emission maximum after the binding with proteins and reversely with the yield of fluorescence. The preparations of phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase, xantinoxidase, glyceratekinase, lysozyme, RNase during the long (1-2 h) contact with TNS change the values C1/2, that evidences for interaction with the hydrophobic indicator of new structures of protein molecule or for a change in the nature of its linkage itself. An attempt is made to characterize the accessible for TNS hydrophobic nature of individual proteins by a coefficient of molar hydrophobic nature which unites three mentioned characteristics. Serum albumin,
insulin
, glucogon, alpha chemotrypsin, DNase are most hydrophobic, pyruvate kinase, aldolase, urease, RNase--least hydrophobic, Glycerate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, xanthinoxidase,
trypsin
, lysozyme are in intermediate position.
...
PMID:[Comparative characteristics of hydrophobic nature of certain proteins by their interaction with 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonates]. 120 4
The cleavage specificity of boar acrosin is, like that of
trypsin
, strictly limited to the arginyl and lysyl bonds, as demonstrated for the oxidized B-chain of
insulin
. In addition, in this polypeptide substrate as well as in reduced and carboxymethylated ribonuclease, these peptide bonds are hydrolyzed by acrosin and
trypsin
with nearly identical velocities.
...
PMID:Cleavage specificity of boar acrosin on polypeptide substrates, ribonuclease and insulin B-chain. 121 88
Initiation of proliferation in density-inhibited chick embryo fibroblast cultures induced by
insulin
or
trypsin
was partially reversed by replacing the medium with supernatants from parallel non-stimulated cultures. Growth stimulation by neuraminidase, pokeweed mitogen, bacterial lipopolysaccharides or purified tuberculin was less, or not at all, affected by this procedure. Medium change per se caused some proliferation in non-stimulated cultures. Increased rate of sugar uptake in
insulin
-stimulated cultures returned to the level of that in non-stimulated cultures within a few hours after medium change. This reversion took place apparently irrespective of the phase of the cell cycle. Replacing the medium with supernatant from non-stimulated cultures induced a rapid decline in subsequent thymidine incorporation during the first S-phase, and completely abolished the second peak of DNA synthesis. The fraction of cells irreversibly committed to mitosis increased when the time after stimulation increased. Less than three hours' incubation with
insulin
or
trypsin
was needed to initiate proliferation of a significant fraction of the cell population. It is concluded that reversion of the initiated cycle of a given cell is no more possible after the cell has entered the S-phase.
...
PMID:Reversible release of chick embryo fibroblast cultures from density dependent inhibition of growth. 121 7
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>