Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A Kunitz-type inhibitor family has been biochemically and histochemically characterized in bovine liver. This family includes the well-known pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) and three BPTI-related molecular forms (isoinhibitors I, II and III). The purification of the inhibitors was performed by affinity chromatography on immobilized trypsin followed by fast protein liquid chromatography. The inhibitors were identical to those identified previously in bovine spleen and lung. Light immunohistochemical experiments were done by a streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase method using two different immunoglobulin preparations, which selectively discriminated between BPTI and the other isoinhibitors. BPTI-related immunoreactivity was found exclusively at the level of isolated cells, of which many were identified as mast cells by toluidine blue staining. By contrast, isoinhibitor-related immunoreactivity showed a more widespread distribution, including hepatocytes, mast cells and biliary duct epithelial cells. Finally, specific immunoreactivity was also present in plasma. These results suggest that: i) BPTI and related isoinhibitors may be involved in the regulation of the activity of some mast cell proteases, as it happens in other bovine organs (Businaro et al. 1987, 1988); ii) BPTI isoinhibitors, but not BPTI itself, may also control proteolytic activities in hepatic specific structures (hepatocytes and biliary duct epithelial cells).
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PMID:Bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and related isoinhibitors in bovine liver. A biochemical and histochemical study. 261 49

Although there are many articles describing the detection of complement components in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded renal tissues, it is still difficult to obtain reproducible results. The authors determined the optimal conditions for detecting complement components in routine paraffin sections by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method and concluded that proteolytic digestion of the deparaffinized sections was crucial to detect complement and to preserve tissue structures. The optimal proteolytic digestion was a 15-minute incubation at 37 degrees C in trypsin solution, 0.5 mg/ml, pH 7.6. Under these conditions, all of the complement components so far studied (C1q, C1s, C4, C3c, C3b, C5, C6, C9, and properdin) were detected without significant destruction of tissue structures in 52 renal biopsy specimens from patients with various forms of glomerulonephritis. Immunohistochemistry using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method was equivalent to indirect immunofluorescence and superior to direct immunofluorescence in utility and was useful in the diagnosis of glomerular diseases.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical demonstration of complement components in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded renal tissues. 264 86

The combined presence of WSN gene segments 6 (neuraminidase), 7 (M1 and M2), and 8 (NS1 and NS2) in reassortants of WSN with A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) has been found by others to be necessary for full expression of neurovirulence in mice. We are examining the expression of the analogous three gene segments in brains of mice after intracerebral infection with non-neuroadapted strains A/WS/33 (WS) (from which WSN was derived) and A/PR/8/34 (PR8). Our aim is to determine possible mechanisms by which one or more of the five gene products may restrict replication of these strains in mouse brain cells to a single cycle, yielding noninfectious hemagglutinating particles (incomplete growth cycle). We found that minority subsets of such particles did produce plaques, provided they were activated by trypsin (analogous to other abortive systems producing virions with uncleaved HA), a step obviated for some WSN virions by indirect promotion of hemagglutinin cleavage by the neuraminidase of that strain. The percentage of such potentially infectious virions, relative to total hemagglutinating particles, was significantly lower in WS- or PR8-infected than in WSN-infected brains, suggesting possible defects in synthesis or function of M1 protein in the former. Cells in immunostained sections and appropriate bands in Western blots (immunoblots) of viral proteins electrophoretically separated from lysates of PR8-infected brains reacted with antibody to nucleoprotein but not to M1 protein. Either method revealed the presence of both proteins in WSN-infected brains. In contrast, Western blot analyses of particles concentrated from PR8-, WS-, or WSN-infected brains by hemadsorption, elution, and pelleting did reveal NP and M1 bands with comparable relative peroxidase-antiperoxidase staining intensities. The findings suggest that availability of M1 protein is a factor influencing the extent or rate of assembly of potentially infectious (i.e., trypsin-activated) progeny virions in mouse brains and that in this respect the two non-neurovirulent strains differ from WSN quantitatively rather than qualitatively.
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PMID:Role of hemagglutinin cleavage and expression of M1 protein in replication of A/WS/33, A/PR/8/34, and WSN influenza viruses in mouse brain. 264 24

We have localized desmin in the quail ovary, by the unlabelled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique, using two monoclonal and one polyclonal antisera. Special attention has been paid to the influence of fixation and of proteolytic pretreatment of sections. It appeared that the immunostaining of desmin largely depends on the nature of the fixative. Carnoy fluid, Bouin's fixative, and a paraformaldehyde-acetic acid fixative preserved the histological structure very efficiently. However, trypsin pretreatment proved to be necessary to unmask the antigenic sites in the ovaries fixed in Bouin's fixative and the paraformaldehyde-acetic acid fixative. Desmin immunoreactivity was detected in the tunica albuginea and the chordae, a number of which surrounding the blood vessels, from the hilus to the thecal surface of the follicles. Small branches of chordae connected them with the tunica albuginea, forming a suspensory apparatus. Desmin was also localized in the smooth-muscle cells of the blood vessels. In the theca, immunoreactivity was detected in the wall of arterioles, of venules, and of capillaries. Further experimental and immunohistochemical research have to be performed to establish if the suspensory apparatus is a myoid tissue.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of desmin in the quail ovary. Demonstration of a suspensory apparatus. 271 48

An immunohistochemical technique was developed for detection of feline calicivirus (FCV) in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded cultured cells and tissues. Initial trials with cultured cells indicated that the indirect immunoperoxidase method using rabbit antiserum to FCV strain 255, and horseradish peroxidase-labelled antibodies to rabbit immunoglobulin G lacked sensitivity and showed excessive diffuse background staining despite trypsin digestion of sections before staining. An amplified indirect immunoperoxidase technique using commercially available biotinylated antirabbit antibodies and avidin-biotin-peroxidase or streptavidin-peroxidase (SP) complexes proved highly successful. When optimal conditions, including those for trypsinization, inactivation of endogenous peroxidase and blocking were determined, the SP technique was preferred. Applied to tissue of cats in the acute phase of FCV infection, the technique provided clear identification of cells containing FCV antigens in sections in which histological detail was well preserved.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of feline calicivirus in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens. 276 53

A continuous cell line of murine alveolar macrophages (AM), designated MH-S, has been established following transformation of cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage from Balb/cJ mice with simian virus 40 (SV40). Thirty days after infection of the AM cultures, foci of rapidly proliferating cells were recovered and these have been propagated continuously for more than 36 mo. Following its initial isolation in Fischer's medium supplemented with L-cell-conditioned medium and horse and fetal bovine serum, the cell line is now routinely grown in RPMI-1640 medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum in the absence of conditioned medium. MH-S cells were adherent, lacked contact inhibition, and were trypsin-sensitive. They expressed intracellular T-antigen and incorporated 3H-thymidine (DNA synthesis) with a doubling time of approximately 48 h but doubled in number in 96 h. MH-S exhibited typical macrophage morphology, was greater than 98% esterase-positive, negative for peroxidase, and expressed cell surface Ia and Mac-1 antigens. The cells were Fc receptor-positive as demonstrated by rosette formation with, and phagocytosis of, antibody-coated sheep erythrocytes. Constitutive IL-1 secretion was significantly increased following stimulation of the cells with lipopolysaccharide. Like freshly isolated AM, MH-S cells suppressed the in vitro plaque-forming cell (PFC) response in a dose-dependent manner when cultured with splenic lymphocytes. This cell line should facilitate studies where homogeneous populations of AM are desirable, especially those involved in determining the immunological functions of AM and their potential role in lung pathology.
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PMID:MH-S, a murine alveolar macrophage cell line: morphological, cytochemical, and functional characteristics. 278 72

The coupling of iodotyrosine residues of thyroglobulin (Tg) catalysed by thyroid peroxidase (TPO) has scarcely been studied with respect to the TPO of abnormal human thyroid glands. The present paper proposes a rapid and convenient assay method applicable for determining the coupling activity of a sample of less than 500 mg from each patient's thyroid. The main characteristics of the method are as follows: (i) mitochondrial/microsomal fractions of thyroid glands were treated with sodium cholate plus trypsin, and the supernatants obtained by ultracentrifugation were directly used for the assay of coupling and peroxidase activity of TPO; (ii) the formation of iodotyrosine residues catalysed by TPO was performed by using chemically iodinated Graves'-disease Tg containing 41 iodine atoms per molecule and with a high iodotyrosine and a low iodothyronine content; (iii) newly synthesized iodothyronine residues (thyroxine, 3,5,3'-tri-iodothyronine, and 3,3',5'-tri-iodothyronine) were analysed by h.p.l.c. after hydrolysis of Tg with proteinases and extraction of iodothyronines with ethyl acetate.
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PMID:Improved assay method for activity of thyroid peroxidase-catalysed coupling of iodotyrosine residues of thyroglobulin utilizing h.p.l.c. for analysis of iodothyronines. 281 64

The occasional cleavage of the Pseudomonas cytochrome-c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome-c:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.5) molecule into two well-defined fragments during the preparation of the enzyme is shown to be identical to that caused by elastase isolated from the culture solution of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A cyanogen bromide fragmentation of proteolytically cleaved and of intact enzyme shows the cleaved peptide bond to be situated in cyanogen bromide fragment II. The amino-acid sequence of this fragment was established by sequencing peptides obtained with trypsin, thermolysin, chymotrypsin and o-iodosobenzoate. It is concluded from the sequence homology that the polypeptide chain of Pseudomonas peroxidase is wrapped around the high-potential heme in a similar manner as in high-potential cytochromes c in general. The specific proteolytic cleavage occurs at a Ser-Val (Leu-Pro) region which is assumed to be the site of attachment between enzyme and membrane. The cleavage of the Ser-Val bond renders the peroxidase molecule enzymatically inactive by impeding the conformational changes essential for the function of the native enzyme.
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PMID:Specific cleavage of Pseudomonas cytochrome-c peroxidase by elastase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 282 23

Treatment of prostaglandin (PG)H synthase purified from ram seminal vesicle microsomes with trypsin cleaves the 70-kDa subunits into 33- and 38-kDa fragments (Chen, Y.-N. P., Bienkowski, M. J., and Marnett, L. J. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 16892-16899). In contrast to a minimal decrease in cyclooxygenase activity, peroxidase activity declines rapidly following trypsin treatment. The time course for loss of guaiacol peroxidase activity corresponds closely to the time course for protein cleavage. The ability of trypsin-treated enzyme to support catalytic reduction of 5-phenyl-4-pentenyl-1-hydroperoxide in the presence of reducing substrates is significantly reduced. The products of metabolism of 10-hydroperoxy-8,12-octadecadienoic acid indicate that trypsin-treated enzyme catalyzes homolytic scission of the hydroperoxide bond in contrast to the heterolytic scission catalyzed by intact enzyme. Spectrophotometric titrations of hematin addition to trypsin-treated PGH synthase indicate approximately a 50% reduction in heme binding. These observations suggest that trypsin treatment of PGH synthase decreases the ability of the protein to bind prosthetic heme at a site that controls peroxidase activity. Comparison of the N-terminal sequence of the 38-kDa fragment of trypsin-treated PGH synthase to the amino acid sequence of the intact protein indicates that cleavage occurs between Arg253 and Gly254. Based on literature precedents and the results of the present investigations, we propose that the heme prosthetic group that controls the peroxidase activity of PGH synthase binds to the His residue of the sequence His250-Tyr251-Pro252-Arg253 located immediately adjacent to the trypsin cleavage site.
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PMID:Functional differentiation of cyclooxygenase and peroxidase activities of prostaglandin synthase by trypsin treatment. Possible location of a prosthetic heme binding site. 284 44

Human stratum corneum was extracted in Tris-HCl containing EDTA and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, separated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, transblotted to nitrocellulose papers and reacted with rabbit antihuman epidermal transglutaminase (ETG) antibody. Protein-bound antibody was detected with a multistep peroxidase procedure. Proteins with a molecular weight of 50,000 (50kDa) and 72,000 daltons (72kDa) were stained when anti-ETG was used and not when second antibody alone or sera from nonimmunized animals were used. When ETG was treated with trypsin or organic solvents, there was no alteration in the mobility of the 50kDa ETG band, but there was complete disappearance of the 72kDa band. Antibody that bound 72kDa protein, when eluted from the blot, reacted with both 50kDa and 72kDa proteins; similarly, antibody that bound to the 50kDa protein, when eluted from the blot, reacted with both the 50kDa and 72kDa proteins. Partially purified 72kDa ETG activity was increased (3 to 16 times control levels) after heating at 56 degrees C in the presence of calcium and dithiothreitol or by treatment with trypsin. These studies, in conjunction with the previous studies of ETG activation, are consistent with there being two forms of ETG. The different forms may play a role in regulating enzyme activity.
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PMID:High-molecular-weight human epidermal transglutaminase. 286 Dec 39


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