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 major cell-surface glycoprotein of the TA3-Ha ascites mammary adenocarcinoma diminished during transfer from ascites growth to cell growth in suspension culture. A sensitive, hemagglutination-inhibition assay that used a lectin from Vicia graminea seeds indicated approximately a 50% loss after 7-10 days of culture and a 90% loss after 2 months. These findings were corroborated by carbohydrate and amino acid analysis with gas-liquid chromatography of trypsin glycopeptides released from the cell surface. Repassage of the cultured cells in vivo caused the reappearance of the surface glycoprotein.
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PMID:Reversible loss in suspension culture of a major cell-surface glycoprotein of the TA3-Ha mouse tumor. 123 14

B cells derived from peripheral-blood lymphocytes (PBL) and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) from a patient with a high serum antibody titer to autologous melanoma were transformed with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and evaluated for reactivity against autologous tumor. B cells producing antibody reactive with autologous tumor and unreactive with normal fibroblasts were detected both in TIL and in PBL. One cell line derived from PBL and another derived from TIL sustained production of tumor-reactive antibody for 10 weeks and over 15 months respectively. The cell line derived from PBL, 2D11, produced an antibody reactive with a trypsin-resistant antigen expressed on the cell membrane of autologous and allogeneic melanoma cell lines. The cell line derived from TIL, 1F6, produced an antibody reactive with a cell-surface glycoprotein expressed by 5 autologous melanoma cell lines derived from 5 different metastases and 16/19 allogeneic melanoma cell lines. 1F6 also showed reactivity with cell lines derived from a blue nevus, a congenital nevus, an astrocytoma, and 1/4 renal-cell carcinomas; but it was not reactive with 5 foreskin melanocyte cell lines, 2 normal fibroblast lines, 5 leukemia/lymphoma lines, 8 lung-cancer lines, 8 glioblastoma lines, or lines derived from 1 ovarian carcinoma, 1 colon carcinoma, 1 vulvar carcinoma, 1 fibrosarcoma, 1 murine melanoma, or 4 murine leukemia/lymphomas. We describe here an antibody that detects a new melanoma specificity obtained by EBV transformation of tumor-infiltrating B cells.
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PMID:Analysis of two human monoclonal antibodies against melanoma. 145 38

Microfilament-associated proteins and membrane-microfilament interactions are being investigated in microvilli isolated from 13,762 rat mammary ascites tumor cells. "Phalloidin shift" analyses on velocity sedimentation gradients of Triton X-100 extracts of [3H]-glucosamine-labeled microvilli identified a 120-kDa cell-surface glycoprotein associated with the microvillar microfilament core. The identification was verified by concanavalin A (Con A) blots of one- and two-dimensional (2D) electrophoresis gels of sedimented microfilament cores. By 2D-electrophoresis and lectin analyses the 120-kDa protein appeared to be a fraction of ASGP-2, the major Con A-binding glycoprotein of the sialomucin complex of the 13,762 cells. This identity was confirmed by immunoblot analyses using immunoblot-purified anti-ASGP-2 from anti-membrane serum prepared against microvillar membranes. Proteolysis of the microvilli with subtilisin or trypsin resulted in an increase in the amount of ASGP-2 associated with the microfilament cores. An increase was also observed with sialidase treatment of the microvilli, suggesting that negative charges, probably present on the highly sialated sialomucin ASGP-1 of the ASGP-1/ASGP-2 sialomucin complex, reduce ASGP-2 association with the microfilament core. Proteolysis of isolated microvillar membranes, which contain actin but not microfilaments, also increased the association of ASGP-2 with a Triton-insoluble, actin-containing membrane fraction. Purified ASGP-2 does not bind to microfilaments in sedimentation assays. Since the Triton-insoluble membrane residue is enriched in an actin-containing transmembrane complex, which contains a different glycoprotein, we suggest that the ASGP-2 is binding indirectly via this complex to the microfilament core in the intact microvilli.
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PMID:Microfilament association of ASGP-2, the concanavalin A-binding glycoprotein of the cell-surface sialomucin complex of 13,762 rat mammary ascites tumor cells. 304 20

Two monoclonal antibodies that cause changes in the morphology of cultured chick myogenic cells have been described previously [8]. In this paper, these antibodies are shown to interact with the same 140Kd protein. The 140Kd protein has been further characterized as a cell-surface glycoprotein by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodinations and lectin affinity chromatography. The protein is resistant to digestion by trypsin and collagenase and has been shown to be unrelated to fibronectin by immunoprecipitation studies and by peptide mapping. A second protein, of approximately 170Kd MW, is also immunoprecipitated by the monoclonal antibodies. This protein is probably unrelated to the 140Kd protein since the peptide maps are quite distinct.
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PMID:Characterization of a 140Kd cell surface glycoprotein involved in myoblast adhesion. 638 44

Compaction, a process of cell-cell adhesion between mouse blastomeres or between embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells requires calcium ions. A decompaction effect similar to that observed in the absence of Ca2+ is triggered by Fab fragments of rabbit anti-EC IgG. This effect occurs through the recognition of a specific cell-surface glycoprotein named uvomorulin. An 84,000 dalton fragment of uvomorulin (UMt) has been previously extracted by trypsin from EC cell membranes and purified. WE present evidence that effects of Ca2+ on compaction are transmitted through conformational changes in uvomorulin. First, Ca2+ protects UMt from further proteolysis by trypsin. Mn2+ and Sr2+ have similar effects, whereas this protection is reversed by La3+. Second, UMt can bind the monoclonal antibody De1 only in the presence of Ca2+ (half-binding at 10(-5) M Ca2+). This antigenic exposure also takes place in the presence of Mn2+ or Sr2+ and is reversed by La3+. Third, metal ions (Ca2+, Mn2+, Sr2+) that promote trypsin resistance and recognition by DE1 are found to trigger the compaction of morulae and EC cells. Metal ions (La3+) that reduce trypsin resistance and affinity for DE1 result in decompaction.
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PMID:Cell-cell interactions in early embryogenesis: a molecular approach to the role of calcium. 697 38

Using the principle of relief of self-quenching of carboxyfluorescein [Weinstein, J. N., Yoshikami, S., Henkart, P., Blumenthal, R., & Hagins, W. A. (1977) Science 195, 489-492] upon leakage of the dye from the interior of lipid vesicles, we investigated the integrity of sonicated small unilamellar vesicles in the presence of isolated hepatocytes, Zajdela ascites hepatoma cells, and plasma membranes of either cell type. We observed that cells as well as plasma membranes induce leakage of carboxyfluorescein from vesicles. Two parameters (initial rate and maximal level of induced leakage) were determined to quantitate the leakage events and were found to depend on cell density, vesicle concentration, and vesicle lipid composition. The magnitude of both parameters is shown to increase with cell density and to decrease with increasing vesicle lipid concentration and seems to be proportional to the number of vesicles found in close contact with the cell. For vesicles made of phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol, the degree of induced leakage increases steeply with cholesterol contents increasing from 30 to 40 mol %. In the case of simultaneous presence of 10 mol % phosphatidylserine, induced leakage can be observed at cholesterol contents exceeding 20 mol %. We show that leak-inducing activity resides in the plasma membrane and that it can be considerably reduced by treatment of the plasma membranes with neuraminidase or trypsin, suggesting the involvement of cell-surface glycoprotein(s). Release of activity from intact cells and isolated plasma membranes into the medium occurs spontaneously (at a slow rate) but can be facilitated by freezing and thawing; the activity can subsequently be recovered in a soluble form from the medium.
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PMID:Cell-induced leakage of liposome contents. 721 93

We have investigated the signals between identified leech neurons during the formation of specific synapses in culture. At an inhibitory serotonergic synapse between two well-studied neurons, the postsynaptic cell has an additional (extrasynaptic) excitatory response to 5-HT which may underly a form of activity-dependent modulation. Thus, the presynaptic neuron must select which 5-HT response will be activated and which will be excluded at its synapses. The selection of these responses preceded synapse formation and was specifically induced at sites of contact with the presynaptic neuron, this not being observed for other cell pairings. Aldehyde-fixed presynaptic cells were equally effective, unless pre-treated with trypsin or wheat germ agglutinin, suggesting that contact with a specific cell-surface glycoprotein induced this physiological change in 5-HT sensitivity. The mechanism underlying the selective loss of the extrasynaptic response has been examined by single channel recording. Cation channels in the postsynaptic neuron were modulated by protein kinase C (PKC) upon binding of 5-HT to a 5-HT2 receptor. However, at sites of contact with the presynaptic neuron, the channels were no longer sensitive to PKC. Furthermore, when cation channels from uncontacted neurons were inserted or 'crammed' into contacted neurons, they were rapidly rendered insensitive to PKC, demonstrating a cytoplasmic signal for the uncoupling of channel modulation. Interestingly, the cytoplasm of contacted postsynaptic neurons showed immunoreactivity for tyrosine phosphorylation: exposure of the neurons to specific inhibitors of tyrosine kinases prevented tyrosine phosphorylation, the loss of cation channel modulation and synapse formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Signalling synapse formation between identified neurons. 758

In a previous study, we demonstrated the occurrence of novel proteins modified with a diphytanylglyceryl group in thioether linkage in Halobacterium halobium (Sagami, H., Kikuchi, A., and Ogura, K. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 14851-14854). In this study, we further investigated protein isoprenoid modification in this halobacterium using several radioactive tracers such as [3H]geranylgeranyl diphosphate. One of the radioactive bands observed on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis corresponded to a periodic acid-Schiff stain-positive protein (200 kDa). Radioactive and periodic acid-Schiff stain-positive peptides (28 kDa) were obtained by trypsin digestion of the labeled proteins. The radioactive materials released by acid treatment of the peptides showed a similar mobility to dolichyl (C55) phosphate on a normal-phase thin-layer plate. However, radioactive hydrolysates obtained by acid phosphatase treatment co-migrated not with dolichol (C55-65), but with diphytanylglycerol on both reverse- and normal-phase thin-layer plates. The mass spectrum of the hydrolysate was also coincident with that of diphytanylglycerol. The partial amino acid sequences of the 28-kDa peptides were found in a fragment (amino acids 731-816) obtainable by trypsin cleavage of the known cell-surface glycoprotein of this halobacterium. These results indicate that the cell-surface glycoprotein (200 kDa) is modified with diphytanylglyceryl phosphate.
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PMID:Evidence for covalent attachment of diphytanylglyceryl phosphate to the cell-surface glycoprotein of Halobacterium halobium. 1036 51

A number of antibodies that recognize human dendritic cells (DC) have been identified. The main aim of this study was to compare and contrast different antigen retrieval techniques using both enzymatic and non-enzymatic treatments in order to determine the expression and distribution of several DC markers on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. Normal human lung, oral epithelial hyperplasia lesions, oral squamous cell carcinoma, and prostate adenocarcinoma tissues were evaluated using a panel of DC specific antibodies. The results of immunohistochemical staining for CD83, CD1a, CD11c, and S-100 DC markers were compared following the different antigen retrieval approaches. The overall best results for the analysis of tumor-associated DC were obtained with the enzymatic methods. Protease XXIV digestion was determined to be essential for detection of S-100 and CD11c positive DC, whereas trypsin and pepsin were required for the recognition of CD1a and CD83 expressing tumor-associated DC. These results could be easily adapted for routine practice and should be useful for characterization of the DC system in cancer patients for both diagnostic and prognostic purposes. In addition, standardized procedures for evaluating different subpopulations of tumor-associated DC should bring new insights in understanding of DC-tumor cell interaction.
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PMID:Comparative analysis of CD1a, S-100, CD83, and CD11c human dendritic cells in normal, premalignant, and malignant tissues. 1613 99

Calcium is a second messenger for many signaling pathways in B cells, but its role as a receptor ligand has not been well characterized. However, pulses of free calcium were found to cause the rapid release of internal calcium stores in normal human B cells. This response appeared to be mediated by a cell surface protein with receptor properties as it could be blocked by pretreatment with trypsin and with kinase and phospholipase Cgamma inhibitors. The calcium receptor on B cells was not the conventional calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) since B cells did not express CaSR and calcium-induced responses could not be blocked by specific CaSR inhibitors. B-cell responses to extracellular calcium activated phosphoinositide-3 kinase/AKT, calcineurin, extracellular signal regulated kinase, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, protein kinase C, Ca(2+)/calmodulin kinase II, and nuclear factor-kappaB signaling pathways, and resulted in transcription of the early response gene, CD83. This extracellular calcium sensor enhanced B-cell responses to Toll-like receptor, B-cell receptor, and cytokine receptor agonists. These findings suggest a means by which B cells prepare to engage in immune responses by responding to calcium fluctuations in their environment.
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PMID:Extracellular calcium sensing promotes human B-cell activation and function. 1772 42


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