Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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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)
Human kallikrein 2 (hK2) is a secreted,
trypsin
-like protease that shares 80% amino acid sequence identity with prostate-specific antigen (PSA). hK2 has been shown to be a serum marker for prostate cancer and may also play a role in cancer progression and metastasis. We have previously identified a novel complex between human kallikrein 2 (hK2) and protease inhibitor 6 (PI-6) in prostate cancer tissue. PI-6 is an intracellular serine protease inhibitor with both antitrypsin and
antichymotrypsin
activity. In the current study we have shown that PI-6 forms a rapid in vitro complex with hK2 but does not complex with PSA. Recombinant mammalian cells expressing both hK2 and PI-6 showed hK2-PI-6 complex in the spent media only after cell death and lysis. Similarly, LNCaP cells expressing endogenous hK2 and PI-6 showed extracellular hK2-PI-6 complex formation concurrently with cell death. Immunostaining of prostate cancer tissues with PI-6 monoclonal antibodies showed a marked preferential staining pattern in cancerous epithelial cells compared with noncancerous tissue. These results indicate that the hK2-PI-6 complex may be a naturally occurring marker of tissue damage and necrosis associated with neoplasia. Both hK2 and PI-6 were shed into the lumen of prostate cancer glands as granular material that appeared to be cellular necrotic debris. The differential staining pattern of PI6 in tissues suggests a complex regulation of PI-6 expression that may play a role in other aspects of neoplastic progression.
...
PMID:Human kallikrein 2 (hK2), but not prostate-specific antigen (PSA), rapidly complexes with protease inhibitor 6 (PI-6) released from prostate carcinoma cells. 1174 44
Contrapsin is a member of the serpin superfamily and inhibits
trypsin
much more strongly than alpha1-antiproteinase. Mouse and rat contrapsins, however, have similarity in sequence to human alpha1-
antichymotrypsin
. In order to test the hypothesis that reactive site regions of contrapsin family evolved under strong selective pressure, cDNA sequence of C57BL/6 mouse contrapsin was determined and compared with that of ICR mouse. The cDNA sequence of C57BL/6 mouse contrapsin was found to contain an open reading frame encoding polypeptide consisting of 418 amino acid residues. The work reported in this paper shows that the reactive site is not hypervariable as compared with the rest of molecule.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of C57BL/6 mouse contrapsin cDNA. 1191 63
Serpins inhibit proteinases through a complicated multistep mechanism. The precise nature of these steps and the order by which they occur are still debated. We compared the fate of active and S195A inactive rat
trypsin
upon binding to alpha(1)-antitrypsin and P(1)-Arg-
antichymotrypsin
using stopped-flow kinetics with fluorescence resonance energy transfer detection and time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer. We show that inhibition of active
trypsin
by these serpins leads to two irreversible complexes, one being compatible with the full insertion of the serpin-reactive site loop but not the other one. Binding of inactive
trypsin
to serpins triggers a large multistep reversible rearrangement leading to the migration of the proteinase to an intermediate position. Binding of inactive
trypsin
, unlike that of active
trypsin
, does not perturb the rhodamine fluorescence at position 150 on the helix F of the serpin. Thus, inactive proteinases do not migrate past helix F and do not trigger full serpin loop insertion.
...
PMID:Comparative trajectories of active and S195A inactive trypsin upon binding to serpins. 1207 35
The interaction between duodenase and inhibitors of Bowman-Birk type from soybeans (BBI) and lima beans (LBI) was investigated. Duodenase was shown to interact only with
antichymotrypsin
site of these inhibitors. The inhibition constants of duodenase by BBI, LBI, BBI-
trypsin
and LBI
trypsin
complexes were 4, 23, 400, 600 (n)M respectively.
...
PMID:Study on interaction between duodenase protease with dual specificity and inhibitors of bowman-birk family. 1214 11
Secretory vesicles of neuroendocrine cells possess multiple proteases for proteolytic processing of proteins into biologically active peptide components, such as peptide hormones and neurotransmitters. The importance of proteases within secretory vesicles predicts the presence of endogenous protease inhibitors in this subcellular compartment. Notably, serpins represent a diverse class of endogenous protease inhibitors that possess selective target protease specificities, defined by the reactive site loop domains (RSL). In the search for endogenous serpins in model secretory vesicles of neuroendocrine chromaffin cells, the presence of serpins related to alpha1-antichymotrypsin (
ACT
) was detected by Western blots with anti-
ACT
. Molecular cloning revealed the primary structures of two unique serpins, endopin 1 and endopin 2, that possess homology to
ACT
. Of particular interest was the observation that distinct RSL domains of these new serpins predicted that endopin 1 would inhibit
trypsin
-like serine proteases cleaving at basic residues, and endopin 2 would inhibit both elastase and papain that represent serine and cysteine proteases, respectively. Endopin 1 showed selective inhibition of
trypsin
, but did not inhibit chymotrypsin, elastase, or subtilisin. Endopin 2 demonstrated cross-class inhibition of the cysteine protease papain and the serine protease elastase. Endopin 2 did not inhibit chymotrypsin,
trypsin
, plasmin, thrombin, furin, or cathepsin B. Endopin 1 and endopin 2 each formed SDS-stable complexes with target proteases, a characteristic property of serpins. In neuroendocrine chromaffin cells from adrenal medulla, endopin 1 and endopin 2 were both localized to secretory vesicles. Moreover, the inhibitory activity of endopin 2 was optimized under reducing conditions, which required reduced Cys-374; this property is consistent with the presence of endogenous reducing agents in secretory vesicles in vivo. These new findings demonstrate the presence of unique secretory vesicle serpins, endopin 1 and endopin 2, which possess distinct target protease selectivities. Endopin 1 inhibits
trypsin
-like proteases; endopin 2 possesses cross-class inhibition for inhibition of papain-like cysteine proteases and elastase-like serine proteases. It will be of interest in future studies to define the endogenous protease targets of these two novel secretory vesicle serpins.
...
PMID:Novel secretory vesicle serpins, endopin 1 and endopin 2: endogenous protease inhibitors with distinct target protease specificities. 1243 89
The mustard trypsin inhibitor, MTI-2, is a potent inhibitor of
trypsin
with no activity towards chymotrypsin. MTI-2 is toxic for lepidopteran insects, but has low activity against aphids. In an attempt to improve the activity of the inhibitor towards aphids, a library of inhibitor variants was constructed and cloned into the pRlac3 phagemid vector. The library of 9.3 x 107 independent colonies was created by randomisation of a stretch of five consecutive codons in the reactive site. Repeated selection rounds against bovine
trypsin
and chymotrypsin allowed the identification of novel, MTI-2 derived, antitrypsin and
antichymotrypsin
inhibitors. Chy8, the selected variant with highest affinity for bovine chymotrypsin (Ki = 32 nm versus >1000 nm for the wild-type) represents the strongest known recombinant chymotrypsin inhibitor of the MTI-2 family. It is highly toxic to nymphs of the aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum, and moderately toxic to nymphs of Aphis gossypii and Myzus persicae. The LC50 of 73 microg ml-1 towards A. pisum is the lowest value known among chymotrypsin inhibitors. The aphicidal activity of Chy8 was improved eightfold compared to the wild-type inhibitor. This demonstrates, for the first time, that bovine chymotrypsin provides a useful template to select engineered proteins highly toxic against these aphids. The selected gene will allow the development of transgenic crops that are protected against sucking insect pests.
...
PMID:Selection by phage display of a variant mustard trypsin inhibitor toxic against aphids. 1258 13
The condition of proteinase-inhibitor balance was studied in blood plasma of patients with obstetric sepsis. Hypoproteinemia (due to a massive blood loss and toxic effect) was shown to result in a 2-5-fold decrease of the activity of endogenous proteinases in blood plasma versus the control group. The activity of alpha-macroglobulins was also by 2 times lower versus the controls, while the activity of alpha 1-
antichymotrypsin
and of an acid-stable inhibitor of
trypsin
was found to be higher by 20-30%. A degree of imbalance of proteinase/inhibitor depends on a disease severity.
...
PMID:[Imbalance in the proteinase-inhibitor system in obstetric sepsis and septic shock]. 1293 25
From among a wide variety of protein purification techniques affinity chromatography has proved to be particularly effective for separation of proteolytic enzymes and their inhibitors. In this article, following a general description of affinity adsorbents used for purification of proteinases, we overview a simple separation procedure for some serine proteinases and their inhibitors by way of affinity chromatography in the presence of high NaCl concentration. It has been shown that some highly specific
trypsin
inhibitors exhibit also
antichymotrypsin
activity when high concentration of Na(+) but not K(+) or Li(+) ions are present in the reaction mixture. Taking advantage of this phenomenon the virgin forms of
trypsin
inhibitors from squash seeds, Kazal-type inhibitor from porcine pancreas and alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor from human and sheep plasma, as an example, were separated using immobilized chymotrypsin or its inactive derivative methylchymotrypsin in the presence of 5 M NaCl.
...
PMID:Non-conventional affinity chromatography of serine proteinases and their inhibitors. 1451 56
Granzyme M is a
trypsin
-fold serine protease that is specifically found in the granules of natural killer cells. This enzyme has been implicated recently in the induction of target cell death by cytotoxic lymphocytes, but unlike granzymes A and B, the molecular mechanism of action of granzyme M is unknown. We have characterized the extended substrate specificity of human granzyme M by using purified recombinant enzyme, several positional scanning libraries of coumarin substrates, and a panel of individual p-nitroanilide and coumarin substrates. In contrast to previous studies conducted using thiobenzyl ester substrates (Smyth, M. J., O'Connor, M. D., Trapani, J. A., Kershaw, M. H., and Brinkworth, R. I. (1996) J. Immunol. 156, 4174-4181), a strong preference for leucine at P1 over methionine was demonstrated. The extended substrate specificity was determined to be lysine = norleucine at P4, broad at P3, proline > alanine at P2, and leucine > norleucine > methionine at P1. The enzyme activity was found to be highly dependent on the length and sequence of substrates, indicative of a regulatory function for human granzyme M. Finally, the interaction between granzyme M and the serpins alpha(1)-
antichymotrypsin
, alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor, and proteinase inhibitor 9 was characterized by using a candidate-based approach to identify potential endogenous inhibitors. Proteinase inhibitor 9 was effectively hydrolyzed and inactivated by human granzyme M, raising the possibility that this orphan granzyme bypasses proteinase inhibitor 9 inhibition of granzyme B.
...
PMID:Granzyme M is a regulatory protease that inactivates proteinase inhibitor 9, an endogenous inhibitor of granzyme B. 1549 98
Human kallikrein 5 (KLK5) is a member of the human kallikrein gene family of serine proteases. Preliminary results indicate that the protein, hK5, may be a potential serological marker for breast and ovarian cancer. Other studies implicate hK5 with skin desquamation and skin diseases. To gain further insights on hK5 physiological functions, we studied its substrate specificity, the regulation of its activity by various inhibitors, and identified candidate physiological substrates. After producing and purifying recombinant hK5 in yeast, we determined the k(cat)/K(m) ratio of the fluorogenic substrates Gly-Pro-Arg-AMC and Gly-Pro-Lys-AMC, and showed that it has
trypsin
-like activity with strong preference for Arg over Lys in the P1 position. The serpins alpha(2)-antiplasmin and antithrombin were able to inhibit hK5 with an inhibition constant (k(+2)/K(i)) of 1.0 x 10(-) (2)and 4.2 x 10(-4) m(-1) min(-1), respectively. No inhibition was observed with the serpins alpha(1)-antitrypsin and alpha(1)-
antichymotrypsin
, although alpha(2)-macroglobulin partially inhibited hK5 at high concentrations. We also demonstrated that hK5 can efficiently digest the extracellular matrix components, collagens type I, II, III, and IV, fibronectin, and laminin. Furthermore, our results suggest that hK5 can potentially release (a) angiostatin 4.5 from plasminogen, (b) "cystatin-like domain 3" from low molecular weight kininogen, and (c) fibrinopeptide B and peptide beta15-42 from the Bbeta chain of fibrinogen. hK5 could also play a role in the regulation of the binding of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 to vitronectin. Our findings suggest that hK5 may be implicated in tumor progression, particularly in invasion and angiogenesis, and may represent a novel therapeutic target.
...
PMID:Biochemical and enzymatic characterization of human kallikrein 5 (hK5), a novel serine protease potentially involved in cancer progression. 1571 79
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