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)

Interstitial collagenases (matrix metalloproteinase-1, EC 3.4.24.7), isolated from extracts of inflamed human gingiva, gingival crevicular fluid and saliva were characterized for their molecular weight, proteolytic and non-proteolytic activation and substrate specificity against soluble collagen types I, II and III. All three collagenases had Mr of 70 K. The enzymes existed predominantly in a latent form that could be activated by aminophenylmercuric acetate, gold thioglucose and hypochlorous acid. Among serine proteases tested, trypsin, chymotrypsin, neutrophil cathepsin G and a combination of trypsin and human gingival fibroblast prostromelysin activated gingival and salivary interstitial collagenases. Plasmin and plasma kallikrein, however, were relatively ineffective activators. The collagenases degraded soluble type I and II collagens at apparently equal rates but considerably faster than they did type III collagen. These findings suggest that the characteristics of interstitial collagenases found in inflamed human gingiva, gingival crevicular fluid and saliva are consistent with those of human neutrophil interstitial collagenase rather than the fibroblast-type interstitial collagenase. Thus, neutrophils are suggested to be the main source of such enzymes in inflamed human gingiva, crevicular fluid and saliva during adult periodontitis.
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PMID:The role of gingival crevicular fluid and salivary interstitial collagenases in human periodontal diseases. 196 17

We present a cascade of proteolytic events catalyzed by the proteases secreted by cultured keratinocytes and fibroblasts that results in the activation of interstitial procollagenase. Cultured human skin fibroblasts constitutively secrete interstitial collagenase and stromelysin as proenzymes. In contrast, interstitial collagenase found in serum-free skin organ culture conditioned medium is activated. Cocultivation of the major cellular components of skin organ culture, dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes, induces activation of interstitial procollagenase and prostromelysin in the presence of plasminogen. This activation occurs through a urokinase-dependent pathway where added keratinocytes secrete the plasminogen activator urokinase, which converts plasminogen into plasmin. Plasmin is capable of activating purified procollagenase and prostromelysin. Plasmin-dependent activation of procollagenase generates an enzyme species, by amino-terminal processing, identical to those generated by limited proteolysis with trypsin or treatment with organomercurial compounds. Catalytic amounts of activated stromelysin can in turn convert plasmin- or trypsin-activated collagenase into a fully active enzyme by removal of approximately 15 amino acid residues from the carboxyl end of the enzyme. This results in a 5- to 8-fold increase in collagenase specific activity that is due to its proteolytic cleavage and not to the presence of the activator stromelysin. Stromelysin alone in both pro- and activated forms is not capable of efficient activation of human fibroblast interstitial procollagenase.
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PMID:Tissue cooperation in a proteolytic cascade activating human interstitial collagenase. 246 56

After incubation with human serum or plasma, 125I-basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) (molecular mass 18.5 kDa) exhibits molecular mass forms greater than 200 kDa as determined by nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by autoradiography. These high molecular mass forms of bFGF are immunoprecipitable with antiserum raised against alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M). Purified alpha 2M and 125I-bFGF form a covalent complex in a specific, saturable manner. Excess unlabeled bFGF competes with 125I-bFGF for complex formation. Complex formation is complete after 4 h and is inhibited by pretreating alpha 2M with dithiothreitol, iodoacetamide, iodoacetic acid, and N-ethylmaleimide. The complex is resistant to acidic conditions and denaturants such as urea. Heparin, which binds bFGF, has no effect on complex formation. Methylamine, which blocks protease binding to alpha 2M, increases the amount of 125I-bFGF that can be bound 2-fold. Plasmin and trypsin treatment of alpha 2M has no effect on 125I-bFGF binding. The ability of growth factors to compete for binding is specific, as aFGF and TGF-beta compete for binding to alpha 2M, whereas platelet-derived growth factor does not. 125I-bFGF.alpha 2M complexes do not bind to low affinity bFGF binding sites and bind poorly to high affinity bFGF binding sites on BHK-21 cells. In addition, 125I-bFGF bound to alpha 2M has decreased ability to stimulate plasminogen activator production in bovine capillary epithelial cells.
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PMID:Alpha 2-macroglobulin is a binding protein for basic fibroblast growth factor. 246 67

Plasmin reacted readily with recombinant murine interferon-gamma (rIFN-gamma) in vitro, reducing the relative molecular mass of each monomer by approximately 1,000. The amino terminus of the rIFN-gamma remained intact and no sites of internal peptide bond hydrolysis were detected, indicating that the plasmin target region is most likely near the carboxyl terminus. Cleavage of rIFN-gamma was observed with similar concentrations of trypsin or min-plasmin. By contrast, human neutrophil elastase failed to alter the structure of rIFN-gamma. The plasma proteinase inhibitor, alpha 2-antiplasmin, protected rIFN-gamma from plasmin digestion. Purified alpha 2-macroglobulin-plasmin complex cleaved rIFN-gamma; however, the activity was greatly reduced compared with the free proteinase. The antiviral activity of the rIFN-gamma was enhanced four- to fivefold by treatment with plasmin or trypsin. By contrast, naturally occurring murine IFN-gamma was inactivated by plasmin (80%), suggesting that the effect of plasmin on IFN activity can vary depending on the preparation studied. The importance of plasmin at the site of an immune reaction is well established. This investigation identifies plasmin and miniplasmin as physiologic proteinases capable of reacting with IFN-gamma in vivo.
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PMID:Cleavage of recombinant murine interferon-gamma by plasmin and miniplasmin. 252 20

Certain group A streptococci are known to possess a receptor for the human enzyme plasmin. Plasmin is a member of a super gene family that includes other serine proteases and kringle containing proteins. In this study we have examined the interaction of a group A streptococcus with structurally related proteins, including plasmin, glu-plasminogen, tissue plasminogen activator, kallikrein, factor XII, prothrombin, thrombin, trypsin, and urokinase. Our studies indicate that only the key fibrinolytic enzyme, plasmin, demonstrates significant binding activity to the group A streptococcus.
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PMID:Group A streptococci bind human plasmin but not other structurally related proteins. 255 Oct 62

The fibrinolytic enzyme plasmin at 0.25 units/ml produced a contraction of isolated canine basilar arteries that developed slowly and was sustained for at least 2 hours. Plasmin and thrombin (1 unit/ml) acted synergistically to enhance the contractile response. In contrast to plasmin, the marked contraction elicited by thrombin ended within 1 hour, and afterward the artery was completely tachyphylactic to thrombin. Fibrin clot, fibrinopeptides, and fibrin degradation products did not prolong significantly the effect of thrombin or prevent the tachyphylaxis. Plasmin and thrombin may occupy a common membrane receptor because exposing the artery briefly to trypsin (24 micrograms/ml) thereafter abolished the contractile effect of plasmin and thrombin without affecting the action of other agonists. Antithrombin III (1.0 unit/ml) relaxed basilar arteries that were precontracted with plasmin (0.5 unit/ml), thrombin (1.0 unit/ml), serotonin (10(-5) M), uridine triphosphate (10(-4) M), or KCl (8 X 10(-2) M). The results suggest that the vasoconstrictor effect of thrombin might contribute to hemostasis after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) but, because of tachyphylaxis, not to delayed vasospasm. On the other hand, the constrictor action of plasmin might appear late in the course of SAH in association with clot lysis and tissue repair. Last, the level of the vasorelaxant antithrombin III in cerebrospinal fluid could control the appearance and severity of cerebral arterial spasm in SAH.
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PMID:Role of plasmin, thrombin, and antithrombin III as etiological factors in delayed cerebral vasospasm. 257 47

Quantitation of fibronectin (FN) concentration is strongly influenced by FN fragmentation with trypsin, kallikrein and plasmin. Digestion by trypsin and kallikrein leads to a progressive decline in FN detectability by the immunoturbidimetric technique to zero values but is associated with an increase in the height of rockets in the Laurell's electroimmunoassay. Plasmin mediated FN fragmentation induces a strong overestimation of the FN content by the electroimmunoassay and, at very high enzyme concentrations, provokes an underestimation of FN by the immunoturbidimetric technique. The decline in FN reactivity in the immunoturbidimetric assay coincides with the disappearance of heavy fractions migrating only slightly faster than native FN in SDS-PAGE. The increase in the height of rockets in the electroimmunoassay is the highest when fractions of intermediate rate of migration prevail in the SDS-PAGE pattern. Concomitant use of these two immunoassays can distinguish native FN from its degraded form and may possibly provide a partial explanation for discrepancies in published studies on the concentration of circulating FN in various pathological states.
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PMID:Effect of proteolysis on quantitation of plasma fibronectin concentration by two immunoassays (electroimmunoassay and immunoturbidimetric technique). 293 54

Plasmin, free of an activator, was obtained after activation of the highly purified human plasminogen by means of trypsin immobilized on Sepharose 4B and after removal of the enzyme from the system. Plasmin was acylated at the active centre using p-amidinophenyl ester of p'-anisic acid to produce the fibrinolytic agent causing a long-term effect. Inactive acyl plasmin was deacylated with the constant rate k3 = 3.10(-4) c-1 (r1/2 = 40 min) at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees. Preliminary studies of the anisoyl-plasmin effect on the system of fibrinolysis in rats showed that in the absence of fibrin clot the fibrinolytic activity was not increased immediately in the euglobulin fraction of blood but after 30 min in result of deacylation of the acyl-enzyme administered into circulation.
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PMID:[Isolation and properties of acylplasmin]. 293

A versatile, convenient assay for vertebrate collagenases has been developed using the fluorescent peptide substrate dansyl-Pro-Gln-Gly-Ile-Ala-Gly-D-Arg. This sequence resembles that of collagen at the site of cleavage but includes modifications designed to eliminate nonspecific hydrolysis by contaminating peptidases. Both human skin fibroblast and bovine corneal cell collagenases cleave the substrate specifically at the Gly-Ile bond. Plasmin, thrombin, trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase B, and bacterial collagenase do not cleave the substrate. Elastase and angiotensin converting enzyme display 20- and 400-fold less activity than the vertebrate collagenases, respectively, and cleave the peptide at different positions. The assay is performed by incubating a 5- to 25-microliters aliquot of trypsin-activated sample with an equal volume of 2 mM substrate overnight at 33 degrees C and pH 7.5. Thin-layer chromatography then separates the fluorescent product from the substrate in less than 20 min and allows the detection of subnanogram levels of collagenase. The assay is applicable to the screening of large numbers of samples under different conditions of pH and ionic strength and is readily adaptable for use in a variety of collagenase-dependent systems, such as assays for collagenase activating and/or inducing factors.
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PMID:A convenient fluorescent assay for vertebrate collagenases. 301 20

The capacity of purified tryptase from human lung mast cells to metabolize human fibrinogen, fibrin, and plasminogen was evaluated. Tryptase (5 micrograms/ml) inactivated the thrombin-induced clotting activity of fibrinogen (100 micrograms/ml) with essentially similar t 1/2 values of 4.6 min in the absence of heparin and 5.8 min in the presence of heparin (20 micrograms/ml) that were not appreciably different than with lysine-Sepharose-purified plasmin (5 micrograms/ml). Fibrinogen treated with tryptase together with heparin lost all detectable clotting activity by 4 hr at 37 degrees C, whereas fibrinogen treated with tryptase alone resulted in destruction of only 80% of fibrinogen clotting equivalents after 16 hr. Tryptase alone was observed to cleave only the alpha-chains of fibrinogen by electrophoresis of tryptase-treated, denatured, and reduced fibrinogen in polyacrylamide gradient gels. Tryptase together with heparin cleaved first the alpha-chain and then the beta-chain, the latter cleavage corresponding to complete loss of fibrinogen clotting activity by 4 hr. No fibrinogen fragments with anticoagulant activity were generated by tryptase. In contrast, plasmin left no residual clotting activity after 4 hr of incubation and generated fibrinogen fragments with anticoagulant activity. Plasmin sequentially cleaved the alpha, beta, and gamma subunits of fibrinogen. Tryptase alone (6 micrograms/ml) or together with heparin (20 micrograms/ml) failed to activate plasminogen (0.6 mg/ml) after a 60-min incubation at 37 degrees C. Addition of urokinase to tryptase-treated or untreated plasminogen resulted in essentially identical plasmin activities (0.32 and 0.34 U/ml, respectively), indicating that tryptase neither activates nor destroys plasminogen. Tryptase (700 ng) also failed to substantially solubilize cross-linked fibrin (2.6 micrograms) or the corresponding amount of fibrinogen bound to plastic microtiter plates with or without heparin. The failure to solubilize fibrinogen and, possibly, fibrin is consistent with the observation that the apparent m.w. by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of unreduced fibrinogen is not appreciably altered by prior treatment with tryptase, even though cleavage of alpha-and beta-chains is revealed after reduction. Fibrinogenolysis by tryptase complements other mast cell mediators with anticoagulant properties such as heparin and suggests a significant prevention of coagulation by activated mast cells.
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PMID:The fibrinogenolytic activity of purified tryptase from human lung mast cells. 316 48


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