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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)
The bcr gene plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of two human leukemias associated with the Philadelphia chromosome: chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In both instances a chimeric gene, formed between bcr and the abl protooncogene, results in expression of fused bcr-abl proteins with tyrosine kinase activity. There is controversy regarding the normal gene products of bcr. We investigated this problem by several techniques and found proteins of 190/185, 155, 135, 125, 108, 83 and 47 kDa in several human cell lines by immunoprecipitation with two distinct site-directed anti-bcr antibodies termed anti-bcr(738-753) and anti-bcr(898-911). The 190/185, 155, 125 and 108 kDa proteins were consistently detected by anti-bcr(898-911) antibodies by immunoblotting. Antibodies pre-reacted with excess bcr peptide did not detect these proteins. These proteins were labeled with [32P]orthophosphate in vivo and in vitro by [gamma 32P]ATP in immune complex kinase assays performed with anti-bcr antibodies indicating that these proteins are phosphorproteins. Following labeling in kinase assays, phosphoamino acid analyses detected both phosphoserine and phosphothreonine. In structural studies using one dimensional peptide maps derived by partial V8 protease treatment, the 185, 155, 135, 125 and 108 kDa proteins shared several peptide fragments but contained unique fragments as well. Similarly 2-dimensional maps of proteins labeled in the kinase assay exhaustively digested with
trypsin
, revealed homology between the 155, 135, 125, 108, and 83 kDa proteins. bcr proteins sedimented in glycerol gradients as putative complexes detected in the cytoplasm of the cell. A 47 kDa protein as well as the recently identified Ph-
P53
protein appeared to be associated with bcr proteins based on their co-sedimentation in glycerol gradients and co-immunoprecipitation with several different anti-bcr antibodies. None of the proteins exhibited a precursor-product relationship in pulse-chase experiments conducted with [35S]methionine. We conclude that human cells express several different bcr gene products ranging in size from 190 to 83 kDa, and that these proteins can form specific intracellular cytoplasmic complexes with other cellular proteins.
...
PMID:Characterization of bcr gene products in hematopoietic cells. 264 52
In a series of 22 pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas, including two acinar cystadenocarcinomas, cellular differentiation was analyzed by immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy. In addition, overexpression of
p53 protein
and Ki-ras codon 12 mutation was studied. Four of the 20 noncystic acinar cell carcinomas showed a pure acinar pattern, nine an acinar-solid, and seven a solid pattern. All tumors stained for at least one of the following pancreatic acinar markers:
trypsin
(21 of 22), lipase (19 of 22), chymotrypsin (13 of 22), phospholipase A2 (nine of 22), and pancreatic stone protein (19 of 22). One-third of the tumors expressed neuroendocrine markers (synaptophysin, eight of 22; chromogranin A, six of 21) and duct cell markers (CA19.9, nine of 21; B72.3, six of 21). Cellular coexpression of
trypsin
and synaptophysin was demonstrated in one tumor. Electron microscopy revealed zymogen granules (nine of nine). In only one of 16 tumors a Ki-ras mutation at codon 12 was found, whereas in none of 19 tumors could overexpression of
p53 protein
be demonstrated. The results suggest that acinar cell carcinomas show obvious capacity to differentiate into several directions, but nevertheless constitute an entity different from ductal adenocarcinomas or endocrine tumors.
...
PMID:Pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma. An analysis of cell lineage markers, p53 expression, and Ki-ras mutation. 836 71
Stimulation of the Fas (APO-1, CD95) receptor, which is present on a variety of cells, usually triggers a process of programmed cell death. Systemic injection of anti-Fas antibody into mice leads to fulminant liver destruction resulting from massive hepatocyte apoptosis, and to rapid death. Hepatocytes bear Fas but do not express Bcl-2, a protein that plays, in a number of conditions, a protective role against apoptosis. We have generated mice whose liver expresses Bcl-2 as the result of bcl-2 transgene placed under the control of the hepatocyte-specific alpha1-anti-
trypsin
gene promoter, but is otherwise not distinguishable from that of normal mice. These mice display a marked to almost total resistance to liver damage induced by anti-Fas antibody injection. This protective effect of Bcl-2 occurs in the absence of significant variations, in the stimulated livers, in the level of expression of other proteins also involved in resistance or sensitivity to apoptosis, namely Bcl-x, Bax, Bad, Bak, and
p53
. Mice with protected livers, however, die almost as rapidly as normal mice, which indicates that acute lethality results from stimulation of Fas receptors present on other target organs or cells.
...
PMID:A bcl-2 transgene expressed in hepatocytes protects mice from fulminant liver destruction but not from rapid death induced by anti-Fas antibody injection. 864 44
Many human tumours are hyperdiploid, particularly in advanced stages of growth. The purpose of the present work was to investigate whether exposure to hypoxia followed by reoxygenation might induce hyperploidisation of diploid human tumour cells in vitro. The investigation was performed by using the diploid melanoma cell line BEX-c (median chromosome number, 46; DNA index, 1.10 +/- 0.04) as test line and the hyperdiploid melanoma cell line SAX-c (median chromosome number, 61; DNA index, 1.42 +/- 0.03) as control line. Cell cultures kept in glass dishes in air-tight steel chambers were exposed to hypoxia (O2 concentrations < 10 p.p.m. or < 100 p.p.m.) at 37 degrees C for 24 h. DNA content was measured by flow cytometry. Metaphase spreads banded with
trypsin
-Versene-Giemsa were examined to determine the number of chromosomes per cell. An electronic particle counter was used to measure cell volume. The expression of
p53
and pRb was studied by Western blot analysis. Transient exposure to hypoxia was found to induce a doubling of the number of chromosomes in BEX-c but not in SAX-c. The fraction of the BEX-c metaphase spreads with 92 chromosomes was approximately 10% at 18 h after reoxygenation, decreased to approximately 2% at 7 days after reoxygenation and then increased gradually with time. The whole cell population became tetraploid within 25 weeks. BEX-c and SAX-c behaved differently during the 24 h hypoxia exposure. Cell volume and fraction of cells in G2 + M increased with time in BEX-c but remained essentially unchanged in SAX-c. On the other hand, the expression of
p53
and pRb was similar for the two lines; hypoxia induced increased expression of
p53
and hypophosphorylation of pRb.
...
PMID:Hypoxia-induced tetraploidisation of a diploid human melanoma cell line in vitro. 876 66
We studied the role of proteases in apoptosis using a cell-free system prepared from a human leukemia cell line. HL60 cells are
p53
null and extremely sensitive to a variety of apoptotic stimuli including DNA damage induced by the topoisomerase I inhibitor, camptothecin. We measured DNA fragmentation induced in isolated nuclei by cytosolic extracts using a filter elution assay. Cytosol from camptothecin-treated HL60 cells induced internucleosomal DNA fragmentation in nuclei from untreated cells. This fragmentation was suppressed by serine protease inhibitors. Serine proteases (
trypsin
, endoproteinase Glu-C, chymotrypsin A, and proteinase K) and papain by themselves induced DNA fragmentation in naive nuclei. This effect was enhanced in the presence of cytosol from untreated cells. Cysteine protease inhibitors (E-64, leupeptin, Ac-YVAD-CHO [ICE inhibitor]) did not affect camptothecin-induced DNA fragmentation. The apopain/Yama inhibitor, Ac-DEVD-CHO, and the proteasome inhibitor, MG-132, were also inactive both in the cell-free system and in whole cells. Interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE) or human immunodeficiency virus protease failed to induce DNA fragmentation in naive nuclei. Together, these results suggest that DNA damage activates serine protease(s) which in turn activate(s) nuclear endonuclease(s) during apoptosis in HL60 cells.
...
PMID:DNA fragmentation induced by protease activation in p53-null human leukemia HL60 cells undergoing apoptosis following treatment with the topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin: cell-free system studies. 880 33
In order to increase the sensitivity to immunostaining in formalinfixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, we developed an immunohistochemical method by microwave heating of tissue sections instead of
trypsin
digestion. The results of this study showed that there was no positive
P53
protein reaction in normal and hyperplastic mucousa of human mouth, whereas 90% (27/30) of cases with dysplasia, 61% (30/49) of oral squamous cell carcinomas and 86% (13/15) of regional metastatic lymph nodes were positive. And all positive reactions were localized in nuclei. Comparison of these positive results of
p53
gene mutation detected by silver staining method with the results by polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformation polymorphism analysis did not reveal matched results, especially during the precancerous period. The authors analysed the causes of difference not only by methodology, but also by cell groups which had different genetic changes in tissues of precancerous lesions.
...
PMID:[The role of p53 gene during the development of human oral malignant lesions: a comparative study of p53 gene mutation with P53 protein positive immunostaining]. 938 53
beta-Lapachone (beta-lap) effectively killed MCF-7 and T47D cell lines via apoptosis in a cell-cycle-independent manner. However, the mechanism by which this compound activated downstream proteolytic execution processes were studied. At low concentrations, beta-lap activated the caspase-mediated pathway, similar to the topoisomerase I poison, topotecan; apoptotic reactions caused by both agents at these doses were inhibited by zVAD-fmk. However at higher doses of beta-lap, a novel non-caspase-mediated "atypical" cleavage of PARP (i.e., an approximately 60-kDa cleavage fragment) was observed. Atypical PARP cleavage directly correlated with apoptosis in MCF-7 cells and was inhibited by the global cysteine protease inhibitors iodoacetamide and N-ethylmaleimide. This cleavage was insensitive to inhibitors of caspases, granzyme B, cathepsins B and L,
trypsin
, and chymotrypsin-like proteases. The protease responsible appears to be calcium-dependent and the concomitant cleavage of PARP and
p53
was consistent with a beta-lap-mediated activation of calpain. beta-Lap exposure also stimulated the cleavage of lamin B, a putative caspase 6 substrate. Reexpression of procaspase-3 into caspase-3-null MCF-7 cells did not affect this atypical PARP proteolytic pathway. These findings demonstrate that beta-lap kills cells through the cell-cycle-independent activation of a noncaspase proteolytic pathway.
...
PMID:Activation of a cysteine protease in MCF-7 and T47D breast cancer cells during beta-lapachone-mediated apoptosis. 1069 31
We previously reported that two nuclear factor 1-like elements mediated the transcription of the rat
p53
gene. A 40-kDa protein was shown to bind to these elements, which was different from common NF1 family proteins. In this study, the biochemical properties of the 40-kDa binding protein were investigated. The metal ion dependency of the protein was examined with various chelators; the protein was proved to require Mg(2+) for maximum DNA-binding activity. The binding protein was highly resistant to ionic strength and denaturant. The protein-DNA complex was reduced at high NaCl concentration, but residual DNA-binding activity remained. Even 2 M urea did not completely eliminate the formation of protein-DNA complex. DNA-binding activity of the protein was also stable at high temperature. Treatment of the protein-DNA complex with increasing concentrations of proteinase K or
trypsin
demonstrated the existence of a protease-resistant DNA-bound core. These biochemical properties provide new insight into the 40-kDa NF1-like nuclear factor.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of a nuclear factor that binds to NF1-like elements in the rat p53 promoter. 1079 61
Evidence suggests that
p53
induces cell death by a dual mode of action involving activation of target genes and transcriptionally independent direct signaling. Mitochondria are major signal transducers in apoptosis. We recently discovered that a fraction of induced
p53 protein
rapidly translocates to mitochondria during
p53
-dependent apoptosis, but not during
p53
-independent apoptosis or
p53
-mediated cell cycle arrest. Importantly, specific targeting of
p53
to mitochondria was sufficient to induce apoptosis in
p53
-deficient tumor cells. This led us to propose a model where
p53
exerts a direct apoptogenic role at the mitochondria, thereby enhancing the transcription-dependent apoptosis of
p53
. Here we show for the first time that mitochondrial localization of endogenous
p53
can be visualized by immunofluorescence of whole cells when stressed by hypoxic conditions. Suborganellar localization by limited
trypsin
digestion of isolated mitochondria from stressed cells suggests that a significant amount of mitochondrial
p53
is located at the surface of the organelle. This mitochondrial association can be reproduced in vitro with purified
p53
. Together, our data provide further evidence for an apoptogenic signaling role of
p53 protein
in vivo at the level of the mitochondria.
...
PMID:Hypoxia death stimulus induces translocation of p53 protein to mitochondria. Detection by immunofluorescence on whole cells. 1116 56
The neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine has been used to induce selective dopaminergic cell death in animal models of Parkinson's disease. The response of neurons to this toxin has been shown to be greatly influenced by astrocytes. Our laboratory reported previously that human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells became more resistant to the toxicity of 6-hydroxydopamine when co-cultured with mouse astrocytes. This enhanced tolerance required direct and specific adhesion between SH-SY5Y cells and astrocytes. We hypothesized that this interaction led to biochemical changes in SH-SY5Y cells, thereby protecting these cells from toxicity. To study these changes, we again co-cultured SH-SY5Y cells with astrocytes and treated them with 6-hydroxydopamine. An optimized condition of
trypsin
treatment was employed to separate SH-SY5Y cells from astrocytes quickly. Western blot analysis demonstrated that 6-hydroxydopamine significantly increased
p53 protein
in monolayer SH-SY5Y cells grown in either regular medium or conditioned medium from astrocytes. This change, however, was not observed in the group co-cultured with astrocytes. Data obtained from the ribonuclease protection assay indicated that similar changes also occurred at the transcriptional level. The enhanced resistance of the co-cultured SH-SY5Y cells to the toxicity of 6-hydroxydopamine is attributed to the ability of astrocytes to prevent the increase of
p53
induced by this toxin. This study demonstrates the significance of the interaction between astrocytes and neurons when they are exposed to neurotoxins.
...
PMID:Inhibition of 6-hydroxydopamine-induced p53 expression and survival of neuroblastoma cells following interaction with astrocytes. 1131 93
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