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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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 multicatalytic proteinase complex (MPC) exhibits three proteolytic activities designated as
trypsin
-like, chymotrypsin-like, and peptidylglutamyl-peptide hydrolyzing (PGPHA). Evidence based on inhibitor and specificity studies indicates that each of the three activities is associated with a different component of the complex. Inactivation of the three activities by the serine proteinase inhibitor, 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin (DCI), reveals the presence of an additional DCI-resistant component that cleaves natural peptides including
neurotensin
, dynorphin, angiotensin II, the oxidized B-chain of insulin, and also proinsulin at a rate greater than that of the native uninhibited complex. Examination of the reaction products of
neurotensin
(NT) and proinsulin degradation showed cleavage of the Ile12-Leu13 bond in NT and cleavage of the Leu44-Ala45 and Val39-Gly40 bonds within the connecting peptide (C-chain) of bovine proinsulin, suggesting preferential cleavage of bonds on the carboxyl side of branched chain amino acids. Although resistant to inhibition by DCI, the component was sensitive to inhibition by the isocoumarin derivatives, 7-amino-4-chloro-3-[3-(isothioureido)propoxy]isocoumarin and 4-chloro-7-guanidino-3-(2-phenylethoxy)isocoumarin. Degradation of NT was activated by leupeptin, chymostatin, and antipain indicating that binding of these aldehyde inhibitors at one site can stimulate proteolytic activity at a different site of the complex. The DCI-resistant component seems to constitute a major component of the complex active in degradation of natural peptides and proteins.
...
PMID:A 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin-resistant component of the multicatalytic proteinase complex. 151 Sep 27
The inhibitory effect of various dipeptides on the
neurotensin
-degrading metallopeptidase, endopeptidase 24.16, was examined. These dipeptides mimick the Pro10-Tyr11 bond of
neurotensin
that is hydrolyzed by endopeptidase 24.16. Among a series of Pro-Xaa dipeptides, the most potent inhibitory effect was elicited by Pro-Ile (Ki approximately 90 microM) with Pro-Ile greater than Pro-Met greater than Pro-Phe. All the Xaa-Tyr dipeptides were unable to inhibit endopeptidase 24.16. The effect of Pro-Ile on several purified peptidases was assessed by means of fluorigenic assays and HPLC analysis. A 5 mM concentration of Pro-Ile does not inhibit endopeptidase 24.11, endopeptidase 24.15, angiotensin-converting enzyme, proline endopeptidase,
trypsin
, leucine aminopeptidase, pyroglutamyl aminopeptidase I and carboxypeptidase B. The only enzyme that was affected by Pro-Ile was carboxypeptidase A, although it was with a 50-fold lower potency (Ki approximately 5 mM) than for endopeptidase 24.16. By means of fluorimetric substrates with a series of hydrolysing activities, we demonstrate that Pro-Ile can be used as a specific inhibitor of endopeptidase 24.16, even in a complex mixture of peptidase activities such as found in whole rat brain homogenate.
...
PMID:Specific inhibition of endopeptidase 24.16 by dipeptides. 176 Oct 32
Purified mast cell carboxypeptidase cleaved the C-terminal leucines from Leu5-enkephalin (Leu-ENK),
neurotensin
(NT), and kinetensin (KT), with Km values of 36, 16, and 15 microM, and kcat values of 44, 51, and 53 s-1, respectively. To better predict potential in vivo hydrolysis products generated by mast cell proteases, these peptides were incubated with released skin mast cell supernatants. Leu5-enkephalin was hydrolyzed only by carboxypeptidase. Kinetensin was cleaved by
tryptase
, chymase, and carboxypeptidase to yield KT(1-3), KT(1-7), KT(1-8), KT(4-7), and KT(4-8), the last two peptides by the concerted action of two of the proteases. NT(1-11) and NT(1-12) were generated from
neurotensin
by chymase and carboxypeptidase, respectively.
...
PMID:Human mast cell proteases hydrolyze neurotensin, kinetensin and Leu5-enkephalin. 180 Sep 60
Tryptase was purified 13,000-fold to apparent homogeneity from rat skin. The two-step procedure involved ammonium sulfate fractionation of the initial extract followed by combined sequential affinity chromatography on agarose-glycyl-glycyl-p-aminobenzamidine and concanavalin A-agarose. The purified enzyme had a specific activity toward N-benzoylarginine ethyl ester (BzArgOEt) of 170 mumol/min mg-1 and was obtained in a yield of 28% as determined by the specific substrate, H-D-Ile-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide. Rat skin tryptase was thermal labile, losing 50% of its activity when preincubated for 30 min at 30 degrees C. The presence of NaCl (1 M) improved thermal stability and was necessary for long-term storage. Heparin did not stabilize the enzyme against thermal denaturation, and heparin-agarose failed to bind the enzyme. Rat skin tryptase was inhibited by diisopropylphosphofluoridate, antipain, leupeptin, and aprotinin but not by alpha 1-antitrypsin, ovomucoid, or soybean or lima bean
trypsin
inhibitors. Substrate specificity studies using a series of tri- and tetrapeptidyl-p-nitroanilide and peptidyl-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin substrates demonstrated the existence of an extended substrate binding site. Rat skin tryptase hydrolyzed [Arg8]vasopressin,
neurotensin
, and the oxidized B-chain of insulin at the -Arg8-Gly9-NH2, -Arg8-Arg9-, and -Arg22-Gly23-bonds, respectively. No general proteinase activity was observed toward casein, hemoglobin, or azocoll. Rat skin tryptase had a Mr of 145,000 by gel filtration. The subunit Mr was either 34,000 or 30,000 depending on the electrophoretic technique used. Treatment of the enzyme with peptide N-glycosidase F (N-glycanase) decreased the subunit Mr by 4000. The enzyme exhibited multiple isoelectric forms (pI's of 4.5-4.9). Rat skin tryptase was found to be related statistically to other tryptases on the basis of amino acid composition. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was Ile1-Val2-Gly3-Gly4-Gln5-Glu6-Ala7-+ ++Ser8-Gly9-Asn10-Lys11-Trp12-Pro13- Trp14- Gln15-Val16-Ser17-Leu18-Arg19-Val20- --21-Asp-22Thr23-Tyr24-Typ25-, with a putative glycosylation site at residue 21. This sequence was 72-80% homologous with the N-terminus of other tryptases but only 40% homologous with that of bovine
trypsin
.
...
PMID:Tryptase from rat skin: purification and properties. 203 67
A high-performance liquid chromatographic method with fluorescence detection is described for the determination of substance P, one of the neuropeptides, in the hypothalamus tissue of rat brain. The detection is based on on-line post-column fluorescence derivatization selective for arginine-containing peptides. The endogenous substance P-like arginine-containing peptide extracted from the tissue and [D-Phe11]-
neurotensin
as an internal standard were separated from various interfering substances on a reversed-phase column (TSKgel ODS-120T) by gradient elution with acetonitrile-phosphate buffer (pH 2.3). The peptides in the eluate were then automatically converted into fluorescent derivatives for detection by reaction with benzoin. Arginine-containing fragments produced by the enzyme reaction of substance P in the chromatographic fraction with
trypsin
were also detected, for the identification of the endogenous substance P-like arginine-containing peptide. The method was sensitive enough to permit the quantitative determination of the peptide at a concentration as low as 580 fmol/mg of protein in the brain homogenate. The concentration values of the substance P-like arginine-containing peptide in the tissue were 9.45 +/- 1.50 pmol/mg of protein (six determinations).
...
PMID:High-performance liquid chromatographic determination of substance P-like arginine-containing peptide in rat brain by on-line post-column fluorescence derivatization with benzoin. 247 17
Oral pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy generally benefits patients with severe pancreatic deficiency. However, the fate of oral pancreatic supplements in the digestive lumen and their possible effects on circulating gut hormones are only partially known. The purpose of this article is to validate an experimental model that produces total pancreatic insufficiency in pigs, and to study the fate of orally administered Eurobiol, a whole pancreas lyophilized preparation, and its effects on circulating plasma levels of five digestive hormones. Pancreatic insufficiency was created by pancreatic duct ligation, and the duodenal, jejunal and ileal contents were sampled through cannulas before a normal meal and 0.5-24 h later. Blood samples were taken at the same times, and plasma
neurotensin
, pancreatic polypeptide, secretin, cholecystokinin (CCK), and gastrin were measured. In pigs with pancreatic insufficiency, Eurobiol, given during the meal, induced a significant increase in all enzyme activities in the duodenum and the jejunum, and in the levels of amylase,
trypsin
, and chymotrypsin in the ileum, relative to placebo. In the duodenum, the peak concentrations of enzyme activities were 19, 11, 17, and 29% (p less than 0.001) of the postprandial peak activities measured in control pigs with an intact pancreas for lipase, amylase,
trypsin
, and chymotrypsin, respectively. In the jejunum, the same activities were, respectively, 30, 11, 25, and 36% (p less than 0.01-0.001) of normal peaks. In pigs with pancreatic insufficiency, basal and integrated meal-stimulated
neurotensin
levels were increased; basal, peak, and integrated meal-stimulated pancreatic polypeptide and secretin levels were increased, whereas gastrin and CCK were not different from controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Total pancreatic insufficiency in pigs: a model to study intestinal enzymes and plasma levels of digestive hormones after pancreatic supplementation by a whole pancreas preparation. 247 98
The neurotransmitter of the non-adrenergic non-cholinergic inhibitory innervation of the stomach is still unknown. We studied the effect of a series of neurotransmitter candidates, ATP, [Leu]enkephalin and [Met]enkephalin, somatostatin,
neurotensin
and VIP, in the rat gastric fundus and compared these effects with the response to electrical stimulation of the non-adrenergic non-cholinergic inhibitory neurons. Rats of both sexes were treated with reserpine (5 mg . kg-1 intraperitoneally) 24 h before killing. Longitudinal muscle strips of the gastric fundus were prepared and mounted between parallel platinum electrodes in Krebs solution containing atropine 10(-6) M and serotonin 3.10(-6) M. A maximal relaxatory response was obtained on transmural stimulation of the strips at supramaximal voltage, 1 msec and 5 Hz. ATP (10(-6)-10(-3) M) elicited a biphasic response, a small relaxation followed by a contraction. The maximal relaxatory response induced by ATP was much lower than that induced by transmural stimulation during 45 sec (37.3% versus 166.2%, where 100% is the maximal contractile response to ATP, n = 17). Desensitization to ATP did not influence the relaxation induced by transmural stimulation. [Met]enkephalin, [Leu]enkephalin and naloxone did not change the tone of the strips or the amplitude of the electrically induced relaxation. Somatostatin had no influence while
neurotensin
induced a concentration-dependent contraction from 10(-9) M or 10(-8) M on. VIP (10(-10)-3.10(-8) M) induced a concentration-dependent relaxation. The maximal relaxation induced by VIP was 120.8% of that induced by transmural stimulation (n = 16). The relaxation induced by VIP 10(-8) M, left in contact with the tissue for 10 min, was comparable to that induced by transmural stimulation during 10 min, except for a lag time of more than 10 sec after the addition of VIP. The relaxation induced by VIP was not influenced by tetrodotoxin, phentolamine or propranolol. The peptidase
trypsin
(10(-6) M) antagonized the relaxation by exogenously added VIP but did not influence the electrically induced relaxation. The results obtained in this study show that, of the substances tested, only VIP mimics the relaxation induced by stimulation of the inhibitory non-adrenergic non-cholinergic neurons in the rat gastric fundus; VIP therefore seems a reasonable candidate as neurotransmitter of these neurons.
...
PMID:Study on the possible neurotransmitter of the non-adrenergic non-cholinergic innervation of the rat gastric fundus. 287
The endogenous opioid peptides all contain the enkephalin sequence Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met and Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu at their aminoterminus. Three distinct families of these peptides (endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins) are present in different neuronal pathways within the central nervous system. Molecular genetics have shown that these three families of opioid peptides are derived from three distinct precursors. Pro-opiomelanocortin gives rise to the endorphins, as well as adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and the melanotropic hormones (MSH's). [Met] enkephalin, [Leu] enkephalin and the related heptapeptide [Met] enkephalin-Arg6-Phe7 and octapeptide [Met] enkephalin-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8 are derived from proenkephalin. The third family is derived from prodynorphin and includes dynorphin A, dynorphin B (also known as rimorphin) and alpha- and beta-neo-endorphin. The structure of the genes coding for these precursors are similar, suggesting the possibility of one common ancestral gene. The most common scheme for enzymatic maturation of precursors proposes the action of a
trypsin
-like endopeptidase followed by a carboxypeptidase B-like exopeptidase. However, we have provided evidence that this combination of
trypsin
-like and carboxypeptidase B-like enzymes may not be the only mechanism for liberating enkephalin from low molecular weight enkephalin-containing peptides. Indeed, endo-oligopeptidase A, an enzyme, known to hydrolyze the Phe5-Ser6 bond of bradykinin and the Arg8-Arg9 bond of
neurotensin
, has been shown to produce, by a single cleavage, [Leu] enkephalin or [Met] enkephalin from small enkephalin-containing peptides, (Camargo et al., 1987, J. Neurochem. 48, 1258-1263).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Biosynthesis of opioid peptides]. 305 81
Treatment of mammalian plasmas with pepsin yielded extraordinary quantities of immunoreactive
neurotensin
(iNT) and methionine5-enkephalin (iENK). The concentrations measured after pepsin-treatment (iNT, 1-5 microM and iENK, 0.1-0.5 microM) were 1-100 thousand times the normal circulating levels of these peptides. The reactions were shown to be time, temperature and pH dependent and to involve the action of pepsin on albumin-like proteins (Mr, ca, 65,000). Pepsin-generated iNT from rat plasma differed from NT since it reacted only with C-terminal directed antisera and eluted earlier than NT during HPLC on mu-Bondapak C-18. Partially purified iNT was active in two bioassays for NT, one which senses changes in vascular permeability to protein after intradermal injection into rats and another which measures release of histamine from isolated rat mast cells. Other biologic activities generated by pepsin-treating plasma included effects on systemic blood pressure in rats and on the contractility of the isolated guinea pig ileum. Some of these, however, were attributable to the formation of angiotensin- and bradykinin-related peptides. Pepsin-generated iENK gave three major peaks during HPLC, one of which (ca, 25%) co-eluted with oxidized ENK and also registered in a radioreceptor assay for opiate-related substances. In addition, this material produced ENK-like effects on the isolated guinea pig ileum and on vascular permeability in rat skin. The precursor-like protein(s) for iENK were distinguished from adrenal proenkephalins since it did not liberate iENK upon digestion with
trypsin
and carboxypeptidase B. Since pepsin can mimic renin these results suggest the existence of systems in blood (analogous to the renin/angiotensin system) for the generation of biologically active NT- and ENK-related peptides and they also raise the question as to whether other neuropeptides might be found circulating in precursor form(s).
...
PMID:Generation of immunoreactive neurotensin(s) and enkephalin(s) by pepsin-treatment of plasma. 310 14
The observation that suckling evokes a modest rise in serum TSH when compared with that of prolactin is inconsistent with the hypothesis that TRH serves as a hypophysiotropic mediator of this response. In the present study we attempted to provide an explanation for this discrepancy by determining whether any of a growing number of putative prolactin releasing factors could alter pituitary responsiveness to TRH. Anterior pituitaries from lactating (day 14) rats were monodispersed with
trypsin
, cultured for 2 days, and then incubated in the presence of medium alone or medium containing TRH, dopamine, or a combination of these secretagogues. Companion sets of cultures were incubated concurrently with either beta-endorphin,
neurotensin
, oxytocin, serotonin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, or lysine vasopressin. As expected, TRH stimulated and dopamine suppressed prolactin release. None of the substances tested except oxytocin had a significant effect on pituitary cell responsiveness to TRH or dopamine. Oxytocin had no effect on prolactin secretion when tested alone or in combination with TRH and dopamine. TRH alone stimulated TSH release by these cultures, while oxytocin and dopamine were ineffective by themselves. However, TSH secretion by cultures treated simultaneously with TRH and oxytocin could be suppressed to approximately half of that released by cells incubated with TRH alone. These results demonstrate that oxytocin attenuates TRH-induced TSH release by a direct action on pituitary cells without affecting the prolactin response. This selectivity of responsiveness imparted by oxytocin might contribute to the blunted release of TSH after suckling.
...
PMID:Oxytocin attenuates TRH-induced TSH release from rat pituitary cells. 315 75
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