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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)
We have previously reported the presence of a cell surface associated lectin activity in Giardia lamblia, a human protozoan parasite that is a significant cause of diarrheal disease worldwide [Lev, B., Ward, H., Keusch, G. T., & Pereira, M. E. A. (1986) Science (Washington, D.C.) 232, 71-73]. This lectin is specifically activated in vitro by a host protease,
trypsin
, which is secreted in vivo at the site of infection. The activated lectin agglutinates cells to which the parasite adheres in vivo and binds specifically to isolated
brush border
membranes of these cells. These findings suggest that this lectin may be of importance in the host-parasite interaction. We now report the identification of this lectin, which we have named taglin (to denote
trypsin
-activated Giardia lectin), and describe some of its properties. A monoclonal antibody that inhibits the hemagglutinating activity of taglin recognizes a protein of 28,000/30,000 kdaltons in Western blots of Giardia lysates. This finding was confirmed by direct demonstration of lectin activity with the technique of erythrocyte binding to proteins electroblotted to nitrocellulose, which revealed specific red cell binding to giardial protein bands in the same molecular weight range as those recognized by the monoclonal antibody. This study also elucidates the binding of taglin to terminal phosphomannosyl residues. The involvement of cell surface phosphate in binding of taglin to erythrocytes is shown by the abolition of lectin activity by alkaline phosphatase treatment of the erythrocytes. Taglin also requires divalent cations, Ca2+ or Mn2+, for hemagglutinating activity and is active within a narrow pH range of 6-7.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of taglin, a mannose 6-phosphate binding, trypsin-activated lectin from Giardia lamblia. 344 82
A kininase I-like enzyme (carboxypeptidase) was purified to homogeneity from human urine and compared to the 48,000 mol. wt. (48K) active subunit of carboxypeptidase N. The urinary carboxypeptidase had a mol. wt. of 73,000 in gel filtration and 76,000 in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It had a pH optimum of 7.0 and differed from the 48K subunit in stability, susceptibility to
trypsin
, and enzymatic activity. The urinary enzyme did not cross-react with antibody to carboxypeptidase N in "Western blotting". Urine from a patient genetically deficient in plasma carboxypeptidase N (21% of normal) contained normal levels of urinary carboxypeptidase with similar properties to that from pooled human urine. Membrane fractions from several tissues contained a similar carboxypeptidase activity. The activity was highest in a microvillous membrane fraction from human placenta (65 nmol/min/mg with Bz-Gly-Lys as substrate). High specific activities were also found in membrane fractions of human kidney (18 nmol/min/mg) and lung (8 nmol/min/mg). The membrane-bound enzyme was distinguished from lysosomal and catheptic carboxypeptidases as well as "enkephalin convertase" by the use of specific inhibitors. These results show that urine contains a carboxypeptidase capable of cleaving arginine or lysine from the C-terminus of peptides. The enzyme does not arise from plasma carboxypeptidase N, but may be released into the urine from the renal
brush border
.
...
PMID:Kininase one-an'-a-half: the newest member of the kininase family. 381 89
The mechanisms by which FFA are absorbed by the gut are unclear. To examine these processes, binding of [14C]oleate to isolated rat jejunal microvillous membranes (MVM) was studied in vitro. When [14C]oleate alone or compounded with bovine serum albumin at various molar ratios was incubated with MVM aliquots, binding was time- and temperature-dependent, inhibitable by addition of excess cold oleate, and decreased by heat denaturation or
trypsin
digestion of the membranes. When [14C]oleate binding to heat denatured MVM, which increased continuously as a function of the free oleate concentration and was taken as a measure of nonspecific binding, was subtracted from total binding to native MVM, a curve suggestive of saturable specific binding was observed. In contrast to fatty acids, there was no specific binding of [14C]taurocholate or [35S]sulfobromophthalein to jejunal MVM. After MVM solubilization with 1% Triton X-100, affinity chromatography over oleate-agarose and elution with 7 M urea yielded a single 40,000-mol-wt protein. This Sudan Black/periodic acid-Schiff-stain-negative protein co-chromatographed on Sephadex G-100 with [14C]oleate, [14C]palmitate, [14C]arachidonate, and [14C]linoleate, but not with the [14C]oleate ester of cholesterol, [14C]phosphatidylcholine, [14C]taurocholate, or [35S]sulfobromophthalein. A rabbit antibody to the previously reported hepatic membrane fatty acid binding protein (FABP) gave a single line of immunologic identity between the FABPs of rat jejunum and rat liver membrane. It inhibited the binding of [14C]oleate to native MVM but not heat denatured MVM, and, in immunohistochemical studies, demonstrated the presence of the FABP in the apical and lateral portions of the
brush border
cells of the jejunum, but not on the luminal surface of esophagus or colon. These data are compatible with the hypothesis that a specific FABP plays a role in fatty acid absorption from the gut.
...
PMID:Identification, isolation, and partial characterization of a fatty acid binding protein from rat jejunal microvillous membranes. 388 64
1. A neutral peptidase, previously shown to be located in the
brush border
of the proximal tubule, and assayed by its ability to hydrolyse [(125)I]iodoinsulin B chain was purified from rabbit kidney. 2. The starting material for the purification was a microsomal pellet prepared from a homogenate of cortical tissue. The membrane-bound enzymes were solubilized by treatment with toluene and
trypsin
. About half the neutral peptidase activity was released by this treatment in a form that no longer sedimented with the microsomal pellet and which penetrated polyacrylamide gels when subjected to disc electrophoresis. Other treatments with detergents or proteolytic enzymes either inactivated the peptidase or failed to convert it into a genuinely soluble form. 3. Chromatography with successive columns of Sephadex G-200, DEAE-cellulose and hydroxyl-apatite yielded an enzyme that was free of other brush-border peptidase activities and which was homogeneous on disc electrophoresis and ultracentrifugation. 4. The purified enzyme attacked [(125)I]iodoglucagon at a rate comparable with that for [(125)I]iodoinsulin B chain. It did not appear to attack proteins (insulin, albumin and casein) that had been similarly iodinated. 5. Unlabelled insulin B chain and unlabelled glucagon were substantially hydrolysed by the endopeptidase, whereas insulin and albumin released only trivial amounts of ninhydrin-reacting material. The resistance of insulin to attack by endopeptidase, even after prolonged incubation, was confirmed by biological and immunoassay. 6. The specificity of the peptidase was determined by analysis of the products after incubating unlabelled insulin B chain, and some oligopeptide substrates, including pentagastrin, with the enzyme. All of the bonds readily cleaved were those involving the alpha-amino group of hydrophobic residues, i.e. x-Leu-, x-Val-, x-Tyr-, x-Phe- and x-Met-, provided that the residues were not C-terminal. 7. The enzyme showed only endopeptidase activity. Substrates suitable for aminopeptidases, carboxypeptidases or esterases were not attacked.
...
PMID:The purification and specificity of a neutral endopeptidase from rabbit kidney brush border. 442 92
The aminopeptidase A of the porcine intestinal brush-border membrane has been purified following solubilization by
trypsin
(p-form) or Emulphogen (d-form). Full purification of d-amino-peptidase A required the use of anti-impurities immunoabsorbant chromatography. The d-amino-peptidase A constitutes about 4% of the total proteins of the membrane, compared to 8-12% for another, already characterized, brush-border aminopeptidase N. Both d-form and p-form of aminopeptidase A have been clearly shown to be dimeric. Experimental evidence is presented favoring the view that they are symmetrical dimers, with the consequence that each of the two subunits of the d-form possesses an hydrophobic anchor holding them at the membrane surface. As already demonstrated for several other
brush border
hydrolases, the hydrophobic anchor is N-terminal in porcine intestinal aminopeptidase A. The molecular weight of the peptide including the anchor liberated by
trypsin
during the conversion of the d-form into the p-form has been estimated by an isotopic dilution method to be about 4500 (42 residues). This value which compares well with those recently obtained in the case of rabbit aminopeptidase N (3700-3800; 36-38 residues), indicates that the anchor is much shorter than believed earlier. A preliminary survey of the specificity of both aminopeptidases A and N towards four synthetic amino acid p-nitroanilides confirms that aminopeptidase A mostly cleaves acidic residues. Its activity towards neutral residues is much lower, but probably significant in certain cases.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of an aminopeptidase A from hog intestinal brush-border membrane. 610 77
Binding of Escherichia coli strain 431 heat-stable enterotoxin (STa) and activation of intestinal particulate guanylate cyclase by E. coli STa were studied with rat intestinal epithelial cells and
brush border
membranes (BBMs). The rates of guanylate cyclase stimulation by 431 STa in cells and BBMs were rapid, with maximal levels of cyclic GMP observed within 5 min. Specific binding of 125I-labeled STa from E. coli 431 (431 125I-STa) and activation of guanylate cyclase by unlabeled 431 STa were observed with intestinal BBMs; however, neither was detected with membranes from nonintestinal tissues. The STa receptor was solubilized with 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate, a nondenaturing dipolar ionic detergent, in yields of approximately 50%. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the detergent-solubilized receptor-431 125I-STa complex, followed by autoradiography, showed that 431 125I-STa bound to a single BBM component with a molecular weight of about 100,000. Binding of 431 STa to its solubilized receptor was saturable, specific, and essentially irreversible. Pretreatment of the soluble receptor with
trypsin
and pronase but not chymotrypsin decreased binding of 431 125I-STa. The 431 STa-receptor complex was dissociated by boiling in the presence of 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, incubation with 0.5 M acetic acid, or reduction with dithiothreitol. In contrast to the residual particulate guanylate cyclase activity of detergent-treated membranes, solubilized guanylate cyclase was not stimulated by STa. Membrane structure appears to play an important role in the coordination of STa binding and stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity.
...
PMID:Solubilization and partial characterization of the intestinal receptor for Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin. 615 10
The presence of human blood group A determinants has been shown on the A+ rabbit intestinal
brush border
glycoproteins, particularly hydrolases. Sugar compositions of aminopeptidases N from A+ and A- rabbits were compatible with the presence in these molecules of eight N-linked glycans and of two O-linked glycans bearing the A determinants in A+ animals. The exact relative molecular masses of hydrophobic domain(s) of aminopeptidases N and A from pig and rabbit intestinal
brush border
have been determined by an isotopic dilution technique. The values obtained were compatible with the anchorage in the membrane of the monomeric rabbit enzymes, or of each subunit of the dimeric pig enzymes, by their N-terminal sequences, composed of 20-25 hydrophobic amino acids. This N-terminal hydrophobic sequence (14 residues) has been determined for rabbit aminopeptidase N. Short peptides containing approximately 60% hydrophobic amino acids have been extracted by chloroform-methanol from purified
brush border
and basolateral membranes of pig enterocytes. Their molecular properties were very similar to those of the aminopeptidase anchors released by
trypsin
treatment of detergent-extracted enzymes. However, several lines of evidence failed to support the assumption that these free hydrophobic peptides can be identified with anchors left inside the bilayer after proteolytic cleavage of surface hydrolases.
...
PMID:Aminopeptidases and proteolipids of intestinal brush border. 634 98
After twenty weeks of continuous dosing with Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae substantial, but declining, numbers of worms had persisted in most of the lambs examined, although there were wide inter-individual variations. Mucosal lesions were found in the proximal small intestines of all the infected animals, their severity being directly related to worm burden. Representative
brush border
enzyme activities analysed in intestinal mucosal extracts from the same lambs showed differing responses. Alkaline phosphatase and glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase were significantly depleted, whereas maltase activity was only marginally reduced, and leucine aminopeptidase activity was normal. Mucosal acetylcholinesterase activity was significantly elevated in the parasitised animals and, interestingly in view of the postulated role of this enzyme in nematode pathogenicity, the level of activity was directly correlated with individual worm burdens. Intestinal
trypsin
and chymotrypsin activities were unaffected and the level of superoxide dismutase, an enzyme associated with the inflammatory response, was normal. There were also no consistent changes in the mucosal activities of several enzymes including lactic dehydrogenase, creatine phosphokinase, aldolase, and glutamic oxaloacetate transaminase, whose leakage from damaged or necrotic tissues has been well defined in terms of the concomitant increase in their activity in the circulation. Lambs treated orally with fenbendazole five and/or ten weeks before slaughter either in the presence or absence of continued larval intake, had negligible worm burdens, and showed little evidence of intestinal damage at post mortem. Brush border enzyme levels, with the exception of alkaline phosphatase and, in two cases dipeptidase, were normal in these animals. The activity of alkaline phosphatase was approximately double that in the continuously infected, untreated lambs, but remained markedly lower than in the uninfected controls. The activities of the other enzymes studied, including acetylcholinesterase, were within the control range. In summary, in chronic trichostrongylosis even relatively low nematode burdens were associated with marked pathological and biochemical damage in the intestine with both lesion severity and mucosal acetylcholinesterase activity being directly related to worm numbers. Although morphological integrity was completely restored after anthelmintic treatment, the persistent low activity of
brush border
alkaline phosphatase coupled with the enzymological findings in untreated, infected animals suggests that recovery of the full functional capability of the intestinal mucosa may take longer.
...
PMID:Intestinal enzyme activity in lambs chronically infected with Trichostrongylus colubriformis: effect of anthelmintic treatment. 634 11
The possibility of preservation and restoration of antigenicity of some antigens in paraffin-embedded tissue was evaluated by direct immunofluorescent technique on deparaffinized sections. Fixation with 96% ethanol-1% acetic acid, 10% neutral buffered formalin and p-formaldehyde was useful for the preservation of tissue antigens and immune deposits, whose antigenicity could be easily restored by
trypsin
digestion. Neutral buffered formalin was also a satisfactory fixative in immunofluorescent staining on lymphocyte/plasma cell-bound immunoglobulins. Fixation with alcohol-Bouin's fluid showed contrast results; feasible for staining of cell-bound immunoglobulins, but poor for that of glomerular immune deposits. After papain digestion, BSA and lysozyme, antigens of immune complexes, were easily detected in experimental chronic serum sickness glomerulonephritis. Pepsin was more efficient than
trypsin
in restoring the antigenicity of renal tissue antigens such as fibronectin and polyantigenic basement membrane, but the
brush border
antigen of the proximal renal tubules was frail to the pepsin digestion. In general, the enzymatic digestion time necessary for the restoration of antigenicity was in parallel with fixation time. Results obtained have shown that deparaffinized sections could be used as satisfactory substrate for immunohistochemistry when proper fixation and efficient proteolytic enzymatic pretreatments were performed.
...
PMID:Restoration of antigenicity of tissue antigens, cell-bound immunoglobulins and immune deposits in paraffin-embedded tissue. The influence of fixation and proteolytic enzymatic digestion. 643 48
The vitamin D-induced intestinal calcium-binding protein (CaBP) was quantitated in membranous components of the intestinal mucosa by a specific and sensitive RIA. Inclusion of detergent (Triton X-100) in extraction buffer and in the RIA system was required to release and measure membrane-associated CaBP. Purified brush borders were shown to contain CaBP with a specific activity (micrograms per mg protein) about 12% of that in the total homogenate. By transferring proteins separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to nitrocellulose blots electrophoretically, CaBP was immunologically detected in brush borders from vitamin D3-treated chicks, but not in those from vitamin D3-deficient chicks. CaBP was also detected in isolated
brush border
membrane vesicles by the gel electrophoresis-blot transfer technique. Brush border CaBP was inaccessible to proteolytic hydrolysis by
trypsin
unless trypsinized in the presence of detergent. CaBP-binding substances were found to be present in purified brush borders, using the gel overlay technique. A specific binding protein with a mol wt in the range of 50,000-70,000 daltons was identified, as well as an avid CaBP binder at less than 14,000 mol wt. These observations provide evidence for the association of a significant fraction of total intestinal CaBP with brush borders in vivo, which might have physiological relevance.
...
PMID:Membrane-associated vitamin D-induced calcium-binding protein (CaBP): quantification by a radioimmunoassay and evidence for a specific CaBP in purified intestinal brush borders. 648 66
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