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)

A 60,000-dalton polypeptide (p60) has been identified in the feline leukemia virus (FeLV) pseudotype of Moloney sarcoma virus [MSV(FeLV)]. This polypeptide is present in the purified virus complex in concentrations greater than either the murine p30 or the feline p27. Purified p60 crossreacts immunologically with murine p30 group antiserum and contains several interspecies determinants, whereas the group specific determinant of FeLV p27 is not detected. Comparison of peptide fingerprints of p60 and murine p30 show many peptides in common. Limited digestion of p60 with either trypsin or chymotrypsin produced p30-35 and p20 peptides which retain the MuLV p30 group and interspecies antigenic activities. The p30 produced by both enzymes comigrates in polyacrylamide gels with the murine p30 of MSV(FeLV), thus suggesting that p60 may be an uncleaved precursor to p30.
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PMID:A p60 polypeptide in the feline leukemia virus pseudotype of Moloney sarcoma virus with murine leukemia virus p30 antigenic determinants. 4 60

Three phenotypical variants of normal human serum alpha2-macroglobulin revealed by immunoelectrophoresis and specific antibodies obtained in rabbits are presented. The variants are characterized by differences in electrophoretic mobility: one being fast, one slow, and one of an intermediate rate. To find out possible differences with respect to the effect of the trypsin and chymotrypsin on the three variants, they were treated with the enzymes before immunoelectrophoresis. Migration was accelerated in all cases, after complexing with the enzymes, but the differences in the relative positions of the variants were maintained. The trypsin- and chymotrypsin-binding capacities of these three forms seem to differ, as suggested by the results presented in this report.
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PMID:Variants of normal human alpha2-macroglobulin. Immunoelectrophoresis and enzyme-binding effect. 5 Feb 67

Pancreatitis was induced by injection of autologous bile into the main pancreatic duct of dogs. An initial fall in blood pressure was accompanied by appearance of large quantities of active trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase in pancreatic exudate with full saturation of protease inhibitors. The enzymes soon appeared in ascitic fluid and lymph, but only in the form of complexes with alpha1-antitrypsin, and alpha2-macroglobulin. No such complexes were detected in venous blood indicating short half-life in the circulation. These studies confirm the release of pancreatic enzymes during bile-induced pancreatitis, and quantify an important protective role for plasma protease inhibitors in this situation.
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PMID:Release of proteolytic enzymes in bile-induced pancreatitis in dogs. 5 Sep 58

Human leukocytes, when exposed to aggregated human gamma-globulin (AHGG) or immune complexes (isolated from RA synovial fluid) fixed to a cartilagenous surface, release neutral proteases that degrade the extracellular matrix of cartilage. The chondromucoprotein destruction by these proteases is suppressed by a variety of synovial fluids but is not susceptible to inhibition by trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase inhibitors, or a combination of these agents. The inhibitory effect of synovial fluid can be reversed in the presence of increasing enzyme concentrations. Intact viable human polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the presence of AHGG also release a collagenase precursor that can be activated by limited proteolysis with trypsin or RA synovial fluids. Enzyme release (neutral proteases) by phagocytosing cells is inhibited by the antiinflammatory agents phenylbutazone and colchicine; these agents do not affect release of the collagenase precursor. However, the latent collagenase release is susceptible to inhibition when leukocytes are preincubated (prior to exposure to AHGG) with inhibitors of protein synthesis. Under these conditions, neutral protease release is unaffected.
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PMID:Connective tissue-degrading enzymes of human leukocytes. 5 2

A fragment of IgE with molecular weight of about 40,000 was identified by radioimmunoassay in human small intestinal fluid after fractionation by gel filtration chromatography. Digestion of E myeloma protein PS by pooled intestinal fluid, trypsin or chymotrypsin yielded a degradation product of similar molecular weight that probably consisted principally of epsilon 1 determinant-containing fragments. These findings suggest that IgE is secreted into the intestinal lumen and degraded there by pancreatic proteolytic enzymes, producing an enzyme-resistant portion of the amino-terminal part of the Fc region.
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PMID:Studies on IgE in human intestinal fluids. 5 26

Gingival samples removed from fifteen Beagle dogs were sectioned into small pieces, parts of which served as the uncultured piece; the remaining pieces were organ cultured for four hours at 37 degrees C in MEM control, compound 48/80, endotoxins, protease, collagenase, hyaluronidase, trypsin and chymotrypin media. Uncultured and cultured tissues and spent media were analyzed spectrofluorometrically for histamine content. The uncultured gingiva contained a mean of 2.80 mug histamine/g of tissue and was considered to contain 100% total histamine available for release. The percentages of histamine released into the medium were 5.4% for culture control, 57.3% for compound 48/80, 5.4% for endotoxins, 77.3% for protease, 16.1% for hyaluronidase, 24 for collagenase, 39.3% for trypsin, and 36.5% for chymotrypsin. When compared to the culture control, all test substances showed statistically significant histamine release (P less than 0.005 to P less than 0.0005) except for the endotoxins and for hyaluronidase (P greater than 0.05). The results demonstrate (1) that gingiva contains a potential source or reservoir of histamine, presumably in mast cells, and when appropriately challenged in vitro can release this histamine; (2) no direct effect of endotoxins on histamine release in vitro, (3) that all enzymes tested except hyaluronidase resulted in significant histamine release. The results of this in vitro study support a thesis that enzymes are active in the early events of gingival inflammation.
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PMID:The effect of endotoxins and enzymes in vitro on the release of gingival histamine. 5 3

Human properdin (P) was found to be sensitive to the action of trypsin, chymotrypsin, pepsin, and Streptomycetes caesipitosus protease. Incubation of P with these enzymes resulted in loss of its functional activity and the production of antigenically deficient components compared to untreated P. Upon incubation with trypin, P was initially cleaved into a minor fragment and a major fragment. Further degradation ot the fragments occurred with prolongation of inculation time. The minor fragment was highly susceptible to further proteolysis compared to the major fragment which contained the carbohydrate moiety of the molecule. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of trypsin-digested P suggested that the subunit polypeptide chains were initially cleaved at similar points to produce the major and minor fragments. The sedimentation velocity of the major fragment was higher than that of the intact molecule. The implications of these observations of the configuration of P are discussed.
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PMID:Effect of proteolytic digestion on the structure and function of human properdin. 5 3

Proteases capable of activating procollagenase from gingiva and from fibroblast and macrophage monolayer cultures were harvested from homogenates of canine tumor mast cells. The mast cell proteases lysed casein and Azocoll but not native collagen. In low salt concentrations the enzymes existed at high molecular weight complexes, which were dissociated by increasing the salt concentration above 1.0 M (NaCl, KCl). Gel filtration in 1.4 M KCl separated the protease activity into three peaks, all of which activated procollagenase. Two of the enzymes showed substrate specificities (hydrolysis of p-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester and benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester) and reactive center reactivities similar to pancreatic trypsin and chymotrypsin. Based on gel filtration, apparent molecular weights of 160 000 (p-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester esterase), 90 000 (main procollagenase activator) and 36 000 benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester esterase) were determined. Activation of procollagenase resulted in a 18-20 000 decrease of the molecular weight. The activation was directly related to the amount of activator added within certain limits. Further addition of activator resulted in proteolytic inactivation of collagenase.
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PMID:Activation of fibroblast procollagenase by mast cell proteases. 5 9

Altered hemoglobin (Hb) has been found in the feces as a sequel to an upper gastrointestinal bleed. Active Hb antigen of increased anodic mobility was detected on immunoelectrophoresis of melena stools using a goat anti-Hb. The Hb derivative was also identified in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis using 412 nm. absorbance. The alteration could be simulated in vitro by incubation of hemolysate with duodenal juice or purified carboxypeptidase B alone, or by a mixture of carboxypeptidases A and B. Treatment of hemolysate or purified Hb with acid, gastric juice, pepsin, pancreatic juice, bile, trypsin, or chymotrypsin failed to produce the characteristic alteration. Instead, no change, or production of alpha and beta chains, or gradual but complete elimination of the Hb antigen was seen. This latter all or none pattern is presumed to prevail in the large bowel on the basis of incubations of hemoglobin-feces mixtures. Individuals documented to be bleeding into the colon were found to have at least a portion of their Hb antigen in the unaltered form by immunoelectrophoresis. This finding may be of value in identifying the general origin of a gastrointestinal bleed.
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PMID:Appearance, properties, and origin of altered human hemoglobin in feces. 6 May 7

The present study using immunologic methodology confirms previous observations from this laboratory of an absence of a protease component with arginine esterase activity in plasma of patients with cystic fibrosis. In this study, the pooled plasma from control individuals was activated and partially purified after adsorption on columns of soybean trypsin inhibitor conjugated to Sepharose 4B followed by elution with benzamidine. The fraction was further purified by isoelectrofocusing on polyacrylamide gels. Proteins around the pI range of 5.5 were eluted and utilized to prepare an antiserum. Immunoelectrophoresis of activated plasma samples from control subjects and patients with cystic fibrosis was performed utilizing the antiserum. In controls, four precipitin arcs with residual esterase activity were observed, whereas only three were seen in plasma from patients with cystic fibrosis. Double gel diffusion experiments using specific antisera ruled out the presence of trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasminogen, prothrombin, C1 esterase, alpha one-trypsin inhibitor, and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor in the concentrated benzamidine eluate. The antisera to alpha two-macroglobulin gave an immunoprecipitate which was readily stained for proteolytic activity. On immunoelectrophoresis, the alpha two-macroglobulin precipitin band corresponded to the band absent in plasma of patients with cystic fibrosis. In contrast, the alpha two-macroglobulin levels were similar in plasma of control subjects and patients with cystic fibrosis. Using the antiserum to the protein fractith proteolytic activity could be demonstrated in control plasma. One specific enzyme-active "rocket" was absent in plasma of patients with cystic fibrosis. In a double blind study of 15 control samples and 15 samples from patients with cystic fibrosis, a specific "rocket" was shown to be present in 13 control samples and absent in 14 cystic fibrosis samples. alpha two-Macroglobulin was determined by both an immunologic procedure and by its trypsin binding (trypsin protein esterase concentration). The ratio of the immunologic assay to the biologic activity assay was 90 for the normal plasma samples and only 65 for cystic fibrosis samples.
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PMID:Absence of an alpha two-macroglobulin-protease complex in cystic fibrosis. 6 Jul 35


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