Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.5 (thrombin)
33,306 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of pH and time on the stability of heparin sodium in dextrose 5% in water (D5W) injection and in dextrose 5% in 0.45% sodium chloride injection was studied. Admixtures of heparin sodium 5,000 units/250 ml were tested after 0, 10, 20 and 30 minutes and 1, 2, 6, 12 and 24 hours of storage at room temperature. The pH of the carrier solutions was adjusted to 2, 4 or 9 prior to adding the heparin sodium. Heparin activity was measured using a thrombin clotting time assay. Samples were tested for pH changes at the same times. No substantial changes in heparin activity over the 24-hour period occurred with any of the pH-adjusted solutions. The pH of the heparin-D5W admixtures remained constant over time. The two carrier solutions, over a pH range of 2 to 9, appear to be suitable vehicles for heparin sodium.
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PMID:Effect of pH on the stability of heparin in 5% dextrose solutions. 3 53

1. A simple, highly sensitive, specific fluorometric method for the determination of chymotrypsin is described. 2. The new substrate utilized in this assay, N-glutaryl-glycyl-glycyl-l-phenylalanine beta-naphthylamide (GGPNA), is readily soluble in water, stable and highly specific for chymotrypsin. It is not degraded by a large excess of carboxypeptidase B, elastase, thrombin or plasmin and is virtually resistant to trypsin. 3. GGPNA is extremely sensitive to the action of chymotrypsin and permits detection of enzyme concentrations as low as 1 ng/ml. Linearity between enzyme concentration and fluorescence produced is maintained up to at least 3000 ng/ml. 4. alpha2-Macroglobulin-bound chymotrypsin hydrolyzes GGPNA at a rate about 2/3 of that exhibited by the free enzyme. 5. Bile pigments in amounts normally found in duodenal juice or traces of blood do not interfere with the assay. 6. GG PNA which releases beta-naphthylamine upon hydrolysis is suitable also for colorimetric and histological determination of chymotrypsin.
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PMID:A new, highly sensitive and specific assay for chymotrypsin. 23 87

Both cationic and anionic detergents were found to precipitate fibrinogen by forming fibrinogen-detergent complexes. These complexes were soluble in distilled water, but the aqueous solutions were very unstable and the complexes precipitated in the presence of salt. In the interaction of fibrinogen with the cationic detergent, stearyltrimethyl-ammonium chloride, approximately 160 molecules of detergent were found to bind to one molecule of fibrinogen. In distilled water, the fibrinogen-stearyltrimethylammonium complex (FG-STA(Cl)) remained soluble in the presence of thrombin [ED 3.4.21.5] although the same peptides were released as those released from fibrinogen. Precipitation of FG-STA(Cl) by salt was found to be closely related to adsorption of the anion of the salt by the complex. Futher addition of salt resulted in solubilization of the precipitate, and the solubilization was also due to further adsorption of the anion onto the precipitate.
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PMID:Interaction of fibrinogen with detergent. 23 94

The effects of DMSO are thought to result from the formation of hydrogen bonds with proton-donor groups on biopolymers, which are stronger than those formed with water. Since DMSO contains methyl groups, however, effects on hydrophobic bonding in proteins could be expected at higher DMSO levels. Our studies of the effects of DMSO on model subunit proteins can be interpreted in the above terms. At a concentration of 20% or less, DMSO changed glutamate dehydrogenase into the inactive monomer and the effects were fully reversible with the activator (ADP). Higher DMSO levels resulted in irreversible inactivation. The predominant effect noted on beta-glucuronidase was irreversible inactivation by 20% or more DMSO at 37 degrees C. Purified beta-glucuronidase exhibited an activation in 20% DMSO at high substrate levels; this resulted from an apparent substrate inhibition in the absence of DMSO. DMSO inhibited the clotting of fibrinogen by purified thrombin, but the major effect appeared to be due to competition between thrombin and DMSO for binding sites on fibrinogen. These effects appear to be largely due to interactions between DMSO and hydrophobic bonding in fibrinogen, although DMSO also appears to interfere with the aggregation of fibrin monomers through its effects on hydrophilic groups. These results suggest that reversible alterations in protein structure are the major effect of exposure of subunit proteins to low DMSO levels at low temperatues, while irreversible denaturation of subunit proteins may be an appreciable effect a higher temperatures and higher DMSO concentrations.
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PMID:Effects of dimethyl sulfoxide on subunit proteins. 23 13

Initial transfusion needs aremet by type-specific rather than low titer O-negative blood. When the patient's problem approaches the magnitude of exchange transfusion (5 to 10 units) in less than 4 hours, platelet transfusion to treat dilutional thrombocytopenia is administered. Fresh frozen plasma is administered to provide clotting factors. When five units have been exceeded, platelet, pro-thrombin, and partial thromboplastin are measured. A blood clot is checked for clotting, retraction, and lysis. These tests screen platelet quantity and the intrinsic and extrinsic clotting system. Administered blood is warmed in a water bath or heating coil. Blood gas analysis (pH, pO2, and pCO2) is performed every five units to allow for precise administration of bicarbonate. The electrocardiogram is used to monitor potassium and calcium abnormalities. Hyperkalemia is seldom a problem. Hypocalcemia may be present transiently and is treated with calcium choride. Component therapy is the standard recommended practice. Fresh blood is recommended for the patient who has had an acute exchange transfusion and continues to require large quantities of blood. Fresh blood obviates the need for combining components and allows one transfusion unit to address itself to the multiple needs of the patient.
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PMID:The use of fresh blood in the treatment of critically injured patients. 23 51

1. Beta-Phenylpropionylthiocholine and N-(5-aminopentyl)-5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulphonamide (dansylcadaverine) serve as a pair of water-soluble (pH7.5) model substrates for transamidating enzymes. Amide formation could be followed directly through fluorescence measurements by monitoring the continuous extraction of the water-soluble coupling product, N-(beta-phenylpropionyl)dansylcadaverine, into n-heptane. By this procedure, the steady-state kinetics of glutamine-lysine endo-gamma-glutamyltransferase from human plasma (fibrinoligase, thrombin- and Ca2+-activated blood coagulation Factor XII) and from guinea-pig liver (liver transglutaminase) were investigated at 25 degrees C. 2. With beta-phenylpropionylthiocholine as the varied substrate, Lineweaver-Burk plots with various concentrations of dansylcadaverine intercept on the horizontal axis, suggesting that formation of the acyl-enzyme is rate limiting. 3. On the basis of functional normality of active sites, kcat. values of 1.8 s(-1) and 0.9 s(-1) were obtained for the plasma and liver gamma-glutamyltransferase respectively. The two enzymes show identical affinities for the first substrate, beta-phenylpropionylthiocholine, with Ka 4 times 10(-4) M. 4. Utilization of the second substrate, dansylcadaverine, appears to be an order of magnitude more efficient with the liver enzyme. 5. N-(5-Amino-3-thiapentyl)-5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulphonamide (dansylthiacadaverine) could be used instead of dansylcadaverine in the fluorescent kinetic system. 6. Competitive inhibition by a non-fluorescent amine substrate histamine was also evaluated.
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PMID:Transamidase kinetics. Amide formation in the enzymic reactions of thiol esters with amines. 23 98

The 1H and 13C spectra of four peptides, L-Phe-Val-Arg-pNA, D-Phe-Val-Arg-pNA, L-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA and D-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA (pNA = p-nitroaniline, Pip = pipecolic acid residue), have been examined, and deductions made about their conformation in solution. The D-Phe peptides, which are cleaved especially rapidly by thrombin in water, have structures (in deuterated DMSO) in which the aromatic ring of the D-Phe residue is folded back over the Val or Pip residue. This arrangement is not found in the L-Phe peptides. It is proposed that this feature (in which Phe could be situated near Val and near the Arg-Gly bond of the A alpha chain in the three-dimensional structure of fibrinogen) may be especially advantageous for binding to the enzyme.
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PMID:H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of some peptides with fibrinogen-like reactivity. 42 3

The effects of three widely spaced levels of bacterial contamination of reagent water on several chemistry, radioimmunoassay, and coagulation procedures were studied. These included determinations of lactate dehydrogenase, creatine kinase, aspartate transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, blood urea nitrogen, total protein, thyroid-stimulating hormone, digoxin, thrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, and prothrombin time. Statistical analyses included calculations of means and coefficients of variation, and analysis of variance, as well as correlation coefficients for test results versus logarithm of bacterial contamination. Statistically and clinically significant differences occurred together only for an elevated level of creatine kinase.
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PMID:Effects of bacterial contamination of reagent water on selected laboratory tests. 43 36

Results in animals and in man indicate that in many circumstances, lipemia is not closely related to the severity of atherosclerosis nor to the incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) or the intake of saturated fats as observed in paired studies between farmers from Moselle and Var in France and from West and East Scotland. In rabbits, an increased response of platelets to thrombin occurs before any deposition of cholesterol, as a result of a saturated fat feeding. Under these conditions, the addition of alcohol to the drinking water decreases significantly both the platelet response to thrombin and the severity of atherosclerotic lesions without much affecting plasma cholesterol. In farmers from Moselle and Var (as well as from Scotland), platelet functions, namely the aggregation to thrombin and their clotting activity, i.e. PF3, are closely related to the intake of saturated fats, either as a result of the long-term feeding or of a 1 year change in the diet of Moselle farmers. Certain platelet functions appear to be the only blood parameter related to the incidence of CHD and significantly correlated on a group, as well as on an individual basis, with the intake of saturated fat, and inversely related with that of calcium. Saturated fats and calcium are known to be the two main dietary factors related to CHD. These results suggest that the intermediate link between dietary fats and CHD might be blood platelets rather than serum lipids, through an effect on both thrombosis and atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Dietary fats and platelet functions in relation to atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease. 51 Oct 11

We have developed a technique for the rapid separation and quantitative collection of thromboxane B2 (TXB2), PGE2, PGD2, PGF2 alpha, 12-hydroxy-5,8,10 heptadecatrienoic acid (HHT), 12-L-hydroxy-5,8,10,14 eicosatetraenoic acid (HETE), and arachidonic acid released from thrombin treated human platelets. Platelets were pre-labeled with 3H-arachidonic acid and then isolated by gel filtration. They were then exposed to thrombin for various intervals and separated by centrifugation. Aliquots of the cell-free medium were applied directly to a high pressure liquid chromatograph containing a fatty acid column as the stationary phase. A quarternary solvent system containing tetrahydrofuran (THF), acetonitrile (CH3CN), water and acetic acid (HOAC) resolved and eluted the arachidonic acid metabolites within 30 minutes. Since no sample preparation is required and since the solvent system does not quench the counting efficiency of a standard liquid scintillation fluor the technique permits rapid separation and quantitation of radiolabeled arachidonic acid and its metabolites.
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PMID:The use of high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) for the separation of radiolabeled arachidonic acid and its metabolities produced by thrombin-treated human platelets. I. The validation of the technique. 52 71


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