Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.73 (urokinase-type plasminogen activator)
10,685 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Trypsin, thrombin, fibrinolysin, papain, chymothrypsin and urokinase were immobilized on aminopolystyrene resin by the reaction of diazocoupling. An activation of prothrombin and plasminogen and also hydrolysis of fibrin by immobilized enzymes were studied. The immobilized enzymes hydrolyzed N-benzoyl-1-arginine ethyl ester and L-tyrosine ethyl ester. The only preparation of immobilized thrombin possessed the coagulational activity. After the covalent binding trypsin and plasmin maintained the capacity to cause a fibrinolysis. Immobilized trypsin, plasmin, papain, chymotrypsin and urokinase exhibited the fibrinolytic effect due to convertion of plasminogen into plasmin.
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PMID:[Blood coagulating properties of immobilized proteases]. 14 May 25

A blood coagulation factor, Factor XIII, was highly purified from bovine fresh plasma by a method similar to those used for human plasma Factor XIII. The isolated Factor XIII consisted of two subunit polypeptides, a and b chains, with molecular weights of 79,000 +/- 2,000 and 75,000 +/- 2,000, respectively. In the conversion of Factor XIII to the active enzyme, Factor XIIIa, by bovine thrombin [EC 3.4.21.5], a peptide was liberated. This peptide, designated tentatively as "activation peptide," was isolated by gel-filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column. It contained a total of 37 amino acid residues with a masked N-terminal residue and C-terminal arginine. The whole amino acid sequence of "Activation peptide" was established by the dansyl-Edman method and standard enzymatic techniques, and the masked N-terminal residue was identified as N-acetylserine by using a rat liver acylamino acid-releasing enzyme. This enzyme specifically cleaved the N-acetylserylglutamyl peptide bond serine and the remaining peptide, which was now reactive to 1-dimethylamino-naphthalene-5-sulfonyl chloride. A comparison of the sequences of human and bovine "Activation peptide" revealed five amino acids replacements, Ser-3 to Thr; Gly-5 to Arg; Ile-14 to Val; Thr-18 to Asn, and Pro-26 to Leu. Another difference was the deletion of Leu-34 in the human peptide. Adsorption chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column in the presence of 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate was developed as a preparative procedure for the resolution of the two subunit polypeptides, a or a' chain and b chain, constituting the protein molecule of Factor XIII or Factor XIIIa. End group analyses on the isolated pure chains revealed that the structural change of Factor XIII during activation with thrombin occurs only in the N-terminal portion of the a chain, not in the N-terminal end of the b chain or in the C-terminal ends of the a and b chains. From these results, it was concluded that the activation of bovine plasma Factor XIII by thrombin must be accompanied by a limited proteolysis of the arginyl-glycyl bond located in the N-terminal region of the a chain, liberating the "Activation peptide." The possibility of activating Factor XII with other porteinases was examined using Factor Xa [EC 3.4.21.6], Factor XIIa, kallikreins [EC 3.4.21.8], urokinase [EC 3.4.99.26], trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4], ficin [EC 3.4.22.3], papain [EC 3.4.22.2], and bromelain [EC 3.4.22.4]. Among these enzymes, only bromelain and trypsin showed clear activating effects.
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PMID:On the activation of bovine plasma factor XIII. Amino acid sequence of the peptide released by thrombin and the terminal residues of the subunit polypeptides. 122 22

A new cell line (LC-1/sq) of human lung squamous-cell carcinoma was established from a surgically resected specimen of primary lung cancer. Upon continuous propagation in serum-free culture medium, it secreted trypsin inhibitors into the conditioned medium. The major fraction of the trypsin inhibitor (T1-1) was purified to apparent homogeneity by anion-exchange and gel-filtration high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by transblotting to Immobilon. T1-1 effectively inhibited trypsin. Chymotrypsin, plasmin and kallikrein were inhibited to a lesser extent, but urokinase-type plasminogen activator, elastase, thrombin and papain were not inhibited. The activity of T1-1 was acid-stable and heat-resistant, and its molecular weight was 115 kDa by SDS-PAGE. It exhibited single NH2-terminal sequence, and its first 20 NH2-terminal amino-acid residues were identical with those of protease nexin-II (PN-II)/amyloid beta-protein precursor (APP). These characteristics of T1-1 suggest that the major trypsin inhibitor secreted by LC-1/sq is indistinguishable from PN-II/APP. LC-1/sq is the first lung squamous carcinoma cell line that secretes functionally active trypsin inhibitor, PN-II/APP, in vitro and is useful for studying its biological significance in malignant tumor.
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PMID:Establishment of a new human cancer cell line secreting protease nexin-II/amyloid beta protein precursor derived from squamous-cell carcinoma of lung. 191 42

The putative inhibitor domain of Alzheimer's disease amyloid protein precursor was purified from E. coli containing a synthetic gene encoding the Kunitz domain. The purified protein (A4 inhibitor) inhibited the activity of trypsin, forming a 1:1 molar complex with the enzyme. It also strongly inhibited plasmin (Ki = 7.5 x 10(-11) M) from human serum and tryptase (Ki = 2.2 x 10(-10) M) from rat mast cells (tryptase M). In addition, it inhibited rat pancreatic trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin and kallikrein and human serum kallikrein, but did not inhibit rat chymase, pancreatic elastase, alpha-thrombin, urokinase, papain or cathepsin B.
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PMID:Protease-specificity of Kunitz inhibitor domain of Alzheimer's disease amyloid protein precursor. 196 31

Enzymes can be assayed by HPLC by calculating the amount of substrate(s) left over, or product formed, through the peak area ratios with a suitable internal standard. However, sometimes the substrates used are contaminated with small amounts of products and this can lead to errors in the determination of the enzyme activity. A method for a HPLC test of such enzymes, which prevents eventual errors, uses the ratio substrate/product at time zero as internal standard and the kinetics can be followed with the aid of a simple mathematical equation. This approach was applied to the determination of the activities of papain, urokinase, NAD glycohydrolase, and pyruvate kinase samples and it was compared with the data obtained by the internal standard method, giving reproducible results in all cases.
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PMID:High-performance liquid chromatography determination of enzyme activities in the presence of small amounts of product. 254 13

Thirty analogues of leupeptin were synthesized and examined for their inhibitory activities against trypsin, papain, plasmin, kallikrein, thrombin and urokinase in vitro. Benzoyl- and alpha-naphthalenesulfonyl-L-leucyl-L-argininal were 8 times more inhibitory to papain, benzyloxycarbonyl-L-pyroglutamyl-L-leucyl-L-argininal 10 times more to trypsin and plasmin, and DL-2-pipecolyl-L-leucyl-L-argininal 25 times more to kallikrein than leupeptin. Against urokinase, only L-pyroglutamyl-L-leucyl-L-argininal exhibited a potent inhibitory activity. alpha-Naphthalensulfonyl-, dansyl- and benzyloxycarbonyl-(2S,3R)-3-amino-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutyryl-L-leucyl-L- argininal were inhibitory to thrombin.
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PMID:Protease-inhibitory activities of leupeptin analogues. 296 94

Prokallikrein was activated by trypsin and by alpha-chymotrypsin, but not by proteases, such as plasmin, thrombin, urokinase, carboxypeptidase B, papain, elastase, pepsin, and cathepsin D. Moreover, rat fresh serum did not activate prokallikrein. Maximum activation of prokallikrein by trypsin was obtained at the concentration of 10 micrograms to 1 mg per ml in PBS and that by alpha-chymotrypsin was at the concentration of 5 mg per ml. The enzymic properties of trypsin-activated and alpha-chymotrypsin-activated kallikreins were identical with those of active kallikrein in the kidney.
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PMID:Activation of prokallikrein in the rat kidney by proteases. 637 43

A protein capable of inhibiting trypsin and other pancreatic proteases has been purified to homogeneity from Escherichia coli by conventional procedures and affinity chromatography. It is stable for at least 30 min at 100 degrees C and pH 1.0, but it is inactivated by digestion with pepsin. The inhibitor has an apparent molecular weight of 38,000 as determined by gel filtration and must be a homodimer since it contains a single 18,000-dalton subunit upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor has an isoelectric point of 6.1. One dimeric molecule of the inhibitor can bind two trypsin molecules to form a mixed tetrameric complex, in which trypsin molecules are completely inhibited. The inhibitor is not digested by the trypsin. When N-benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide was used as a trypsin substrate, half-maximal inhibition was observed at 22 nM. This protein also inhibits chymotrypsin, pancreatic elastase, rat mast cell chymase, and human serosal urokinase, but it does not inhibit human pulmonary tryptase, kallikrein, papain, pepsin, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, subtilisin, and thermolysin. Surprisingly, it did not inhibit any of the eight soluble endoproteases recently isolated from E. coli (i.e. proteases Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Ci, and Pi) nor the chymotrypsin-like (protease I) and trypsin-like (protease II) esterases in E. coli. The inhibitor is localized to the periplasmic space and its level did not change with different growth media or stages of cell growth. The physiological function of this E. coli trypsin inhibitor is unknown. We suggest that E. coli trypsin inhibitor be named "Ecotin."
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PMID:Purification from Escherichia coli of a periplasmic protein that is a potent inhibitor of pancreatic proteases. 641 24

A series of affinity chromatography packings for the purification of serine and sulfhydryl esterases (acetylcholinesterase, alkaline phosphatase, urokinase and papain) have been synthesized using commercially available agarose, glass and acrylate parent matrices. Two ligands were coupled to the matrices by utilizing carbodiimide or reaction with active groups already present on the matrix: the quaternary ammonium compound trimethyl(p-aminophenyl)ammonium chloride and the serine esterase inhibitor analog p-aminobenzamidine. It was found that enzyme purification on the agarose- or acrylate-based packings was most successful, resulting in as much as fifty-fold purification over starting material. The pressure stability of the acrylate packing allowed purification by high-pressure affinity chromatography and decreased purification times as much as six-fold in comparison to agarose columns.
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PMID:Comparison of low- and high-pressure affinity chromatography for the purification of serine and sulfhydryl esterases. 653 Apr 33

Limulus amebocyte lysate was fractionated by heparin-Sepharose chromatography into four components (fractions A, B, C and D). Major coagulation factors, i.e., proclotting enzyme, coagulogen, and proclotting enzyme activating factor precursor (proactivator) in the lysate were eluted, respectively, in fraction A, fraction B and fraction C. Clotting enzyme activity was detected only following recombination of fraction A and fraction C in the presence of endotoxin. The conversion of proactivator to its active form (activator) was an endotoxin-dependent reaction and was inhibited by polymyxin B. Either proactivator is an endotoxin-sensitive factor or another endotoxin-sensitive factor, which activates proactivator, is present in fraction C. Optimal pH for proclotting enzyme activation by activator was broad and ranged from pH 6.0 to 8.0, while that for the endotoxin-mediated activation of proactivator was pH 7.0. No initial latent period was observed during activation of the proactivator or proenzyme. The activator was inhibited by benzamidine, leupeptin, soybean trypsin inhibitor and diisopropyl fluorophosphate, suggesting that the activator is a trypsin-type serine protease. Trypsin, but not thrombin, urokinase, plasmin, papain or alpha-chymotrypsin activated the proclotting enzyme. Therefore, limited proteolysis, i.e., of an arginyl- or lysyl-X bond(s), of the proenzyme molecule is probably involved in its activation.
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PMID:Fractionation of Limulus amebocyte lysate. Characterization of activation of the proclotting enzyme by an endotoxin-mediated activator. 713 84


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