Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.9 (enterokinase)
675 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The interrelationship of enterokinase and trypsin activities were investigated in 133 infants and children with a variety of gastrointestinal and pancreatic disorders. Fourteen patients with diarrhea and grade II mucosal injury revealed a significant (P less than 0.01) reduction of enterokinase, trypsin, and disaccharidase activites as compared to 59 children with normal mucosa. Nine patients with cystic fibrosis and pancreatic insufficiency had normal mucosal enterokinase activity and elevated intraluminal enterokinase activity with very low or no trypsin activity. Patients with hypoproteinemia and gastrointestinal protein loss, associated with intestinal lymphangiectasia (4 patients) and intestinal lymphoid nodular hyperplasia (3 patients), had normal or insignificant decrease of enterokinase and trypsin activities. In patients with steatorrhea, a normal sweat test, normal intestinal mucosa, and absent trypsin activity, two entities were defined. One group (3 patients) was diagnosed as Schwachman-Diamond syndrome with pancreatic insufficiency and normal mucosal and intraluminal enterokinase activity. The second group (2 patients) with absent mucosal and intraluminal enterokinase activity and normal lipase and amylase activities was diagnosed as congenital enterokinase deficiency.
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PMID:Enterokinase and trypsin activities in pancreatic insufficiency and diseases of the small intestine. 94 55

Serum immunoreactive trypsin (IRT) concentrations are elevated in newborn children with cystic fibrosis (CF) and subsequently fall, in most cases, to values below normal. To evaluate the molecular form(s) of IRT present in serum, we have performed serum activation by enterokinase and have measured serum IRT before and after activation. This approach is based on the postulate that enterokinase converts trypsinogen into trypsin, and this trypsin would then be mainly trapped by alpha 2-macroglobulin, thus escaping the assay. This assumption was confirmed in the 28 controls studied, where the mean percentage (+/- S.D.) of IRT recovery after serum activation was 13.7 +/- 2.9. Previous inhibition of alpha 2-macroglobulin by methylamine raised the recovery over 85%, confirming that most of the serum IRT present in controls was in the form of trypsinogen. Identical results were obtained in the serum of 10 obligate heterozygotes and in 57 out of 80 CF patients. In 23 CF patients the mean percentage of IRT recovery after serum activation was 41.6 +/- 17.6. Gel-filtration studies were performed on the sera of the CF patients showing an abnormal increase in the IRT recovery after serum activation. We could demonstrate that IRT was distributed in two fractions: one eluted with the Mr 25,000 protein as usually found in controls and other CF sera, and the other eluted with the Mr 75,000 protein corresponding to a complex of trypsin with alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor. These results show that, in these sera, active trypsin has been directly released in blood. These findings suggest that in some patients with CF, subclinical attacks of acute pancreatitis may occur.
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PMID:Behaviour of serum immunoreactive trypsin after serum activation by enterokinase in normal and cystic fibrosis patients. Evidence of a trypsin-alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor complex in some cystic fibrosis patients. 248 Aug 20

The mechanism leading to exocrine pancreatic disease in children differs from those encountered in adult patients: I. In acute pancreatitis autodigestion of the gland by proteolytic enzymes may occur and two mechanisms may play a role. 1. Reflux of biliary secretions (e.g. in malformations of the duct system) facilitates activation of trypsinogen by enteropeptidase and leads to the presence of active proteolytic enzymes in the gland (exogenous activation). 2. Lysosomal enzymes may play a role in the intracellular activation of zymogens if inflammation leads to a fusion of lysosomes with zymogen granules (endogenous activation). II. In chronic relapsing and hereditary pancreatitis malformations of the pancreatico-biliary duct system must be sought because surgery may be indicated (common channel syndrome and choledochal cysts). III. Among the hereditary diseases leading to pancreatic insufficiency cystic fibrosis (CF) plays the main role. Haplotype analysis has shown that two genetically different types of CF exists (PS and PI). The pancreas shows manifest insufficiency only in the PI-types which occur in more than 70% of cases but the distribution of haplotypes is different in different ethnic groups. In spite of the recent discovery of the cystic fibrosis gene the exact mechanism leading to exocrine pancreatic dysfunction in CF is not clear, but diminished chloride and bicarbonate secretion, may be the result of a disturbance in the regulation of chloride channels, on acinar or ductular level. In the Shwachman-Diamond syndrome a very severe type of exocrine insufficiency with unknown etiology is encountered at birth.
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PMID:[Physiopathology of the exocrine pancreas in children]. 269 2

Duodenal fluids from control and cystic fibrosis (CF) patients were assayed for enterokinase (EK), trypsin and chymotrypsin activities. CF patients as a group were found to have higher basal EK activity in spite of low trypsin and chymotrypsin activities. In control patients, pancreozymin (CCK) injection led to increases in specific activities of trypsin and chymotrypsin and a decrease in EK but did not change the total EK activities. Secretin administration led to decreases in specific activities of trypsin and chymotrypsin compared to post-CCK levels. The total EK activities were greatly increased following secretin administration. Thus, secretin may have direct influence on the release of EK into the duodenum. CCK and secretin have no effect on the specific activities of trypsin, chymotrypsin and EK in CF patients. EK release in CF patients is either constitutive and therefore not affected by CCK and secretin or it has been fully induced by the low trypsin content and becomes unresponsive to further hormonal stimulation.
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PMID:Effect of pancreozymin and secretin on intraluminal enterokinase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin activities of cystic fibrosis and control children. 704 59