Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.9 (
enterokinase
)
675
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcium ions are shown to have a marked pH-dependent effect on the kinetics of benzoyllarginine ethyl ester hydrolysis by porcine
enteropeptidase
(
EC 3.4.21.9
). Below pH 6.0, calcium ions stimulate benzoylarginine ethyl ester hydrolysis but inhibit this activity above pH 6.0. This effect is mainly on the Km for benzoylarginine ethyl ester. At pH 5.3, 2mM calcium ions reduce the Km for benzoylarginine ethyl ester from 0.31 mM to 0.26 mM while at pH 6.5 the Km increases four-fold from 0.035 mM to 0.12 mM in the presence of calcium ions.
Enteropeptidase
activity is not inhibited by ethylenediaminetetra-acetate indicating that calcium ions are a non-essential cofactor for benzoylarginine ethyl ester hydrolysis.
...
PMID:The effect of calcium ions on the hydrolysis of benzoylarginine ethyl ester by porcine enteropeptidase. 1 Sep 92
The active site of porcine
enteropeptidase
(
EC 3.4.21.9
) was investigated in order to characterize better both catalytic and binding sites. The participation of a serine and a histidine residue in the catalytic process was fully confirmed and the two residues were located on the light chain of the enzyme. The binding site was found to be composed of at least 2 subsites S1 and S2. The subsite S1 (similar to the trypsin-binding site) is responsible for the interactions with the small substrates of trypsin and the lysine side chain of trypsinogen, while subsite S2 (probably a cluster of lysines) is responsible for the interactions with the polyanionic sequence found in all trypsinogens. Binding of substrate by subsite S2 led to an increased efficiency of the catalytic site which can be correlated to the known high specificity of
enteropeptidase
.
...
PMID:On the catalytic and binding sites of porcine enteropeptidase. 1 10
A sensitive procedure is described for the determination in duodenal aspirates of
enteropeptidase
activity based on the activation of trypsinogen and the estimation of trypsin formed with benzoyl-arginine-p-nitroanilide. Using the recovery approach where a known amount of purified human
enteropeptidase
is diluted in duodenal fluid and the recoverable activity determined, this method was shown to give a sensitive and reliable estimate of the
enteropeptidase
activity in duodenal fluid although it was shown that the enzyme was subject to a 10% activation by components in the duodenal fluid. The reported 5-fold stimulation of
enteropeptidase
activity by bile salts could not be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Determination of enteropeptidase activity in human duodenal aspirates. 1 79
Bile acids increase the release of human
enteropeptidase
as well as other brush-border enzymes (alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase) from duodenal mucosa, as had been shown earlier in experimental animals. The action of bile acids is independent of their known enhancing effect on
enteropeptidase
activity. The pH of duodenal juice is an important, hitherto unrecognized, factor in the release mechanism of brush-border enzymes. All of the above enzymes tested were released to a markedly greater extent at pH 8.2 than 6.3, regardless of the presence or absence of bile acid. Contrary to some results obtained with animal tissue, by other investigators, our experiments with human duodenal mucosa indicate that
enteropeptidase
, under all conditions tested, is released at a rate considerably greater than that for alkaline phosphatase or leucine aminopeptidase. The looser association of
enteropeptidase
with cellular components relative to that of other brush-border enzymes, as indicated by our observations, may be related to the unique function of
enteropeptidase
as the trigger enzyme of protein digestion.
...
PMID:Effect of bile acids and pH on the release of enteropeptidase in man. 2 91
The molecular forms of immunoreactive pancreatic cationic trypsin in sera of patients with acute pancreatic inflammation have been characterized using a radioimmunoassay technique that is capable of detecting trypsinogen as well as trypsin bound to alpha 1-antitrypsin. Trypsin bound to alpha 2-macroglobulin is not immunoreactive under normal assay conditions. However, alpha 2-macroglobulin-bound trypsin can be detected after gel filtration of serum on Bio-Gel A-0.5 m and acid treatment of column fractions. The average serum level of immunoreactive cationic trypsin from 20 patients with acute pancreatic inflammation was 1,590 ng/ml. An average normal value of 26 ng/ml has been obtained previously. Serum samples from 14 patients with pancreatic inflammation were chromatographed under conditions that resolve trypsinogen, alpha 1-antitrypsin-bound trypsin, and alpha 2-macroglobulin-bound trypsin. In each case, the major portion of the immunoreactive material eluted at a position corresponding to free trypsinogen, while a minor fraction of the immunoreactive material appeared to be trypsin bound to alpha 1-antitrypsin. The zymogen nature of the major peak was confirmed in one case by activation with human
enteropeptidase
. In 11 of 14 patients, acid treatment of the alpha 2-macroglobulin peak yielded immunoreactive trypsin.
...
PMID:Molecular forms of immunoreactive pancreatic cationic trypsin in pancreatitis patient sera. 9 23
The postition of a number of human intestine brush border membrane enzyme activities in polyacrylamide gels after electrophoresis has been determined. These activities are, in order from the origin, maltase/glucoamylase, lactase/phlorizin hydrolase, maltase/sucrase/isomaltase,
enteropeptidase
, trehalase and gamma-glutamyl-transferase. Leucylnaphthylamide hydrolyzing activity was inactivated by sodium dodecylsulfate and its position was not determined. The positions of the activities have been correlated with the positions of protein bands previously determined. One such band situated between
enteropeptidase
and alkaline phosphatase has not been identified.
...
PMID:Enzymes of the human intestinal brush border membrane. Identification after gel electrophoretic separation. 23 25
Enteropeptidase
converts trypsinogen into active trypsin, which not only hydrolyses some peptide bonds of food proteins but also activates a number of pancreatic zymogens. For this reason
enteropeptidase
is a key enzyme in the digestion of dietary proteins and its absence may result in gross protein malabsorption.
...
PMID:The role of enteropeptidase in the digestion of protein and its development in human fetal small intestine. 39 33
A specific radioimmunoassay has been developed for human pancreatic cationic trypsin. The assay has been employed for the determination of immunoreactive forms of pancreatic cationic trypsin in blood. The trypsin employed as radioiodinated tracer in the assay was inactivated with tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone (TLCK) to prevent binding of the tracer to the serum inhibitors while maintaining its immunoreactivity. The average normal serum level determined was 26 ng/ml, with a range of 12--41 ng/ml. Eight of nine patients with acute pancreatic inflammation had at least a 15-fold elevation of total serum immunoreactive cationic trypsin. Cationic trypsinogen and cationic trypsin bound to alpha1-antitrypsin cross-react strongly in the radioimmunoassay. Thus it is possible to measure these potential molecular forms of cationic trypsin in serum. When normal human serum was fractionated on Sephadex G-200, all of the immunoreactive material eluted as a single peak of approximately 23,000 mol wt. No cationic trypsin could be detected in association with alpha1-antitrypsin or alpha2-macroglobulin. The 23,000-mol-wt peak was definitively shown to contain trypsinogen by affinity chromatography and by activation with human
enteropeptidase
. The identification of cationic trypsinogen in blood implies that the zymogen is secreted into the circulation by the pancreas rather than entering the bloodstream via absorption from the intestine.
...
PMID:Determination of human pancreatic cationic trypsinogen in serum by radioimmunoassay. 43 51
The activities of highly purified human enterokinase (
enteropeptidase
,
EC 3.4.21.9
) and bovine trypsin were tested against three synthetic substrates alpha-N-Benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester HCl, alpha-N-Benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide HCl and alpha-N-Benzoyl-DL-arginine-2-naphthylamide HCl. There was no detectable hydrolysis of these substrates by
enterokinase
whereas the kinetic parameters obtained for trypsin were in close agreement with those previously described by other workers. The values for Km and kcat were dependent on the Ca2+ concentration. Hydrolysis of glycine-tetra-L-aspartyl-L-lysyl-2-naphthylamide (Gly(Asp)4-Lys-Nap) by these protease was also studied. Enterokinase-catalysed hydrolysis obeyed simple steady-state kinetics and values for Km of 0.525 mM and 0.28 mM and for kcat of 21.5 s-1 and 28.3 s-1 were obtained in 0.1 mM and 10 mM Ca2+, respectively. Trypsin-catalysed hydrolysis was complex and the response to Ca2+ was sigmoidal partly due to the lability of trypsin at low Ca2+ concentrations. A sensitive specific assay for
enterokinase
was developed and applied to the measurement of the enzyme in serum; interference by nonspecific arylamidases was eliminated by the addition of Zn2+.
...
PMID:Hydrolysis of artificial substrates by enterokinase and trypsin and the development of a sensitive specific assay for enterokinase in serum. 45 24
Porcine
enteropeptidase
(
EC 3.4.21.9
) purified from acetone powders of fresh duodenal fluid shows a molecular weight, as determined on Ultragel AcA-34, of 190000.
Enteropeptidase
has been solubilised from pig intestinal mucosa using 1% (v/v) Triton X-100. When Triton X-100 extracts of freeze-dried mucosa after partial fractionation on DEAE-cellulose were chromatographed on Sephadex G-200, the bulk of the activity eluted in the void volume rather than with an expected Ve/V0 ratio of about 1.24 corresponding to a molecular weight of around 200000. Gel filtration of aqueous mucosal extracts obtained in the absence of Triton X-100 showed two regions of enzymic activity in approximately equal proportions, one in the void volume, and the other with the expected Ve/V0 ratio of 1.24, whereas the Triton X-100 extracts of the residue from the above extract showed the presence of only the macromolecular species of
enteropeptidase
. This species was excluded from Sepharose 4B. It was confirmed that aminopeptidase was also extracted by Triton X-100 in a molecular form which was excluded from Sepharose 4B. The results suggest that Triton X-100 extracts
enteropeptidase
with a membrane component attached and in agreement with this it was found that proteolysis rapidly converted the macromolecular form to a stable smaller molecular species corresponding in size to that found in solution in the duodenal fluid. There was full recovery of the enzymic activity following this conversion. Papain and trypsin brought about an almost complete conversion to the smaller form of
enteropeptidase
whereas chymotrypsin, pancreatin and an intestinal peptidase preparation were only partially effective. It is concluded that membrane bound enzymes such as
enteropeptidase
and aminopeptidase are bound to the intestinal brush border membrane in a similar manner and are not actively secreted into the lumen but rather are largely released or solubilised by the combined action of the bile and pancreatic secretions.
...
PMID:Identification of a mucosal form of enteropeptidase in triton X-100 extracts of porcine duodenal mucosa. 55 56
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>