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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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 effects of corticosteroid have been studied in rats submitted to oral administration of prednisone (5 mg. per kg. per day) during 8, 15, 30, and 90 days. The results were compared to those obtained after parenteral administration of hydrocortisone acetate (50 mg. per kg. per day intramuscularly). The morphometric changes of the villus-crypt axis and the brush border enzymic content of the mucosa (sucrase,
enterokinase
, alkaline phosphatase, and
aminopeptidase
) were the parameters investigated at the duodenal, jejunal, and ileal levels. Oral administration of prednisone resulted in a significant increase of the duodenal villous height at the 15th (+ 13 per cent, p less than 0.01), 30th (+ 33 per cent, p less than 0.001), and 90th day (+ 56 per cent, p less than 0.001), whereas in the jejunum a constant decrease of the villous height was noted. Parenteral hydrocortisone administration did not affect intestinal morphology. Effects of oral corticosteroids on the microvillous enzymic activities were related to both intestinal level and duration of corticoids administration: (1) in the duodenum increase of sucrase, alkaline phosphatase, and
aminopeptidase
during 30 days followed by normalization at the 90th day, (2) an initial increase of sucrase, alkaline phosphatase, and
aminopeptidase
limited to the first 8 days in the jejunum, and (3) a significant rise of alkaline phosphatase (greater than 100 per cent, p less than 0.001) and
enterokinase
(greater than 100 per cent, p less than 0.001) in the ileum at the 15th day of treatment. Parenteral corticosteroid administration was associated with a significant increase of both sucrase and
enterokinase
activities. The present study suggests that: (1) Corticosteroids exert a direct effect on the intestinal morphology varying with the intestinal level and duration of treatment. (2) No correlation could be established between anatomic and functional changes. (3) Oral corticosteroids exert an enhancing effect of the brush border enzymic activities, even in the adult mucosa and particularly at the ileal level where they stimulate significantly the
enterokinase
mucosal activity. (4) Parenteral corticosteroids exert a more specific effect limited to sucrase and
enterokinase
enhancement.
...
PMID:Effects of oral and parenteral corticosteroids on intestinal villous morphology and brush border enzymes in the rat. 31 75
The apparent molecular weights of human intestinal
aminopeptidase
,
enterokinase
and maltase in native duodenal fluid were estimated by gel chromatography on Sephadex G-200 under different conditions of operational buffer and temperature. No evidence for environmentally induced changes in molecular form was found.
...
PMID:The apparent molecular weights of human intestinal aminopeptidase, enterokinase and maltase in native duodenal fluid. 33 38
The affinity chromatography of human enterokinase using p-aminobenzamidine as the ligand [Grant, D.A.W. & Hermon-Taylor, J. (1976) Biochem. J. 155, 243-254] has been reassessed and the optimal conditions for the synthesis and operation of the derivatised gel defined. Satisfactory adsorbants were only produced using high concentrations of both CNBr and spacer-arm in the initial coupling slurry. Under these conditions it seemed likely that the majority of the ligand in a sterically favourable position to bind
enterokinase
was on the external surface of the bead. Trypsin binding to the adsorbant was not so critically dependent on the synthetic conditions and correlated closely with the degree of substitution. Dilution of the adsorbant with unlabelled Sepharose 4B indicated that there was more than one binding site per
enterokinase
molecule. The highest affinity was presumably for the active site, with adsorption supported by secondary interactions with spacer-arm or gel matrix not necessarily on the same bead. Maximal resolution was obtained by prolonged washing of the gel after loading; two populations of intestinal
aminopeptidase
were identified. Substitution of aniline for p-aminobenzamidine abolished specific
enterokinase
adsorption and improved the purification procedure by further removal of onon-specifically adsorbed contaminants.
...
PMID:Optimisation of conditions for the affinity chromatography of human enterokinase on immobilised p-aminobenzamidine. Improvement of the preparative procedure by inclusion of negative affinity chromatography with glycylglycyl-aniline. 35 95
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
A modification of Weiser's (1973) cell isolation method was used in order to study the developmental pattern of various intestinal enzyme activities in villus and crypt cells of normal rats from 5 days after birth until 8 weeks. Alkaline phosphatase and
enterokinase
activities were always located in the upper villus zone during postnatal development. Enterokinase activity was higher in the upper villus cells during the third week of life than after this period. Aminopeptidase activity was located in the crypt cells during the first week, its maximum activity remained in this area until the third week. At this time, sucrase activity appeared in the crypt cells, then
aminopeptidase
and sucrase activities rose to the villus zone during the fourth week. Amylase activity was detected along the entire crypt-villus axis 5 days after birth, reaching maximum activity in crypt cells at the end of the first week and in the upper villus cells after the fourth week. In contrast with the other enzymes studied almost all amylase activity was soluble in the youngest animals whereas at weaning most of the activity appeared in a particulate form in the villus cells. But in the crypt cells the ratio between particulate and soluble form remained unchanged until the adult stage. Various hypotheses are advanced to explain the patterns of evolution of the different enzymes.
...
PMID:Intestinal enzymes activities in isolated villus and crypt cells during postnatal development of the rat. 83 93
Rat small bowel was perfused in vivo and ex vivo in the absence of biliary and pancreatic secretion. Intraluminal release of sucrase, alkaline phosphatase,
aminopeptidase
and
enterokinase
was significantly increased after administration of PG E1 and E2 1 and 5 microgram/kg. This suggests a direct stimulation of the intestinal mucosa, which might be mediated through cyclic AMP; dibutyryl cAMP significantly stimulates intraluminal release of proteins, sucrase and
enterokinase
.
...
PMID:Prostaglandins E1 and E2 stimulate release of intestinal brush border enzymes. 90 72
A method is described for the purification of human enterokinase from accumulated duodenal fluid by affinity chromatography using p-aminobenzamidine as the ligand. Resolution was greatest when glycylglycine was substituted as the spacer arm. Purification was not a one-step procedure, and some contamination, principally by the alpha-glucosidases, remained. Their removal was completed by immunoadsorption using antisera raised to
enterokinase
-free material containing these enzymes, prepared as a by-product of the purification procedure. The final preparation had an activity of 4260 nmol of trypsin/min per mg and was free of other enzymic activity tested. Amino acid and sugar analyses of the highly purified enzyme indicated an acidic glycoprotein containing 57% sugar (neutral sugars 47%, amino sugars 10%). The apparent mol.wts. and Stokes radii of human and pig
enterokinase
were 296 000 and 316 000, and 5.65 and 5.78 nm respectively. Two isoenzymes were identified for human enterokinase and three for the pig enzyme. Human
enterokinase
demonstrated a resistance to reduction of disulphide linkages and to sodium dodecyl sulphate binding, which may be related to the need for it to retain its integrity in the digestive environment of the upper small intestine. Antisera to highly purified pig and human enterokinases specifically inhibited
enterokinase
activity. Immuno-inhibition of intestinal
aminopeptidase
, maltase and glucoamylase by homologous antisera was not observed.
...
PMID:The purification of human enterokinase by affinity chromatography and immunoadsorption. Some observations on its molecular characteristics and comparisons with the pig enzyme. 94 36
The specificity of the synthetic substrate Gly-[L-Asp]4-L-Lys 2-naphthylamide originally developed for the assay of
enteropeptidase
(
EC 3.4.21.9
), was investigated with partially purified
aminopeptidase
. Our results indicate that, not only
enteropeptidase
, but also the concerted action of the aminopeptidases of the rat small intestine, can rapidly release 2-naphthylamine from the substrate. A previously undescribed, highly active, dipeptidylaminopeptidase, which hydrolyses a Gly-Asp dipeptide from the N-terminus of the substrate, was detected in rat small intestine. The resulting [L-Asp]3-L-Lys 2-naphthylamide fragment is then degraded by a combination of aminopeptidase A and N to yield free 2-naphthylamine. Thus the present substrate cannot be regarded as being specific for
enteropeptidase
, and its use leads to an over-estimation of
enteropeptidase
activity in homogenates and extracts of intestinal tissue. In order to prevent this non-specific hydrolysis by aminopeptidases, stereoisomeric substrates with the sequence L-Ala-D-Asp-[L-Asp]3-L-Lys methyl ester, D-Ala-[L-Asp]4-L-Lys methyl ester and L-Ala-[Asp]4-L-Lys methyl ester were synthesized and tested as alternative substrates by their ability to inhibit the
enteropeptidase
-catalysed activation of trypsinogen.
...
PMID:Specificity studies on enteropeptidase substrates related to the N-terminus of trypsinogen. 329 38
We produced bovine trypsinogen in the yeast Pichia pastoris. Little or no trypsinogen was detected when the gene with its native leader sequence was expressed under the control of the strong aox1 promoter, suggesting that expression of the wild-type bovine trypsinogen was toxic to the cells. We altered the trypsinogen native propeptide sequence by replacing the lysine at position 6 with an aspartic acid, thus destroying the site in the propeptide cleaved by
enterokinase
and by trypsin. This mutant accumulated up to 10 mg of trypsinogen per liter in shake flask cultures and about 40 mg/liter in 6-liter fermentors. Trypsinogen could be activated in vitro with a dipeptidyl-
aminopeptidase
, which selectively removed the modified trypsinogen propeptide; the resulting trypsin was fully active and showed evidence of glycosylation. Thus, we have developed a novel protein production scheme that can be used for the expression of proteins, such as proteases, that are deleterious to the producing organism. This system relies on the expression of a zymogen that cannot be activated in vivo coupled with its in vitro purification and activation.
...
PMID:A single mutation in the activation site of bovine trypsinogen enhances its accumulation in the fermentation broth of the yeast Pichia pastoris. 1257 Oct 36
Posttranslational modifications influence the structure, stability and biological activity of proteins. Most of the reactions are enzyme-catalyzed, but some, such as asparagine (Asn) and glutamine (Gln) deamidation and the isoaspartate (isoAsp) formation within peptide chains, occur spontaneously. It has been previously shown that certain peptide sequences form isoAsp quite fast if the Asp stretches are exposed to the protein surface, thereby potentially changing susceptibility to proteolysis at these sites. This tempted us to investigate the activity of exo- and endopeptidases against Asp- or isoAsp-containing substrates. Members of the prolyl oligopeptidase family were unable to cleave substrates after proline if isoAsp was placed in the P2-position. Caspases, usually accepting Asp at P1-position of their substrates, did not cleave isoAsp-containing sequences. Similarly, the metal-dependent
aminopeptidase
amino peptidase N did not turnover N-terminal isoAsp-containing substrates, nor could the endopeptidase matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP 3) hydrolyze a serum amyloid A protein-like substrate if the sequence contained isoAsp instead of Asp. Also, the highly specific
enterokinase
, usually clipping after a stretch of four Asp residues and a lysine in the P1 position, could not turnover substrates if the P2 amino acid was replaced by isoAsp. In contrast, acylamino acid-releasing enzyme and dipeptidyl peptidases 1, 2 and 4 hydrolyzed substrates containing the isoAsp-Ala motif.
...
PMID:Isoaspartate residues dramatically influence substrate recognition and turnover by proteases. 1897 29
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