Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.6 (chymopapain)
407 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The articular surface of adult BALB/c mouse femoral heads is covered by a fine granular electron dense material containing negative charges that bind electrostatically cationized ferritin. The material is of proteidic nature being digested by trypsin and chymopapain and resistant to testicular and microbial hyaluronidase, keratanase, chondroitinase ABC and AC. Mammalian collagenase disrupted the surface without digesting the material and allowed the penetration of cationized ferritin in the subsurface layers, where the label was bound on residual fibers. Sequential digestion with collagenase and chondroitinase ABC showed that the charges associated with the subsurface fibers are proteoglycans.
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PMID:Effects of enzymatic digestions on the negative charge of articular cartilage surfaces. 408 65

1. The hydraulic resistance of synovial interstitium helps to retain a lubricating fluid within the joint cavity. The contributions of sulphated glycosaminoglycans to resistance were assessed by selective depletion by chondroitinase ABC, keratanase and heparinases I, II and III in vivo. Also, since glycosaminoglycans do not account fully for the resistance, the contribution of non-collagenous, structural proteins in interstitium was assessed by treatment with chymopapain, a collagen-sparing protease. 2. Ringer solution containing enzyme was injected into the synovial cavity of the knee in anaesthetized rabbits. After >= 30 min the intra-articular pressure was raised and the relation between pressure (Pj) and trans-synovial outflow (Qs) determined. The slope dQs/dPj at low pressures, i.e. below yield pressure, represents the hydraulic conductance of the lining, i.e. 1/resistance. The contralateral joint received Ringer solution without enzyme as a control. Action of enzymes on the tissue was confirmed by histochemical and immunohistochemical studies. 3. Treatment with chondroitinase ABC (5 joints) increased the hydraulic conductance of the lining by 2.3 times (control, 1.34 +/- 0.22 microliter l min-1 cmH2O-1; post-enzyme, 3.11 +/- 0.45 microliter l min-1 cmH2O-1). This was significantly less than the effects of leech, Streptomyces and testicular hyaluronidases, which caused an average 4.7 times increase (P < 0.001, ANOVA). Analogous findings were made above yield pressure. 4. Treatment with keratanase (3 joints) or heparinases I, II and III (3 joints) caused no significant increase in trans-synovial flows or conductance, even though the concentration of heparan sulphate in synovium is higher than that of chondroitin sulphates or hyaluronan. 5. Treatment with chymopapain (7 joints) caused the greatest increases in trans-synovial flow, which exceeded control flow by an order of magnitude in one case. After 0.1 U chymopapain the average conductance was 6.6 times the control conductance below yield pressure. Immunohistochemical studies confirmed that chymopapain treatment removed the synovial proteoglycans. 6. It is concluded that, despite their similar resistivities in vitro, the different glycosaminoglycans do not contribute equally, weight for weight, to interstitial resistance in vivo. Hyaluronan is the dominant glycosaminoglycan governing synovial interstitial resistance. In addition, non-collagenous structural proteins contribute significantly to interstitial resistance.
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PMID:Effect of depletion of glycosaminoglycans and non-collagenous proteins on interstitial hydraulic permeability in rabbit synovium. 970 37