Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.23.5 (cathepsin D)
4,130 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Essentiale or vitohepatum were administered into 26-28 months old Wistar rats to stabilize the lysosomal membranes. Administration of essentiale (cyancobalamine standardization at a dose of 0.286 microgram/kg) within 21 days led to a decrease in total activity of acid DNAase, acid phosphatase, cathepsin D, hyaluronidase without distinct changes in acid RNAase activity. Vitohepatum administered similarly (cyancobalamine standardization at a dose of 0.27 microgram/kg) caused a decrease in total activity of lysosomal enzymes acid DNAase acid phosphatase, cathepsin D, did not affect hyaluronidase and acid RNAase activities. The administration of the both drugs was also accompanied by a decrease in non-sedimented activity of the enzymes studied.
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PMID:[Effectiveness of essentiale and vitohepatum as stabilizers of liver lysosomal membranes]. 377 11

Mature secretory granules of epithelioid cells--the so-called renin granules--exhibit certain properties, which in this particular combination are expressed only by lysosomes: Renin granules have autophagic capabilities; they react to the application of lipidosis-inducing, lysosomotropic substances by the gradual accumulation of polar lipids; all secretory granules of epithelioid cells contain acid phosphatase until maturity; and exogenous tracers reach renin granules without labeling the Golgi complex. Several functional implications can therefore be considered. Hydrolytic enzymes, constitutive elements of the granule matrix, might either cleave inactive prorenin to yield active renin within the granules or, by unspecific hydrolysis of renin, participate in the regulation of the overall quantity of secretory product. Autophagic phenomena, the involvement of renin granules in the traffic of exogenous tracers, and the build-up of polar lipids following experimental interference with lipid catabolism indicate a large turnover of membrane material in renin granules. They also suggest that cytoplasmic and extracellular fluid gains access to the granule content and may thus be involved there in the regulation of biochemical reactions by changing the intragranular milieu or via signal molecules. In addition to the lysosome-like properties of epithelioid cell secretory granules, the secretory product, renin, as a carboxyl protease, is structurally related to other acidic proteases. In the case of cathepsin D, even functional similarities exist.
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PMID:Are the renin-containing granules of juxtaglomerular epithelioid cells modified lysosomes? 388 48

Lysosomal enzyme activities in pancreatic islets of obese hyperglycemic ob/ob mice aged 3 to 6 months were investigated and compared with those of normal lean NMRI mice of the same age. It was observed that the glycogenolytic glucose-producing hydrolase acid amyloglucosidase displayed a fivefold higher activity in the islets of obese mice than in the islets of normal NMRI mice. However, other islet lysosomal enzyme activities measured, such as N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase and beta-glucuronidase, were of the same magnitude in both obese and lean mice. A starvation period of 24 hours induced a significant depression of islet acid amyloglucosidase activity in obese as well as lean mice, whereas the activities of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase and beta-glucuronidase were unaffected. Further, the activities of other types of islet lysosomal enzymes, such as acid phosphatase and cathepsin D, were also measured in obese mice. These activities were not found to be affected by the actual fasting period. A good correlation (r = 0.815; P less than 0.01) was observed between islet acid amyloglucosidase activity and plasma insulin concentrations in obese mice, whereas no such relationship was apparent with regard to other islet lysosomal enzyme activities recorded. Acid amyloglucosidase activity in liver tissue of the obese mouse was about 30 times lower than that of islet tissue. Further, the activity of liver amyloglucosidase was of the same order of magnitude in obese and lean mice. Similarly, other lysosomal enzyme activities in the liver of obese and lean mice were not strikingly different.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lysosomal enzyme activities in pancreatic islets from normal and obese hyperglycemic mice. 391 27

Activity of lysosome enzymes (acidic phosphatase, beta-glucosidase, DNAase, RNAase and cathepsin D) is determined for its variation in different organs of rainbow trout during complete fasting. It is shown that the activity of most enzymes of concern almost in all organs except skeletal muscles is on the higher level in trouts fasted for 30 days than in the control ones. With an increase of the fasting term to 60 days the acid phosphatase, DNAase, RNAase activity decreases while the glucosidase and cathepsin D activity in some organs increases. Variations detected in the enzyme profile of the trout lysosomes under fasting are of adaptive character.
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PMID:[Changes in the activity of trout lysosomal enzymes during fasting]. 392 43

Pulmonary alveolar macrophages were isolated from adult, male New Zealand white rabbits by bronchial lavage and exposed to cadmium chloride in vitro. The observed cell sensitivity to this metal was highly dependent upon the incubation conditions used as well as the cytotoxic index selected. An LC50 value, as measured by dye exclusion (erythrosin B), was determined to be 390 microM when these cells were exposed to cadmium in Ham's F12 culture medium for 8 hr at 35 degrees C. The presence of fetal calf serum in the medium (10%; v/v) enhanced this toxicity slightly, LC50 = 235 microM, as did raising the incubation temperature to 37 degrees C, LC50 = 201 microM. No effect on cadmium toxicity was observed when the culture medium was made deficient in Cu, Zn, and Fe, nor was there any effect observed when Hepes buffer was substituted for the bicarbonate/carbon dioxide buffering system. Measurements of cadmium-109 uptake by pulmonary alveolar macrophages were consistent with and could explain, at least in part, the above observations of cytotoxicity. In the standard culture system (an 8-hr exposure period at 35 degrees C in Ham's F12 culture medium plus serum), the appearance in the culture medium of two lysosomal enzyme activities, acid phosphatase and cathepsin D, paralleled cell death. In addition, an EC50 value of 102 microM was found for cadmium when cell respiration (O2 uptake) was measured; an EC50 value of 31 microM was found for cadmium when cell function (engulfment of killed yeast particles) was followed; and scanning electron microscopic studies showed cell membrane changes (loss of fine structure and blebbing) at cadmium concentrations as low as 30 microM. These findings suggest that loss of cell function and/or changes in cell morphology are more sensitive measurements of macrophage exposure to cadmium than is either cell death, lysosomal enzyme release, or cell respiration.
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PMID:Toxicity of cadmium chloride in vitro: indices of cytotoxicity with the pulmonary alveolar macrophage. 394 38

This study was carried out to evaluate the influence of long-term treatment with doxorubicin (DXR) (4 mg/kg IV for 5 weeks) on heart and liver lysosomes of mice. We evaluated the variations in both total and "sedimentable" enzyme activity of cathepsin D, which is the major endopeptidase of myocites and probably involved in physiologic and pathologic degradation of actomyosin and mitochondria, and that of acid phosphatase, which is more prominent in interstitial cells. Our results show that marked changes occur in both total and sedimentable enzyme activity of cathepsin D in the heart of treated animals and to a lesser extent in the liver. In contrast, no modification of either total or sedimentable acid phosphatase was seen in either organ. The effects we observed are much more marked for cardiac cathepsin D; this is in good agreement with the cardiac specificity of DXR-induced cardiotoxicity with long-term administration and suggests that lysosomes could play a role in the pathogenesis of this phenomenon.
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PMID:Lysosomal alterations in heart and liver of mice treated with doxorubicin. 400 46

It has been shown in vitro that nonachlazine stabilizes rat myocardial lysosomal membranes and activates total acid phosphatase in homogenates of rat myocardium. Preliminary addition of nonachlazine to homogenates in two different final concentrations produces unequal changes in total and free activity of acid phosphatase and cathepsin D during 2.5-hour incubation of homogenates at 37 degrees C.
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PMID:[Effect of nonachlazine on the temperature sensitivity of the lysosomal membranes of the heart muscle in rats in vitro]. 402 78

The localization of cathepsin D-like acid proteinase in the rat stomach and other tissues was studied, and its biochemical properties were compared with those of rat gastric cathepsin D (EC 3.4.23.5). Cathepsin D-like acid proteinase existed overwhelmingly in the mucosal layer and was hardly detected in the gastric juice. Its subcellular distribution profile was very similar to that of acid phosphatase, but not to that of pepsinogen. This proteinase-like enzyme activity was also found in rat splenic extract. These results strongly suggest that the proteinase is a lysosomal enzyme. In addition, cathepsin D-like acid proteinase demonstrated an in vitro transition of molecular species during storage at -30 degrees C. Although this molecular change was distinctive in ion-exchange column chromatography and susceptibility to some enzyme inhibitors, it was not accompanied by a significant decrease in molecular weight. To compare cathepsin D-like acid proteinase with ordinary cathepsin D, gastric cathepsin D was newly purified to apparent homogeneity in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its biochemical properties demonstrate that this is a true cathepsin D in rat gastric mucosa. Moreover, this cathepsin D activity was not abolished by treatment with antiserum specific to cathepsin D-like acid proteinase or pepsinogen. From these results, we can conclude that the proteinase is a lysosomal acid proteinase different from newly purified gastric cathepsin D.
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PMID:A comparative study of two kinds of cathepsin D-type proteinases from rat gastric mucosa. 406 86

The effect of human growth hormone on arterial basement membrane-like (BM) material was studied. BM-like material was obtained from the cell layer of cultured aortic myomedial cells using a sonication-differential centrifugation technique. After the addition of small amounts of growth hormone (1 ng/ml) to the cultures, we observed a 26% increased incorporation of amino acids into BM-like material (2p less than 0.005). However, further increase in the incorporation was not observed using either 3 ng or 10 ng growth hormone per ml. Growth hormone inhibited removal/degradation of BM-like material by 16% (2p less than 0.01). However, pinocytosis rate and activity of major lysosomal enzymes: cathepsin D, acid phosphatase and beta-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase were unchanged. Incorporation of glycosaminoglycans as evaluated by [35SO4]-labelling was reduced by 8% when cells were exposed to growth hormone (2p less than 0.01). The present study demonstrates an effect of growth hormone on the turnover and composition of BM-like material in cultured arterial myomedial cells.
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PMID:Growth hormone effect on accumulation of arterial basement membrane-like material studied on rabbit aortic myomedial cell cultures. 409 60

The response of rat liver lysosomes to an intraperitoneal injection of glucagon has been evaluated from studies on the mechanical fragility, osmotic sensitivity, and sedimentation properties of these subcellular particles. It has been found that about (1/2) hr after the injection of glucagon the hepatic lysosomes exhibit a fairly sudden increase in their sensitivity to mechanical stresses and to exposure to a decreased osmotic pressure. At the same time, their sedimentation properties undergo complex changes characterized mainly by a significant increase in the sedimentation coefficient of a considerable proportion of the total particles. In addition, glucagon causes an increase in the proportion of slowly sedimenting particles, with the result that the distribution of sedimentation coefficients within the total population tends to become bimodal. The latter change is more pronounced for acid phosphatase, less so for cathepsin D, and barely detectable for acid deoxyribonuclease. All these modifications are maximal between 45 and 90 min after injection and regress to normal within approximately 4 hr. With the exception of the increase in the slow component, for which no explanation can be advanced at the present time, they are consistent with the hypothesis that glucagon causes an increase in lysosomal size, and may be related to the autophagic-vacuole formation known to occur after glucagon administration.
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PMID:Influence of glucagon, an inducer of cellular autophagy, on some physical properties of rat liver lysosomes. 429 15


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