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:3.4.23.5 (
cathepsin D
)
4,130
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
With the increasing availability of screening mammography, more women are diagnosed as having breast cancers at an early, node-negative stage. The majority of these patients would be cured with total mastectomy or breast conservation treatment. However, about 30% of the patients would have recurrence of disease in distant sites. In recent randomized clinical trials, adjuvant systemic therapy has been shown to reduce the rate of recurrence in these patients. Proper selection of patients for adjuvant therapy is necessary to avoid exposing many patients with low risk of recurrence to treatments for whom the benefit is not justified by the toxicity and the cost. In this article, we review the clinical and pathologic prognostic factors in early stage, node-negative breast cancer patients, including tumor size, nuclear and histologic grades, estrogen and progesterone receptors, menopausal status, proliferative rate, HER-2/neu oncogene amplification, and
cathepsin D
level. Favorable prognostic factors include tumor size less than or equal to 2 cm, low nuclear and histologic grades, low S-phase fraction, diploid state, low
cathepsin
-D level, and positive estrogen and progesterone receptor status. The value of HER-2/neu oncogene overexpression is controversial, and further studies are needed to define its role as a prognostic factor in patients with node-negative breast cancer. Based on these prognostic factors, it is possible to identify subsets of patients who have a low risk of recurrence and would not benefit significantly from adjuvant systemic therapy.
...
PMID:Prognostic indicators in node-negative early stage breast cancer. 158 Mar
We performed immunocytochemical localization of
cathepsin D
in osteoclasts of the proximal growth plate of the rat femurs using both the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method for cryo-semi-thin (1 micron) sections and the colloidal gold-labeled IgG method for K4M ultra-thin sections. At the light microscopic level,
cathepsin D
immunoreactivity in the osteoclasts appeared at the vesicles, granules, and/or small vacuoles. They were distributed throughout the cytoplasm of each cell and were relatively numerous close to the bone surface. This antigen could not be detected at the eroded bone surface. As for other cells, immunoreactivity was seen only in the lysosomes of osteoblast-like cells. Immunoreactivity in the osteoclasts was stronger and greater in the density and number than in osteoblast-like cells. At the electron microscopic level, osteoclasts with well-developed ruffled border possessed numerous
cathepsin D
-containing lysosomes, vacuoles, and coated vesicle-like structures. Cathepsin D-containing lysosomes fused with
cathepsin
-negative vacuoles and formed large secondary lysosomes. Osteoclasts with poorly developed ruffled border possessed fewer
cathepsin D
-containing lysosomes than those with well-developed ruffled border. No immunogold particles were seen in vacuole-like channel expansions of the ruffled borders, between the channels of the ruffled borders, or on the eroded bone surface. These findings demonstrate that osteoclasts contain a large amount of
cathepsin D
. They suggest that
cathepsin D
is necessary for osteoclastic bone resorption, that it plays an indirect rather than direct role.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical localization of cathepsin D in the rat osteoclast. 161 34
The formation of beta-amyloid in the brains of individuals with Alzheimer disease requires the proteolytic cleavage of a membrane-associated precursor protein. The proteases that may be involved in this process have not yet been identified. Cathepsins are normally intracellular proteolytic enzymes associated with lysosomes; however, when sections from Alzheimer brains were stained by antisera to
cathepsin D
and cathepsin B, high levels of immunoreactivity were also detected in senile plaques. Extracellular sites of
cathepsin
immunoreactivity were not seen in control brains from age-matched individuals without neurologic disease or from patients with Huntington disease or Parkinson disease. In situ enzyme histochemistry of
cathepsin D
and cathepsin B on sections of neocortex using synthetic peptides and protein substrates showed that senile plaques contained the highest levels of enzymatically active
cathepsin
. At the ultrastructural level,
cathepsin
immunoreactivity in senile plaques was localized principally to lysosomal dense bodies and lipofuscin granules, which were extracellular. Similar structures were abundant in degenerating neurons of Alzheimer neocortex, and
cathepsin
-laden neuronal perikarya in various stages of disintegration could be seen within some senile plaques. The high levels of enzymatically competent lysosomal proteases abnormally localized in senile plaques represent evidence for candidate enzymes that may mediate the proteolytic formation of amyloid. We propose that amyloid precursor protein within senile plaques is processed by lysosomal proteases principally derived from degenerating neurons. Escape of cathepsins from the stringently regulated intracellular milieu provides a basis for an abnormal sequence of proteolytic cleavages of accumulating amyloid precursor protein.
...
PMID:Enzymatically active lysosomal proteases are associated with amyloid deposits in Alzheimer brain. 169 25
Evaluation of prognostic factors for breast cancers is important for therapeutic decisions both at the time of surgery and during postoperative surveillance. In 1979, H. Rochefort described an induced protein with a molecular weight of 52,000 Daltons identified as procathepsin D. Total
cathepsin D
(TCD) (52K + 48K + 34K), expressed in pmol/mg protein, can be measured by an immunoradiometric method commercialized by Cis-Biointernational. Total
cathepsin D
was assayed in 413 breast cancer tumors from patients who underwent surgery between January 1, 1978, and December 31, 1985. Using a cut-off of 35 pmol/mg protein, patients with an elevated level had a significantly poorer survival than those with a low level (p = 0.03). This difference was not found for node-negative patients but was very significant for node-positive patients (p less than 0.008). The survival of node-positive patients with a low total
cathepsin
level was not statistically different from that of node-negative patients. Analysis of the N+ subgroup of patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy revealed that TCD no longer had any prognostic value, whereas it was still important for the N+ subgroup who received an adjuvant treatment. Cox multivariate analysis of prognostic value for survival placed total
cathepsin D
in third position, after nodal invasion and progesterone receptor status, for the entire population, and in first position before progesterone receptor status for the node-positive population. The association of a low
cathepsin
level and positive progesterone receptors characterized the subgroup of patients with the longest survival. TCD levels played the same role for prediction of the outcome of metastasis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prognostic value of total cathepsin D in breast tumors. A possible role in selection of chemoresistant patients. 175 72
Activities of cysteine and trypsin-like proteinase inhibitors and of
cathepsin D
were measured in mixed saliva of periodontitis patients with conditions of varying severity. Salivary proteinase inhibitor activities were found related, to a certain measure, to the severity of inflammation. Salivary antitryptic activity was somewhat reduced and cysteine proteinase inhibitor activity elevated in patients with non-severe periodontitis. In cases with medium-severe and severe periodontitis salivary proteinase activity was augmenting, approaching the normal value, whereas cysteine proteinase inhibitor level was significantly decreased. A reduction of salivary inhibitor activity was related to the formation of inhibitor-proteinase complexes, whereas a rise of this activity was explained by release of inhibitors from these complexes resulting from dissociation. This is possibly due to the formation of partially cleaved inhibitor form because of
cathepsin
effects.
...
PMID:[The proteinase inhibitors of mixed saliva in periodontitis]. 185 78
The release of T4 and T3 from the prohormone thyroglobulin (Tg) occurs in thyroid lysosomes. To examine the role of
cathepsin
-B, -D, and -L, the three major endopeptidases in this process, we incubated rabbit [125I]Tg, labeled in vivo, with lysosomal extracts from human thyroids. Iodopeptide formation was evaluated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate after short term incubations (20-45 min), while iodoamino acid release was assessed by paper chromatography after long term incubations (8 and 24 h). Using pepstatin to inhibit
cathepsin D
, Z-Phe-Ala-CHN2 to inhibit both cathepsin B and L, and Z-Phe-Phe-CHN2 to selectively inhibit cathepsin L, we obtained the following results: 1) blocking of all three endopeptidases reduced both iodopeptide formation in short term experiments and iodoamino acid release in long term experiments by 80-90%; 2) iodopeptide formation was reduced by 85% with Z-Phe-Ala-CHN2, by 56% with Z-Phe-Phe-CHN2, and by 26% with pepstatin; 3) iodoamino acid release was reduced by 60-80% with Z-Phe-Ala-CHN2 and by 40-50% with either Z-Phe-Phe-CHN2 or pepstatin at 8 h, but by less than 20% at 24 h; pepstatin and Z-Phe-Phe-CHN2 together reduced iodoamino acid release by 80% and 60% at 8 and 24 h, respectively. Limited hydrolysis of Tg by lysosomal enzymes produced at least eight peptide fragments of less than 100,000 mol wt. Three of these, together representing 32% of the 125I released, resulted from cleavages in the C-terminal region of Tg corresponding to residues 2487, 2393, and 2390 of cDNA-derived human Tg. Several other peptides, together containing 38% of the 125I released, included the N-terminus of Tg. These C-terminal and N-terminal fragments contained three of Tg's four major hormonogenic sites, but none of the cleavage sites fell close to the hormone sites themselves. We conclude that 1) the formation of discrete iodopeptides precedes the release of iodothyronines and iodotyrosines from Tg; 2) the cysteine proteinases are more important than
cathepsin D
in this process; and 3) these endopeptidases selectively cleave Tg to favor the production of hormone-containing intermediates for subsequent processing by exopeptidases.
...
PMID:Proteolytic processing of thyroglobulin by extracts of thyroid lysosomes. 190 99
3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase is a key regulatory enzyme of cholesterol biosynthesis and is located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). A fusion protein, HMGal, consisting of the membrane domain of HMG-CoA reductase fused to Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase and expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells from the SV40 promoter, was previously constructed and was found to respond to regulatory signals for degradation in a similar fashion to the intact HMG-CoA reductase. Degradation of both HMG-CoA reductase and HMGal in CHO cells was enhanced by addition of mevalonate or low density lipoprotein (LDL). In this report we show that 2 cysteine protease inhibitors, N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-norleucinal (ALLN) and N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-methioninal (ALLM), completely inhibit the mevalonate- or LDL-accelerated degradation of HMG-CoA reductase and HMGal and also block the basal degradation of these enzymes. It has been shown that in vitro these protease inhibitors inhibit the activities of Ca(2+)-dependent neutral proteases as well as lysosomal proteases, including cathepsin L,
cathepsin
b, and
cathepsin D
. However, the mevalonate-accelerated degradation of HMG-CoA reductase and HMGal is not affected by lysosomotropic agents, suggesting that the site of action of these inhibitor peptides in preventing the degradation is not the cathepsins. In brefeldin A-treated cells, where protein export from the ER is blocked, ALLN is still effective in inhibiting the degradation of HMG-CoA reductase and HMGal. These results indicate the involvement of non-lysosomal Ca(2+)-dependent proteases in the basal and the accelerated degradation of HMG-CoA reductase and HMGal. Enzymatic assays in vitro and immunoblot analyses have revealed calpain- and calpastatin-like proteins in CHO cells. The activities and the amount of these proteins do not change under conditions of enhanced degradation, indicating that the levels of these proteins are not subject to mevalonate regulation.
...
PMID:Inhibition of degradation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase in vivo by cysteine protease inhibitors. 190 66
The normal provision of thyroid hormones to the body requires their release from the prohormone, thyroglobulin (Tg). Previous work established the importance of cathepsins B, D, and L (formerly designated cysteine proteinase I) to this process but had not defined the points of proteolytic attack for each enzyme. In the present study we labeled rabbit Tg in vivo with sodium 125I and performed limited digestions with cathepsins B, D, and L, purified from human thyroids. The resultant peptide fragments were analyzed by amino-terminal sequencing and located within the Tg molecule by comparison with the cDNA-derived sequences from human Tg. We identified three cleavage points for cathepsin B, corresponding to P'1 residues 532, 795, and 2487; four cleavage points for cathepsin L, corresponding to P'1 residues 2389, 2452, 2490, and 2657; and four cleavage points for
cathepsin D
, corresponding to P'1 residues 551, 1835, 2468, and 2643. None of the cleavage points was near Tgs known hormonogenic sites, but these peptide fragments contained three of the four major hormonogenic sites in rabbit Tg, suggesting some preference for their early proteolytic processing. Cathespin B alone among the three endopeptidases had some exopeptidase activity toward Tg. The cleavage specificities for each of the endopeptidases resembled those described with other protein substrates. Thus,
cathepsin D
preferentially cleaved bonds between hydrophobic residues, and cathespin L cleaved bonds with hydrophobic residues at P2 and P3. Although
cathepsin
Bs specificity was less obvious, it produced a major cleavage between 2 leucine residues. The existence of three endopeptidases cleaving at different sites shows that Tg proteolysis is a complex process, suggests synergism among their enzyme activities, and provides a physiological mechanism for selective hormone release, including its regulation by TSH.
...
PMID:Thyroglobulin processing by thyroidal proteases. Major sites of cleavage by cathepsins B, D, and L. 193 80
The changes in the activities of certain lysosomal hydrolases, viz., beta-glucuronidase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase, alpha-glucosidase, alpha-galactosidase, alpha-mannosidase, cathepsin B,
cathepsin D
, and collagenolytic
cathepsin
, in serum and heart of rats subject to myocardial infarction with isoproterenol, were studied during the periods of peak infarction and recovery. The activities of all the enzymes assayed exhibited a significant increase both in serum and in heart at peak infarction stage and these levels returned to normal during the stage of recovery and repair. The infiltration of inflammatory cells at the infarct regions and the altered lysosomal fragility are probably responsible for the increased activity of the enzymes studied. This may also bring about the catabolism of connective tissue constituents as reported in literature.
...
PMID:Influence of isoproterenol-induced myocardial infarction on certain glycohydrolases and cathepsins in rats. 201 10
To investigate the role of proteolysis in amyloid formation, we studied the localization of the proteolytic enzymes,
cathepsin D
and cathepsin B, in the prefrontal cerebral cortex and hippocampus of human postmortem brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease and from individuals free of neurological disease. In control and Alzheimer brains,
cathepsin
immunoreactivity within cells was localized to lysosome-related structures, which were particularly abundant in neuronal perikarya. In Alzheimer brain,
cathepsin
immunoreactivity was also heavily concentrated extracellularly within senile plaques. Cathepsin immunoreactivity associated with plaques was not confined to lysosomes and was distributed throughout the plaque. Isolated amyloid cores, however, were not immunostained. Cathepsin-laden perikarya of degenerating neurons were frequently seen within senile plaques and, in the more advanced stages of degeneration,
cathepsin
immunoreactivity was present throughout the cytoplasm. Other identified constituents of senile plaques appeared to be less significant sources of
cathepsin
immunoreactivity, including astrocytes, degenerating neurites, microglia and macrophages. These results demonstrate that lysosomal proteinases are major constituents of the senile plaque and that degenerating neuronal perikarya are a principal source of the
cathepsin
immunoreactivity. We propose that the unregulated action of extracellular cathepsins liberated from degenerating neurons may lead to abnormal processing of the amyloid precursor protein and to the formation of amyloid locally within senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Lysosomal proteinase antigens are prominently localized within senile plaques of Alzheimer's disease: evidence for a neuronal origin. 235 Jun 88
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>