Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two hundred and ninety four duodenal and jejunal mucosal biopsy specimens from patients with coeliac disease, treated and untreated, and other conditions were examined histologically and by histochemical staining for five peptidase and three disaccharidase enzymes to determine profiles of activity. Suppression of activity paralleled the histology with the following enzymes: lactase, trehalase, brush border endopeptidase, dipeptidyl peptidase II and isomaltase. Lactase, trehalase, and brush border endopeptidase were specifically suppressed in untreated coeliac disease and were diagnostically useful. Examination of a combination of enzymes is recommended.
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PMID:Brush border enzymes in coeliac disease: histochemical evaluation. 218 3

The activities of the lysosomal endopeptidase cathepsin B (cath B; CZB-Ala-Arg-Arg-MNA as substrate) and the lysosomal exopeptidase dipeptidylpeptidase II (DAP II; Lys-Ala-2NA as substrate) were fluorometrically determined in the renal homogenate of normal and experimental (castration followed by a 14-day treatment with estradiol and testosterone) rats of both sexes. In addition, methodological investigations of the renal homogenate were performed in order to differentiate cath B from other proteinases. These showed that cath-B activity was highest at around pH 6, was strongly inhibited by 4-hydroxymercuribenzoate and leupeptin, and was activated by dithiothreitol. Trypsin-like activities were not demonstrable under the used incubation conditions. The animal experiments showed that renal cath-B activities (1) were significantly higher in females than in males, (2) increased significantly in males and decreased significantly in females after castration (no significant difference between both sexes), (3) decreased in female and male castrates after treatment with testosterone and increased strongly after treatment with estradiol, and (4) showed an activity pattern similar to that of DAP II. The results are discussed in relation to the sex-dependent and sex-hormone-dependent proteinuria of rats. It is suggested that there is a correlation between protein catabolism in the kidney and proteinuria, i.e. high lysosomal proteinase activities correspond with low proteinuria.
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PMID:Renal cathepsin-B activities in rats after castration and treatment with sex hormones. 374 98

Rabbit thyroids contain cathepsin D (CD) and several thiol endopeptidases including cathepsin B and three newly described enzymes (cathepsins 180K, 110K, and 45K). The present paper assesses the relative physiological importance of these enzymes in thyroglobulin degradation in rabbits. Thyroidal thiol endopeptidase [thiol thyroglobulin hydrolase (thiol TgH)] activity increased in the absence of changes in CD activity in animals treated with 10 U bovine TSH. Peak enzyme activity occurred 24 h after injection of hormone. After 20 U bovine TSH, thiol endopeptidase activity increased by approximately 100%, whereas CD increased by 50%. The increase in thiol enzyme activity was attributed both to cathepsin B and to the other thiol endopeptidases. The lysosomal acid hydrolases acid phosphatase and dipeptidyl peptidase II were unaffected by TSH at either dose level. Thiol TgH activity, but not CD activity, was decreased in thyroids of rabbits treated with T4 [5 micrograms/(100 g BW X day)] for 1 week. All thyroidal acid hydrolases examined were suppressed in animals receiving T4 for 3 weeks. Thiol TgH activity was localized primarily to a lysosome-enriched fraction of thyroid homogenates. Our results suggest that the thiol proteases probably are the most important endopeptidases in thyroglobulin hydrolysis in vivo and that their activities are influenced by TSH.
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PMID:Stimulation of thyroidal thiol endopeptidases by thyrotropin. 636 Jun 67

The usefulness of optimized and newly elaborated histochemical methods for proteinases is illustrated on two selected substances. DAP IV (Gly-Pro-MNA,FBB,pH 7.2) was discovered in 39% and DAP II (Lys-Ala-MNA,FBB,pH 5.5) in 60% of the lymphocytes of human peripheral blood (ly). The reaction product of such ly differs in quality and quantity. On the ultrastructural level, the reaction product of DAP IV (Gly-Pro-MNA,HNF) was found in cell membranes and lysosomes. Enzyme activity in other areas was probably suppressed during the preparation procedure. Although the number of ly revealed with Lys-Pro-MNA and Phe-Pro-MNA at pH 5.5 and with Lys-Pro-MNA at pH 7.2 is high, these substrates do not distinctly discriminate DAP IV and DAP II. DAP IV occurs exclusively in T lymphocytes. The number of DAP IV-positive ly was not decreased in patients with myelofibrosis, plasmacytoma, chronic granulocytic leukemia, or tricholeukemia. It was, however, greatly reduced in chronic lymphatic leukemia (CLL). In patients with malignant lymphomas other than CLL, ly presence is related to the stage of the disease. Decreased values indicate a more severe stage or a relapse. In the majority of patients with gastric cancer DAP IV-positive ly were decreased. They were normal or increased in patients with peptic ulcer. The assessment of the number of DAP IV-positive ly is a simple method that provides information regarding the condition of patients with malignant lymphomas and gastric carcinoma. Neutrophilic leukocytes and their precursors, and to a lesser extent monocytes, are revealed when N-acetyl-Met-I-naphthyl ester (Ac-Met-N) is used as substrate. Membrane-bound lysosomal and cytosol proteinases were investigated together with disaccharidases in jejunal biopsies of patients with malabsorption syndrome. Activities of all enzymes were affected in patients with celiac disease. According to their impairment enzymes could be arranged: Lactase(L). trehalase (T), brush border endopeptidase (BBEP), gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT), DAP IV, enzyme(s) cleaving Ac-Mer-N, aminopeptidase A, cytosol peptidases and aminopeptidase M. In the propria, DAP IV is decreased or absent, while GGT and, particularly, DAP II are increased. After a gluten-free diet, activities are restored in a reverse order. BBEP and GGT are useful as auxiliary parameters in the assessment of the damage or differentiation degree of enterocytes. DAP IV is a sensitive indicator of the involvement of the propria.
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PMID:Proteinases in pathology. Usefulness of histochemical methods. 701 84

Variations in activity of the membrane-bound and cytosolic proteinases and peptidases were analyzed in human and rabbit erythrocytes at various stages of their life-span. The patterns observed with human erythrocytes were the following. (a) The acidic endopeptidase activity associated with the membranes undergoes a substantial decline during cellular aging, with an estimated half-life of 65 days. Concomitantly it appears to become progressively more latent. (b) All cytosolic proteinase and peptidase activities described previously (Pontremoli, S., Melloni, E., Salamino, F., Sapartore, B., Michetti, M., Benatti, U., Morelli, A. and De Flora, A. (1980) Eur. J. Biochem. 110, 421-430) decline exponentially throughout the erythrocyte life-span, with the exception of dipeptidyl aminopeptidase III. The calculated half-lives were: 60 days for the neutral endopeptidase; 87 days for the total acidic endopeptidase activity which is accounted for by three distinct enzymes; 49 days for aminopeptidase B and 133 days for a second aminopeptidase with broad substrate specificity; 84 days for dipeptidyl aminopeptidase II. The results obtained with the rabbit erythrocytes were: (a) no significant decline of leucine aminopeptidase, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase II and III activities in the transition from reticulocytes to mature erythrocytes; (b) very limited decline of aminopeptidase B activity; (c) a pronounced age-dependent decay, in increasing order, of neutral endopeptidase, aminopeptidase A, carboxypeptidase and acidic endopeptidase activities.
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PMID:Decay of proteinase and peptidase activities of human and rabbit erythrocytes during cellular aging. 702 Jul 67

Thyroid hormones are synthesized within the thyroglobulin (Tg) molecule and must be released to reach the circulation and exert their metabolic effect. We have previously shown that three lysosomal endopeptidases, cathepsin B, D, and L, are active in the early stages of intrathyroidal degradation of Tg but do not themselves release free hormone. The current study examines the role of exopeptidases as the next step in thyroid hormone release. Human thyroidal cathepsin B and two partially purified exopeptidases, dipeptidyl peptidase II (DP-PII) and lysosomal dipeptidase I (LDPI), were used to digest the 20-kDa N-terminal peptide of rabbit Tg, which contains the dominant T4 site of Tg at residue 5. Cathepsin B acted as an endopeptidase initially, producing small T4-containing peptides. After more extended digestion, it also acted as an exopeptidase, producing the dipeptide T4-Gln, corresponding to residues 5 and 6 of Tg. Lysosomal dipeptidase I alone had no effect on 20 kDa but acted in combination with cathepsin B to release T4 from the T4-Gln dipeptide. Although addition of DPPII increased the release of hormone from 125I-Tg by an extract of DPPII-deficient lysosomes, it had no apparent effect on the degradation of the 20-kDa peptide, either alone or in combination with cathepsin B or LDPI. Thus DPPII may act in synergy with some other endopeptidase, or alternatively, may play a role in the release of hormone from other sites in Tg. We conclude that the N-terminus of Tg, which contains its major hormonogenic site, is particularly susceptible to hydrolysis by the endopeptidase cathepsin B and that cathepsin B additionally has an important exopeptidase action that allows it to release a T4 dipeptide that is then further degraded by LDPI to release free T4.
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PMID:The combined action of two thyroidal proteases releases T4 from the dominant hormone-forming site of thyroglobulin. 875 51

Two kinds of dipeptidyl aminopeptidase I (DAP I [cathepsin C])-like activities which hydrolyze Gly-Phe-p-nitroanilide (Gly-Phe-pNA) were detected in Pseudomonas sp. strain WO24. They were purified and characterized. The isolated enzymes, named DAP BII and DAP BIII, were revealed to be homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and isoelectric focusing. DAP BII was estimated to have a molecular mass of 150,000 Da by gel filtration and a subunit size of 73,000 Da by SDS-PAGE, indicating it to be a homodimer. The molecular mass of DAP BIII was evaluated to be approximately 60,000 Da by gel filtration and 69,000 Da by SDS-PAGE, indicating that it is monomeric. The isoelectric points of DAP BII and DAP BIII were 6.1 and 5.0, and their optimal pHs were 8.0 and 8.5 to 9.0, respectively. The result of peptide mapping for DAP BII and DAP BIII showed that these enzymes consist of different components. Both enzymes were completely inhibited by diisopropylphosphofluoride but not by general thiol inhibitors, indicating that they are serine proteases. DAP BII and DAP BIII hydrolyzed Gly-Phe-pNA but not Gly-Arg-pNA, both of which are model substrates for mammalian DAP I. Despite these shared activities toward DAP I, DAP BII released dipeptides from Ala-Ala-pNA and Lys-Ala-4-methylcoumarinamide (a substrate for DAP II), whereas DAP BIII did not hydrolyze either of these compounds and was presumed to prefer substrates composed of bulky, hydrophobic amino acids at P1 and P1' positions. In addition, DAP BII showed no endopeptidase activity, whereas DAP BIII possessed the activity on N-terminally blocked peptide derivatives besides exopeptidase activity. Assays performed with bioactive peptides such as angiotensin I and neuromedin N as substrates indicate that DAP BII has a considerably broader substrate specificity than DAP BIII and is able to hydrolyze an X-Pro bond, an imido bond that few peptidases and no known DAPs can cleave. These characteristics, namely, substrate specificities, molecular mass, pI, peptide mapping, pH optimum, and effect of inhibitors, suggested that the two DAPs purified in this work are distinct enzymes and do not belong to any of the previously reported DAP classes.
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PMID:Two types of novel dipeptidyl aminopeptidases from Pseudomonas sp. strain WO24. 889 31