Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cell-death programs executed in the pancreas under pathological conditions remain largely undetermined, although the severity of experimental pancreatitis has been found to depend on the ratio of apoptosis to necrosis. We have defined mechanisms by which apoptosis is induced in pancreatic acinar cells by the oxidant stressor menadione. Real-time monitoring of initiator caspase activity showed that caspase-9 (66% of cells) and caspase-8 (15% of cells) were activated within 30 min of menadione administration, but no activation of caspase-2, -10, or -12 was detected. Interestingly, when caspase-9 activation was inhibited, activation of caspase-8 was increased. Half-maximum activation (t(0.5)) of caspase-9 occurred within approximately 2 min and was identified at or in close proximity to mitochondria, whereas t(0.5) for caspase-8 occurred within approximately 26 min of menadione application and was distributed homogeneously throughout cells. Caspase-9 but not caspase-8 activation was blocked completely by the calcium chelator BAPTA or bongkrekic acid, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. In contrast, caspase-8 but not caspase-9 activation was blocked by the destruction of lysosomes (preincubation with Gly-Phe beta-naphthylamide, a cathepsin C substrate), loss of lysosomal acidity (bafilomycin A1), or inhibition of cathepsin L or D. Using pepstatin A-BODIPY FL conjugate, we confirmed translocation of cathepsin D out of lysosomes in response to menadione. We conclude that the oxidative stressor menadione induces two independent apoptotic pathways within pancreatic acinar cells: the classical mitochondrial calcium-dependent pathway that is initiated rapidly in the majority of cells, and a slower, caspase-8-mediated pathway that depends on the lysosomal activities of cathepsins and is used when the caspase-9 pathway is disabled.
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PMID:Caspase-8-mediated apoptosis induced by oxidative stress is independent of the intrinsic pathway and dependent on cathepsins. 1743 Dec 16

Acute pancreatitis is characterized by premature intracellular protease activation and infiltration of inflammatory cells, mainly neutrophil granulocytes and macrophages, into the organ. The lysosomal proteases cathepsin B, D, and L have been identified as regulators of early zymogen activation and thus modulators of the severity of pancreatitis. Cathepsin C (CTSC, syn. dipeptidly-peptidase I) is a widely expressed, exo-cystein-protease involved in the proteolytic processing of various other lysosomal enzymes. We have studied its role in pancreatitis. We used CTSC-deleted mice and their WT littermates in two experimental models of pancreatitis. The mild model involved eight hourly caerulein injections and the severe model partial duct ligation. Isolated pancreatic acini and spleen-derived leukocytes were used for ex vivo experiments. CTSC is expressed in the pancreas and in inflammatory cells. CTSC deletion reduced the severity of pancreatitis (more prominently in the milder model) without directly affecting intra-acinar cell trypsin activation in vitro The absence of CTSC reduced infiltration of neutrophil granulocytes impaired their capacity for cleaving E-cadherin in adherens junctions between acinar cells and reduced the activity of neutrophil serine proteases polymorphonuclear (neutrophil) elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase 3, but not neutrophil motility. Macrophage invasion was not dependent on the presence of CTSC. CTSC is a regulator and activator of various lysosomal enzymes such as cathepsin B, D, and L. Its loss mitigates the severity of pancreatitis not by reducing intra-acinar cell zymogen activation but by reducing infiltration of neutrophil granulocytes into the pancreas. In this context one of its key roles is that of an activator of neutrophil elastase.
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PMID:Deficiency of cathepsin C ameliorates severity of acute pancreatitis by reduction of neutrophil elastase activation and cleavage of E-cadherin. 3045 53