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)

Human urinary kallikrein and an antiserum to it raised in the rabbit were used to detect and quantitate immunoreactive tissue kallikrein in human serum. Both 125I-labeled kallikrein and the unlabeled purified enzyme appear complexed to higher molecular weight entities in serum, but specific binding between radiolabeled enzyme and antiserum was unaffected by the presence of serum or plasma. Parallelism to standard displacement curves was always seen with radioimmunoassay of normal sera as well as with human mixed saliva or pancreatic extracts. Assay sensitivity is 160 pg/ml of serum, or 16 pg per tube. Purified plasma kallikrein or prekallikrein in concentrations up to 10 micrograms/ml showed no displacement. Acetone-kaolin activation of plasma produced the expected 30-fold increase in Tos-Arg-OMe esterase activity but no change in immunoreactive tissue kallikrein levels. Serum concentrations were 3.8 +/- 0.7 (mean +/- SE) ng/ml in 21 normal volunteers, and were similar in patients with Fletcher trait or Hageman factor deficiency. Significantly increased serum concentrations were seen with long-term low dietary sodium intake or acute forms of pancreatitis. Although the relation of this immunoreactive material to any active tissue kallikrein within the circulation remains to be determined, our studies provide a new parameter for the assessment of a system repeatedly suggested to have some role in regulation of vascular resistance.
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PMID:Immunoreactive tissue kallikrein in human serum. 656 56

The clinical course of acute pancreatitis is strongly influenced by secondary cardiac, pulmonary and renal damage. The aim of the present study was to gather information about the compartment promoting the systemic damage. Therefore the activity of lipase, phospholipase A and plasma pro-kallikrein and the concentration of tissue kallikrein and kininogen were measured in portal venous blood, pancreatic lymph and peritoneal exudate. Anaesthetized pigs were subjected to fluid resuscitation to keep systemic haemodynamic parameters constant. The pancreas was isolated in situ. The pigs were randomly assigned to a control group (n = 9) or one of the two pancreatitis groups (n = 10 each). Pancreatitis was induced by i.a. infusion of free fatty acid (FFS) or retrograde infusion of 5% sodium taurocholate intraductally (NaT). In both pancreatitis groups the activity of lipase and phospholipase A increased. The most pronounced changes were seen in the peritoneal exudate (phospholipase A activity 40 min after induction: control 10.0 U/l, NaT 72.2 U/l). In both pancreatitis groups there was evidence for activation of the tissue kallikrein kinin system in the form of an increase in the kallikrein concentration and a decrease in the kininogen concentration. Again the changes were most pronounced in the peritoneal exudate (tissue kallikrein 40 min after induction: control 14.7 ng/ml, NaT 452 ng/ml).
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PMID:[Enzyme liberation and activation of the kallikrein-kinin system in experimental pancreatitis. Studies of portal vein blood, pancreatic lymph and peritoneal effusion]. 832 7

Human tissue kallikrein is a serine protease implicated in the pathology of various inflammatory disorders. As one of the two principal enzymes that generate proinflammatory kinin peptides in vivo, tissue kallikrein represents an attractive target for therapeutic intervention in diseases such as asthma, pancreatitis, and rheumatoid arthritis. Three distinct human tissue kallikrein variants, differing in one or two amino acid substitutions, are predicted to exist based on genomic or cDNA nucleotide sequences derived from different tissues. The effects of these substitutions on the biochemical properties of tissue kallikrein are unknown but could, in principle, confer tissue-specific functions on the enzyme or affect the clinical utility of specific kallikrein inhibitors. All three variants, as well as a deglycosylated derivative, were expressed in high yield as recombinant proteins in Pichia pastoris. The recombinant kallikrein variants and natural urinary kallikrein all hydrolyzed synthetic peptides with similar specificity and efficiency and released kallidin from kininogen at comparable rates. Similarly, no significant differences were observed in the interactions between kallikrein variants and protein inhibitors such as SBTI, alpha1-PI, and aprotinin. We conclude that the known tissue kallikrein variants represent allelic variants and are not likely to have tissue-specific activity related to the amino acid substitutions.
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PMID:Expression and characterization of human tissue kallikrein variants. 953 4

In order to investigate the mechanism of kinin release leading to vascular symptoms in acute interstitial-oedematous pancreatitis, the novel, selective inhibitors of tissue kallikrein, (2S,2'R)-2-(2'-amino-3'-(4'-chlorophenyl)propanoylamino)-N-(3-guanidinopropyl)-3-(1-naphthyl)propanoamide (FE999024, CH-2856), and of plasma kallikrein, (2'S,2"R)-4-(2'-(2"(carboxymethylamino)-3"-cyclohexyl-propanoylamino)-3'-phenyl-propanoylamino)piperidine-1-carboxamidin (FE999026, CH-4215), were used in experimental caerulein-induced pancreatitis in rats. Oedema formation and plasma protein extravasation during the 2 h infusion of caerulein were inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by i.p. pretreatment with FE999024 (7-60 micromol kg(-1)) while FE999026 had no effect at the same doses. Haemoconcentration and hypovolaemia associated with the pancreatic oedema formation during pancreatitis were significantly attenuated by FE999024 at a dose of 20 micro mol kg(-1). The reduction in circulating plasma volume was not affected by FE999026. Accumulation of amylase and lipase in the pancreas was dose-dependently reduced by FE999024 while enzyme activities in the blood serum were increased by FE999024 at 60 micromol kg(-1) indicating improved enzyme removal from the tissue. Enzyme activities in the tissue and in the blood remained unaffected by FE999026. FE999024 (20 micromol kg(-1)) largely inhibited increased tissue kallikrein-like activity in the pancreas during acute pancreatitis and also strongly attenuated influx of plasma kallikrein into the tissue. FE999026 (20 micromol kg(-1)) significantly inhibited plasma kallikrein-like activity in the pancreas but had no effect on tissue kallikrein-like activity. In conclusion, vascular kinin-mediated symptoms observed during oedematous pancreatitis in the rat are caused by the action of tissue kallikrein in the pancreas whereas an involvement of plasma kallikrein seems to be unlikely.
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PMID:Involvement of tissue kallikrein but not plasma kallikrein in the development of symptoms mediated by endogenous kinins in acute pancreatitis in rats. 1238 83

1 Kinin B(2) receptor antagonists or tissue kallikrein (t-KK) inhibitors prevent oedema formation and associated sequelae in caerulein-induced pancreatitis in the rat. We have now further investigated the mechanism of kinin generation in the pancreas. 2 Kinins were elevated in the pancreatic tissue already before oedema formation became manifest. Peak values (421+/-59 pmol g(-1) dry wt) were reached at 45 min and remained elevated for at least 2 h; a second increase was observed at 24 h. Pretreatment with the B(2) receptor antagonist icatibant abolished kinin formation, while post-treatment was ineffective. 3 Total kininogen levels were very low in the pancreas of controls, but increased 75-fold during acute pancreatitis. This increase was absent in rats that were pretreated with icatibant. 4 During pancreatitis, t-KK-like and plasma kallikrein (p-KK)-like activity in the pancreas, as well as trypsinogen activation peptide (TAP) increased significantly. Icatibant pretreatment further augmented t-KK about 100-fold, while p-KK was significantly attenuated; TAP levels remained unaffected. 5 Endogenous protease inhibitors (alpha(1)-antitrypsin, alpha(2)-macroglobulin) were low in normal tissues, but increased 45- and four-fold, respectively, during pancreatitis. This increase was abolished when oedema formation was prevented by icatibant. 6 In summary, oedema formation is initiated by t-KK; the ensuing plasma protein extravasation supplies further kininogen and active p-KK to the tissue. Concomitantly, endogenous protease inhibitors in the oedema fluid inhibit up to 99% of active t-KK. Our data thus suggest a complex interaction between kinin action and kinin generation involving positive and negative feedback actions of the inflammatory oedema.
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PMID:Mechanism of kinin release during experimental acute pancreatitis in rats: evidence for pro- as well as anti-inflammatory roles of oedema formation. 1277 Sep 35