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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mode of existence of cathepsins B and L in the white muscle of chum salmon was examined immunohistochemically with specific antibodies against cathepsins B and L. Cathepsins B and L were clearly demonstrated to be present in macrophage-like phagocytes near/in the muscle fibers in the white muscle. In particular, numerous phagocytes were observed around the necrotic muscle fibers. Therefore, the high
cathepsin
activity is considered to be brought about by the phagocytes appearing in the white muscle. It is probable that the phagocytes in the muscle are inferred to take such a part in the destruction of muscle fiber associates with the drastic physiological change such as sexual maturation and/or
starvation
of the fish during spawning migration.
...
PMID:Increase in catheptic activity and appearance of phagocytes in the white muscle of chum salmon during spawning migration. 180 24
Fibroblasts from normal adult forearm skin and neonatal foreskin were cultured and examined for their ability to synthesize and secrete elastase and neutral
cathepsin
. All of the cultures examined produced detectable amounts of elastase using insoluble elastin as substrate. An enzyme was also found that hydrolyzed the synthetic elastin substrate, N-succinyl-(Ala)3-p-nitroanilide, but did not degrade insoluble elastin. In addition, activity against the synthetic
cathepsin
substrate N-benzoyl-DL-phenylalanine-naphthyl ester was found. Inhibitor profiles indicate that the elastin and N-succinyl-(Ala)3-p-nitroanilide degrading activities are due to metalloproteinases. Degradation of N-benzoyl-DL-phenylalanine-naphthyl ester can be inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. These proteinases were usually found associated with the cell layer. Although activities of the measured proteinases were detected in all cultures, increased or decreased enzyme activities were not predictably related to passage number or length of serum
starvation
. Degree of confluence also affected proteinase activities. Separation of the dermal-epidermal junction can be produced by the injection of these proteinases into intact mouse skin.
...
PMID:Elastase and neutral cathepsin production by human fibroblasts: effect of culture conditions on synthesis and secretion. 352 5
Prolonged
starvation
mimics chronic negative nitrogen balance observed in many physiopathological situations. During
starvation
, an initial decrease in protein utilization (phase I) is followed by a long period of protein sparing (phase II) that ends with a marked rise in nitrogen excretion (phase III). Variations in protein metabolism during
starvation
are determined by changes in protein synthesis and degradation rates (Cherel, Y., Attaix, D. Rosolowska-Huszcz, D., Belkhou, R., Robin, J.P., Arnal, M. and Le Maho, Y. (1991) Clin. Sci. 81, 611-619), but little information is available on expression of proteolytic systems. In this study, cathepsin B, H and L activities were compared in hindlimb muscles and liver at various phases of
starvation
in thyroidectomized and sham-operated rats. In muscle,
cathepsin
activities fell from the fed state to phase II, which suggests that cathepsins may play a role in the curtailment of muscle proteolysis during protein sparing phase. This decrease of muscle
cathepsin
activities was reproduced by thyroidectomy alone. In contrast, liver cathepsin B and H activities fell during
starvation
, but were not affected by thyroidectomy alone. Liver cathepsin L decreased only during
starvation
in thyroidectomized animals. These observations emphasize that different mechanisms modulate
cathepsin
expression in skeletal muscle and liver.
...
PMID:Effect of fasting and thyroidectomy on cysteine proteinase activities in liver and muscle. 812 68
Protein catabolism in fibroblasts cultured from the skin of normal individuals and of patients with mucolipidosis II (I-cell disease) and several other lysosomal storage diseases was examined by metabolic labelling with [3H]leucine and following the fate of radioactive proteins in pulse-chase experiments. In mucolipidosis II cells, overall protein degradative rates were found to be distinctly lower than in normal control cells. To distinguish lysosomal from non-lysosomal degradation, labelling experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of 10 mM NH4Cl, an inhibitor of lysosomal function. It was found that mucolipidosis II fibroblasts exhibited a markedly reduced rate of lysosomal protein degradation, whereas the rate of nonlysosomal degradation appeared normal. Serum and amino acid
starvation
led to a marked increase in lysosomal protein degradation in normal cells, but had only a minimal effect on that in mucolipidosis II fibroblasts. The specific activities of cathepsins B, H and L were profoundly diminished in all mucolipidosis II cell lines tested. Lysosomal protein degradation in a mucolipidosis III cell line was impaired to a similar degree as in mucolipidosis II cells, whereas it was decreased to a lesser extent in fibroblasts from patients with mucopolysaccharidoses I and VI, galactosialidosis and GM1-gangliosidosis. We conclude that fibroblasts from patients with mucolipidosis II and III have a severely compromised capacity for endogenous lysosomal protein degradation that appears to result from multiple
cathepsin
deficiency. This lysosomal defect is likely to have pathophysiological consequences.
...
PMID:Protein catabolism in fibroblasts cultured from patients with mucolipidosis II and other lysosomal disorders. 824 Feb 60
Cells in tumors may be exposed to adverse conditions such as nutrient deprivation, acidic pH and hypoxia. It has been shown previously that exposure to hypoxia, acidosis and glucose
starvation
in vitro increases the experimental metastatic ability of murine KHT-LP1 sarcoma, SCC-VII squamous carcinoma and B16 melanoma cells. This effect was most marked when cells were allowed to recover under normal in vitro growth conditions before injection. In the present study we examined whether the invasive capacity of the cells could be influenced by these modifications of the cell microenvironment. We used Matrigel, a basement membrane-like preparation in a two-chamber invasion assay to address this issue. Both KHT-LP1 and SCC-VII murine cell lines showed an increased ability to invade through Matrigel after hypoxia, and glucose
starvation
, but there was no consistent change in invasive capacity following acidosis exposure. The results for hypoxia and glucose
starvation
are in agreement with our previous studies of metastatic ability for these cell lines and we confirmed this for KHT-LP1 cells exposed to hypoxia in the current study. In parallel with the invasion assays, we compared
cathepsin
(L + B) content of the cells in treated and control suspensions. The effect observed varied according to the cell line and the treatment received (hypoxia, glucose
starvation
). There was an increase of
cathepsin
content for KHT-LP1 cells exposed to hypoxia and this increase correlated well with the increase of the invasion ability through Matrigel. We did not observe any increase of
cathepsin
for hypoxia-treated SCC-VII or for KHT-LP1 and SCC-VII cells treated with glucose
starvation
. These results suggest that transient hypoxia and glucose
starvation
can increase the invasive ability of tumor cell lines and thus may cause tumor progression by facilitating the invasive step of the metastatic process. The increased levels of
cathepsin
(L + B) in the KHT-LP1 cells treated with hypoxia, compared to control non-treated cells, may play a part in this increased invasive capacity.
...
PMID:Exposure to hypoxia, glucose starvation and acidosis: effect on invasive capacity of murine tumor cells and correlation with cathepsin (L + B) secretion. 900 2
In order to define the cellular site of synthesis for hemocyanin and digestive enzymes in the decapod hepatopancreas, we studied the expression of messenger ribonucleic acids (RNAs) for these molecules in the epithelium lining hepatopancreas tubules. In situ hybridisation of gene probes for the digestive enzymes amylase,
cathepsin
-L, cellulase, chitinase-1 and trypsin to tissue sections of the shrimp hepatopancreas confirmed that the F-cells lining tertiary, secondary and primary ducts are the sites of synthesis for digestive enzyme messenger RNA (mRNA). The F-cells also contained mRNA for the hemocyanin gene. This finding raises important questions on the mechanism by which mature hemocyanin accumulates in the shrimp hemolymph. Our in situ hybridisation studies further showed that Penaeus monodon F-cells remain transcriptionally active for digestive enzyme mRNAs during periods of
starvation
.
...
PMID:Expression of hemocyanin and digestive enzyme messenger RNAs in the hepatopancreas of the Black Tiger Shrimp Penaeus monodon. 1238 78
The August Krogh principle, stating that for any particular question in biology, nature holds an ideal study system, was applied by choosing the anorexic, long-distance migration of salmon as a model to analyze protein degradation and amino acid metabolism. Reexamining an original study done over 20 years ago on migrating sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), data on fish migration and
starvation
are reviewed and a general model is developed on how fish deal with muscle proteolysis. It is shown that lysosomal activation and degradation of muscle protein by lysosomal cathepsins, especially cathepsin D and sometimes cathepsin L, are responsible for the degradation of muscle protein during fish migration, maturation and
starvation
. This strategy is quite the opposite to mammalian muscle wasting, including
starvation
, uremia, cancer and others, where the ATP-ubiquitin proteasome in conjunction with ancillary systems, constitutes the overwhelming pathway for protein degradation in muscle. In mammals, the lysosome plays a bit part, if any. In contrast, the proteasome plays at best a subordinate role in muscle degradation in piscine systems. This diverging strategy is put into the context of fish metabolism in general, with its high amino acid turnover, reliance on amino acids as oxidative substrates and flux of amino acids from muscle via the liver into gonads during maturation. Brief focus is placed on structure, function and evolution of the key player in fishes: cathepsin D. The gene structure of piscine cathepsin D is outlined, focusing on the existence of duplicate, paralogous, cathepsin D genes in some species and analyzing the relationship between a female and liver-specific aspartyl protease and fish
cathepsin
Ds. Evolutionary relationships are developed between different groups of piscine cathepsins, aspartyl proteases and other cathepsins. Finally, based on specific changes in muscle enzymes in fish, including migrating salmon, common strategies of amino acid and carbon flux in fish muscle are pointed out, predicting some metabolic concepts that would make ideal application grounds for the August Krogh principle.
...
PMID:Salmon spawning migration and muscle protein metabolism: the August Krogh principle at work. 1554 63
The pathogenic mechanisms underlying acute pancreatitis are not clear. Two key pathologic acinar cell responses of this disease are vacuole accumulation and trypsinogen activation. We show here that both result from defective autophagy, by comparing the autophagic responses in rodent models of acute pancreatitis to physiologic autophagy triggered by fasting. Pancreatitis-induced vacuoles in acinar cells were greater in number and much larger than those induced with fasting. Degradation of long-lived proteins, a measure of autophagic efficiency, was markedly inhibited in in vitro pancreatitis, while it was stimulated by acinar cell
starvation
. Further, processing of the lysosomal proteases cathepsin L (CatL) and CatB into their fully active, mature forms was reduced in pancreatitis, as were their activities in the lysosome-enriched subcellular fraction. These findings indicate that autophagy is retarded in pancreatitis due to deficient lysosomal degradation caused by impaired
cathepsin
processing. Trypsinogen activation occurred in pancreatitis but not with fasting and was prevented by inhibiting autophagy. A marker of trypsinogen activation partially localized to autophagic vacuoles, and pharmacologic inhibition of CatL increased the amount of active trypsin in acinar cells. The results suggest that retarded autophagy is associated with an imbalance between CatL, which degrades trypsinogen and trypsin, and CatB, which converts trypsinogen into trypsin, resulting in intra-acinar accumulation of active trypsin in pancreatitis. Thus, deficient lysosomal degradation may be a dominant mechanism for increased intra-acinar trypsin in pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Impaired autophagic flux mediates acinar cell vacuole formation and trypsinogen activation in rodent models of acute pancreatitis. 1980 11
Acid digestive proteinases were studied in the gastric fluids of two species of clawed lobster (Homarus americanus and Homarus gammarus). An active protein was identified in both species as aspartic proteinase by specific inhibition with pepstatin A. It was confirmed as cathepsin D by mass mapping, N-terminal, and full-length cDNA sequencing. Both lobster species transcribed two cathepsin D mRNAs:
cathepsin
D1 and
cathepsin
D2. Cathepsin D1 mRNA was detected only in the midgut gland, suggesting its function as a digestive enzyme. Cathepsin D2 mRNA was found in the midgut gland, gonads, and muscle. The deduced amino acid sequence of
cathepsin
D1 and
cathepsin
D2 possesses two catalytic DTG active-site motifs, the hallmark of aspartic proteinases. The putatively active
cathepsin
D1 has a molecular mass of 36.4 kDa and a calculated pI of 4.14 and possesses three potential glycosylation sites. The sequences showed highest similarities with cathepsin D from insects but also with another crustacean cathepsin D. Cathepsin D1 transcripts were quantified during a
starvation
period using real-time qPCR. In H. americanus, 15 days of
starvation
did not cause significant changes, but subsequent feeding caused a 2.5-fold increase. In H. gammarus,
starvation
caused a 40% reduction in
cathepsin
D1 mRNA, and no effect was observed with subsequent feeding.
...
PMID:Aspartic cathepsin D endopeptidase contributes to extracellular digestion in clawed lobsters Homarus americanus and Homarus gammarus. 2016 86
This study presents evidence that cathepsin B, a lysosomal protease, may be involved in the regulation of apoptosis during serum-
starvation
in teleost follicles. Zebrafish vitellogenic follicles were isolated, incubated under serum-free conditions and homogenized. The follicle extracts demonstrated caspase-3-like activity using the fluorogenic substrate DEVD-AMC, indicating the onset of apoptosis. Cathepsin B activity as measured using the fluorogenic cathepsin B substrate, Z-Arg-Arg-AMC was elevated within the first 6h of incubation in serum-free media and coincided with the onset of apoptosis. This increase in cathepsin B activity was sensitive to the cathepsin B inhibitor, CA-074-ME. Furthermore, adding CA-074-ME to the follicle incubation blocked caspase-3-like activation, suggesting that cathepsin B activity is a positive regulator of the apoptotic cascade during serum-
starvation
. Interestingly, the increase in
cathepsin
-B-like activity was not preceded by an increase in cathepsin B mRNA transcription, suggesting that regulation of this enzyme is at a level other than of the gene. These results suggest a regulatory role for cathepsin B during follicular apoptosis in zebrafish ovarian follicles.
...
PMID:A role for the lysosomal protease cathepsin B in zebrafish follicular apoptosis. 2017 Jul 40
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