Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01034 (cystatin C)
3,397 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two cysteine proteinase inhibitors of the cystatin C type have been purified from urine of sodium chromate-treated rats. Both strongly inhibit papain as well as rat liver cathepsin L (Ki less than 10(-11) M) whereas rat liver cathepsins B and H are inhibited to a lesser extent. They differ by their apparent molecular mass of 17 kDa and 22 kDa and by their isoelectric point greater than or equal to 9.5 and 7.7 respectively. These two molecules share complete immunochemical identity and are precipitated by antibodies directed against human cystatin C but not by anti rat thiostatin and anti rat H-kininogen antibodies. They are also found in large amounts in seminal vesicles where they represent most of the cysteine proteinase inhibitory capacity.
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PMID:Purification of the cystatin C-like inhibitors from urine of nephropathic rats. 314 92

In the present work we demonstrate the presence of cysteine proteinase inhibitors of all three classes: kininogens, stefin A, and cystatin C, in inflamed human gingiva. Using cystatin C, in inflamed human gingiva. Using immunochemical methods we found that stefin A is the major inhibitor of cysteine proteinases, followed by kininogen and cystatin C. The values for stefin A and cystatin C ranged from 7.0--400 micrograms/g and 1.5--6.1 micrograms/g tissue, respectively, as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in inflamed gingival homogenates from patients with different degrees of periodontal disease.
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PMID:Cysteine proteinase inhibitors in inflamed human gingiva. 314 95

Human saliva contains at least three molecular species of cystatin S-type cysteine proteinase inhibitor (cystatin S, cystatin SN and cystatin SA), which have similar but distinct amino-acid sequences. The nucleotide sequences of the CST 1 gene for cystatin SN and the CST 2 gene for cystatin SA are highly homologous to each other and to the corresponding regions of the cDNA for cystatin C and the EcoRI-PstI fragment from the cystatin C gene. Three cystatin-like domains in the kininogen gene and the salivary cystatin genes share the same gene organizations. These data demonstrate that family II cystatin genes are evolutionarily related to family III cystatin genes.
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PMID:Cystatin superfamily. Evidence that family II cystatin genes are evolutionarily related to family III cystatin genes. 320 64

Synovial fluid of patients with different inflammatory and metabolic joint diseases contains low-molecular CPIs (stefins and cystatins) and high-molecular CPIs (kininogens). An additional inhibitory fragment with a molecular mass of about 20 kDa, which is a part of the kininogen molecule, has been detected. Cathepsin B and cystatin C were determined by ELISA test in 47 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, seronegative spondylarthritis, osteoarthritis, undifferentiated arthritis and gout. A significantly higher amount of cathepsin B was found in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. The elevation of cathepsin B was accompanied by an increased amount of cystatin C.
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PMID:Human cathepsin B and cysteine proteinase inhibitors (CPIs) in inflammatory and metabolic joint diseases. 326 7

Staphylococcus aureus is known to produce three very active extracellular proteinases. One of these enzymes, a cysteine proteinase, after purification to homogeneity was found to degrade insoluble bovine lung elastin at a rate comparable to human neutrophil elastase. This enzyme had no detectable activity against a range of synthetic substrates normally utilized by elastase, chymotrypsin, or trypsin-like proteinases. However, it did hydrolyze the synthetic substrate carbobenzoxy-phenylalanyl-leucyl-glutamyl-p-nitroanilide (Km = 0.5 mM, kcat = 0.16 s-1). The proteolytic activity of the cysteine proteinase was rapidly and efficiently inhibited by alpha 2-macroglobulin and also by the cysteine-specific inhibitor rat T-kininogen (Ki = 5.2 X 10(-7) M). Human kininogens, however, did not inhibit. Human plasma apparently contains other inhibitors of this enzyme, since plasma depleted of alpha 2-macroglobulin retained significant inhibitory capacity. The elastolytic activity of this S. aureus proteinase and its lack of control by human kininogens or cystatin C may explain some of the connective tissue destruction seen in bacterial infections due to this and related organisms such as may occur in septicemia, septic arthritis, and otitis.
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PMID:Degradation of elastin by a cysteine proteinase from Staphylococcus aureus. 342 37

Six cysteine proteinase inhibitors were isolated from human urine by affinity chromatography on insolubilized carboxymethylpapain followed by ion-exchange chromatography and immunosorption. Physicochemical and immunochemical measurements identified one as cystatin A, one as cystatin B, one as cystatin C, one as cystatin S, and one as low molecular weight kininogen. The sixth inhibitor displayed immunochemical cross-reactivity with salivary cystatin S but had a different pI (6.85 versus 4.68) and a different (blocked) N-terminal amino acid. This inhibitor was tentatively designated cystatin SU. The isolated inhibitors accounted for nearly all of the cysteine proteinase inhibitory activity of the urinary pool used as starting material. The enzyme inhibitory properties of the inhibitors were investigated by measuring inhibition and rate constants for their interactions with papain and human cathepsin B. Antisera raised against the inhibitors were used in immunochemical determinations of their concentrations in several biological fluids. The combined enzyme kinetic and concentration data showed that several of the inhibitors have the capacity to play physiologically important roles as cysteine proteinase inhibitors in many biological fluids. Cystatin C had the highest molar concentration of the inhibitors in seminal plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and milk; cystatin S in saliva and tears; and kininogen in blood plasma, synovial fluid, and amniotic fluid.
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PMID:Isolation of six cysteine proteinase inhibitors from human urine. Their physicochemical and enzyme kinetic properties and concentrations in biological fluids. 348 17

The cathepsins B, H and L of human origin were isolated in pure form in sufficient quantities for structural characterization. The complete amino acid sequence of human liver cathepsin B was determined. Partial amino acid sequences of the human kidney cathepsin H and L show the highly conserved region around the active site cysteine. The cysteine proteinase inhibitors stefin A, human stefin B and human cystatin C were isolated, characterized and sequenced. Their amino acid sequences are compared with sequences of other protein inhibitors of the stefin and cystatin family, showing a high degree of homology throughout both families. The stefin and cystatin family, together with newly discovered kininogen family belong to the same superfamily of cystatins. The constructed dendrogram shows that the most closely related inhibitors so far sequenced are human stefin B and rat liver TPI.
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PMID:Human cysteine proteinases and their protein inhibitors stefins, cystatins and kininogens. 349 61

A study has been made of the mechanism of action of intradiscal injections of preparations of chymopapain in the treatment of sciatica. Such preparations were found to contain at least four distinct proteins, but enzymatically active chymopapain was the component mainly responsible for releasing glycosaminoglycan from cartilaginous tissue. Previous suggestions that an electrostatic interaction between chymopapain and glycosaminoglycan is important to the action of injected enzyme were not supported by the finding that both positively and negatively charged forms of chymopapain efficiently released glycosaminoglycan from cartilaginous tissue. In contrast, cysteine alone did not cause release of glycosaminoglycan. Chymopapain was found to be inhibited efficiently by the protein inhibitors, cystatin C and low molecular weight kininogen in vitro, and the possible relevance of this finding to the efficacy and safety of chemonucleolysis is discussed.
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PMID:The biochemistry of the action of chymopapain in relief of sciatica. 378 40

Many of the proteins of vertebrate blood plasma share common ancestry. As more sequences are reported, the network of relationships continues to expand in unexpected directions. Computer analysis now reveals that a minor plasma protein of unknown function, gamma-trace protein, is related to the kininogen family. Some other possible relationships have been uncovered also, including a resemblance between the histidine-rich hinge regions of high molecular weight kininogen and hemopexin and between Factor VIII and Von Willebrand Factor.
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PMID:More homologies among the vertebrate plasma proteins. 393 99

The kinetics of pH-induced inactivation of human cathepsins B and L was studied by conventional and stopped-flow methods. The inactivation of both enzymes was found to be an irreversible, first-order process. The inactivation rate constants increased exponentially with pH for both enzymes. From log kinac vs pH plots, 3.0 and 1.7 protons were calculated to be desorbed for pH-induced inactivation of cathepsins L and B. Cathepsin B was thus substantially more stable than cathepsin L (approximately 15-fold at pH 7.0 and 37 degrees C). Cathepsin B was efficiently inhibited by cystatin C at pH 7.4, whereas the inhibition by stefin B and high molecular weight kininogen was only moderate. In contrast, cathepsin L was efficiently inhibited by both chicken cystatin and stefin B at this pH kass approximately 3.3 x 10(7) m-1 s-1).
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PMID:Regulation of the activity of lysosomal cysteine proteinases by pH-induced inactivation and/or endogenous protein inhibitors, cystatins. 762 31


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