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Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Proteases capable of activating procollagenase from gingiva and from fibroblast and macrophage monolayer cultures were harvested from homogenates of canine tumor mast cells. The
mast cell
proteases lysed casein and Azocoll but not native collagen. In low salt concentrations the enzymes existed at high molecular weight complexes, which were dissociated by increasing the salt concentration above 1.0 M (NaCl, KCl).
Gel
filtration in 1.4 M KCl separated the protease activity into three peaks, all of which activated procollagenase. Two of the enzymes showed substrate specificities (hydrolysis of p-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester and benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester) and reactive center reactivities similar to pancreatic trypsin and chymotrypsin. Based on gel filtration, apparent molecular weights of 160 000 (p-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester esterase), 90 000 (main procollagenase activator) and 36 000 benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester esterase) were determined. Activation of procollagenase resulted in a 18-20 000 decrease of the molecular weight. The activation was directly related to the amount of activator added within certain limits. Further addition of activator resulted in proteolytic inactivation of collagenase.
...
PMID:Activation of fibroblast procollagenase by mast cell proteases. 5 9
Polypeptide VII of cytochrome c oxidase was isolated and purified by gel filtration on Bio-
Gel
P-10 in 10% acetic acid. Automatic Edman degradation of this peptide chain was not successful, because it is blocked at the N-terminus. The amino acid analysis shows a relatively high content of hydrophilic residues (54%). On the basis of this analysis and the apparent molecular weight by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and gel filtration, a chain length of about 80 residues was calculated. Among the tryptic peptides one blocked heptapeptide was found. Cleavage of this peptide with thermolysin gave two peptide fragments, one of which was not retained on a cation exchange resin. Mass spectrometric sequence determination of this peptide revealed the structure Ac-Ala-Glu-Asp for the N-terminus of polypeptide VII. Treatment with
carboxypeptidase A
at two different pH values showed that the C-terminal amino acid is isoleucine and the penultimate amino acid is lysine.
...
PMID:Studies on cytochrome c oxidase, VII. Isolation and chemical characterization of polypeptide VII. 22 66
The use of honeybee venoms and their components may assist in the elucidation of the pathophysiology of reactions to honeybee stings. This initial study compared venoms from various sources by chemical and biological assays, and significant variations were observed. Ten different bee venoms were compared by nitrogen analysis, mouse toxicity, hyaluronidase content, and antigenicity. Based on mouse toxicity, hyaluronidase content, and gel diffusion analysis, two groups of bee venoms could be differentiated. Venoms in one group, Group A, were more toxic, contained hyaluronidase, and showed an additional precipitin band. All venoms contained mellitin as a major fraction, which formed nonimmune precipitin bands during gel diffusion analysis.
Gel
filtration chromatography and dialysis separated the venoms into components that were then identified by enzyme assays, rat
mast cell
degranulation, hemolytic activity, and gel diffusion analysis. The venoms within Group A showed similar components, some of which, most noticeably hyaluronidase, were not present in Group B. Dialysis showed that a large portion of the venom could pass through a cellophane membrane including a portion of the phospholipase A. Heterogeneous molecular weights were found for phospholipase A by both gel filtration and dialysis, and may reflect variation in carbohydrate content. It appears that bee venom variability for whatever reason, a heterogeneous MW antigen, and a non-immune precipitable component require careful consideration in any study involving this venomm. These studies have yielded relatively pure, identified bee venom components which can be employed in further studies investigating reactions to honeybee stings.
...
PMID:Comparison of honeybee venoms and their components from various sources. 80
Five amino acid residues, i. e. serine, lysine, histidine and two tyrosine residues, are split from the C-end of the alpha-subunit of bovine luteinizing hormone by
carboxypeptidase A
.
Gel
-filtration through Sephadex G-100 demonstrated that the carboxypeptidase-treated alpha-subunit is not recombined with the native beta-subunit and does not form complex molecules of the hormone.
...
PMID:[Important role of C-terminal amino acid sequence of the luteinizing hormone alpha-subunit in its recombination with the beta-subunit]. 102 94
Inhibitors of the peptidase and esterase activities of carboxypeptidases A and B have been isolated from extracts of Ascaris lumbricoides var suis. These proteins were obtained by treatment of the aqueous extracts at low pH, precipitation with ammonium sulfate, molecular sieving on Bio-
Gel
P-4, and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The inhibitors were resolved into three homogeneous peaks on CM-cellulose. These components, CM-A, CM-B, and CM-C, have constant specific activity and were recovered in a 41% yield. They moved as single bands when subjected to electrophoresis at high or low pH on polyacrylamide gels and they have similar amino acid compositions. Methionine, tyrosine, and cysteine are absent from each of the inhibitors. The 65 residues of CM-B suggest a minimum molecular weight of 7530, in close agreement to the value of 7600 +/- 200 determined on a Bio-
Gel
P-100 column. Each of the proteins has the same NH2-terminal residues, NH2-Asx-Glx-Val-Glx- and the same COOH-terminal residue, leucine. A plot of per cent acrylamide versus log relative mobility suggests that the three proteins are charge isomers. CM-B appears to be stable to high NaCl concentrations, extremes of pH, high temperatures, and digestion by intestinal proteases. Carboxypeptidase C, carboxypeptidase N, and yeast protease C are not inhibited by CM-B. However, the exopeptidase and esterase activities of human
carboxypeptidase A
are inhibited. The inhibitors appear to bind to bovine
carboxypeptidase A
with an atypical stoichiometry. Two moles of CM-B inhibitor bind to 1 mol of enzyme. The evidence is: (a) a demonstrated purity of bovine
carboxypeptidase A
, (b) minimal and maximal inhibitor molecular weights by different methods, of 7600 and 8300, and (c) a maximum specific activity of apparently homogeneous inhibitors which is 50% of that predicted for unit stoichiometry.
...
PMID:Characterization of proteins from Ascaris lumbricoides which bind specifically to carboxypeptidase. 126 22
The role of the C-terminal Phe882-Ala883 residues of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase in specific transcription has been investigated by means of site-directed mutagenesis. A mutant enzyme that lacks the C-terminal Phe882-Ala883 residues, denoted the "foot" mutant, has been cloned and overproduced, and the effects of the deletion on promoter recognition, initiation, and elongation have been determined.
Gel
retardation assays and DNase I footprinting show that the foot mutant specifically recognizes and binds to T7 promoters, although this binding appears to be approximately 30-fold weaker than that of the wild-type enzyme. Transcription assays using oligonucleotide templates that contain the consensus T7 promoter show a dramatic decrease in transcriptional activity for the foot mutant. With templates whose coding region begins CCC..., the mutant synthesizes poly(G) products even in the presence of all four nucleotides. The synthesis of poly(G) products from such templates has previously been observed for the wild-type enzyme when GTP is the sole nucleotide present in the reaction and is thought to occur by a novel mechanism involving slippage of the RNA chain 3' to 5' relative to the template [Martin, C.T., Muller, D.K., & Coleman, J.E. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 3966-3974]. These data suggest that the loss in transcriptional activity by the foot mutant results from a severe decrease in processivity as well as catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. Removal of the C-terminal Phe and Ala residues from the wild-type enzyme with
carboxypeptidase A
generates the phenotype of the mutant precisely, proving that all of the properties of the foot mutant derive from the loss of the Phe-Ala-COOH moiety.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Processivity of T7 RNA polymerase requires the C-terminal Phe882-Ala883-COO- or "foot". 205 36
We quantitated serum neutrophil chemotactic activity (NCA), which is associated with
mast cell
or basophil activation, to determine if
mast cell
or basophil mediators are released during bronchoprovocation-inhalation challenge with subirritant levels of toluene diisocyanate (TDI). Four subjects with suspected TDI-induced asthma and four mite-sensitive subjects with asthma who served as a comparison group were studied. NCA was measured in a multiwell, microchemotaxis chamber. Blood samples were collected, and FEV1 measurements were performed before challenge and at regular intervals during the subsequent 24 hours. Three of four workers clinically sensitive to TDI reacted to a subirritant TDI exposure. There was no increase in NCA during placebo challenges. NCA increased in the three TDI-sensitive workers during early and late asthmatic reactions in quantities proportional to the FEV1 decline. No increase in NCA was found during TDI exposures in the TDI-negative worker.
Gel
filtration analysis demonstrated the main NCA fraction eluted with macromolecules of an estimated molecular weight greater than 440,000 daltons. This characteristic is compatible with neutrophil chemotactic factor of basophil or
mast cell
origin. The kinetics of NCA release were similar in mite- and TDI-induced asthmatic reactions. A high correlation (r = 0.97; p = 0.0006) was obtained between the percent decrease in FEV1 during early asthmatic reactions and percent increase in NCA. These observations support the hypothesis that activation of mast cells or basophils is associated with TDI-induced early and late asthmatic reaction.
...
PMID:Neutrophil chemotactic activity in toluene diisocyanate (TDI)-induced asthma. 215 57
Active substances extracted from the Remak nerve of the chicken were subjected to chromatographic and electrophoretic separation followed by bioassay of contracting activities on the longitudinal muscle of the guinea-pig ileum (LMGPI) and on the isolated whole chick rectum (WCR).
Gel
filtration profiles on a Sephadex G-50 column showed two peaks of LMGPI-contracting activity and of WCR-contracting activity. No difference was seen in the enzymatic destruction between the LMGPI-contracting activity and substance P. Their similarities were also indicated by the parallelism of their elution curves in the gel chromatography on Sephadex G-25, their equal stability in acid solutions, and comparable antagonism and inhibition of the contractile effects on LMGPI by substance P antagonists and after desensitization of substance P receptors. Ion exchange chromatography revealed the existence of two main substances responsible for the LMGPI-contracting activity. One of them eluted at the same position as that for substance P, but differed in immunoreactivity and electrophoretic mobility from substance P. The WCR-contracting activity differed from the LMGPI-contracting activity in that it was pepsin-resistant and
carboxypeptidase A
-susceptible, and it eluted at a different position during ion exchange chromatography. It seems likely that the LMGPI-contracting activity in the extracts is attributed to a substance P-family of peptides, but the WCR-contracting activity is due to another substance of a peptide nature.
...
PMID:Smooth muscle excitatory substances from Remak nerve of the chicken and a comparison of their pharmacological and chemical properties with substance P. 242 Oct 31
Previous studies have demonstrated that grain dust can stimulate lymphocyte proliferation and the production of interleukin-1 by macrophages. This study was undertaken to investigate whether grain dust could stimulate the production of histamine-releasing factor (HRF) by guinea pig spleen cells. We also studied the direct action of grain dust on guinea pig lung mast cells and basophils. Plastic nonadherent cells from immunized animals were cultured for 24 hours in the presence of grain dust or lipopolysaccharide, and the cell-free supernatants were assayed for HRF activity in the
mast cell
and basophil histamine release test. Lung mast cells were isolated by enzymatic digestion and discontinuous Percoll gradient centrifugation. It has been demonstrated that grain dust stimulated the production of HRF by spleen cells from the immunized animals but not from the control animals. Stimulation of spleen cells with lipopolysaccharide did not enhance the HRF production.
Gel
chromatography of grain dust-stimulated supernatant revealed that HRF has a molecular weight in the range of 50 to 70 kd and 5 to 8 kd. We also found that grain dust directly released significant amount of histamine from both mast cells and basophils. The results of this study suggest that grain dust contains some potent active substances that can activate lymphocytes, mast cells, and basophils.
...
PMID:Activation of guinea pig lymphocytes and mast cells by grain-dust extract. 245 Jan 15
Human peripheral blood monocytes generated activities during 24-h culture that were capable of triggering histamine release from 17 of 18 human basophil donors. Monocytes and their in vitro transformed macrophages continued to elaborate these basophil histamine-releasing activities for at least 3 wk in culture. In the 18 basophil donors tested, maximum histamine release induced by monocyte supernatants was 33.8 +/- 5.9% (mean +/- SEM) of total basophil histamine content; optimum anti-IgE-induced release was 38.8 +/- 6.2%. Basophil histamine release in response to monocyte activities was optimal at 37 degrees C and at calcium concentrations of 2 to 5 mM. Release was greater than 90% complete 1 min after challenge and was inhibited by anti-allergic drugs. The mechanism of release appeared to be independent of IgE binding.
Gel
filtration of supernatants derived from both day 1 (monocyte stage) and day 14 (macrophage stage) cultures demonstrated activity peaks with approximate m.w. of 12,000 and 30,000. In contrast to the marked responsiveness of basophils, only 2 of 10 human lung
mast cell
preparations responded; release in those preparations was low: 3% and 13% histamine release, respectively. Thus, monocytes produce potent histamine-releasing activities with differential actions on basophils and mast cells.
...
PMID:Human monocytes generate basophil histamine-releasing activities. 245 Sep 19
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