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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A carboxypeptidase which cleaves basic C-terminal amino acids from peptides was purified from concentrated human urine by a three-step procedure: chromatography on Affi-Gel Blue, arginine-Sepharose affinity chromatography, and gel filtration by HPLC on a TSK-G3000SW column. Urinary carboxypeptidase was purified 406-fold with an 11% yield and a specific activity of 49 mumol/min/mg with benzoylglycylargininic acid as substrate. It migrated as a single band of Mr 75,700 in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate. It cleaved benzoylglycylarginine, benzoylglycyllysine, benzoylglycylargininic acid, benzoylalanyllysine, and benzoylphenylalanyllysine at different relative rates than human plasma
carboxypeptidase N
, the Mr 48,000 active subunit of
carboxypeptidase N
or human pancreatic carboxypeptidase B. Urinary carboxypeptidase did not hydrolyze benzoylglycylphenylalanine, a substrate of
carboxypeptidase A
, but readily cleaved bradykinin with a Km of 46 microM and a Kcat of 32 min-1. Its activity was enhanced by CoCl2 and inhibited by cadmium acetate, o-phenanthroline, or DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 7.0 and its activity dropped at pH 6.0 by 60%. It was stable for at least 2 h at 37 degrees C (pH 8.0) but was unstable at room temperature below pH 4.5. The molecular weight, electrophoretic mobility, and activity of urinary carboxypeptidase was not affected by trypsin. The effect of pH and stability further distinguished the urinary carboxypeptidase from other human carboxypeptidases. Urinary carboxypeptidase was immunologically distinct from
carboxypeptidase N
when analyzed by the "Western blot" technique. Thus, human urine contains a basic carboxypeptidase, different from known carboxypeptidases, which may be released into the urine by the kidney. Here it could inactivate kinins and other peptides containing a basic C-terminal amino acid.
...
PMID:Purification of a human urinary carboxypeptidase (kininase) distinct from carboxypeptidases A, B, or N. 648 37
Cellulose acetate electrophoresis (pH 8,6 ionic strength 0,05) puts in evidence the soluble complexes "albumin-protamine" which are easily distinguished from albumin being more positively charged. The albumin-protamine complexes formed in serum or plasma, after addition of protamine, undergo in vitro a dissociation progressing with time to the complete restitution of albumin. This dissociation is slowed down by the inhibitors of the carboxypeptidase B (SCPB), an enzyme present in plasma and serum, but is not influenced by the inhibitor phenylmethyl-sulfonyl fluoride (PMSF). A protamine which had lost its four C-terminal arginines by the action of a DFP-treated carboxypeptidase B (CPB) still formed complexes with albumin (and, besides, remained able to neutralize heparin). On the contrary protamine degraded first by CPB, and afterwards by the DFP-treated
carboxypeptidase A
(
CPA
) lost these two properties. These results suggest that the dissociation of albumin-protamine complex in plasma and serum requires a
protaminase
action additional to the action of SCPB.
...
PMID:[Protaminase activity of plasma and serum in vitro. II.- Electrophoretic study of serum albumin-protamine soluble complexes]. 670 Oct 6
We compared angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) and
carboxypeptidase A
(
CPA
), two zinc metallopeptidases, for the hydrolysis of the usual ACE synthetic substrate benzoylglycyl-histidyl-leucine (HHL) investigating the possible interference by
CPA
in the determination of ACE activity in biological fluids. Both purified enzymes hydrolyse HHL in a radiochemical assay with the same optimal pH, a characteristic divalent metal requirement, a close similar behavior against inhibitors of other metallopeptidases, such as enkephalinase and
kininase I
, and the involvement of arginine and lysine residues in their active site. Conversely,
CPA
does not show the other catalytic properties of ACe, i.e. chloride dependence, low Km for HHL, inhibition by specific synthetic ACE inhibitors and antibody, also hydrolysis of the other ACE substrate furylacryloylphenylalanyl-glycyl-glycine (FAPGG). We advise the use of ACE inhibitors to validate ACE measurement with HHL or, alternatively, FAPGG, which is a more specific substrate for ACE, must be preferred, although the poor sensitivity of the spectrophotometric assay with this substrate limits its use to blood samples.
...
PMID:Carboxypeptidase A hydrolyses benzoylglycyl-histidyl-leucine but not furylacryloyl-phenylalanyl-glycyl-glycine, two usual substrates for angiotensin I-converting enzyme. 758 46
We have investigated the contractile effect of bradykinin (BK) in guinea pig lung in vitro. BK induces a dose-related contraction of lung parenchymal strips which is increased significantly in the presence of 10(-5) M captopril (an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor) or 10(-5) M DL-thiorphan (a neutral endopeptidase inhibitor). The
kininase I
inhibitor, DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidino-ethylthiopropionic acid (MGTPA), has no effect on the BK-induced contraction. BK is more potent in contracting parenchymal lung strips than other contractile agents (histamine, carbachol and substance P), however the BK-induced maximal contraction is lower than those obtained with histamine and carbachol. The B1 agonist, des-Arg9-BK, does not contract lung parenchymal strips. The new BK B2 receptor antagonists (Hoe 140, NPC 17731 and NPC 17761), which possess binding affinities in the nanomolar range, inhibit the BK-induced contractile response in a dose-dependent manner. The BK-induced contraction was unaffected by propranolol, atropine, tetrodotoxin, capsaicin pre-treatment, triprolidine, methysergide, Ro 19-3704 and N omega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME), excluding the involvement of nervous pathways, preformed
mast cell
mediators, platelet-activating factor and nitric oxide. However, indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, AA-861, a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, and furegrelate, a thromboxane A2 synthase inhibitor, decreased the contractile response to BK, suggesting that both cyclooxygenase and 5-lipoxygenase products are involved in this contraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Bradykinin-induced contraction of guinea pig lung in vitro. 799 Sep 78
The structure of the enzymatically active subunit of human plasma
carboxypeptidase N
was modeled based on the homology with bovine
carboxypeptidase A
. The active site of
carboxypeptidase N
is well conserved in comparison with
carboxypeptidase A
. From a comparison of energetically favorable binding sites for different atomic probe groups a hypothesis for the differences in substrate specificity between carboxypeptidases A and N was derived. Small synthetic peptide substrates were synthesized to confirm this hypothesis. This study shows that even with very low homology model building by homology can be employed to build models of sufficient quality to aid in drug design.
...
PMID:On the specificity of carboxypeptidase N, a comparative study. 826 77
Pain affects approximately 80% of patients with pancreatic cancer, with half requiring strong opioid analgesia, namely: morphine-based drugs on step three of the WHO analgesic ladder (as opposed to the weak opioids: codeine and tramadol). The presence of pain is associated with reduced survival. This article reviews the literature regarding pain: prevalence, mechanisms, pharmacological, and endoscopic treatments and identifies areas for research to develop individualized patient pain management pathways. The online literature review was conducted through: PubMed, Clinical Key, Uptodate, and NICE Evidence. There are two principal mechanisms for pain: pancreatic duct obstruction and pancreatic neuropathy which, respectively, activate mechanical and chemical nociceptors. In pancreatic neuropathy, several histological, molecular, and immunological changes occur which correlate with pain including: transient receptor potential cation channel activation and
mast cell
infiltration. Current pain management is empirical rather etiology-based and is informed by the WHO analgesic ladder for first-line therapies, and then endoscopic ultrasound-guided celiac plexus neurolysis (EUS-CPN) in patients with resistant pain. For EUS-
CPN
, there is only one clinical trial reporting a benefit, which has limited generalizability. Case series report pancreatic duct stenting gives effective analgesia, but there are no clinical trials. Progress in understanding the mechanisms for pain and when this occurs in the natural history, together with assessing new therapies both pharmacological and endoscopic, will enable individualized care and may improve patients' quality of life and survival.
...
PMID:Pain in Patients with Pancreatic Cancer: Prevalence, Mechanisms, Management and Future Developments. 2822 52
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