Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
14,925 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Large quantities of the low-molecular-weight natriuretic material (F4), which appears after the salts when fractionated on G-25 Sephadex column, were obtained from the urine of normal man on a normal diet. The natriuretic substance in F4 was (1) untrafiltrable through a membrane with a claimed molecular-weight cut-off of 500 daltons (Amicon UMO5); (2) soluble in more polar organic solvents; (3) totally soluble in 95% acetone when specific activity was doubled; (4) relatively resistant to heating at 100 degrees C for 1 hour at a pH of 10, and to heating at 110 degrees C in 6 N hydrochloric acid for up to 90 hours under anaerobic conditions, and treatment with nitrous acid; it was less resistant to these procedures when extracted into 95% acetone; (5) not destroyed by trypsin, chymotrypsin, pronase, pepsin, leucine aminopeptidase, and subtilysin, nor was it destroyed by pepsin, leucine aminopeptidase, subtilysin, carboxypeptidase A and B, and aminopeptidase M, or by monoamine oxidase, aryl sulphatase, and beta-glucuronidase when extracted into 95% acetone. The natriuretic substance in the 95% acetone-soluble F4 was totally destroyed by incubation with prolidase. The least amount of 95% acetone-soluble F4 required to produce a significant natriuresis in the bioassay rat was that derived from a 7-min sample of urine. The maximal response was obtained from a 30-min sample of urine. Continuous i.v. infusion of the 95% acetone-soluble F4 for 40 min produced a sustained natriuresis, whereas a greater amount injected as a bolus produced an effect which was not sustained beyond 20 min.
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PMID:Further observations on a low-molecular-weight natriuretic substance in the urine of normal man. 4 87

[Asn A21]Insulin is formed as the main product during alkaline saponification of insulin hexamethyl ester. Purification was achieved by gel chromatography followed by ion-exchange chromatography on carboxymethyl cellulose at pH 4 or by preparative isoelectric focusing in a granulated gel over a narrow pH range. Two main products could be isolated. One of them showed the electrophoretic behaviour of insulin (A), whilst the other corresponded to insulin with a blocked carboxyl function (B). Incubation of this product B with carboxypeptidase A liberated only the C-terminal alanine of the B-chain, but not the asparagine of the C-terminus of the A-chain. Chymotryptic digestion of the isolated S-sulfonate A-chain derivative (C) followed by high-voltage electrophoresis confirmed that the carboxyl function of asparagine A21 was blocked. In order to determine the free carboxyl functions of the A-chain derivative C, it was coupled with glycine methyl ester yielding D. Amino acid analysis of the chymotryptic peptides of D showed that the carboxyl functions of glutamic acid A4 and A17 had been free prior to coupling. The amino acid analysis of the enzymatic hydrolysate (subtilisin, aminopeptidase M) of the A-chain derivative C showed an additional peak with an elution position identical to the model compound aminosuccinimide. The biological activity of the [Asm A21[insulin was found to be about 40% in the fat cell test and 13.2 units/mg measured by the mouse convulsion method.
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PMID:[A21-Asparaginimide] insulin. Saponification of insulin hexamethyl ester, I. 83 63

Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) is a cyclic peptide which behaves as an antagonist of the pituitary melanotropic hormone alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone in fishes. Cloning of the rat MCH cDNA precursor recently revealed the presence of an additional putative peptide named NEI. The present work examined the susceptibility of these novel peptides to hydrolysis by various purified exo- and endo-peptidases including endopeptidases 24.11 (NEP), 24.15, 24.16, angiotensin-converting enzyme, leucine aminopeptidase and carboxypeptidase A. NEP attacked MCH at three sites of the molecule with an apparent affinity of about 12 microM and a kcat. of 4 min-1. The first site of cleavage was at Cys-7-Met-8, i.e. within the peptide loop formed by the internal disulphide bridge. NEP could therefore be considered as an MCH-inactivating peptidase since the degradation products generated are probably devoid of biological activity. In contrast, NEI neither inhibited the degradation of the NEP chromogenic substrate glutaryl-Phe-Ala-Phe-p-aminobenzoate nor was susceptible to proteolysis by NEP. Unlike NEP, angiotensin-converting enzyme, endopeptidase 24.15 and endopeptidase 24.16 appeared totally unable to cleave MCH, whereas the peptide was readily degraded by aminopeptidase M and carboxypeptidase A.
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PMID:Hydrolysis of rat melanin-concentrating hormone by endopeptidase 24.11 (neutral endopeptidase). 152 Feb 71

A fully automated exopeptidase digestion procedure for the partial determination of N- and C-terminal peptide/protein sequence is described. The digestion of various substrates with aminopeptidase M, carboxypeptidase A, P or Y was accomplished with the Varian 9090 autosampler's robotic automix routines. The released free amino acids, in addition to free amino acids from acid hydrolysates, were derivatized with phenylisothiocyanate in an automated fashion and subsequently chromatographed on a C18 column for separation and quantitation. The advantages of automating this precolumn phenylisothiocyanate derivatization are the virtual elimination of sample manipulation errors and very reproducible data due to the precise control of the reaction conditions both of which, facilitate the interpretation of the exopeptidase reaction kinetic data.
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PMID:Automated phenylthiocarbamyl amino acid analysis of carboxypeptidase/aminopeptidase digests and acid hydrolysates. 205 Jul 78

Acid hydrolysis of trichloroacetic acid precipitate from rat tissue (liver, kidney and testis) homogenate released significant amounts of acid-insoluble putrescine, spermidine and spermine. Following incubation of liver homogenate with [1,4-14C]putrescine, 1.4% of total radioactivity and 1.0% of labelled diamine were recovered in the acid-insoluble fraction. Exhaustive digestion of acid-precipitable material with proteinases (Pronase, aminopeptidase M, carboxypeptidase A, B and Y) revealed the presence of di- and polyamines and of N1-(gamma-glutamyl)spermidine, N1-(gamma-glutamyl)spermine and N1,N12-bis(gamma-glutamyl)spermine. These derivatives were identified both by chromatographic analysis and by enzymatic digestion with purified gamma-glutamylamine cyclotransferase. The finding of di- and polyamine gamma-glutamyl derivatives in the proteinase-digested acid-insoluble fraction of homogenate may be considered as a proof of the in vivo transglutaminase-catalyzed binding of polyamines to proteins. This evidence suggests that di- and polyamines might have an important role in mammalian tissues through covalent binding to proteins by either one or both the primary amino groups.
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PMID:Presence of di- and polyamines covalently bound to protein in rat liver. 286 56

p6gestibility by proteolytic enzymes of peptides cross-linked by ionizing radiation was investigated. Small peptides of alanine and phenylalanine were chosen as model compounds and aminopeptidases and carboxypeptidases were used as proteolytic enzymes. Peptides exposed to gamma-radiation in aqueous solution were analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography before and after hydrolysis by aminopeptidase M, leucine aminopeptidase, carboxypeptidase A and carboxypeptidase Y. The results obtained clearly demonstrate the different actions of these enzymes on cross-linked aliphatic and aromatic peptides. Peptide bonds of cross-linked dipeptides of alanine were completely resistant to enzymatic hydrolysis whereas the enzymes, except for carboxypeptidase Y, cleaved all peptide bonds of cross-linked peptides of phenylalanine. The actions of the enzymes on these particular compounds are discussed in detail.
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PMID:Enzymatic digestibility of peptides cross-linked by ionizing radiation. 614 37

Interrelationships between the catalytic behavior of glucose-6-phosphatase and the structure of rat-liver microsomal membranes were investigated. 2. Rabbit anti-microsomal serum completely inhibited glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis in detergent-modified microsomes but showed no inhibitory effect on the enzyme activity of intact or mechanically disrupted vesicles. 2. Controlled proteolysis of intact microsomes using carboxypeptidase A and/or aminopeptidase M largely denatured enzymes situated on the outer surface of the microsomal vesicles such as monodehydroascorbate reductase and cytochrome c reductase. However, it did not affect the glucose-6-phosphatase activity at all, which remained in a latent state within the membrane. 3. Temperature studies on glucose-6-phosphatase have revealed that only the enzyme activity of intact microsomes exhibited a nonlinear Arrhenius plot, whereas detergent-modified microsomes showed a linear temperature response. 4. Treatment of microsomes with phospholipase C and toluene-2,4-diisocyanate resulted in an apparent loss of about 65% and 85% of the original glucose-6-phosphatase activity and was closely correlated with hydrolysis and chemical modification of phosphatidylethanolamine, respectively. These apparent inactivations could be reversed by addition of Triton X-114 alone without any phospholipid supplementation. These observations indicate that glucose-6-phosphatase is buried within the microsomal membrane, not exposed on either side. They also suggest that phospholipids are involved in the glucose-6-phosphate transport mechanism.
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PMID:Investigations on the possible involvement of phospholipids in the glucose-6-phosphate transport system of rat-liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. 624 79

Human foetal liver cells are an enriched source of mast cell progenitors that complete their differentiation and mature in response to stem cell factor, the ligand for Kit, in liquid culture. These mast cells are Kit+, metachromatic with toluidine blue+, tryptase+, histamine+ and show ultrastructure features of mast cells. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against different cell-surface antigens (33 mAb were used), the cell-surface phenotype of human stem cell factor-dependent foetal liver-derived mast cells was examined by flow cytometry. Consistent with previous reports on tissue-derived mast cells, those derived from foetal liver in vitro expressed HLA class I, CD9, CD29, CD33, CD43, CD45 and Kit. Unlike mast cells dispersed from tissue, a high expression of CD13 was found. Also, these in vitro-derived mast cells express little, if any, high-affinity IgE receptor. However, small amounts of mRNA for the alpha-chain in foetal liver-derived mast cells compared to KU812 cells (a human basophil-like cell line) could be detected by Northern blotting. Full expression of Fc epsilon RI may require additional growth factor(s).
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PMID:Phenotypic characterization of stem cell factor-dependent human foetal liver-derived mast cells. 768 44

Opioid peptides are converted by mushroom tyrosinase into melanin-like compounds retaining the peptide moiety (opio-melanins). Opio-melanins, owing to the presence of the linked aminoacids and in contrast with DOPA-melanin, are soluble compounds. The enkephalin-generated melanins are cleaved by carboxypeptidase A and pronase whereas aminopeptidase M cannot remove aminoacids from the pigment. Enkephalins, as well as other opioid peptides, (alpha-endorphin, kyotorphin, esorphins) if oxidized in presence of DOPA and tyrosinase are readily incorporated into DOPA-melanin. The resulting mixed-melanins (opio-melanin + DOPA-melanin) can be solubilized in hydrophilic solvents. Melanin from leu-enkephalin exhibits paramagnetism as evidenced by an EPR spectrum identical to that of DOPA-melanin, but unlike the latter pigment, it does not appear to oxidize NADH, probably for the presence of the peptide moiety that exerts a hampering effect on the oxidizing capacity.
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PMID:Some biochemical properties of melanins from opioid peptides. 790 28

We have established the peptidase content of a P2 fraction (enriched in synaptosomes) and plasma membranes prepared from canine intestinal mucosa. Fourteen exo- and endopeptidases were assayed with fluorimetric or chromogenic substrates and identified by means of specific peptidase inhibitors. Post-proline dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV, aminopeptidase M, and carboxypeptidase A were the most abundant exopeptidases, while aminopeptidases A and B, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase, pyroglutamyl peptide hydrolase I, and carboxypeptidase B displayed little, if any, activity. Endopeptidase 24.11 was the only endopeptidase that was detected in high amount. By contrast, proline endopeptidase exhibited a low activity, while angiotensin-converting enzyme, endopeptidase 24.15, endopeptidase 24.16, and cathepsin B and D-like activities were not detected. The catabolic rates of the two related neuropeptides, neurotensin (NT) and neuromedin N (NN), established that NN was inactivated 16 to 24 times faster than NT by plasma membrane and P2 fractions, respectively. Furthermore, the two peptides underwent qualitatively distinct mechanisms of degradation. A phosphoramidon-sensitive formation of NT(1-10) was detected as the major NT catabolite, indicating that NT was susceptible to an endoproteolytic cleavage elicited by endopeptidase 24.11. By contrast, NN was inactivated by the action of an exopeptidase at its N-terminus, leading to the formation of [des-Lys1]NN. The occurrence of this NN metabolite was prevented by bestatin and actinonin, but not by the aminopeptidase B inhibitor, arphamenine B, indicating that the release of the N-terminal residue of NN was likely due to aminopeptidase M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Differential catabolic fate of neuromedin N and neurotensin in the canine intestinal mucosa. 833 46


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