首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The interaction of leech-derived tryptase inhibitor (LDTI) with bovine liver capsule tryptase (BLCT) and bovine trypsin has been studied using both thermodynamic and kinetic approaches. Several differences were detected: (i) the equilibrium affinity of LDTI for BLCT (Ka = 8.9 x 10(5) M(-1)) is about 600-fold lower than that for bovine trypsin (Ka = 5.1 x 10(8) M(-1)); (ii) LDTI behaves as a purely non-competitive inhibitor of BLCT, while it is a purely competitive inhibitor of bovine trypsin. These functional data are compared with those previously reported for the LDTI binding to human tryptase, where tight inhibition occurs at two of the four active sites of the tetramer (Ka = 7.1 x 10(8) M(-1)). Amino acid sequence alignment of BLCT, human betaII-tryptase and bovine trypsin allows us to infer some possible structural basis for the observed functional differences.  相似文献   

2.
Human pulmonary mast cells (MCs) express tryptases alpha and beta I, and both granule serine proteases are exocytosed during inflammatory events. Recombinant forms of these tryptases were generated for the first time to evaluate their substrate specificities at the biochemical level and then to address their physiologic roles in pulmonary inflammation. Analysis of a tryptase-specific, phage display peptide library revealed that tryptase beta I prefers to cleave peptides with 1 or more Pro residues flanked by 2 positively charged residues. Although recombinant tryptase beta I was unable to activate cultured cells that express different types of protease-activated receptors, the numbers of neutrophils increased >100-fold when enzymatically active tryptase beta I was instilled into the lungs of mice. In contrast, the numbers of lymphocytes and eosinophils in the airspaces did not change significantly. More important, the tryptase beta I-treated mice exhibited normal airway responsiveness. Neutrophils did not extravasate into the lungs of tryptase alpha-treated mice. Thus, this is the first study to demonstrate that the two nearly identical human MC tryptases are functionally distinct in vivo. When MC-deficient W/W(v) mice were given enzymatically active tryptase beta I or its inactive zymogen before pulmonary infection with Klebsiella pneumoniae, tryptase beta I-treated W/W(v) mice had fewer viable bacteria in their lungs relative to zymogen-treated W/W(v) mice. Because neutrophils are required to combat bacterial infections, human tryptase beta I plays a critical role in the antibacterial host defenses of the lung by recruiting neutrophils in a manner that does not alter airway reactivity.  相似文献   

3.
A trypsin-like enzyme (tryptase) has been purified to homogeneity from the granules of a human cytolytic lymphocyte (CTL) line, Q31, by a three-step procedure. By including 0.3% (v/v) Triton X-100 and 1 mg/ml heparin in purification buffers, near total yields of tryptase activity were obtained during the purification. The enzyme, referred to as Q31 tryptase, migrated in polyacrylamide gels with sodium dodecyl sulfate at a position corresponding to 28 kDa with and to 45 kDa without 2-mercaptoethanol. It had an amino-terminal sequence identical to a previously reported human CTL tryptase at 20 of 22 positions identified. It hydrolyzed N alpha-carbobenzyloxy-L-lysyl-thiobenzyl ester (BLT), and this BLT esterase activity was most efficient at slightly alkaline pH and was relatively more active near neutral pH than mouse CTL tryptase. Human alpha 1-protease inhibitor, human antithrombin III, phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, and p-aminobenzamidine inhibited the Q31 tryptase. The inhibition by human antithrombin III was rapid enough to be of physiological significance. A survey of oligopeptide p-nitroanilides found that the best substrate for human Q31 tryptase is H-D-(epsilon-carbobenzyloxy)Lys-L-Pro-L-Arg-p-nitroanilide. The Q31 tryptase appears to have broad specificity for amino acid residues at P2 and P3, i.e. at 2 and 3 residues amino-terminal to the scissile bond.  相似文献   

4.
A tryptic protease with the characteristics of a mast cell tryptase was purified from dog mastocytoma cells propagated in nude mice. Partial amino acid sequence of the mastocytoma tryptase revealed unexpected differences in comparison with other mast cell and leukocyte granule protease sequences. Extraction from mastocytoma homogenates at high ionic strength, followed by gel filtration and benzamidine affinity chromatography yielded a product with several closely spaced bands (Mr 30,000-32,000) on gel electrophoresis and a single N-terminal sequence. Nondenaturing analytical gel filtration revealed an apparent Mr of 132,000, suggesting noncovalent association as a tetramer. Studies with peptide p-nitroanilides indicated pronounced substrate preferences, with P1 arginine preferred to lysine. Benzoyl-L-Lys-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide was the best of the substrates screened. Inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and tosyllysine chloromethyl ketone indicated that the enzyme is a serine protease. Like the tryptases of human mast cells, mastocytoma tryptic protease was inhibited by NaCl, resistant to inactivation by alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor and plasma, and stabilized by heparin. Comparison of the N-terminal 24 residues of mastocytoma tryptase revealed 80% identity with the more limited sequence reported for human lung tryptase, and surprisingly, closer homology to serine proteases of digestion and clotting than to other leukocyte granule proteases sequenced to date, including mast cell chymase. The N-terminal isoleucine is the homolog of trypsinogen Ile-16 which becomes the new N-terminus upon cleavage of the activation peptide. Thus, the tryptase N-terminus is related to the catalytic domain of activated serine proteases, and lacks the N-terminal regulatory domains found in most clotting and complement serine proteases. These findings provide further evidence that tryptases are unique serine proteases and that they may be less closely related in evolution and function than are other leukocyte granule proteases described to date.  相似文献   

5.
Tryptases alpha and beta/II were expressed in insect cells to try to ascertain why human mast cells express these two nearly identical granule proteases. In contrast to that proposed by others, residue -3 in the propeptide did not appear to be essential for the three-dimensional folding, post-translational modification, and/or activation of this family of serine proteases. Both recombinant tryptases were functional and bound the active-site inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate. However, they differed in their ability to cleave varied trypsin-susceptible chromogenic substrates. Structural modeling analyses revealed that tryptase alpha differs from tryptase beta/II in that it possesses an Asp, rather than a Gly, in one of the loops that form its substrate-binding cleft. A site-directed mutagenesis approach was therefore carried out to determine the importance of this residue. Because the D215G derivative of tryptase alpha exhibited potent enzymatic activity against fibrinogen and other tryptase beta/II-susceptible substrates, Asp215 dominantly restricts the substrate specificity of tryptase alpha. These data indicate for the first time that tryptases alpha and beta/II are functionally different human proteases. Moreover, the variation of just a single amino acid in the substrate-binding cleft of a tryptase can have profound consequences in the regulation of its enzymatic activity and/or substrate preference.  相似文献   

6.
Previously, this laboratory identified clusters of alpha-, beta-, and mast cell protease-7-like tryptase genes on human chromosome 16p13.3. The present work characterizes adjacent genes encoding novel serine proteases, termed gamma-tryptases, and generates a refined map of the multitryptase locus. Each gamma gene lies between an alpha1H Ca2+ channel gene (CACNA1H) and a betaII- or betaIII-tryptase gene and is approximately 30 kb from polymorphic minisatellite MS205. The tryptase locus also contains at least four tryptase-like pseudogenes, including mastin, a gene expressed in dogs but not in humans. Genomic DNA blotting results suggest that gammaI- and gammaII-tryptases are alleles at the same site. betaII- and betaIII-tryptases appear to be alleles at a neighboring site, and alphaII- and betaI-tryptases appear to be alleles at a third site. gamma-Tryptases are transcribed in lung, intestine, and in several other tissues and in a mast cell line (HMC-1) that also expresses gamma-tryptase protein. Immunohistochemical analysis suggests that gamma-tryptase is expressed by airway mast cells. gamma-Tryptase catalytic domains are approximately 48% identical with those of known mast cell tryptases and possess mouse homologues. We predict that gamma-tryptases are glycosylated oligomers with tryptic substrate specificity and a distinct mode of activation. A feature not found in described tryptases is a C-terminal hydrophobic domain, which may be a membrane anchor. Although the catalytic domains contain tryptase-like features, the hydrophobic segment and intron-exon organization are more closely related to another recently described protease, prostasin. In summary, this work describes gamma-tryptases, which are novel members of chromosome 16p tryptase/prostasin gene families. Their unique features suggest possibly novel functions.  相似文献   

7.
Tryptases are trypsin-like serine proteinases found in the granules of mast cells. Although they show 40% sequence identity with trypsin and contain only 20 or 21 additional residues, tryptases display several unusual features. Unlike trypsin, the tryptases only make limited cleavages in a few proteins and are not inhibited by natural trypsin inhibitors, they form tetramers, bind heparin, and their activity on synthetic substrates is progressively inhibited as the concentration of salt increases above 0.2 M. Unique sequence features of seven tryptases were identified by comparison to other serine proteinases. The three-dimensional structures of the tryptases were then predicted by molecular modeling based on the crystal structure of bovine trypsin. The models show two large insertions to lie on either side of the active-site cleft, suggesting an explanation for the limited activity of tryptases on protein substrates and the lack of inhibition by natural inhibitors. A group of conserved Trp residues and a unique proline-rich region make two surface hydrophobic patches that may account for the formation of tetramers and/or inhibition with increasing salt. Although they contain no consensus heparin-binding sequence, the tryptases have 10-13 more His residues than trypsin, and these are positioned on the surface of the model. In addition, clustering of Arg and Lys residues may also contribute to heparin binding. Putative Asn-linked glycosylation sites are found on the opposite side of the model from the active site. The model provides structural explanations for some to the unusual characteristics of the tryptases and a rational basis for future experiments, such as site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

8.
The primary structure of bovine liver UDP-glucose dehydrogenase (UDPGDH), a hexameric, NAD(+)-linked enzyme, has been determined at the protein level. The 52-kDa subunits are composed of 468 amino acid residues, with a free N-terminus and a Ser/Asn microhetergeneity at one position. The sequence shares 29.6% positional identity with GDP-mannose dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas, confirming a similarity earlier noted between active site peptides. This degree of similarity is comparable to the 31.1% identity vs. the UDPGDH from type A Streptococcus. Database searching also revealed similarities to a hypothetical sequence from Salmonella typhimurium and to "UDP-N-acetyl-mannosaminuronic acid dehydrogenase" from Escherichia coli. Pairwise identities between bovine UDPGDH and each of these sequences were all in the range of approximately 26-34%. Multiple alignment of all 5 sequences indicates common ancestry for these 4-electron-transferring enzymes. There are 27 strictly conserved residues, including a cysteine residue at position 275, earlier identified by chemical modification as the expected catalytic residue of the second half-reaction (conversion of UDP-aldehydoglucose to UDP-glucuronic acid), and 2 lysine residues, at positions 219 and 338, one of which may be the expected catalytic residue for the first half-reaction (conversion of UDP-glucose to UDP-aldehydoglucose). A GXGXXG pattern characteristic of the coenzyme-binding fold is found at positions 11-16, close to the N-terminus as with "short-chain" alcohol dehydrogenases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Enzyme histochemistry of rat mast cell tryptase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fixation and staining conditions for rat mast cell tryptase and its histochemical distribution in different rat tissues were investigated. Prostate, skin, lung, gut, stomach and salivary glands were fixed in either aldehyde or Carnoy fixatives and then frozen or embedded in paraffin wax. Preservation of tryptase enzymic activity against peptide substrates required aldehyde fixation and frozen sectioning. Of the peptide substrates examined, z-Ala-Ala-Lys-4-methoxy-2-naphthylamide and z-Gly-Pro-Arg-4-methoxy-2-naphthylamide proved the most effective for the demonstration of tryptase. Double staining by enzyme cytochemistry followed by immunological detection of tryptase showed that, in all tryptase-containing mast cells, the enzyme is at least in part active. Conventional dye-binding histochemistry was used to confirm the identity of mast cells. Aldehyde-fixed mucosal mast cells required a much shorter staining time with Toluidine Blue if tissue sections were washed directly in t-butyl alcohol. Double staining by enzyme cytochemistry and dye binding showed that tryptase is absent from mucosal and subepidermal mast cells, which are also smaller in size and appear to contain fewer granules than connective tissue mast cells. This study demonstrates that rat mast cell tryptase, unlike tryptases in other species, is a soluble enzyme. It is stored in an active form and is absent from some mast cell subpopulations in mucosa, skin and lung. © 1998 Chapman & Hall  相似文献   

10.
The tryptase locus on mouse chromosome 17A3.3 contains 13 genes that encode enzymatically active serine proteases with different tissue expression profiles and substrate specificities. Mouse mast cell protease (mMCP) 6, mMCP-7, mMCP-11/protease serine member S (Prss) 34, tryptase 6/Prss33, tryptase ε/Prss22, implantation serine protease (Isp) 1/Prss28, and Isp-2 are constitutively exocytosed enzymes. We now demonstrate that tryptase 5/Prss32, pancreasin/Prss27, and testis serine protease-1 are inserted into plasma membranes via glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors analogous to Prss21, and that these serine proteases can be released from the cell’s surface by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. These data suggest that the C-terminal residues play key roles in determining where tryptases compartmentalize in cells. GPI-anchored proteins are targeted to lipid rafts. Thus, our identification of a number of GPI-anchored tryptases whose genes reside at mouse chromosome 17A3.3 also implicates important biological functions for this new family of serine proteases on the surfaces of cells.  相似文献   

11.
12.
A Haas  K Brehm  J Kreft    W Goebel 《Journal of bacteriology》1991,173(16):5159-5167
A gene coding for catalase (hydrogen-peroxide:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase; EC 1.11.1.6) of the gram-positive bacterium Listeria seeligeri was cloned from a plasmid library of EcoRI-digested chromosomal DNA, with Escherichia coli DH5 alpha as a host. The recombinant catalase was expressed in E. coli to an enzymatic activity approximately 50 times that of the combined E. coli catalases. The nucleotide sequence was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence revealed 43.2% amino acid sequence identity between bovine liver catalase and L. seeligeri catalase. Most of the amino acid residues which are involved in catalytic activity, the formation of the active center accession channel, and heme binding in bovine liver catalase were also present in L. seeligeri catalase at the corresponding positions. The recombinant protein contained 488 amino acid residues and had a calculated molecular weight of 55,869. The predicted isoelectric point was 5.0. Enzymatic and genetic analyses showed that there is most probably a single catalase of this type in L. seeligeri. A perfect 21-bp inverted repeat, which was highly homologous to previously reported binding sequences of the Fur (ferric uptake regulon) protein of E. coli, was detected next to the putative promoter region of the L. seeligeri catalase gene.  相似文献   

13.
Angiotensin I-converting enzyme was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity (12 units/mg) from bovine lung tissue and from human serum using an affinity gel described previously (Harris et al., (1981) Anal. Biochem. 111, 227-234). The isoelectric point (4.5), molecular weight (145 000), S20,W (8.1), amino acid composition and carbohydrate content of the lung enzyme are all similar to the values obtained for the human serum enzyme. The NH2-terminus of the lung enzyme (Ala) is different from that of the serum enzyme (Tyr) but the COOH-terminal sequences are identical (-Leu-Ser-OH). Pure bovine lung enzyme was reduced and carboxyamidomethylated with iodo (14C1) acetamide to the extent predicted by the number of cysteine residues. Since no radioactivity was incorporated into denatured enzyme that was not reduced, all of the cysteine residues must be in the form of disulfide bonds. Reverse-phase HPLC was used to separate peptides obtained from the lung enzyme after degradation with either trypsin or cyanogen bromide. The number of peptides resolved (42 after trypsin, 31 after cyanogen bromide), were only 20% fewer than the number predicted from the amino acid analysis and therefore the possibility that the converting enzyme (a single polypeptide chain) might be a fused dimer is excluded.  相似文献   

14.
Human mast cell tryptases vary strikingly in secretion, catalytic competence, and inheritance. To explore the basis of variation, we compared genes from a range of primates, including humans, great apes (chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan), Old- and New-World monkeys (macaque and marmoset), and a prosimian (galago), tracking key changes. Our analysis reveals that extant soluble tryptase-like proteins, including alpha- and beta-like tryptases, mastins, and implantation serine proteases, likely evolved from membrane-anchored ancestors because their more deeply rooted relatives (gamma tryptases, pancreasins, prostasins) are type I transmembrane peptidases. Function-altering mutations appeared at widely separated times during primate speciation, with tryptases evolving by duplication, gene conversion, and point mutation. The alpha-tryptase Gly(216)Asp catalytic domain mutation, which diminishes activity, is present in macaque tryptases, and thus arose before great apes and Old World monkeys shared an ancestor, and before the alphabeta split. However, the Arg(-3)Gln processing mutation appeared recently, affecting only human alpha. By comparison, the transmembrane gamma-tryptase gene, which anchors the telomeric end of the multigene tryptase locus, changed little during primate evolution. Related transmembrane peptidase genes were found in reptiles, amphibians, and fish. We identified soluble tryptase-like genes in the full spectrum of mammals, including marsupial (opossum) and monotreme (platypus), but not in nonmammalian vertebrates. Overall, our analysis suggests that soluble tryptases evolved rapidly from membrane-anchored, two-chain peptidases in ancestral vertebrates into soluble, single-chain, self-compartmentalizing, inhibitor-resistant oligomers expressed primarily by mast cells, and that much of present numerical, behavioral, and genetic diversity of alpha- and beta-like tryptases was acquired during primate evolution.  相似文献   

15.
Tryptase from rat skin: purification and properties   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
V J Braganza  W H Simmons 《Biochemistry》1991,30(20):4997-5007
Tryptase was purified 13,000-fold to apparent homogeneity from rat skin. The two-step procedure involved ammonium sulfate fractionation of the initial extract followed by combined sequential affinity chromatography on agarose-glycyl-glycyl-p-aminobenzamidine and concanavalin A-agarose. The purified enzyme had a specific activity toward N-benzoylarginine ethyl ester (BzArgOEt) of 170 mumol/min mg-1 and was obtained in a yield of 28% as determined by the specific substrate, H-D-Ile-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide. Rat skin tryptase was thermal labile, losing 50% of its activity when preincubated for 30 min at 30 degrees C. The presence of NaCl (1 M) improved thermal stability and was necessary for long-term storage. Heparin did not stabilize the enzyme against thermal denaturation, and heparin-agarose failed to bind the enzyme. Rat skin tryptase was inhibited by diisopropylphosphofluoridate, antipain, leupeptin, and aprotinin but not by alpha 1-antitrypsin, ovomucoid, or soybean or lima bean trypsin inhibitors. Substrate specificity studies using a series of tri- and tetrapeptidyl-p-nitroanilide and peptidyl-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin substrates demonstrated the existence of an extended substrate binding site. Rat skin tryptase hydrolyzed [Arg8]vasopressin, neurotensin, and the oxidized B-chain of insulin at the -Arg8-Gly9-NH2, -Arg8-Arg9-, and -Arg22-Gly23-bonds, respectively. No general proteinase activity was observed toward casein, hemoglobin, or azocoll. Rat skin tryptase had a Mr of 145,000 by gel filtration. The subunit Mr was either 34,000 or 30,000 depending on the electrophoretic technique used. Treatment of the enzyme with peptide N-glycosidase F (N-glycanase) decreased the subunit Mr by 4000. The enzyme exhibited multiple isoelectric forms (pI's of 4.5-4.9). Rat skin tryptase was found to be related statistically to other tryptases on the basis of amino acid composition. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was Ile1-Val2-Gly3-Gly4-Gln5-Glu6-Ala7-+ ++Ser8-Gly9-Asn10-Lys11-Trp12-Pro13- Trp14- Gln15-Val16-Ser17-Leu18-Arg19-Val20- --21-Asp-22Thr23-Tyr24-Typ25-, with a putative glycosylation site at residue 21. This sequence was 72-80% homologous with the N-terminus of other tryptases but only 40% homologous with that of bovine trypsin.  相似文献   

16.
Activated mast cells release a number of potent inflammatory mediators including histamine, proteoglycans, cytokines, and serine proteases. The proteases constitute the majority of the mast cell granule proteins, and they belong to either the chymase or the tryptase family. In mammals, these enzymes are encoded by two different loci, the mast cell chymase and the multigene tryptase loci. In mice and humans, a relatively large number of tryptic enzymes are encoded from the latter locus. These enzymes can be grouped into two subfamilies, the group 1 tryptases, with primarily membrane-anchored enzymes, and the group 2 tryptases, consisting of the soluble mast cell tryptases. In order to study the appearance of these enzymes during vertebrate evolution, we have analyzed the dog, cattle, opossum, and platypus genomes and sought orthologues in the genomes of several bird, frog, and fish species as well. Our results show that the overall structure and the number of genes within this locus have been well conserved from marsupial to placental mammals. In addition, two relatively distantly related group 2 tryptase genes and several direct homologues of some of the group 1 genes are present in the genome of the platypus, a monotreme. However, no direct homologues of the individual genes of either group 1 or 2 enzymes were identified in bird, amphibian, or fish genomes. Our results indicate that the individual genes within the multigene tryptase locus, in their present form, are essentially mammal-specific.  相似文献   

17.
Mast cell tryptase is a tetrameric serine protease that is stored in complex with negatively charged heparin proteoglycans in the secretory granule. Tryptase has potent proinflammatory properties and has been implicated in diverse pathological conditions such as asthma and fibrosis. Previous studies have shown that tryptase binds tightly to heparin, and that heparin is required in the assembly of the tryptase tetramer as well as for stabilization of the active tetramer. Because the interaction of tryptase with heparin is optimal at acidic pH, we investigated in this study whether His residues are of importance for the heparin binding, tetramerization, and activation of the tryptase mouse mast cell protease 6. Molecular modeling of mouse mast cell protease 6 identified four His residues, H35, H106, H108, and H238, that are conserved among pH-dependent tryptases and are exposed on the molecular surface, and these four His residues were mutated to Ala. In addition, combinations of different mutations were prepared. Generally, the single His-Ala mutations did not cause any major defects in heparin binding, activation, or tetramerization, although some effect of the H106A mutation was observed. However, when several mutations were combined, large defects in all of these parameters were observed. Of the mutants, the triple mutant H106A/H108A/H238A was the most affected with an almost complete inability to bind to heparin and to form active tryptase tetramers. Taken together, this study shows that surface-exposed histidines mediate the interaction of mast cell tryptase with heparin and are of critical importance in the formation of active tryptase tetramers.  相似文献   

18.
Mouse mast cell protease (mMCP) 6 and mMCP-7 are homologous tryptases stored in granules as macromolecular complexes with heparin and/or chondroitin sulfate E containing serglycin proteoglycans. When pro-mMCP-7 and pseudozymogen forms of this tryptase and mMCP-6 were separately expressed in insect cells, all three recombinant proteins were secreted into the conditioned medium as properly folded, enzymatically inactive 33-kDa monomers. However, when their propeptides were removed, mMCP-6 and mMCP-7 became enzymatically active and spontaneously assumed an approximately 150-kDa tetramer structure. Heparin was not required for this structural change. When incubated at 37 degrees C, recombinant mMCP-7 progressively lost its enzymatic activity in a time-dependent manner. Its N-linked glycans helped regulate the thermal stability of mMCP-7. However, the ability of this tryptase to form the enzymatically active tetramer was more dependent on a highly conserved Trp-rich domain on its surface. Although recombinant mMCP-6 and mMCP-7 preferred to form homotypic tetramers, these tryptases readily formed heterotypic tetramers in vitro. This latter finding indicates that the tetramer structural unit is a novel way the mast cell uses to assemble varied combinations of tryptases.  相似文献   

19.
Mast cell populations can be distinguished by differences in the content and substrate specificity of their two major cytoplasmic granule proteases, the chymases and the tryptases. To explore the origins of differences in the types of proteases present in mast cells, we used a double cytochemical staining technique to reveal both chymase and tryptase in cells from four lines of dog mast cell tumors containing both enzymes. We expected that if chymase and tryptase were expressed together during cell development the relative staining intensity of chymase compared to tryptase would be constant among different cells of each tumor. Instead, we found substantial variation in the relative intensity of chymase and tryptase staining among cells of a given mastocytoma line, each of which contained cells presumed to be monoclonal in origin but heterogeneous with respect to cell development. The overall staining intensity for chymase or tryptase correlated with the amount of protease activity in extracts of tumor homogenates. Staining specificity was established by use of selective inhibitors and competitive substrates and was tested on various types of dog cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage. The results suggest that active chymase and tryptase may be expressed differently during mast cell differentiation and support the possibility of a close developmental relationship between mast cells differing in protease phenotype. Moreover, the success of the staining procedures applied to mastocytoma cells suggests that they may be of general utility in phenotyping of mast cells according to the protease activities present in their granules.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号