Amylase alpha-2A autoantibodies: novel marker of autoimmune pancreatitis and fulminant type 1 diabetes. (1/10)

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X-ray crystallographic analyses of pig pancreatic alpha-amylase with limit dextrin, oligosaccharide, and alpha-cyclodextrin. (2/10)

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Protease activation during in vivo pancreatitis is dependent on calcineurin activation. (3/10)

The premature activation of digestive proenzymes, specifically proteases, within the pancreatic acinar cell is an early and critical event during acute pancreatitis. Our previous studies demonstrate that this activation requires a distinct pathological rise in cytosolic Ca(2+). Furthermore, we have shown that a target of aberrant Ca(2+) in acinar cells is the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin (PP2B). In this study, we hypothesized that PP2B mediates in vivo protease activation and pancreatitis severity. To test this, pancreatitis was induced in mice over 8 h by administering hourly intraperitoneal injections of the cholecystokinin analog caerulein (50 microg/kg). Treatment with the PP2B inhibitor FK506 at 1 and 8 h after pancreatitis induction reduced trypsin activities by greater than 50% (P < 0.005). Serum amylase and IL-6 was reduced by 86 and 84% relative to baseline (P < 0.0005) at 8 h, respectively. Histological severity of pancreatitis, graded on the basis of pancreatic edema, acinar cell vacuolization, inflammation, and apoptosis, was reduced early in the course of pancreatitis. Myeloperoxidase activity from both pancreas and lung was reduced by 93 and 83% relative to baseline, respectively (P < 0.05). These data suggest that PP2B is an important target of the aberrant acinar cell Ca(2+) rise associated with pathological protease activation and pancreatitis.  (+info)

Regulation of HSP60 and the role of MK2 in a new model of severe experimental pancreatitis. (4/10)

The objective of this study was to investigate the role of MAPKAP kinase 2 (MK2) and heat shock protein (HSP) HSP60 in the pathogenesis of a new model of severe acute pancreatitis (AP). MK2 plays a significant role in the regulation of cytokines. It has been shown that induction and expression of several HSPs can protect against experimental pancreatitis. Interplay between both systems seems of high interest. Mice with a homozygous deletion of the MK2 gene were used. Severe AP was induced by combined intraperitoneal injections of cerulein with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Severity of AP was assessed by biochemical markers and histology. The serum IL-6 and lung myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels were determined for assessing the extent of systemic inflammatory response. Expression of HSP25, HSP60, HSP70, and HSP90 was analyzed by Western blotting. Repeated injections of cerulein alone or cerulein plus LPS (Cer+LPS) resulted in local inflammatory responses in the pancreas and corresponding systemic inflammatory changes with pronounced severity in the Cer+LPS group. Compared with the C57Bl wild-type mice, the MK2-/- mice presented with significant milder pancreatitis and attenuated responses of serum amylase and trypsinogen activity. Furthermore, serum IL-6 was decreased as well as lung MPO activity. Injection of LPS alone displayed neither pancreatic inflammatory responses nor alterations of pancreatic enzyme activities but evidently elevated serum IL-6 levels and increased lung MPO activity. In contrast hereto, in the MK2-/- mice, these changes were much milder. Increased expression of HSP25 and HSP60 occurred after induction of AP. Especially, HSP60 was robustly elevated after Cer+LPS treatment, in both MK2-/- and wild-type mice. Thus the homozygous deletion of the MK2 gene ameliorates the severity of acute pancreatitis and accompanying systemic inflammatory reactions in a new model of severe acute pancreatitis. Our data support the hypothesis that MK2 participates in the multifactorial regulation of early inflammatory responses in AP, independently of the regulation of stress proteins like HSP25 and HSP60 and most likely due to its effect on cytokine regulation.  (+info)

Functional regulation of sugar assimilation by N-glycan-specific interaction of pancreatic alpha-amylase with glycoproteins of duodenal brush border membrane. (5/10)

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The effects of 13 wk of liraglutide treatment on endocrine and exocrine pancreas in male and female ZDF rats: a quantitative and qualitative analysis revealing no evidence of drug-induced pancreatitis. (6/10)

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Inhibition of starch digestion by the green tea polyphenol, (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate. (7/10)

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Neohesperidin dihydrochalcone: presentation of a small molecule activator of mammalian alpha-amylase as an allosteric effector. (8/10)

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