
pmid: 10075871
Plasma hydrolysis of leucine enkephalin was studied in a group of patients affected by seasonal allergic asthma in acute and quiescent stage; data were compared with those obtained from a control group of healthy volunteers. Results obtained indicate a statistically significant reduction of leu-enkephalin hydrolysis in allergic subjects. In the quiescent stage, substrate degradation is reduced, and the pattern of the hydrolysis by-products is modified with respect to normal controls. In the acute stage, hydrolysis is further reduced, and the pattern of the hydrolysis by-products is further modified with respect to the quiescent stage. The variations of leu-enkephalin hydrolysis appear to be controlled by decreased activity of proteolytic enzymes and by increased activity of the low-molecular-weight plasma inhibitors active on these enzymes. The sum of these processes is conducive to a distribution of enkephalin-hydrolyzing enzymes, as well as a hydrolysis pattern, that appears to be specific for the allergic subjects and distinct from that seen in the controls.
Adult, Male, Hydrolysis, Middle Aged, Asthma, Enzymes, Acute Disease, Hypersensitivity, Humans, Female, Protease Inhibitors, Seasons, Enkephalin, Leucine
Adult, Male, Hydrolysis, Middle Aged, Asthma, Enzymes, Acute Disease, Hypersensitivity, Humans, Female, Protease Inhibitors, Seasons, Enkephalin, Leucine
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