| Literature DB >> 22242022 |
Karna Dev Bardhan1, Vicki Strugala, Peter W Dettmar.
Abstract
Gastroesophageal reflux disease is mediated principally by acid. Today, we recognise reflux reaches beyond the esophagus, where pepsin, not acid, causes damage. Extraesophageal reflux occurs both as liquid and probably aerosol, the latter with a further reach. Pepsin is stable up to pH 7 and regains activity after reacidification. The enzyme adheres to laryngeal cells, depletes its defences, and causes further damage internally after its endocytosis. Extraesophageal reflux can today be detected by recognising pharyngeal acidification using a miniaturised pH probe and by the identification of pepsin in saliva and in exhaled breath condensate by a rapid, sensitive, and specific immunoassay. Proton pump inhibitors do not help the majority with extraesophageal reflux but specifically formulated alginates, which sieve pepsin, give benefit. These new insights may lead to the development of novel drugs that dramatically reduce pepsinogen secretion, block the effects of adherent pepsin, and give corresponding clinical benefit."For now we see through a glass, darkly."-First epistle, Chapter 13, Corinthians.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22242022 PMCID: PMC3216344 DOI: 10.1155/2012/646901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Figure 1Example of pepsin profile from human gastric juice purified by HPAEC.
The active pepsin isoenzymes in man.
| Pepsin isoenzyme | Proportion of total pepsin | Substrate: pH optimum range | Molecular | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | <5% | Haemoglobin: 1.9 | 43810 | The proportion of pepsin 1 rises to 23% in DU |
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| 2 | <1% | Haemoglobin: 2.1 | 39950 | |
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| 3 | 80% | Haemoglobin: 2.4–3.1 | 37150 | Pepsin 3 is a complex of isoenzymes. The assay measures their combined effects. |
| 3A | 6% | Haemoglobin: 3.2 | 3A is structurally similar to 3B but is phosphorylated | |
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| 5 (Gastricsin) | 6-7% | Haemoglobin: 2.0–3.6 (maximum at 3.2) Mucin: 3.5–5 | 31620 | Stable up to pH 7.3 |
“Pepsin 4” is a complex of pepsin and an inhibiting peptide, hence, it does not appear in the list of active pepsin isoenzymes.
“Pepsin 6” is the remnant of a zymogen, in all probability pepsinogen, hence it too does not feature in the isoenzyme list.
“Zone 7” was found to be a cathepsin.
References [21–25].