Publication | Open Access
Nanomolar concentrations of Bowman-Birk soybean protease inhibitor suppress x-ray-induced transformation in vitro.
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Citations
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References
1985
Year
BiochemistryCrude Soybean ExtractTransformation ProcessNatural SciencesMedicineOncogenic AgentBiotechnologyMolecular BiologyCancer Cell BiologyNanomolar ConcentrationsCell ProliferationCell BiologyCellular BiochemistryProteomicsRadiation OncologyTumor BiologyBowman-birk Trypsin
Experiments reported here indicate a crude soybean extract, if defatted with acetone, effectively blocks cell transformation in vitro. An active component of this crude extract is the Bowman-Birk trypsin and chymotrypsin inhibitor. The chymotrypsin-inhibitory region of the Bowman-Birk inhibitor is responsible for suppressing in vitro transformation. Another low molecular weight soybean trypsin inhibitor does not significantly suppress transformation. The Bowman-Birk inhibitor (i) has an irreversible effect on the transformation process, (ii) can suppress radiation-induced transformation even when added to cultures many days after the carcinogen exposure, and (iii) is effective in its ability to suppress transformation when present in the medium at a concentration as low as 0.125 nM.
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