Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We discovered an enzyme in human platelets that deamidates substance P and other tachykinins. Because an amidated carboxyl terminus is important for biological activity, we purified and characterized this deamidase. The enzyme, released from human platelets by thrombin, was purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, followed by chromatography on an octyl-Sepharose column and chromatofocusing on PBE 94. The purified enzyme exhibits esterase, peptidase, and deamidase activities. The peptidase activity (with furylacryloyl-Phe-Phe) is optimal at pH 5.0 while the esterase (benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester) and deamidase (D-Ala2-
Leu5
-enkephalinamide) activities are optimal at pH 7.0. With biologically important peptides, the enzyme acts both as a deamidase (substance P, neurokinin A, and eledoisin) and a carboxy-peptidase (with bradykinin, angiotensin I, substance P-free acid, oxytocin-free acid) at neutrality, although the carboxypeptidase action is faster at pH 5.5. Enkephalins, released upon deamidation of enkephalinamides, were not cleaved. Gly9-NH2 of oxytocin was released without deamidation. Peptides with a penultimate Arg residue were not hydrolyzed. Some properties of the deamidase are similar to those reported for cathepsin A. The deamidase is inhibited by diisopropylfluorophosphate, inhibitors of chymotrypsin-type enzymes, and mercury compounds while other inhibitors of catheptic enzymes, trypsin-like enzymes, and metalloproteases were ineffective. In gel filtration, the native enzyme has an Mr = 94,000 while in non-reducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the Mr = 52,000 indicating it exists as a dimer. After reduction, deamidase dissociates into two chains of Mr = 33,000 and 21,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. [3H]diisopropylfluorophosphate labeled the active site serine in the Mr = 33,000 chain. The first 25 amino acids of both chains were sequenced. They are identical with the sequences of the two chains of lysosomal "protective protein" which, in turn, has sequence similarity to the KEX1 gene product and carboxypeptidase Y of yeast. This protective protein complexes with
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase in lysosomes and is vitally important in maintaining their activity and stability. A defect in this protein is the cause of galactosialidosis, a severe genetic disorder. The ability of physiological stimuli (e.g. thrombin or collagen) to release the deamidase from platelets indicates that it may also be involved in the local metabolism of bioactive peptides.
...
PMID:A peptidase in human platelets that deamidates tachykinins. Probable identity with the lysosomal "protective protein". 169 76
A plasmid vector (pEK1) coding, in framework of
beta-galactosidase
gene, for the amino acid sequence (Asp)4Lys which is recognized by bovine enteropeptidase has been constructed. Using this vector and chemically synthesized DNA coding for the [
Leu5
]-enkephalin, a plasmid (pEK-ENK) has been obtained in which the
beta-galactosidase
gene is fused, through the enteropeptidase linker, with the gene for [
Leu5
]enkephalin. The chimeric protein produced by expression of this plasmid has been isolated and then cleaved by the enteropeptidase to give [
Leu5
]enkephalin with the yield 74%.
...
PMID:[The vector containing a signal for specific degradation of chimeric proteins. Synthesis of [Leu5]enkephalin using enteropeptidase]. 355 62
Opiate receptor binding decayed exponentially in mouse neuroblastoma-rat glioma (NG108-15) hybrid cell preparations following exposure to increasing doses of ionizing radiation (0.2 to 7.0 Mrads; 2.0 Mrads/min). Target size analysis revealed that [3H][D-Ala2, D-
Leu5
]enkephalin (agonist) and [3H]naloxone (antagonist) bound specifically to a component with an apparent molecular size of 200,000 +/- 20,000. Lyophilization of cells for the irradiation procedure did not significantly alter receptor affinity or binding capacity for these ligands. Furthermore, the loss of opiate receptor binding in irradiated cell samples could not be attributed to reduced receptor affinity since increasing concentrations of radiolabeled ligand failed to reverse the inhibition; nonspecific binding decreased only slightly under identical experimental conditions. The value of determining molecular size by radiation inactivation analysis was confirmed by showing that apparent target sizes for two representative lysosomal enzymes (
beta-galactosidase
and alpha-mannosidase) were consistent with results obtained previously using conventional methods. Thus, the data suggest that the ligand binding component of delta-opiate (enkephalin) receptors in NG108-15 cells has a minimum functional size of approximately 200,000.
...
PMID:Molecular size of opiate (enkephalin) receptors in neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid cells as determined by radiation inactivation analysis. 629 28
Rat glioma X mouse neuroblastoma hybrid neurotumor cells (NG108-15), synchronized by amino acid deprivation, showed a cell-cycle-dependent peak of activity of a ganglioside N-acetylgalactosaminyl transferase 14-24 h following release from the cell cycle block (S/G2 phase). Maximal expression of two typical lysosomal hydrolases, N-acetyl-beta-hexosaminidase and
beta-galactosidase
, occurred between 18 and 21 h following release (S phase), declining to G1 phase levels during the peak of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) transferase activity. In addition, glycosyltransferase activity in G2 phase cells showed an increase in apparent Vmax (suggesting the presence of more enzyme/mg of cell protein) and apparent binding affinity for uridine diphosphate N-acetylgalactosamine (UDP-GalNAc) (32 versus 14 microM) when compared to transferase activity in the G1 phase. However, the opioid peptide enkephalin [D-Ala2, D-
Leu5
], which inhibits ganglioside GalNAc transferase activity in unsynchronized NG108-15 cultures, was much more inhibitory in whole cells 8 h after release from the cell cycle block (G1 phase) than in cells 20 h after release (G2 phase), with 50% inhibition occurring at 2 X 10(-9) M and 2 X 10(-7) M, respectively. These results suggest that the GalNAc transferase activity is regulated in more than one way during the cell cycle, since both Vmax and Km changes are observed, and that the cyclic AMP-dependent mechanism by which opiates reduce transferase activity is receptor mediated and cell cycle dependent.
...
PMID:Cell-cycle dependence of a ganglioside glycosyltransferase activity and its inhibition by enkephalin in a neurotumor cell line. 642