Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.1 (chymotrypsin)
10,938 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An extracellular cysteine protease inhibitor (ECPI-2) was purified to homogeneity from the culture filtrate of Chlorella sp. 4533 by the combination of various column chromatographies. The molecular mass of the inhibitor was estimated to be 340 kDa by SDS-PAGE. The inhibitor was extremely heat-stable under acidic or neutral condition. ECPI-2 exhibited an inhibitory activity against the proteolytic activity of papain, ficin, or chymopapain, but not against stem bromelain or cathepsin B. The inhibitor showed no inhibitory activity against trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin or thermolysin. ECPI-2 contains 33.6% carbohydrate residues by weight and inhibits papain at a molar ratio of 1:2. The proteolysis of the inhibitor by trypsin or alpha-chymotrypsin was apparent, but the inhibitory activity of ECPI-2 was unaffected by these enzymes. The alpha-chymotrypsin hydrolysis product from ECPI-2 was further separated into six fractions by gel filtration. From these results, it is suggested that ECPI-2 has several reactive sites for papain.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of extracellular cysteine protease inhibitor, ECPI-2, from Chlorella sp. 1656 14

1. Cerebral proteinases were separated on Sephadex G-100 columns into acid and neutral fractions free from cross-contamination. Acid proteinases were more stable and were purified by additional steps with salt and pH5.0 precipitations, column chromatography on DEAE- or CM-cellulose and free-flow electrophoresis. 2. The separation made it possible to study the properties of the partially purified enzyme fractions. Some of these properties, such as K(m) with selected protein substrates, pH optima and temperature-dependence in the presence and absence of substrates, are described. 3. No requirement for metal ions or added cofactors was demonstrated. Neutral-proteinase activity was more sensitive to inhibition by heavy-metal ions; its activity could be increased by thioglycollate and glutathione, and inhibited by thiol reagents. Neutral and acid proteinases were inhibited by the chymotrypsin inhibitor chloromethyl l-2-phenyl-1-toluene-p-sulphonamidoethyl ketone. 4. In the presence of the appropriate synthetic substrates no cathepsin A activity was found, and only trace quantities of cathepsin B or C activities, which were more than 50-fold less than cathepsin D-like activity.
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PMID:Separation of acid and neutral proteinases of brain. 1674 27

Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite causing Chagas disease, contains a number of proteolytic enzymes. The recent completion of the genome sequence of the T. cruzi CL Brener clone suggests the presence of 70 cysteine peptidases, 40 serine peptidases (none of them from the chymotrypsin family), about 250 metallopeptidases (most leishmanolysin homologues), 25 threonine peptidases, and only two aspartyl peptidases, none of them from the pepsin family. The cysteine peptidases belong to 7 families of Clan CA, 3 families of Clan CD, and one each of Clans CE and CF In Clan CA, the C1 family is represented by cruzipains 1 and 2, biochemically well characterized, as well as cathepsin B and two other cathepsins. There are a number of homologues to calpains (family C2), probably non-functional, lacking the Ca-binding domain. Family C54 includes the Atg4 proteinases (autophagins), which seem to be involved in the autophagic process. Clan CD includes family C14, the metacaspases. We have expressed the metacaspases TcMCA3 and TcMCA5, and obtained indirect evidence of their participation in programmed cell death induced by fresh human serum in the parasite. More experiments are required to better define their role in apoptosis.
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PMID:Cysteine proteinases of Trypanosoma cruzi: from digestive enzymes to programmed cell death mediators. 1737 68

A series of synthetic peptides in which the C-terminal carboxyl grouping (-CO(2)H) of each has been chemically converted into a variety of ene dione derivatives (-CO-CH=CH-CO-X; X = -H, -Me, -OBut, -OEt, -OMe, -CO-OMe), have been prepared and tested as inactivators against typical members of the serine and cysteine protease families. For example, the sequences Cbz-Pro-Phe-CH=CH-CO-OEt (I) which fulfils the known primary and secondary specificity requirements of the serine protease chymotrypsin, and Cbz-Phe-Ala-CH=CH-CO-OEt (II) which represents a general recognition sequence for cysteine proteases such as cathepsins B, L and S, have been tested as putative irreversible inactivators of their respective target proteases. It was found that, whereas II, for example, functioned as a time-dependent, irreversible inactivator of each of the cysteine proteases, I behaved only as a modest competitive reversible inhibitor of chymotrypsin. Within the simple ester sequences Cbz-Phe-Ala-CH=CH-CO-R, the rank order of inhibitor effectiveness decreases in the order R = -OMe > -OEt >> -OBut. It was also found that the presence of both an unsaturated double bond and an ester (or alpha-keto ester) moiety were indispensable for obtaining irreversible inactivators. Of the irreversible inactivators synthesized, Cbz-Phe-Ala-CH=CH-CO-CO-OEt (which contains a highly electrophilic alpha-keto ester grouping) was found to be the most effective exhibiting, for example, second-order rate constants of approximately 1.7 x 10(6)M(-1)min(-1) and approximately 4.9 x 10(4)M(-1)min(-1) against recombinant human cathepsin S and human spleenic cathepsin B, respectively. This initial study thus holds out the promise that this class of inactivator may well be specific for the cysteine protease subclass.
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PMID:Synthesis of peptidyl ene diones: selective inactivators of the cysteine proteinases. 1744 3

Peptidase sequences were analysed in randomly picked clones from cDNA libraries of the anterior or posterior midgut or whole larvae of the yellow mealworm, Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus. Of a total of 1528 sequences, 92 encoded potential peptidases, from which 50 full-length cDNA sequences were obtained, including serine and cysteine proteinases and metallopeptidases. Serine proteinase transcripts were predominant in the posterior midgut, whereas transcripts encoding cysteine and metallopeptidases were mainly found in the anterior midgut. Alignments with other proteinases indicated that 40% of the serine proteinase sequences were serine proteinase homologues, and the remaining ones were identified as either trypsin, chymotrypsin or other serine proteinases. Cysteine proteinase sequences included cathepsin B- and L-like proteinases, and metallopeptidase transcripts were similar to carboxypeptidase A. Northern blot analysis of representative sequences demonstrated the differential expression profile of selected transcripts across five developmental stages of Te. molitor. These sequences provide insights into peptidases in coleopteran insects as a basis to study the response of coleopteran larvae to external stimuli and to evaluate regulatory features of the response.
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PMID:Sequence analysis and molecular characterization of larval midgut cDNA transcripts encoding peptidases from the yellow mealworm, Tenebrio molitor L. 1765 Dec 35

We compared the peptidase activities of the excretory/secretory (E/S) antigens of oncospheres of Taenia solium and related, but nonpathogenic, Taenia saginata. Taenia solium and T. saginata oncospheres were cultured, and the spent media of 24-, 48-, 72-, and 96-hr fractions were analyzed. Activities for serine peptidases (chymotrypsin-, trypsin-, and elastase-like), cysteine peptidases (cathepsin B-, cathepsin L-, and calpaine-like), and aminopeptidase (B-like peptidases) were tested fluorometrically with peptides coupled to 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin. In both species, the E/S antigens showed cysteine, serine, and aminopeptidase activities. Although no particular peptidase had high activity in T. solium, and was absent in T. saginata, or vice versa, different patterns of activity were found. A chymotrypsin-like peptidase showed the highest activity in both parasites, and it had 10 times higher activity in T. solium than in T. saginata. Trypsin-like and cathepsin B-like activities were significantly higher in T. solium. Minimal levels of cathepsin B were present in both species, and higher levels of elastase-like and cathepsin L-like activity were observed in T. saginata. Taenia solium and T. saginata have different levels and temporal activities of proteolytic enzymes that could play a modulator role in the host specificity for larval invasion through penetration of the intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Comparison of the peptidase activity in the oncosphere excretory/secretory products of Taenia solium and Taenia saginata. 1791 49

Lysosomes can trigger the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway by releasing proteases. Here we report that a 25-kDa protein purified from rat liver lysosomes possesses a long standing potent Bid cleavage activity at neutral pH, and the truncated Bid can in turn induce rapid mitochondrial release of cytochrome c. This protease was revealed as chymotrypsin B by biochemical and mass spectrometric analysis. Although it was long recognized as a digestive protease exclusively secreted by the exocrine pancreas, our data support that it also expresses and intracellularly resides in rat liver lysosomes. Translocation of lysosomal chymotrypsin B into cytosol was triggered by apoptotic stimuli such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and intracellular delivery of chymotrypsin B protein induced apoptotic cell death with a potency comparable with cathepsin B, suggestive of a lysosomal-mitochondrial pathway to apoptosis regulated by chymotrypsin B following its release. Noteworthily, either knockdown of chymotrypsin B expression by RNA interference or pretreatment with chymotrypsin B inhibitor N-p-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone significantly reduced tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induce apoptosis. These results demonstrate for the first time that chymotrypsin B is not only restricted to the pancreas but can function intracellularly as a pro-apoptotic protease.
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PMID:Chymotrypsin B cached in rat liver lysosomes and involved in apoptotic regulation through a mitochondrial pathway. 1821 99

The Western corn rootworm is one of the most economically important pests in corn. One possibility for controlling this pest is the cultivation of transgenic corn expressing Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins, such as Cry3A, Cry34Ab1/Cry35Ab1, and Cry3Bb1. However, widespread cultivation of the resulting Bt corn may result in the development of resistant pest populations. The Bt toxins are processed by proteases in the midgut of susceptible insects. Thus, protease activity studies were conducted using the midgut juice (pH 5.75) from third instars larvae of the susceptible Western corn rootworm. As a result, the activities of the serine endopeptidases trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase, cathepsin G, plasmin, and thrombin; the cysteine endopeptidases cathepsin L, papain, cathepsin B, and cathepsin H; the aspartic endopeptidase pepsin; the metallo endopeptidase saccharolysin; the exopeptidase aminopeptidase, and the omegapeptidase acylaminoacylpeptidase were detected. These results are of basic interest but also lead to reference systems for the identification of protease-mediated resistance mechanisms in potentially resistant individuals.
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PMID:Protease activities in the midgut of Western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte). 1932 44

von Willebrand factor (VWF) multimeric composition is regulated in plasma by ADAMTS13. VWF deglycosylation enhances proteolysis by ADAMTS13. In this study, the role of terminal sialic acid residues on VWF glycans in mediating proteolysis by ADAMTS13 was investigated. Quantification and distribution of VWF sialylation was examined by sequential digestion and high-performance liquid chromatography analysis. Total sialic acid expression on VWF was 167nmol/mg, of which the majority (80.1%) was present on N-linked glycan chains. Enzymatic desialylation of VWF by alpha2-3,6,8,9 neuraminidase (Neu-VWF) markedly impaired ADAMTS13-mediated VWF proteolysis. Neu-VWF collagen binding activity was reduced to 50% (+/- 14%) by ADAMTS13, compared with 11% (+/- 7%) for untreated VWF. Despite this, Neu-VWF exhibited increased susceptibility to other proteases, including trypsin, chymotrypsin, and cathepsin B. VWF expressing different blood groups exhibit altered ADAMTS13 proteolysis rates (O > or = B > A > or = AB). However, ABO blood group regulation of ADAMTS13 proteolysis was ablated on VWF desialylation, as both Neu-O-VWF and Neu-AB-VWF were cleaved by ADAMTS13 at identical rates. These novel data show that sialic acid protects VWF against proteolysis by serine and cysteine proteases but specifically enhances susceptibility to ADAMTS13 proteolysis. Quantitative variation in VWF sialylation therefore represents a key determinant of VWF multimeric composition and, as such, may be of pathophysiologic significance.
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PMID:Expression of terminal alpha2-6-linked sialic acid on von Willebrand factor specifically enhances proteolysis by ADAMTS13. 2036 Apr 75

Fluorimetric assays are convenient and efficient to determine the inhibitory potency of enzyme inhibitors. Since enzyme activity can be blocked in a number of ways, it is important to determine the exact mode of inhibition. The first part of the review deals with kinetic methods to distinguish among the different modes of inhibition. In addition to that, pitfalls are discussed that can be encountered if the mode of inhibition was not thoroughly investigated. The second part of the review deals with some basic techniques of hit validation. Specifically, three error sources that may result in misleadingly strong inhibitors are scrutinized and exemplified for two different typical protease assays (cathepsin B, chymotrypsin). The studied error sources are attenuation of the fluorescence signal, aggregation of the analysed molecules, and irreversible binding of the inhibitor to the enzyme. A simple experimental protocol to detect the aforementioned problems is proposed.
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PMID:Enzyme kinetics and hit validation in fluorimetric protease assays. 2016 49


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