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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
alpha-chymotrypsin
-like enzyme was isolated from mast cells of the rat peritoneal cavity by extraction with 0.8 M potassium phosphate, 2 per cent protamine sulfate followed by affinity chromatography on hen ovoinhibitor-agarose and adsorption on barium sulfate. This procedure yielded over 9 mg of protease from the peritoneal lavage fluid of 100 rats, equivalent to 44 per cent of the initial activity. The purified protein was homogeneous as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, analytical isoelectric focusing, and amino-terminal sequence analysis. The protease contains no covalently bound carbohydrate and has a molecular weight of approximately 26,000. The enzyme molecule is a single
polypeptide
chain with an amino-terminal sequence homologous to that of the B chain of bovine
alpha-chymotrypsin
. The kinetic parameters, Km and kcat, for the hydrolysis of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester were determined at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C as 1.1 X 10(-3) M and 84 sec-1, respectively. The value of the second-order rate constant for inactivation of mast cell protease by diisopropylphosphofluoridate was 300 times lower than for bovine
alpha-chymotrypsin
.
...
PMID:Purification and partial characterization of an alpha-chymotrypsin-like protease of rat peritoneal mast cells. 49 54
1. Chymotrypsin treatment of spinach chloroplast membranes does not change the electrophoretic mobility of either chlorophyll-protein complex 1 or 2. 2. The extraction of lipids with 80% acetone after treatment of the membranes with
chymotrypsin
reveals that the
polypeptide
components of both chlorophyll-protein complexes had been extensively digested. The extraction of carotenes with petroleum ether under the same conditions does not change the electrophoretic mobility of the chlorophyll-protein complexes. 3. Fluorescence polarisation studies of chlorophyll-protein complex 2 reveal that the
chymotrypsin
digestion of this complex does not result in changes of mutual orientation or distance apart of chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b or carotenoid. 4. Two
polypeptide
components have been detected after lipid extraction of electrophoretically purified chlorophyll-protein complexes 1 and 2. The SDS molecular weights are 24 000 and 27 000 for complex 2, and 68 000 and 64 000 for complex 1. 5. We conclude that chlorophyll performs an important structural function in both chlorophyll-protein complexes.
...
PMID:Evidence for a structural role for chlorophyll in chlorophyll-protein complexes. 50 98
The three most abundant nonhistone polypeptides (molecular weights 75,000, 71,000 and 61,000) of the avian erythrocyte nucleus have previously been isolated in the nuclear envelope fraction. They have been separated by sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and peptide-mapped after limited enzymatic digestion. Three enzymes --
chymotrypsin
, papain and Staphylococcus aureus protease -- were used. Results obtained with each enzyme indicate strong similarities between the three nuclear envelope polypeptides. The amino acid compositions of the two most abundant polypeptides (P75 and P71) have been determined and found to be similar. Further, they readily yield large fragments upon brief alkaline hydrolysis. For both P75, and P71 the degree and the pattern of alkaline fragmentation are almost identical. A 61,000-dalton
polypeptide
which appears to be P61 is obtained from P75 and P71 by mild acid hydrolysis. These results establish the close chemical similarity of these predominant polypeptides in the erythrocyte nucleus and suggest that they serve related functions.
...
PMID:Comparison of the major polypeptides of the erythrocyte nuclear envelope. 51 70
Human fibrinogen was clotted under conditions that promote latent factor XIII activity and in the presence of a radioactive substitute cross-linking donor ([14C]glycine ethyl ester). The labeled fibrin was reduced and alkylated in the presence of 6 M guanidinium chloride. After dialysis and freeze-drying, the preparation was separated into its constituent
polypeptide
subunits by chromatography on (carboxymethyl)cellulose in the presence of 8 M urea. Under the incorporation conditions used, the radioactivity was limited to gamma chains (one donor molecule/chain) and alpha chains (two donor molecules/chain). The labeled alpha chains were digested with cyanogen bromide and fractionated on Sephadex G-50. All the radioactivity was found in a fragment previously designated H alpha CNI, the largest of the cyanogen bromide fragments in the alpha chain. The fragment was further fragmented by digestion with plasmin, trypsin,
chymotrypsin
, and/or staphylococcal protease. The incorporated radioactivity was found to reside in equal amounts at two different sites located 38 residues apart. These were determined to be positions 88 and 126 in H alpha CNI, which correspond to glutamine-328 and glutamine-366 in the alpha chain.
...
PMID:Amino acid sequence studies on the alpha chain of human fibrinogen. Exact location of cross-linking acceptor sites. 51 45
The [3H] phlorizin-binding component of brush border vesicles was enriched in situ by negative purification. Several procedures, known to effect selective solubilization of membrane components, were used separately or in combination to remove proteins unrelated to the binding. Deoxycholate ruptured the vesicles and released 67% of their protein, thereby increasing the specific [3H] phlorizin-binding activity of the pellet three-to fourfold. Extracting the deoxycholate-pellets with either NaI or alkaline solutions released up to 38% of the deoxycholate-insoluble protein without significantly affecting phlorizin binding. The
polypeptide
composition of the membranes at the different stages was analyzed by NaDodSO4-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A number of polypeptides present in the original vesicles could be ruled out as essential components of the [3H] phlorizin binding entity. Intact and deoxycholate-treated vesicles were subjected to proteolytic attack. Papain liberated sucrase and isomaltase from intact vesicles, but affected neither other Coomassie-stained bands nor phlorizin binding. Neither the protein composition nor the binding properties of sealed vesicles were influenced by trypsin or
chymotrypsin
. However, all the proteolytic enzymes tested on deoxycholate-treated membranes substantially reduced [3H] phlorizin binding and produced concomitantly the disappearance of several bands from the electrophoretic profile. Pretreatment of vesicles with papain, followed by deoxycholate extraction and incubation in alkaline media, increased the specific binding activity of the membranes up to ninefold by removing close to 90% of the protein. A limited number of polypeptides are suggested as possible candidates for the glycoside-binding site of intestinal brush borders.
...
PMID:Partial purification of the sugar carrier of intestinal brush border membranes. Enrichment of the phlorizin-binding component by selective extractions. 52 29
Four proteinase inhibitors, A-II, A-III, B-I, and B-II, were isolated from seeds of Albizzia julibrissin (silk tree) of the subfamily Mimosoideae, which is often regarded as the most primitive group of the Leguminosae plants. They were all of the high-molecular weight type (21,600 for A-II and A-III, and 19,000 for B-I and B-II), and composed of two
polypeptide
chains, linked together by a disulfide bond. A-II (A-III) inhibited bovine trypsin and
alpha-chymotrypsin
probably at an identical site. B-I (BII) inactivated bovine
alpha-chymotrypsin
and porcine elastase. Sequence analyses of A-II and B-II revealed a considerable homology with soybean trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz) but suggested the presence of an about 20-amino acid insertion in the A-II molecule.
...
PMID:Proteinase inhibitors from a mimosoideae legume, Albizzia julibrissin. Homologues of soybean trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz). 52 39
Ca(2+)-activated neutral proteinase was purified from rabbit skeletal muscle by a method involving DEAE-Sephacel chromatography, affinity chromatography on organomercurial-Sepharose and gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200 and Sephadex G-150. The SDS (sodium dodecyl sulphate)/polyacrylamide-gel-electrophoresis data show that the purified enzyme contains only one
polypeptide
chain of mol.wt. 73000. The purification procedure used allowed us to eliminate a contaminant containing two components of mol.wt. about 30000 each. Whole casein or alpha(1)-casein were hydrolysed with a maximum rate at 30 degrees C, pH7.5, and with 5mm-CaCl(2), but myofibrils were found to be a very susceptible substrate for this proteinase. This activity is associated with the destruction of the Z-discs, which is caused by the solubilization of the Z-line proteins. The activity of the proteinase in vitro is not limited to the removal of Z-line. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis on larger plates showed the ability of the proteinase to degrade myofibrils more extensively than previously supposed. This proteolysis resulted in the production of a 30000-dalton component as well as in various other higher- and lower-molecular-weight peptide fragments. Troponin T, troponin I, alpha-tropomyosin, some high-molecular-weight proteins (M protein, heavy chain of myosin) and three unidentified proteins are degraded. Thus the number of proteinase-sensitive regions in the myofibrils is greater than as previously reported by Dayton, Goll, Zeece, Robson & Reville [(1976) Biochemistry15, 2150-2158]. The Ca(2+)-activated neutral proteinase is not a
chymotrypsin
- or trypsin-like enzyme, but it reacted with all the classic thiol-proteinase inhibitors for cathepsin B, papain, bromelain and ficin. Thus the proteinase was proved to have an essential thiol group. Antipain and leupeptin are also inhibitors of the Ca(2+)-activated neutral proteinase.
...
PMID:Purification and some physico-chemical and enzymic properties of a calcium ion-activated neutral proteinase from rabbit skeletal muscle. 53 1
The preceding paper (Hammer, C.H., A. Nicholson, and M. M. Mayer, 1975, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 72:5076) presented evidence on insertion of
polypeptide
chains from the C5b and C7 subunits of C5b, 6, 7 complex into the phospholipid bilayer of erythrocyte membranes. In the present study, EAC1-8 and EAC1-9 (sheep erythrocytes carrying rabbit antibody and complement proteins C1 through C8 or C9, respectively), prepared with either 125I-C8 or 125I-C9, were incubated with trypsin or
chymotrypsin
and the release of 125I was measured. Only 9 to 19% of the specifically bound radioactivity was released. In addition, elution experiments were performed with 0.02 M EDTA-1.0 M NaCl. This solution did not elute C9 from EAC1-9. By contrast cellbound C9 was recovered from erythrocyte membranes with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Thus, enzymatic stripping and elution experiments indicate that cellbound C9 behaves like an integral membrane protein, presumably due to insertion into the lipid bilayer. EAC1-9 membranes that had been subjected to extended digestion with trypsin or
chymotrypsin
were extracted with SDS to recover the enzyme-resistant part of the C9 molecule from the membrane. Even though this domain of C9 carried 90% of the radioiodine associated with native C9, its m.w. was found to be only 18,000 daltons by analysis on SDS-PAGE. This represents one-quarter of the native C9 molecule.
...
PMID:On the mechanism of cell membrane damage by complement: evidence on insertion of polypeptide chains from C8 and C9 into the lipid bilayer of erythrocytes. 55
1. Crude extracts of Limulus CNS cause hyperglycemia in Orconectes immunis and expand chromatophores in Uca pugilator. 2. The hyperglycemic action is due to a previously unknown
polypeptide
(LHGF) with an estimated molecular weight of 6400 daltons. LHGF is inactivated by hydrogen peroxide, pepsin, and protease, but unaffected by trypsin and brief boiling.3. The chromatophorotropic activity is due to the previously reported substance, LUC. LUC is shown to be a peptide with an approximate molecular weight of 1850 daltons; it is inactivated by hydrogen peroxide, protease, pepsin, trypsin,
chymotrypsin
, and thermolysin. 4. LUC and LHGF activity can be readily separated by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-25 column. 5. The similarity of LUC and LHGF to known crustacean hormones is dicussed.
...
PMID:Separation and partial purification of central nervous system peptides from Limulus polyphemus with hyperglycemic and chromatophorotropic activity in crustaceans. 62 59
"Group-specific" protease (GSP) is a serine protease, obtained from rat small intestine, which preferentially inactivates the apo forms of certain pyridoxal phosphate requiring enzymes. The enzyme contains 224 amino acid residues in a single
polypeptide
chain and three disulfide bonds. In the present work the covalent structure has been determined and its homologous relationship to those of
chymotrypsin
, trypsin, and elastase has been established (approximately 33% identity with each). The residues forming the "charge-relay" system of the active site of
chymotrypsin
(His-57, Asp-102, and Ser-195) are found in corresponding regions in GSP, whereas an alanyl residue at position 176 of GSP corresponds to a residue which participates in the primary substrate binding site in serine proteases (Asp-177 in trypsin; Ser-189 in
chymotrypsin
). Three disulfide bonds in GSP occur in similar positions in
chymotrypsin
, trypsin, and elastase. However, GSP lacks a disulfide bond which is present in all known serine proteases (linking Cys-191 to Cys-220 in
chymotrypsin
). In view of the close proximity of this bond to both the primary and the antiparallel binding sites of various serine proteases, it is likely that its absence in GSP is related to the substrate specificity of this enzyme. It is concluded that GSP diverged from a common ancestor preceding
chymotrypsin
but following trypsin.
...
PMID:Covalent structure of a group-specific protease from rat small intestine. Appendix: crystallographic data for a group specific protease from rat intestine. 62 33
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