Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human erythrocyte membranes contain a major transmembrane protein, known as Band 3, that is involved in anion transport. This protein contains a total of five reactive sulfhydryl groups, which can be assigned to either of two classes on the basis of their susceptibility to release from the membrane by trypsin. Two of the groups are located in the region COOH-terminal to the extracellular chymotrypsin-sensitive site of the protein and remain with a membrane-bound 55,000-dalton fragment generated by trypsin treatment. The three sulfhydryl groups NH2-terminal to the extracellular chymotrypsin site are released from the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane by trypsin. All three groups are present in a 20,000-dalton tryptic fragment of Band 3. Two of these groups are located very close to the sites of trypsin cleavage that generate the 20,000-dalton fragment. The third reactve group is probably located about 15,000-daltons from the most NH2-terminal sulfhydryl group. Two other well defined fragments of the protein do not contain reactive sulfhydryl groups. They are a 23,000-dalton fragment derived from the NH2-terminal end that is also released by trypsin from the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane and a 19,000-dalton membrane-bound region of the protein that is produced by treatment with chymotrypsin in ghosts. The 20,000-dalton tryptic fragment may, therefore, constitute a sulfhydryl-containing domain of the Band 3 protein.
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PMID:Reactive sulfhydryl groups of the band 3 polypeptide from human erythroycte membranes. Location in the primary structure. 44 1

Band 3 protein is a major erythrocyte transmembrane glycoprotein. We compared the degradation of band 3 protein by calpain I (a cytoplasmic, micromolar-Ca2(+)-requiring thiol proteinase) in the cells from old individuals (greater than 70 years old) to that in the cells from young ones (20-30 years old). In the young, little degradation of band 3 protein occurred in calpain-treated erythrocyte ghosts. In the old, significant band 3 protein degradation was found in erythrocyte ghosts treated similarly. The difference between young and old in the susceptibility of band 3 protein to calpain was retained in membrane vesicles (membranes stripped of peripheral proteins by NaOH) and in chymotrypsin-generated 60 kDa fragment (CH-60). The isolated N-terminal cytoplasmic 43 kDa fragment was degraded by calpain to a similar extent in old and in young. The separated 17 kDa membrane domain of the CH-60 and the trypsin-generated C-terminal 55 kDa membrane-spanning fragment were not degraded by calpain I in the young, nor in the old. Thus the N-terminal cytoplasmic domain is the domain degraded by calpain I. Enhanced sensitivity in the old is observed in intact band 3 protein and in CH-60, the isolated cytoplasmic domain being equally susceptible in young and old. The observed age-related enhanced sensitivity to calpain is consistent with the presence of modifications in band 3 protein and alterations in the association with the calpain-calpastatin system. Band 3 protein has several important functions, with modifications in the protein having implications for altered cell behaviour in the old individual.
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PMID:Band 3 protein degradation by calpain is enhanced in erythrocytes of old people. 201 84

Canine renal brush border membrane proteins that bind stilbenedisulfonate inhibitors of anion exchange were identified by affinity chromatography. A 130-kDa integral membrane glycoprotein from brush border membrane was shown to bind specifically to 4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate immobilized on Affi-Gel 102 resin. The bound protein could be eluted effectively with 1 mM 4-benzamido-4'-aminostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (BADS). The 130-kDa protein did not bind to the affinity resin in the presence of 1 mM BADS or when the solubilized extract was covalently labeled with 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS). This protein was labeled with [3H]H2DIDS, and the labeling was prevented by BADS. The 130-kDa protein did not cross-react with antibody raised against human or dog erythrocyte Band 3 protein. The 130-kDa protein was accessible to proteinase K and chymotrypsin digestion in vesicles but not to trypsin. The 130-kDa protein was sensitive to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F treatment both in the solubilized state and in brush border membrane vesicles showing that it was a glycoprotein and that the carbohydrate was on the exterior of the vesicles. This glycoprotein was resistant to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H treatment suggesting a complex-type carbohydrate structure. The protein bound concanavalin A, wheat germ agglutinin, and Ricinus communis lectins, and it could be purified using wheat germ agglutinin-agarose.
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PMID:Identification, purification, and characterization of a stilbenedisulfonate binding glycoprotein from canine kidney brush border membranes. A candidate for a renal anion exchanger. 334 57

The exposure of the carboxyl-terminal of the Band 3 protein of human erythrocyte membranes in intact cells and membrane preparations to proteolytic digestion was determined. Carboxypeptidase Y digestion of purified Band 3 in the presence of non-ionic detergent released amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3. The release of amino acids was very pH dependent, digestion being most extensive at pH 3, with limited digestion at pH 6 or above. The 55,000 dalton carboxyl-terminal fragment of Band 3, generated by mild trypsin digestion of ghost membranes, had the same carboxyl-terminal sequence as intact Band 3, based on carboxypeptidase Y digestion. Treatment of intact cells with trypsin or carboxypeptidase Y did not release any amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3. In contrast, carboxypeptidase Y readily digested the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 in ghosts that were stripped of extrinsic membrane proteins by alkali or high salt. This was shown by a decrease in the molecular weight of a carboxyl-terminal fragment of Band 3 after carboxypeptidase Y digestion of stripped ghost membranes. No such decrease was observed after carboxypeptidase Y treatment of intact cells. In addition, Band 3 purified from carboxypeptidase Y-treated stripped ghost membranes had a different carboxyl-terminal sequence from intact Band 3. Cleavage of the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 was also observed when non-stripped ghosts or inside-out vesicles were treated with carboxypeptidase Y. However, the digestion was less extensive. These results suggest that the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 may be protected from digestion by its association with extrinsic membrane proteins. We conclude, therefore, that the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 is located on the cytoplasmic side of the red cell membrane. Since the amino-terminal of Band 3 is also located on the cytoplasmic side of the erythrocyte membrane, the Band 3 polypeptide crosses the membrane an even number of times. A model for the folding of Band 3 in the erythrocyte membrane is presented.
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PMID:Carboxypeptidase Y digestion of band 3, the anion transport protein of human erythrocyte membranes. 365 56

Treatment of red cell ghosts with ozone inhibited both AChE (marking the outside of the membrane) and G3PDH (marking the inside of the membrane). There was no change in tryptophan fluorescence of the ghosts after the ozone treatment. Band 3 protein was isolated from the ozone-treated ghosts. The protein was digested with trypsin to obtain water soluble peptides from the cytoplasmic N-terminal tail and the interhelical loops. Fluorescent peptides included GWVIHPLGLR from the outer loop between helices 7 and 8, and peptide WMEAAR from the N-terminal cytoplasmic tail. Neither one of these peptides was oxidized by ozone. This was true whether or not the ghosts were sealed. We conclude that the position of these tryptophans either in the membrane structure, or because of binding to other proteins in the cytoplasmic tail, protects them from oxidation by ozone. Treatment of horse heart cytochrome c with ozone did not change the absorbance spectrum in the heme region or the tryptophan absorbing region. HPLC of the ozone-treated cytochrome c showed that cytochrome c was being modified, indicated by a change in the elution time. Treatment of cytochrome c with ozone did not change the activity in the NADH-cytochrome c reductase assay. Digestion of the ozone-treated cytochrome c with trypsin gave peptides which demonstrated normal fluorescence. (Cytochrome c has abnormally low fluorescence, which is not changed by ozone exposure.) The peptides were separated by HPLC. The fluorescence of the tryptophan-containing peptide (GITWK) was not decreased by treatment of the cytochrome c by ozone. Amino acid analysis of the ozone-treated cytochrome c indicated that methionine was oxidized. We conclude that tryptophan in cytochrome c is protected from oxidation by ozone because of the interaction with the porphyrin ring. Bovine serum albumin and human serum albumin were treated with ozone. There was a monotonic decrease in tryptophan fluorescence in both cases. Digestion of BSA with trypsin produced two fluorescent peptides. The peptide FWGK was identified by coelution with the authentic peptide. The putative peptide AWSVAR was not the same as the chemically synthesized peptide. The peptide sequences FWGK and "AWSVAR" were both oxidized in ozone-treated bovine serum albumin, with no detectable discrimination. Tryptic digestion of the ozone-treated human serum albumin produced a single fluorescent peptide, which was oxidized by ozone. The putative peptide AWAVAR in the tryptic digest of HSA was distinct from chemically synthesized peptide. The oxidation of tryptophans in proteins by ozone is markedly influenced by position in tertiary structure, position in membrane structure, and by chemical interactions within the protein.
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PMID:Reaction of ozone with protein tryptophans: band III, serum albumin, and cytochrome C. 902 65

Erythrocytes (RBCs) opsonized by IgG and complement are prevalently recognized and phagocytosed by complement receptor CR1. This mechanism, effective in senescent and damaged RBCs seems to be operative in ring-parasitized RBCs, since infection by Plasmodium falciparum induces stage-dependent binding of auto-antibodies and activated C3 to the RBC membrane. Later, parasite forms are also recognized by non-opsonic receptors, such as scavenger receptor CD36. Malaria parasites induce the oxidative formation of hemichromes which are the trigger for the auto-antigen development. Band 3 protein is the most plausible candidate of the RBC auto-antigen, induced by hemichromes. Auto-antigens isolated from trophozoites were found only in a high-molecular-weight protein aggregates not present in the normal RBC. The immunocomplex was purified by protein-A affinity chromatography, purified proteins digested by trypsin and analyzed by MALDI-TOF. Peptide mapping showed that the main antigen consisted of band 3 protein aggregates that also contained hemichromes, IgGs, complement factor 3 (C3), and traces of spectrin and glycophorin but no parasite proteins. Two cysteines located in the band 3 cytoplasmic domain were found to be particularly reactive to oxidants and mediated band 3 covalent dimerization via disulfide bonds. Thus, parasites promote oxidative alterations in the membrane of the host which lead to exposure of antigenic sites recognized by anti-band 3 auto-antibodies. Formation of band 3 clusters appears to be mediated by cytoplasmic binding of hemichromes and also by direct band 3 oxidation, whereby clustered, oxidized and antigenic band 3 was underglycosylated.
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PMID:Mechanisms of band 3 oxidation and clustering in the phagocytosis of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes. 1496 70

The ribosomal protein P2 of Plasmodium falciparum, (PfP2), performs certain unique extra-ribosomal functions. During the few hours of cell-division, PfP2 protein moves to the external surface of the infected erythrocytes (IE) as an SDS-resistant oligomer, and at that stage treatment with specific anti- PfP2 antibodies results in an arrest of the parasite cell-division. Amongst the oligomeric forms of PfP2, mainly the homo-tetramer is peripherally anchored on the external surface of the IE. To study the anchoring of PfP2 tetramer on IE-surface, we have explored the binding properties of PfP2 protein. Using NMR and erythrocyte pull-down studies, here we report that the homo-tetrameric PfP2 protein interacted specifically with erythrocytes and not leukocytes. The hydrophobic N-terminal 72 amino acid region is the major interacting domain. The binding of P2 to RBCs was neuraminidase resistant, but trypsin sensitive. The RBC binding was exclusive to the Plasmodium PfP2 protein as even the homologous protein of the closely related Apicomplexan parasite Toxoplasma gondii TgP2 protein did not interact with erythrocytes. Pull down assays, immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry data showed that erythrocytic Band 3 protein is a possible interactor of Plasmodium PfP2 protein on the erythrocyte surface.
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PMID:Molecular study of binding of Plasmodium ribosomal protein P2 to erythrocytes. 3271 9