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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The membrane-bound coupling factor from Mycobacterium phlei was solubilized from membrane vesicles by washing with low ionic strength buffer or 0.25 M sucrose. The solubilized enzyme exhibited coupling factor, latent ATPase, and succinate oxidation-stimulating activity. Purification by affinity chromatography using Sepharose coupled to ADP yielded a homogeneous preparation of latent ATPase which was purified about 200-fold with an 84% yield in a single step. Purified latent ATPase exhibited coupling factor activity but no succinate oxidation-stimulating activity. The molecular weight of latent ATPase was determined to be 250,000 +/- 10,000 by Sephadex G-200 chromatography. The ATPase was unmasked by
trypsin
treatment and activated by Mg2+ ion. However,
trypsin
treatment inactivated the coupling factor activity in the purified enzyme, indicating that the catalytic sites for ATPase and coupling activity are different. Unlike mitochondrial ATPase, latent ATPase from M. phlei was not cold-labile. Of the nucleoside triphosphates, UTP,
ITP
, and epsilon-ATP (1-N6-ethenoadenosine triphosphate) were hydrolyzed to a lesser extent compared to ATP. Kinetic data showed that ADP acted as a competitive inhibitor of latent ATPase activity with a Ki of 5 x 10(-3) M. Uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation and respiratory inhibitors did not affect the latent ATPase activity, while sodium azide (0.1 mM) inhibited the latent ATPase activity.
...
PMID:Energy-transducing membrane-bound coupling factor-ATPase from Mycobacterium phlei. I. Purification, homogeneity, and properties. 12 54
The ATPase preparations from the hog thyroid was preincubated with various amounts of
trypsin
. The activity of Mg-ATPase was consistently elevated. On the contrary, the Na, K-ATPase activity decreased with increasing amounts of
trypsin
. The effects were similar to those which were observed in the enzyme preparations treated with basis polyamino acids as previously reported. This phenomenon seemed to be specific in the preparations from the thyroid. The Mg-dependent activity was increased after pretreatment with
trypsin
or poly-L-lysine (PLL) when CTP,
ITP
and UTP were used as substrate. Thus the substrate specificity of Mg-ATPase was low. The enzyme-kinetics using ATP as substrate showed that the increase in activity was due to an increase in Vmax and not to a change in Km. The activity of Mg-ATPase was increased even after 30 min of preincubation with
trypsin
, while the Na, K-ATPase activity was almost diminished. These results suggest that the activity of Mg-ATPase in the preparation from the thyroid is specifically changed by the modification of the molecular environment of the enzyme with
trypsin
or basic polyamino acids.
...
PMID:Some properties of hog thyroidal membrane-bound adenosine tri-phosphatase: proteolytic activation of Mg-dependent activity. 23 39
Enzymes in particulate fractions from sea urchin sperm and in soluble fractions from rat lung were shown to catalyze the formation of inosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic IMP) and of 2'-deoxyguanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic dGMP) from
ITP
and dGTP, respectively. With sea urchin sperm particulate fractions, Mn2+ was an essential metal cofactor for inosinate, deoxyguanylate, guanylate and adenylate cyclase activities. Heat-inactivation studies differentiated inosinate and deoxyguanylate cyclase activities from adenylate cyclase, but indicated an association of these activities with guanylate cyclase. Preincubation of sea urchin sperm particulate fractions with
trypsin
altered in a very similar manner guanylate, inosinate, and deoxyguanylate cyclase activities, and various metals and metal-nucleotide combinations protected the three cyclase activities to comparable degrees against
trypsin
. The relative guanylate, deoxyguanylate and inosinate cyclase activities at 0.1 mM nucleoside triphosphate were 1.0, 0.5 and 0.08, respectively. With these three cyclase activities, plots of reciprocal velocities against reciprocal Mn2+-nucleoside triphosphate concentrations were concave upward, suggesting positive homotropic effects. With rat lung soluble preparations, relative guanylate, deoxyguanylate, inosinate and adenylate cyclase activities at 0.09 mM nucleoside triphosphate were 1.0, 1.7, 0.1 and 0, respectively. MnGTP was a competitive inhibitor of deoxyguanylate cyclase activity (Ki equals 12.2 muM) and MndGTP was a competitive inhibitor of guanylate cyclase activity (Ki equals 16.2 muM). Inhibition studies using
ITP
were not conducted. When soluble fractions from rat lung were applied to Bio-Gel A 1.5 m columns, elution profiles of guanylate, deoxyguanylate and inosinate cyclase activities were similar. These results suggest that deoxyguanylate, guanylate and inosinate cyclase activities reside within the same protein molecule.
...
PMID:Enzymatic formation of inosine 3',5'-monophosphate and of 2'-deoxyguanosine 3',5'-monophosphate. Inosinate and deoxyguanylate cyclase activity. 23 91
The intermediate product EAC1-8 released cytoplasmic components as a result of at least two sequential reactions after its interaction with C9. Binding of C9 to EAC1-8 occurred in a few minutes even at 0 degrees C. Trypsinization of EAC1-9 prepared and held at low temperature resulted in nullification of the potential hemolysis of these cells. A brief incubation at 30 or 37 degrees resulted in the formation of an intermediate whose hemolytic potential could not be nullified by
trypsin
. The failure of
trypsin
to nullify hemolysis was attributed to the insertion of C9 into the cell membrane. Studies on the effec of EDTA or low temperature suggested that the reported temperature-dependent step in E* formation described by
Frank
et al. was the insertion of C9. The results of the studies with 86Rb-labeled EAC1-8 indicated that a transmembrane channel was not formed until after the C9 had been inserted and a further reaction or reactions had occurred.
...
PMID:Studies on the terminal stages of immune hemolysis. III. Distinction between the insertion of C9 and the formation of a transmembrane channel. 65 73
The dissociation of mitochondrial F1-ATPase with 3 M LiCl at 0 degrees C, followed by reconstitution, has been analysed. FPLC over a gel filtration column in the dissociation buffer revealed the presence of two protein moieties, an alpha 3 gamma delta epsilon complex and single beta-subunits. When the dissociation and chromatography is performed at pH 6.2, the former protein moiety still contains some adenine nucleotides. Reconstitution of the dissociated complex is not possible any more after FPLC, probably due to the loss of residual adenine nucleotides. After a single column centrifugation step one nucleotide per F1 still remains bound. For reconstitution, additional ATP, or a suitable analog, is required. 2-Azido-ATP, but not 8-azido-ATP or
ITP
, can replace ATP during the reconstitution. F1, reconstituted in the presence of 2-azido-ATP, contains three tightly bound nucleotides, similar to freshly isolated F1, of which in this case one is an adenine nucleotide and two are azido-adenine nucleotides. One of the latter can be rapidly exchanged and is bound to a catalytic site. Covalent binding (at a beta-subunit) of the other tightly bound 2-azido-ATP by ultraviolet illumination does not result in inhibition of the enzyme. Digestion of F1 with
trypsin
, followed by HPLC, showed that the label is not bound to the fragment containing Tyr-368, nor to the fragment containing Tyr-345. This result was confirmed by CNBr digestion, followed by SDS-urea PAGE. We conclude that during dissociation of F1 one tightly bound nucleotide (ADP) remains bound at an alpha/beta interface site and that for reconstitution binding of ATP to a (non-catalytic) beta-site is required. The conformation of this site differs from that of the two catalytic beta-sites.
...
PMID:Characteristics of the non-exchangeable nucleotide binding sites of mitochondrial F1 revealed by dissociation and reconstitution with 2-azido-ATP. 153 23
alpha-Lytic protease is a bacterial serine protease of the
trypsin
family that is synthesized as a 39-kD preproenzyme (Silen, J. L., C. N. McGrath, K. R. Smith, and D. A. Agard. 1988. Gene (Amst.). 69: 237-244). The 198-amino acid mature protease is secreted into the culture medium by the native host, Lysobacter enzymogenes (Whitaker, D. R. 1970. Methods Enzymol. 19:599-613). Expression experiments in Escherichia coli revealed that the 166-amino acid pro region is transiently required either in cis (Silen, J. L., D.
Frank
, A. Fujishige, R. Bone, and D. A. Agard. 1989. J. Bacteriol. 171:1320-1325) or in trans (Silen, J. L., and D. A. Agard. 1989. Nature (Lond.). 341:462-464) for the proper folding and extracellular accumulation of the enzyme. The maturation process is temperature sensitive in E. coli; unprocessed precursor accumulates in the cells at temperatures above 30 degrees C (Silen, J. L., D.
Frank
, A. Fujishige, R. Bone, and D. A. Agard. 1989. J. Bacteriol. 171:1320-1325). Here we show that full-length precursor produced at nonpermissive temperatures is tightly associated with the E. coli outer membrane. The active site mutant Ser 195----Ala (SA195), which is incapable of self-processing, also accumulates as a precursor in the outer membrane, even when expressed at permissive temperatures. When the protease domain is expressed in the absence of the pro region, the misfolded, inactive protease also cofractionates with the outer membrane. However, when the folding requirement for either wild-type or mutant protease domains is provided by expressing the pro region in trans, both are efficiently secreted into the extracellular medium. Attempts to separate folding and secretion functions by extensive deletion mutagenesis within the pro region were unsuccessful. Taken together, these results suggest that only properly folded and processed forms of alpha-lytic protease are efficiently transported to the medium.
...
PMID:Correct folding of alpha-lytic protease is required for its extracellular secretion from Escherichia coli. 161 6
Three to six mg of the millimolar Ca2+-requiring proteinase (m-calpain) were obtained from 1 kg bovine cardiac muscle (fresh wt) and some enzymatic properties of this proteinase were determined. Activity of bovine cardiac m-calpain decreases as ionic strength increases from 75 to 1000 mM. Maximal activation of m-calpain by Ca2+, La3+, Ba2+, and Mn2+ occurs at 2 to 3 mM concentrations of each of these divalent cations, but La3+ activation is only 20 to 25% and Ba2+ and Mn2+ activation only 6 to 10% as great as Ca2+ activation. Maximum Sr2+ activation occurs at 20 mM Sr2+ and is 90 to 95% of maximum Ca2+ activation. Mg2+, Zn2+, Cr2+, and Cd2+ do not activate m-calpain when added alone; Mg2+ does not affect, but Zn2+ inhibits, Ca2+-stimulated activity. The nonionic detergents, Triton X-100 and Brij 35, activate m-calpain 1.6- to 2.0-fold but do not change its Ca2+ requirement. Sodium dodecyl sulfate and urea inhibit m-calpain completely at 0.045% and 2.0 M, respectively. Because they bind Ca2+ needed for activation, ATP, ADP, and
ITP
inhibit m-calpain. The
trypsin
inhibitors, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, ovomucoid trypsin inhibitor, ovoinhibitor, aprotinin, alpha 1-antiproteinase inhibitor, soybean trypsin inhibitor, and lima bean trypsin inhibitor do not affect m-calpain activity; m-calpain does not release measureable quantities of acid-soluble peptides from a rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic protein fraction but does degrade rabbit skeletal myofibrils and casein.
...
PMID:Some properties of the millimolar Ca2+-dependent proteinase from bovine cardiac muscle. 285 32
The Ca2+/Mg2+ ATPase of the rat heart sarcolemmal particles was solubilized with Triton X-100 after treating the membranes with
trypsin
and purified by high speed centrifugation, ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydrophobic chromatography and gel filtration. The purified enzyme was seen as a single protein band in non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and its molecular weight by gel filtration was found to be about 240,000. The enzyme utilized Ca-ATP or Mg-ATP as a substrate with high affinity sites (Km = 0.12-0.16 mM) and low affinity sites (Km = 1 mM). The enzyme also utilized CTP, GTP,
ITP
, UTP and ADP as substrates but at a lower rate in comparison to ATP. The enzyme was activated by Ca2+ (Ka = 0.4 mM) and Mg2+ (Ka = 0.2 mM) as well as by other cations in the order Ca2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Mn2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+ greater than Ni2+ greater than Cu2+. The ATPase activity in the presence of Ca2+ was markedly inhibited by Mg2+, Mn2+, Ni2+ and Cu2+ whereas the monovalent cations such as Na+ and K+ were without effect. The enzyme did not exhibit Ca2+ stimulated Mg2+ dependent ATPase activity and was insensitive to calmodulin, ouabain, verapamil, D-600, oligomycin, azide and vanadate. Optimum pH for Ca2+ or Mg2+ ATPase activity was 8.5-9.0. In view of the possible ectoenzyme nature of the ATPase, its role in adenine nucleotide and Ca2+ metabolism in the myocardium is discussed.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a Ca2+/Mg2+ ecto-ATPase from rat heart sarcolemma. 297 73
Sea urchin sperm were demembranated and reactivated with a solution containing 0.04% Triton X-100 and 0.03 mM ATP. The ATP concentration was then lowered abruptly by diluting the sperm suspension 50-fold into reactivating solution containing no ATP. The flagella of the sperm in the diluted suspension were not motile, but they were bent into a variety of stationary rigor wave forms closely resembling the wave forms occurring at different stages of the flagellar bending cycle during normal movement. The form of these rigor waves was unchanged upon storage for several hours in the presence of dithiothreitol and EDTA. Addition of 1 microM ATP induced slow relaxation of the waves, with most of the sperm becoming partially straightened over a period of about 30 min; somewhat higher concentrations gave a more rapid and complete relaxation. Concentrations of ATP above 10 microM induced resumption of normal beating movements. Addition of
ITP
, GTP, or GDP (up to 1 mM) produced no relaxation of the rigor waves. Digestion with
trypsin
to an extent sufficient to disrupt the radial spokes and the nexin links caused no change in the rigor wave forms, suggesting that these wave forms could be maintained by the dynein cross-bridges between the outer doublet tubules of the flagellar axoneme. Study of the effects of viscous shear on the rigor wave axonemes has shown that they are resistant to distortion by bending, although they can be twisted relatively easily.
...
PMID:Properties of flagellar "rigor waves" formed by abrupt removal of adenosine triphosphate from actively swimming sea urchin sperm. 421 20
Regulation of cyclic nucleotide concentrations in rod outer segments (Rana pipiens) has been further examined. The present studies show that illumination markedly diminishes the concentration of cyclic nucleotides in suspensions of photoreceptor membranes, but the locus of regulation is cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.c) (light-stimulated) and not adenylate cyclase. There is a marked disproportionality between bleaching of rhodopsin and stimulation of phosphodiesterase. Bleaching only 0.6% of the rhodopsin produces half the stimulation produced by bleaching 100% of the rhodopsin. The process of activation of phosphodiesterase by light is in two steps, a light-dependent step followed by an ATP-dependent step. Illumination (in the absence of ATP) produces a
trypsin
-resistant, heat-labile, macromolecular stimulator. In the presence of 0.75 mM ATP (GTP or
ITP
) this stimulator produces a greater than 5-fold increases in the V(max) of photoreceptor phosphodiesterase without changing the K(m). At physiological substrate concentrations (10(-7) M) the rate of hydrolysis of cyclic GMP is 23 times greater than that of cyclic AMP. The light-produced stimulator appears unique to the photoreceptor membranes and does not activate phosphodiesterase in other tissues.
...
PMID:Regulation of cyclic nucleotide concentrations in photoreceptors: an ATP-dependent stimulation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase by light. 435 91
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