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Enzyme
Compound
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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)
An inhibitory protein for the 20S proteasome (also known as macropain, the multicatalytic proteinase complex and 20S proteinase) has been purified from bovine red blood cells. The inhibitor has an apparent molecular weight of 31,000 on
SDS
-PAGE and appears to form multimers under nondenaturing conditions. This protein inhibited all three of the putatively distinct catalytic activities of proteasome A (the active form of the proteinase) characterized by the hydrolysis of synthetic peptides such as Z-VLR-MNA, Z-GGL-AMC or Suc-LLVY-AMC and Z-LLE-beta NA. The inhibitor also prevented the hydrolysis of large protein substrates such as casein, lysozyme and bovine serum albumin. Proteasome L (the latent form of the proteinase) does not degrade these large protein substrates, but does hydrolyze the three synthetic peptides at rates similar to those by proteasome A. The inhibitor inhibited only two of these peptidase activities of proteasome L (hydrolysis of Z-GGL-AMC and of Z-LLE-beta NA or Suc-LLVY-AMC); it had no effect on the hydrolysis of Z-VLR-MNA. The inhibitor was specific for inhibition of the proteasome and had no effect on the activity of any other proteinase tested including
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, papain, subtilisin and both isoforms of calpain. Kinetic analysis indicates that the inhibitor interacted with the proteasome by a mechanism involving tight-binding. Because the proteasome appears to be a key component of the ATP/ubiquitin-dependent pathway of intracellular protein degradation, the inhibitor may represent an important regulatory protein of this pathway.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a protein inhibitor of the 20S proteasome (macropain). 131 59
Several high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-binding proteins, candidates for the putative HDL receptor, have recently been identified, including two membrane proteins: HB1 of 120 kDa and HB2 of 100 kDa, present in rat and human liver plasma membranes respectively. Further insights into their function however, have been hampered by poor recoveries of these hydrophobic peptides, and the present work was undertaken to improve yields and enable a more detailed investigation of their properties. A significant improvement has been achieved using two affinity chromatographic procedures, one exploiting the glycoprotein nature of the proteins and the other exploiting their ligand properties, which in combination resulted in considerable enrichment of HB1 and HB2. Thus DEAE-Sephacel fractionation (0.05-0.2 M-NaCl) of CHAPS-solubilized plasma membranes yielded active HDL-binding proteins which bound to concanavalin A-Sepharose or wheat-germ-lectin-Sepharose columns and retained their binding activity after eluting with methyl-alpha-D-mannoside or N-acetylglucosamine respectively. These glycoproteins were further purified by affinity chromatography using apo-HDL-Sepharose columns. Final purification required preparative
SDS
/PAGE. Investigation of the carbohydrate moieties of the proteins using glycosidases and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed pI values ranging from 4.6 to 4.9 and from 4.5 to 4.7 for HB1 and HB2 respectively, which after treatment with neuraminidase shifted towards basic pH (5.4-5.7 and 5.3-5.5 respectively). The molecular masses were decreased to 115 kDa and 95 kDa respectively, demonstrating that sialic acid residues contributed significantly to the negative charge of the glycosylated peptides. Treatment with the enzyme peptide N-glycosidase F (N-glycanase) resulted in a decrease in molecular mass of HB1 and HB2 to 105 kDa and 80 kDa respectively, but endo-alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase (O-glycanase) treatment was not effective. Neither neuraminidase nor N-glycanase treatment destroyed activity, suggesting that sialic acids or N-linked oligosaccharides are not important determinants of HDL binding. Digestion of plasma membranes with
trypsin
or Pronase resulted in a loss of activity of both HB1 and HB2 that was not influenced by prior treatment with neuraminidase, suggesting that sialic acid residues play no protective role against proteolytic cleavage of HDL receptor proteins.
...
PMID:Affinity purification of the hepatic high-density lipoprotein receptor identifies two acidic glycoproteins and enables further characterization of their binding properties. 131 18
A method was developed for direct microsequencing of N alpha-acetylated proteins electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes from polyacrylamide gels. N alpha-Acetylated proteins (greater than 32 pmol), including horse heart cytochrome c, five mutants of yeast cytochrome c, and bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase, were separated by
SDS
-PAGE and electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes. The portions of the membrane carrying the bands were cut out and treated with 0.5% polyvinylpyrrolidone in acetic acid solution at 37 degrees C for 30 min. The protein was digested on the membrane with 5-10 micrograms of
trypsin
at 37 degrees C for 24 h. During tryptic digestion, the resultant peptides were released from the membrane and the N-terminal peptide was efficiently deblocked with 50 mU of acylamino acid-releasing enzyme at 37 degrees C for 12 h. Picomole levels of the deblocked proteins could be sequenced directly by use of a gas-phase protein sequencer.
...
PMID:Deblocking and subsequent microsequence analysis of N alpha-blocked proteins electroblotted onto PVDF membrane. 132 65
Soybean lipoxygenase 1 was studied using limited proteolysis and active-site labeling to begin the structural characterization of the enzyme in solution. The serine proteases
trypsin
and chymotrypsin cleaved the large monomeric protein (95 kDa) into two large polypeptides, a C-terminal fragment of about 30 kDa and an N-terminal fragment of about 60 kDa. Under conditions that led to complete cleavage of the protein as judged by
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the catalytic activity of the protein was either reduced slightly (chymotrypsin) or enhanced (
trypsin
). The characteristics of the cleaved enzymes were the same as for native lipoxygenase 1 in all aspects examined: insensitivity to cyanide, fluoride, and EDTA, regiochemical and stereochemical consequences of catalysis, and EPR spectroscopy upon oxidation by product. The two fragments apparently were tightly associated as they could not be resolved under conditions which preserved the catalytic activity. Both native and protease-cleaved lipoxygenase 1 formed covalent adducts when treated with either 14C-phenylhydrazine or 4-nitrophenylhydrazine. The label was found only in the 60-kDa fragment and following complete
trypsin
digestion was associated with a peptide beginning after Lys-482 in the primary sequence. Therefore labeling occurred in the vicinity of the conserved histidine cluster which has been postulated as the iron-binding site. From these observations it appears that lipoxygenase 1 exists as a pair of tightly associated domains with the iron-binding site located in the larger of the two.
...
PMID:Limited proteolysis and active-site labeling studies of soybean lipoxygenase. 132 20
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) was isolated from detergent-derived extracts of human intestinal brush-border membranes (BBMs) by immunoprecipitation using a monoclonal antibody. Analysis of the immunoprecipitates by
SDS
/PAGE revealed a polypeptide of apparent M(r) 184,000 under reducing and non-reducing conditions, indicating that ACE does not contain intermolecular disulphide bridges. The quaternary structure of ACE was examined using cross-linking experiments with dithiobis[succinimidylpropionate] (DSP) and density gradient centrifugation on sucrose gradients. Both approaches demonstrated that ACE is assembled in the membrane as a monomer. By contrast, the control glycoprotein aminopeptidase N (ApN) exists as a dimer. Biosynthetic labelling experiments in intestinal tissue explants demonstrated that the 184,000-M(r) protein is generated from a single-polypeptide, mannose-rich precursor of ACE (M(r) 175,000) by modification of the carbohydrate side-chains in the Golgi apparatus. The mode of association of the mature form of the enzyme with BBMs was investigated by hydrophobic labelling of right-side-out brush-border vesicles with the photoactivatable carbene-generating reagent 125I-labelled 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m[formylamino]phenyl)diazirine (125I-labelled TID), followed by treatment with
trypsin
at dilutions that do not cause substantial degradation of ACE. These studies demonstrated that ACE is associated with the membrane via a hydrophobic segment. Furthermore, treatment of 35S-labelled inside-out membrane vesicles with
trypsin
revealed that ACE possesses a cytoplasmic tail, and therefore has a transmembraneous orientation.
...
PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme of the human small intestine. Subunit and quaternary structure, biosynthesis and membrane association. 132 43
We previously found a
trypsin
-like proteinase which momentarily appears immediately before DNA synthesis in the cell cycle of Escherichia coli synchronized by phosphate starvation and which is closely related to the initiation of DNA replication (Kato, M., Irisawa, T., Morimoto, Y. and Muramatu, M., unpublished results). The proteinase was named proteinase In. It was purified approximately 2880-fold with a recovery of 15%. The isolated enzyme appeared homogeneous by gel filtration and electrophoresis. Its molecular mass was estimated by analytical gel filtration and
SDS
/PAGE as approximately 66 kDa. The isoelectric point of proteinase In is 4.9 and its optimal pH is approximately 9. Although protein In hydrolyzes fluorogenic substrate for
trypsin
, its hydrolytic activity seems markedly affected by amino-acid sequence lying towards the N-terminal from the P1 (lysine, arginine) residue. The proteinase does not hydrolyze N2-benzoyl-D,L-arginine-4-nitronanilide and fluorogenic substrates for chymotrypsin and elastase. The proteinase activity is inhibited by leupeptin, antipain and 4-nitrophenyl 4-guanidinobenzoate, but the effects of tosyl-L-lysine chloromethane, diisopropylfluorophosphate, benzamidine and pentamidine isethionate on the proteinase activity are weak or not inhibitory. Its activity is strongly affected in the presence of NaCl and KCl, and at a concentration of 1.5 M, these increase the activity 14-fold and 13-fold, respectively, above that without salt. Proteinase In was strongly inhibited by various esters of trans-4-guanidinomethylcyclohexanecarboxylic acid, and their inhibitory effects were roughly correlated with those on growth of E. coli. Proteinase activity was found in the cytoplasmic fraction.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of proteinase In, a trypsin-like proteinase, in Escherichia coli. 133 54
The parasporal body of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. shandongiensis was characterized in terms of its structure, protein composition, and toxicological properties against several types of insects. The crystals of B. thuringiensis shandongiensis appear to consist of a major protein of 144 kDa present in an spherical inclusion, as determined by transmission electron microscopy, titration curve analysis, and
SDS
-PAGE of the solubilized crystals. A second protein of ca. 60 kDa is present in trace amounts and appears to be associated with a small bar-shaped inclusion. The 144-kDa protein has been characterized by isoelectric point determination, N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis, amino acid analysis, and immunological cross reactivity. Its N-terminal amino acid sequence differed from that of other B. thuringiensis crystal proteins. The 144-kDa protein was not immunologically related to the crystal proteins of two toxic serovars (B. thuringiensis israelensis and B. thuringiensis kurstaki HD-1) and one nontoxic serovar (B. thuringiensis indiana), as shown in immunoblots probed with antiserum raised against the 144-kDa B. thuringiensis shandongiensis protein, the B. thuringiensis israelensis crystal proteins, and the
trypsin
resistant fragment of B. thuringiensis kurstaki P1 proteins. In contrast to most B. thuringiensis serovars, B. thuringiensis shandongiensis crystals did not dissolve at pH 12. Solubilization was achieved in sodium bicarbonate at pH 8.3 and in the presence of 25 mM dithiothreitol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The parasporal inclusion of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. shandongiensis: characterization and screening for insecticidal activity. 135 4
Arylsulfatase A purified from human placenta contained an unreported component with an apparent molecular mass of 7 kDa in addition to the two known components with apparent molecular masses of 58 and 50 kDa. The detailed relationship between the 58 kDa component and the 50 kDa component is as yet unknown. The present study was undertaken to define the structure of the subunits of the sulfatase. The N-terminal sequence of the 50 kDa component was identical to that of the 58 kDa component. Furthermore, the peptide maps of the 50 kDa component, which was separately digested with
trypsin
and Achromobacter proteinase I, were quite similar to those of the 58 kDa one. Through sequence analysis of the incompatible peaks in the peptide maps, the 50 kDa component was found to lack a sequence from Val-445 to the C-terminus. On the other hand, the N-terminal sequence of the 7 kDa component began with Ala-448, though there was a minor sequence commencing with Thr-449. These observations suggest that the 50 and 7 kDa components were produced by limited proteolysis near the C-terminus of the 58 kDa component. Through analysis using unreducing
SDS
-PAGE, the 58 and the 7 kDa components were found to be linked by disulphide bonds. Arylsulfatase A purified from human liver was also composed of the same subunits as the placental one. This finding suggests that human arylsulfatase A undergoes similar proteolytic processing regardless of the tissue involved.
...
PMID:Proteolytic processing of human lysosomal arylsulfatase A. 135 93
The major inhibitor of
trypsin
in seeds of Prosopsis juliflora was purified by precipitation with ammonium sulphate, ion-exchange column chromatography on DEAE- and CM-Sepharose and preparative reverse phase HPLC on a Vydac C-18 column. The protein inhibited
trypsin
in the stoichiometric ratio of 1:1, but had only weak activity against chymotrypsin and did not inhibit human salivary or porcine pancreatic alpha-amylases.
SDS
-PAGE indicated that the inhibitor has a Mr of ca 20,000, and IEF-PAGE showed that the pI is 8.8. The complete amino acid sequence was determined by automatic degradation, and by DABITC/PITC microsequence analysis of peptides obtained from enzyme digestions of the reduced and S-carboxymethylated protein with
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, elastase, the Glu-specific protease from S. aureus and the Lys-specific protease from Lysobacter enzymogenes. The inhibitor consisted of two polypeptide chains, of 137 residues (alpha chain) and 38 residues (beta chain) linked together by a single disulphide bond. The amino acid sequence of the protein exhibited homology with a number of Kunitz proteinase inhibitors from other legume seeds, the bifunctional subtilisin/alpha-amylase inhibitors from cereals and the taste-modifying protein miraculin.
...
PMID:The complete amino acid sequence of the major Kunitz trypsin inhibitor from the seeds of Prosopsis juliflora. 136 92
Glucose isomerase from Streptomyces phaeochromogenes was purified from a commercial preparation, Swetase, by DEAE-cellulose, Bio-Gel A-0.5 m, and hydroxyapatite column chromatographies. It was found to be 2 fractions; F-A, not adsorbed on hydroxyapatite and F-B, adsorbed on hydroxyapatite. They were homogeneous in ordinary and
SDS
-PAGE and had similarities in some enzymatic and physico-chemical properties. The differences, however, were found in the N-terminal amino acid, which was only serine for F-A while it was serine and alanine for F-B, and also in their peptide mapping patterns of digests with
trypsin
, Achromobacter protease I, and cyanogen bromide. The results suggest that glucose isomerase from S. phaeochromogenes was composed of the two kinds of isozymes and that each of isozymes was a tetramer constituted of non-identical subunits.
...
PMID:Evidence for the existence of isozymes of glucose isomerase from Streptomyces phaeochromogenes. 136 94
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