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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)
Characterization of the cyanogen bromide (CNBr) fragments of the beta chain of human haptoglobin revealed five major fragments resulting from cleavage of four methionyl residues. The fragments were isolated by gel filtration in guanidine-HCl on Sepharose 6B and Bio-Gel
P10
and P60. Compositional analyses of the five cyanogen bromide fragments accounted for 248-253 amino acid residues in agreement with the number of residues determined for the intact beta chain. Most of the carbohydrate was attached to CNBr II. Automated amino-terminal sequence analysis and carboxyl-terminal hydrolysis with carboxypeptidase of the haptoglobin beta chain and cyanogen bromide fragments identified 139 residues, or about 55% of the beta-chain molecule. The placement of the fragments within the beta-chain molecule was established by sequence analysis of whole beta chain and a plasmin cleavage fragment. The position of CNBr V was confirmed by the absence of homoserine or homoserine lactone. Cyanogen bromide reaction of intact haptoglobin 1-1 resulted in the isolation of a beta-chain fragment, CNBr III, covalently attached to the intact alpha1 chain by a single disulfide bond. The beta chain was shown to have primary structural similarities to the chymotrypsin family of serin eproteases. Partial sequence analysis of CNBr V established the region which is comparable to the serine-195 active-site region: /Asp-Thr-Cys-Tyr-Gly-Asp-Ala-Gly-Ser-Ala-Phe/ (residues 189-199, chymotrypsinogen A numbering). The active-site serine-195 is replaced by alanine; however, the specificity residue of the
trypsin
-like enzymes, Asp-189, is preserved. Several minor cyanogen bromide cleavage products were also identified in yields of up to 15%. These minor cleavage products give evidence that tryptophanyl residues in proteins, or glycoproteins, are also susceptible to cyanogen bromide cleavage.
...
PMID:Characterization of the cyanogen bromide fragments of the beta chain of human haptoglobin. 99 9
The assembly activity and electrophoretic mobility of a T4 bacteriophage baseplate protein, P11, have been found to be affected by digestion with the proteases
trypsin
, subtilisin and carboxypeptidase Y. Analysis of the
trypsin
limit-digestion product of P11 by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size analysis by high performance liquid chromatography indicate that there is a decrease of approximately 5000 in the molecular weight of the P11 molecule or a loss of 2500 in Mr from each of the gp11 subunits of the dimer. During protease treatment P11 demonstrates a time-dependent loss in the ability to interact with the baseplate protein
P10
to form the P(10/11) complex, the first assembly intermediate of the T4 baseplate 1/6th arm. Similar treatments of the P(10/11) complex indicate that P11 in the complex is not affected by these proteases. Concomitant with the loss of assembly activity is a change in the electrophoretic mobility of P11 on non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels from a single band to a series of more mobile bands suggesting sequential loss of positive charge. P11 assembly activity is completely lost after removal of the first positive charge. These results suggest that the carboxyl termini of the two gp11 subunits of the P11 molecule are involved in the interaction of P11 with
P10
to form the P(10/11) complex. Analysis of the portion of gp11 removed by carboxypeptidase Y demonstrates that there are up to 13 aliphatic and aromatic carboxyl-terminal amino acids.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of precursors in bacteriophage T4 baseplate assembly. III. The carboxyl termini of protein P11 are required for assembly activity. 638 56
Several crystal structures of intact members of the serine proteinase inhibitor (or serpin) superfamily have recently been solved but the relationship of their reactive-loop conformations to those of circulating forms remains unclear. Here we examine reactive-loop conformational changes of anti-
trypsin
and anti-thrombin by using limited proteolysis and binary complex formation with synthetic homologous reactive-loop peptides. Proteolysis at the
P10
-P9, P8-P7 and P7-P6 of anti-
trypsin
was distorted by binary complex formation. The P1'-P2' bond in anti-thrombin was more accessible to proteolysis after binary complex formation, whereas cleavage at the P4-P3 bond was variably altered by synthetic peptide insertion. The proteolytic accessibility of the reactive-site P1-P1' bond of anti-
trypsin
and anti-thrombin binary complexes was identical with that of the native form and no cleavage was observed in the hinge region (P15-
P10
) of either protein, whether native or as binary complexes. these results fit with the proposal that the hydrophobic reactive loop of serpins adopts a modified helical conformation in the circulation, with the hinge region being partly incorporated into the A beta-pleated sheet. This loop can be displaced by peptides and induced to adopt a new conformation similar to the three-turn helix of ovalbumin. Both the native and binary complexed forms of anti-thrombin showed a greatly increased proteolytic sensitivity in the presence of heparin, indicating that heparin either induces a conformational change in the local structure of the helical reactive loop or facilitates the approximation of enzyme and inhibitor.
...
PMID:Probing serpin reactive-loop conformations by proteolytic cleavage. 867 81
The crystal structures of two homologous inhibitors (PMP-C and PMP-D2v) from the insect Locusta migratoria have been determined in complex with bovine alpha-chymotrypsin at 2.1- and 3.0-A resolution, respectively. PMP-C is a potent bovine alpha-chymotrypsin inhibitor whereas native PMP-D2 is a weak inhibitor of bovine
trypsin
. One unique mutation at the P1 position converts PMP-D2 into a potent bovine alpha-chymotrypsin inhibitor. The two peptides have a similar overall conformation, which consists of a triple-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet connected by three disulfide bridges, thus defining a novel family of serine protease inhibitors. They have in common the protease interaction site, which is composed of the classical protease binding loop (position P5 to P'4, corresponding to residues 26-34) and of an internal segment (residues 15-18), held together by two disulfide bridges. Structural divergences between the two inhibitors result in an additional interaction site between PMP-D2v (position
P10
to P6, residues 21-25) and the residues 172-175 of alpha-chymotrypsin. This unusual interaction may be responsible for species selectivity. A careful comparison of data on bound and free inhibitors (from this study and previous NMR studies, respectively) suggests that complexation to the protease stabilizes the flexible binding loop (from P5 to P'4).
...
PMID:Complexation of two proteic insect inhibitors to the active site of chymotrypsin suggests decoupled roles for binding and selectivity. 1149 15
PMP-D2 and HI, two peptides from Locusta migratoria, were shown to belong to the family of tight-binding protease inhibitors. However, they interact weakly with bovine
trypsin
(K(i) around 100 nM) despite a
trypsin
-specific Arg at the primary specificity site P1. Here we demonstrate that they are potent inhibitors of midgut trypsins isolated from the same insect and of a fungal
trypsin
from Fusarium oxysporum (K(i) <or= 0.02 nM). Therefore, they display a selectivity not existing for the parent chymotrypsin inhibitor PMP-C. By NMR, we demonstrate that HI possesses a highly rigid structure similar to the crystal structure of a variant of PMP-D2 in complex with bovine alpha-chymotrypsin. The main difference with PMP-C is located in the region from residues 20 to 24 (positions P6-
P10
) that interacts with the loop containing Gly173 in chymotrypsin. The corresponding residue in mammalian trypsins is always a proline that may generate a steric clash with the inhibitor. The residues thought to confer selectivity were mutated with PMP-C as a model. The resulting analogue PMP-D2(K10W,P21A,W25A) loses some activity toward insect and fungal trypsins but is a more potent inhibitor of mammalian trypsins, corresponding to a decrease of selectivity. This work represents a first attempt in tuning the selectivity of natural peptidic serine protease inhibitors by mutating residues out of the reactive loop (P3-P'3).
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of trypsins by insect peptides: role of P6-P10 loop. 1462 7
We have previously shown that a trypsin inhibitor from desert locust Schistocerca gregaria (SGTI) is a taxon-specific inhibitor that inhibits arthropod trypsins, such as crayfish
trypsin
, five orders of magnitude more effectively than mammalian trypsins. Thermal denaturation experiments, presented here, confirm the inhibition kinetics studies; upon addition of SGTI the melting temperatures of crayfish and bovine trypsins increased 27 degrees C and 4.5 degrees C, respectively. To explore the structural features responsible for this taxon specificity we crystallized natural crayfish
trypsin
in complex with chemically synthesized SGTI. This is the first X-ray structure of an arthropod
trypsin
and also the highest resolution (1.2A) structure of a
trypsin
-protein inhibitor complex reported so far. Structural data show that in addition to the primary binding loop, residues P3-P3' of SGTI, the interactions between SGTI and the crayfish enzyme are also extended over the P12-P4 and P4'-P5' regions. This is partly due to a structural change of region
P10
-P4 in the SGTI structure induced by binding of the inhibitor to crayfish
trypsin
. The comparison of SGTI-crayfish
trypsin
and SGTI-bovine
trypsin
complexes by structure-based calculations revealed a significant interaction energy surplus for the SGTI-crayfish
trypsin
complex distributed over the entire binding region. The new regions that account for stronger and more specific binding of SGTI to crayfish than to bovine
trypsin
offer new inhibitor sites to engineer in order to develop efficient and specific protease inhibitors for practical use.
...
PMID:Extended intermolecular interactions in a serine protease-canonical inhibitor complex account for strong and highly specific inhibition. 1592 57
CNS synapses are produced rapidly upon pre- and post-synaptic recruitment. However, their composition is known to change during development and we reasoned that this may be reflected in the gross biochemical properties of synapses. We found synaptic structure in adult cortical synaptosomes to be resistant to digestion with
trypsin
in the presence and absence of calcium ions, contrasting with previous observations. We evaluated the divalent cation dependence and
trypsin
sensitivities of synapses using synaptosomes from different developmental stages. In contrast to adult synapses, at postnatal day (P) 10 EDTA treatment eliminated approximately 60% of the synapses, and
trypsin
and EDTA, together, eliminated all junctions. Trypsinization in the presence of calcium eliminated approximately 60% of the junctions at
P10
. By P35, all synapses were calcium independent, whereas full
trypsin
resistance was not attained until P49. To compare the calcium dependence and
trypsin
sensitivity of synapses in another region of the adult brain, we examined synapses from adult (P50) hippocampus. Adult hippocampus maintained a population of synapses that resembled that of P35 cortex. Our results show that synapses are modified over a long time period in the developing cortex. We propose a model in which the addition of synergistic calcium-dependent and -independent adhesive systems stabilize synapses.
...
PMID:Structural stabilization of CNS synapses during postnatal development in rat cortex. 1680 40
TTSPs [type II TMPRSSs (transmembrane serine proteases)] are a growing family of
trypsin
-like enzymes with, in some cases, restricted tissue distribution. To investigate the expression of TTSPs in the nervous system, we performed a PCR-based screening approach with
P10
(postnatal day 10) mouse spinal cord mRNA. We detected the expression of five known TTSPs and identified a novel TTSP, which we designated neurobin. Neurobin consists of 431 amino acids. In the extracellular part, neurobin contains a single SEA (sea-urchin sperm protein, enterokinase and agrin) domain and a C-terminal serine protease domain. RT-PCR (reverse transcription-PCR) analysis indicated the expression of neurobin in spinal cord and cerebellum. Histochemical analysis of brain sections revealed distinct staining of Purkinje neurons of the cerebellum. Transiently overexpressed neurobin was autocatalytically processed and inserted into the plasma membrane. Autocatalytic activation could be suppressed by mutating Ser(381) in the catalytic pocket to an alanine residue. The protease domain of neurobin, produced in Escherichia coli and refolded from inclusion bodies, cleaved chromogenic peptides with an arginine residue in position P(1). Serine protease inhibitors effectively suppressed the proteolytic activity of recombinant neurobin. Ca2+ or Na+ ions did not significantly modulate the catalytic activity of the protease. Recombinant neurobin processed 17-kDa FGF-2 (fibroblast growth factor-2) at several P(1) lysine and arginine positions to distinct fragments, in a heparin-inhibitable manner, but did not cleave FGF-7, laminin or fibronectin. These results indicate that neurobin is an authentic TTSP with
trypsin
-like activity and is able to process FGF-2 in vitro.
...
PMID:Neurobin/TMPRSS11c, a novel type II transmembrane serine protease that cleaves fibroblast growth factor-2 in vitro. 1821 25
Corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) is a non-inhibitory serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin) that transports cortisol and progesterone in blood. Crystal structures of rat CBG and a thrombin-cleaved human CBG:anti-
trypsin
(Pittsburgh) chimera show how structural transitions after proteolytic cleavage of the CBG reactive center loop (RCL) could disrupt steroid binding. This ligand release mechanism is assumed to involve insertion of the cleaved RCL into the beta-sheet A of the serpin structure. We have, therefore, examined how amino acid substitutions in the human CBG RCL influence steroid binding before and after its cleavage by neutrophil elastase. Elastase-cleaved wild-type CBG or variants with substitutions at P15 and/or P16 (E334G/G335N or E334A) lost steroid binding completely, whereas deletion of Glu-334 resulted in no loss of steroid binding after RCL cleavage, presumably because this prevents its insertion into beta-sheet A. Similarly, the steroid binding properties of CBG variants with substitutions at P15 (G335P), P14 (V336R), or P12 (T338P) in the RCL hinge were largely unaffected after elastase cleavage, most likely because the re-orientation and/or insertion of the cleaved RCL was blocked. Substitutions at
P10
(G340P, G340S) or P8 (T342P, T342N) resulted in a partial loss of steroid binding after proteolysis which we attribute to incomplete insertion of the cleaved RCL. Remarkably, several substitutions (E334A, V336R, G340S, and T342P) increased the steroid binding affinities of human CBG even before elastase cleavage, consistent with the concept that CBG normally toggles between a high affinity ligand binding state where the RCL is fully exposed and a lower affinity state in which the RCL is partly inserted into beta-sheet A.
...
PMID:Residues in the human corticosteroid-binding globulin reactive center loop that influence steroid binding before and after elastase cleavage. 1901 Dec 38
Previous studies have shown that the
trypsin
inhibitors LMPI-1, LMPI-3 and SGTI from locusts display an unusual species selectivity. They inhibit locust, crayfish and fungal trypsins several orders of magnitude more efficiently than bovine
trypsin
. In contrast, the chymotrypsin inhibitors from the same family, LMPI-2 and SGCI, are active towards mammalian enzymes. The crystal structures of a variant of LMPI-1 and of LMPI-2 in complex with bovine chymotrypsin have revealed subtle structural differences between the
trypsin
and chymotrypsin inhibitors. In a previous report, it was proposed that Pro173 of bovine
trypsin
is responsible for the weak inhibitory activity of LMPI-1 and LMPI-3. A fungal
trypsin
from Fusarium oxysporum contains Gly173 instead of Pro173 and has been shown to be strongly inhibited by LMPI-1 and LMPI-3. To explore the structural features that are responsible for this property, the crystal structure of the complex between LMPI-3 and F. oxysporum
trypsin
was determined at 1.8 A resolution. This study indicates that this small inhibitor interacts with the protease through the reactive site P3-P4' and the
P10
-P6 residues. Comparison of this complex with the SGTI-crayfish
trypsin
and BPTI-bovine
trypsin
complexes reinforces this hypothesis on the role of residue 173 of
trypsin
in species selectivity.
...
PMID:Structure of Locusta migratoria protease inhibitor 3 (LMPI-3) in complex with Fusarium oxysporum trypsin. 1902 Mar 55
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