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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)
1. Anti-heart mitochondria autoantibodies were developed in serum from dogs following experimental myocardial infarction. 2. Heart mitochondria frozen and thawed repeatedly in a sucrose/Tris-chloride buffer retained both their functional integrity as measured by the respiratory control ratio and their ability to serve as an antigen in a complement fixation test. Mitochondria frozen and thawed in a potassium chloride/Tris-chloride buffer lost both their functional integrity and their autoantigenic activity after one freeze-thaw cycle. 3. Extraction of the heart mitochondria with acetone/water mixtures to remove phospholipids from the membrane led to a complete loss of the ability of the mitochondria to react in the complement fixation test but did not affect the ability of the membranes to bind autoantibody in absorption experiments. 4. Treatment of the mitochondrial membranes with increasing concentrations of
trypsin
caused a loss of up to approximately 50% of the membrane protein with a gradual decrease in the autoantigenic activity of the membrane without impairment of the ability of the membrane to bind autoantibody. 5. Removal of up to 90% of the sialic acid of the mitochondrial membrane with neuraminidase resulted in a considerable increase in the complement-fixing autoantigenic activity of the membrane without changing the apparent ability of the membrane to bind autoantibody in absorption experiments. 6. Exposure of mitochondrial membranes to autoantibody and complement caused an inhibition of both an inner mitochondrial membrane enzyme, i.e. cytochrome oxidase (48%) and an outer mitochondrial membrane enzyme, i.e.
NADH
cytochrome c reductase (rotenone insensitive) (37%).
...
PMID:Characterization of autoantigenic sites on isolated dog heart mitochondria. 118 45
Fragments of spinach nitrate reductase (NR) were prepared by limited proteolysis of immunopurified enzyme using both Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease and
trypsin
. Incubation of NR with V8 protease yielded two enzymically active fragments which could be size separated by FPLC on a Superose 12 column or subjected to further proteolysis while bound to a blue Sepharose affinity column. An
NADH
-ferricyanide (NADH-FR) active fragment bound to, and was eluted from, a blue Sepharose column by micromolar concentrations of
NADH
. A fragment with methyl viologen-NR activity was either eluted from the same column using 1 M KNO3 or on further treatment in situ on the blue Sepharose column with
trypsin
. Incubation of holo-NR with
trypsin
resulted in the loss of all terminal nitrate reducing activities but no loss in either
NADH
-FR activity or
NADH
-cytochrome c reductase activity. Two protease-sensitive regions of NR are shown which connect essentially between the flavin (FAD) and haem domains, and between the haem and molybdenum domains of NR. Amino acid analysis of the FAD- and FAD/haem-containing domains yielded two partial sequences which are compared with sequences deduced from complementary DNA (cDNA) of NR from Arabidopsis, tobacco and spinach. The deduced sequences from Arabidopsis and tobacco are found to be ca 80% and the spinach 100% homologous to the sequence obtained for spinach NR fragments.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial amino acid sequence of domains of nitrate reductase from spinach. 136 37
Prokaryotic 3 alpha/20 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase exhibits one segment sensitive to proteolysis with Glu-C protease and
trypsin
(cleaving after Glu192 and Arg196, respectively). Cleavage is associated with dehydrogenase inactivation; the presence of
NADH
offers almost complete protection and substrate (cortisone) gives some protection. Distantly related insect alcohol dehydrogenase is more resistant to proteolysis, but cleavage in a corresponding segment is detectable with Asp-N protease (cleaving before Asp198), while a second site (at Glu243) is sensitive to cleavage with both Glu-C and Asp-N proteases. Combined, the results suggest the presence of limited regions especially sensitive to proteolysis and the possibility of some association between the enzyme active site and the sensitive site(s). Modification of the hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase with tetranitromethane is paralleled by enzyme inactivation. With a 10-fold excess of reagent, labeling corresponds to 1.2 nmol Tyr/nmol protein chain and is recovered largely in Tyr152, with lesser amounts in Tyr251. Tetranitromethane also rapidly inhibits the other two dehydrogenases, but they contain Cys residues, preventing direct correlation with Tyr modification. Together, the proteolysis and chemical modifications highlight three segments of short-chain dehydrogenase subunits, one mid-chain, containing Tyr152 of the steroid dehydrogenase (similar numbers in the other enzymes), strictly conserved and apparently close to the enzyme active site, the other around position 195, sensitive to proteolysis and affected by coenzyme binding, while the third is close to the C-terminus.
...
PMID:Short-chain dehydrogenases. Proteolysis and chemical modification of prokaryotic 3 alpha/20 beta-hydroxysteroid, insect alcohol and human 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenases. 139 1
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts with the bifunctional affinity label 5'-(p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl)-8-azidoadenosine (5'-FSBAzA) in a two-step process: a dark reaction yielding about 0.5 mol of -SBAzA/mol of subunit by reaction through the fluorosulfonyl moiety, followed by photoactivation of the azido group whereby covalently bound -SBAzA becomes cross-linked to the enzyme [Dombrowski, K. E., & Colman, R. F. (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 275, 302-308]. We now report that the rate constant for the dark reaction is not reduced by ADP or GTP, but it is decreased 7-fold by 2 mM
NADH
and 40-fold by 2 mM
NADH
+ 0.2 mM GTP, suggesting that 5'-FSBAzA reacts at the GTP-dependent
NADH
inhibitory site. The amino acid residues modified in each phase of the reaction have been identified. Modified enzyme was isolated after each reaction phase, carboxymethylated, and digested with
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, or thermolysin. The digests were fractionated by chromatography on a phenylboronate agarose column followed by HPLC. Gas-phase sequencing of the labeled peptides identified Tyr190 as the major amino acid which reacts with the fluorosulfonyl group; Lys143 was also modified but to a lesser extent. The predominant cross-link formed during photolysis is between modified Tyr190 and the peptide Leu475-Asp476-Leu477-Arg478, which is located near the C-terminus of the enzyme. Thus, 5'-FSBAzA is effective in identifying critical residues distant in the linear sequence, but close within the regulatory nucleotide site of glutamate dehydrogenase.
...
PMID:Identification of amino acids modified by the bifunctional affinity label 5'-(p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl)-8-azidoadenosine in the reduced coenzyme regulatory site of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase. 156 33
Rat hepatic microsomal squalene synthetase (EC 2.5.1.21) was induced 25-fold by feeding rats with diet containing the hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase inhibitor, fluvastatin, and cholestyramine, a bile acid sequestrant. A soluble squalene synthetase protein with an estimated mass of 32-35 kDa, as determined by gel filtration chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 column, was solubilized out of the microsomes by controlled proteolysis with
trypsin
. Approximately 25% of the activity was recovered in a soluble form. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity utilizing a series of column chromatography purification steps on DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite, and phenyl-Sepharose sequentially. The purified enzyme showed a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Initial kinetic analysis indicated an S0.5 values for trans-farnesyl diphosphate of 1.0 microM and for NADPH of 40 microM. The Vmax with respect to trans-farnesyl diphosphate was calculated at 1.2 mumol/min/mg.
NADH
also serves as substrate for the reaction with S0.5 value of 800 microM. Western blot analysis utilizing rabbit antisera raised against the purified,
trypsin
-truncated enzyme showed a single band for the isolated solubilized enzyme at 32-33 kDa and a band for the intact microsomal enzyme at about 45-47 kDa.
...
PMID:Solubilization, purification, and characterization of a truncated form of rat hepatic squalene synthetase. 156 7
Purified cytoplasmic and membrane-bound lactate dehydrogenases (LDH) from white muscle of skate were characterized, Km for pyruvate and
NADH
for purified LDH were 150 +/- 16 and 29 +/- 7 microM, and for membrane-bound LDH were 185 +/- 22 and 7.5 +/- 1.5 microM, respectively. The membrane-bound enzyme was not inhibited by high pyruvate concentration (up to 20 mM) in contrast to purified LDH. Part of membrane-bound LDH was released by incubation in solutions with a high level of KCl (up to 1 M) or at alkaline pH. The inactivation rate during
trypsin
digestion for solubilized LDH was 2-3-fold higher than that for the membrane-bound enzyme.
...
PMID:Free and membrane-bound lactate dehydrogenase from white driving muscles of skate. 161 Mar 89
D(--)-Mandelate dehydrogenase, the first enzyme of the mandelate pathway in the yeast Rhodotorula graminis, catalyses the NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of D(--)-mandelate to phenylglyoxylate. D(--)-2-(Bromoethanoyloxy)-2-phenylethanoic acid ['D(--)-bromoacetylmandelic acid'], an analogue of the natural substrate, was synthesized as a probe for reactive and accessible nucleophilic groups within the active site of the enzyme. D(--)-Mandelate dehydrogenase was inactivated by D(--)-bromoacetylmandelate in a psuedo-first-order process. D(--)-Mandelate protected against inactivation, suggesting that the residue that reacts with the inhibitor is located at or near the active site. Complete inactivation of the enzyme resulted in the incorporation of approx. 1 mol of label/mol of enzyme subunit. D(--)-Mandelate dehydrogenase that had been inactivated with 14C-labelled D(--)-bromoacetylmandelate was digested with
trypsin
; there was substantial incorporation of 14C into two tryptic-digest peptides, and this was lowered in the presence of substrate. One of the tryptic peptides had the sequence Val-Xaa-Leu-Glu-Ile-Gly-Lys, with the residue at the second position being the site of radiolabel incorporation. The complete sequence of the second peptide was not determined, but it was probably an N-terminally extended version of the first peptide. High-voltage electrophoresis of the products of hydrolysis of modified protein showed that the major peak of radioactivity co-migrated with N tau-carboxymethylhistidine, indicating that a histidine residue at the active site of the enzyme is the most likely nucleophile with which D(--)-bromoacetylmandelate reacts. D(--)-Mandelate dehydrogenase was incubated with phenylglyoxylate and either (4S)-[4-3H]
NADH
or (4R)-[4-3H]
NADH
and then the resulting D(--)-mandelate and NAD+ were isolated. The enzyme transferred the pro-R-hydrogen atom from
NADH
during the reduction of phenylglyoxylate. The results are discussed with particular reference to the possibility that this enzyme evolved by the recruitment of a 2-hydroxy acid dehydrogenase from another metabolic pathway.
...
PMID:Mechanistic and active-site studies on D(--)-mandelate dehydrogenase from Rhodotorula graminis. 173 58
The gene gor encoding Escherichia coli glutathione reductase was mutated to create a positively charged N-terminal extension consisting of five arginine residues followed by a factor Xa cleavage site to the enzyme polypeptide chain. The modified protein assembled in vivo to yield a dimeric enzyme with kinetic parameters indistinguishable from those of wild-type glutathione reductase. The N-terminal extension could not be released by treatment with factor Xa but could be removed by exposure to
trypsin
, again without effect on the enzyme activity. The modified enzyme was readily separated from the wild-type enzyme by means of ion-exchange chromatography or nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Incubation of the modified and wild-type enzymes, separately or as a mixture, with
NADH
led to their partial inactivation, and activity was restored by exposure to 1 mM reduced glutathione. No hybrid dimer was formed in the mixture of modified and wild-type enzymes, as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, strongly suggesting that the inactivation induced by
NADH
was not due to dissociation of the parental dimers. The addition of otherwise benign positively or negatively charged extensions to the N- or C-terminal regions of the constituent polypeptide chains of oligomeric enzymes offers a simple route to detecting hybrid formation and the causative subunit dissociation and exchange.
...
PMID:Engineering surface charge. 1. A method for detecting subunit exchange in Escherichia coli glutathione reductase. 173 8
The conformational stability of holo-lipoamide and apo-lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii was studied by thermoinactivation, unfolding and limited proteolysis. The oxidized holoenzyme is thermostable, showing a melting temperature, tm = 80 degrees C. The thermal stability of the holoenzyme drastically decreases upon reduction. Unlike the oxidized and lipoamide two-electron reduced enzyme species, the
NADH
four-electron reduced enzyme is highly sensitive to unfolding by urea. Loss of energy transfer from Trp199 to flavin reflects the unfolding of the oxidized holoenzyme by guanidine hydrochloride. Unfolding of the monomeric apoenzyme is a rapid fully reversible process, following a simple two-state mechanism. The oxidized and two-electron reduced holoenzyme are resistant to limited proteolysis by
trypsin
and endoproteinase Glu-C. Upon cleavage of the apoenzyme or four-electron reduced holoenzyme by both proteases, large peptide fragments (molecular mass greater than 40 kDa) are transiently produced. Sequence studies show that limited trypsinolysis of the
NADH
-reduced enzyme starts mainly at the C-terminus of Arg391. In the apoenzyme, limited proteolysis by endoproteinase Glu-C starts from the C-terminus at the carboxyl ends of Glu459 and/or Glu435. From crystallographic data it is deduced that the susceptible amino acid peptide bonds are situated near the subunit interface. Thus, these bonds are inaccessible to the proteases in the dimeric enzyme and become accessible after monomerization. It is concluded that reduction of lipoamide dehydrogenase to the four-electron reduced state(s) is accompanied by conformational changes promoting subunit dissociation.
...
PMID:The conformational stability of the redox states of lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. 176 65
Microsomes possessing the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity were isolated from white driving muscles of the skate (Raja clavata) using differential centrifugation. It was shown that the increase of the ionic strength after addition of 0.6 M KCl and alkalinization of the medium result in the solubilization of the LDH activity - by 50% and 80%, respectively. The Km values for pyruvate and
NADH
are 171 microM and 7.5 mM, respectively. Membrane-bound LDH, is not inhibited by pyruvate excess (up to 20 mM); the rate of the enzyme inactivation by
trypsin
is 3 times as low as that of the solubilized enzyme. The existence of two-membrane-bound LDH pools is postulated. The enzyme from the first pool is bound to the membrane by electrostatic whereas the second pool LDH - by hydrophobic forces.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of microsome-bound lactate dehydrogenase from skate white muscles]. 180 5
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