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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 eukaryotic cytosolic chaperonins are large heterooligomeric complexes with a cylindrical shape, resembling that of the homooligomeric bacterial counterpart, GroEL. In analogy to GroEL, changes in shape of the cytosolic
chaperonin
have been detected in the presence of MgATP using electron microscopy but, in contrast to the nucleotide-induced conformational changes in GroEL, no details are available about the specific nature of these changes. The present study identifies the structural regions of the cytosolic
chaperonin
that undergo conformational changes when MgATP binds to the nucleotide binding domains. It is shown that limited proteolysis with
trypsin
in the absence of MgATP cleaves each of the eight subunits approximately in half, generating two fragments of approximately 30 kDa. Using mass spectrometry (MS) and N-terminal sequence analysis, the cleavage is found to occur in a narrow span of the amino acid sequence, corresponding to the peptide binding regions of GroEL and to the helical protrusion, recently identified in the structure of the substrate binding domain of the archeal group II
chaperonin
. This proteolytic cleavage is prevented by MgATP but not by ATP in the absence of magnesium, ATP analogs (MgATPyS and MgAMP-PNP) or MgADP. These results suggest that, in analogy to GroEL, binding of MgATP to the nucleotide binding domains of the cytosolic
chaperonin
induces long range conformational changes in the polypeptide binding domains. It is postulated that despite their different subunit composition and substrate specificity, group I and group II chaperonins may share similar, functionally-important, conformational changes. Additional conformational changes are likely to involve a flexible helix-loop-helix motif, which is characteristic for all group II chaperonins.
...
PMID:MgATP binding to the nucleotide-binding domains of the eukaryotic cytoplasmic chaperonin induces conformational changes in the putative substrate-binding domains. 968 84
Escherichia coli
chaperonin
(cpn) 60 (groEL) is a protein-folding oligomer lacking tryptophan residues that copurifies with tryptophan-containing proteins and peptides. Cpn 60 is a major immunogen in infectious diseases, and evidence suggests that groEL and mycobacterial cpn 60s can induce cytokine synthesis, stimulate cytokine-dependent bone resorption, and up-regulate expression of vascular endothelial cell adhesion molecules. Whether such activities are due to the cpn 60 or to the copurifying/contaminating proteins/peptides has not been determined. Here we report a method for removing the protein contaminants of groEL and demonstrate that this, essentially homogeneous, groEL remains a potent inducer of human monocyte IL-1beta and IL-6 production. Contaminating peptides had no cytokine-inducing activity and did not synergize with purified groEL. The LPS inhibitor polymyxin B and the CD14-neutralizing Ab MY4 had no inhibitory action on groEL demonstrating that activity is not due to LPS contamination. Heating groEL had no effect on its capacity to stimulate human monocytes to secrete IL-6. Proteolysis of groEL with
trypsin
, sufficient to produce low molecular mass peptides, also had no inhibitory effect. Thus, we conclude that groEL is a potent inducer of monocyte proinflammatory cytokine production, which acts through the binding of nonconformational peptide domains that are conserved after proteolysis. These data suggest that if groEL was released from bacteria it could induce prolonged tissue pathology by virtue of its cytokine-inducing activity and its resistance to proteolytic inhibition of bioactivity.
...
PMID:Homogeneous Escherichia coli chaperonin 60 induces IL-1 beta and IL-6 gene expression in human monocytes by a mechanism independent of protein conformation. 968 5
The partially homologous mitochondrial (mAAT) and cytosolic (cAAT) aspartate aminotransferase have nearly identical three-dimensional structures but differ in their folding rates in cell-free extracts and in their affinity for binding to molecular chaperones. In its native state, each isozyme is protease-resistant. Using limited proteolysis as an index of their conformational states, we have characterized these proteins (a) during the early stages of spontaneous refolding; (b) as species trapped in stable complexes with the
chaperonin
GroEL; or (c) as newly translated polypeptides in cell-free extracts. Treatment of the refolding proteins with
trypsin
generates reproducible patterns of large proteolytic fragments that are consistent with the formation of defined folding domains soon after initiating refolding. Binding to GroEL affords considerable protection to both isozymes against proteolysis. The tryptic fragments are similar in size for both isozymes, suggesting a common distribution of compact and flexible regions in their folding intermediates. cAAT synthesized in cell-free extracts becomes protease-resistant almost instantaneously, whereas
trypsin
digestion of the mAAT translation product produces a pattern of fragments qualitatively akin to that observed with the protein refolding in buffer. Analysis of the large tryptic peptides obtained with the GroEL-bound proteins reveals that the cleavage sites are located in analogous regions of the N-terminal portion of each isozyme. These results suggest that (a) binding to GroEL does not cause unfolding of AAT, at least to an extent detectable by proteolysis; (b) the compact folding domains identified in AAT bound to GroEL (or in mAAT fresh translation product) are already present at the early stages of refolding of the proteins in buffer alone; and (c) the two isozymes seem to bind in a similar fashion to GroEL, with the more compact C-terminal portion completely protected and the more flexible N-terminal first 100 residues still partially accessible to proteolysis.
...
PMID:Conformation of aspartate aminotransferase isozymes folding under different conditions probed by limited proteolysis. 972 49
Streptococcus mutans, a major etiological agent of dental caries, causes demineralization of the tooth tissue due to the formation of acids from dietary carbohydrates. Dominant among the virulence determinants of this organism are aciduricity and acidogenicity, the abilities to grow at low pH and to produce acid, respectively. The mechanisms underlying the ability of S. mutans to survive and proliferate at low pH are currently under investigation. In this study we cultured S. mutans at pH 5.2 or 7.0 and extracted soluble cellular proteins. These were analyzed using high-resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and replicate maps of proteins expressed under each of the two conditions were generated. Proteins with modulated expression at low pH, as judged by a change in the relative integrated optical density, were excised and digested with
trypsin
by using an in-gel protocol. Tryptic digests were analyzed using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry to generate peptide mass fingerprints, and these were used to assign putative functions according to their homology with the translated sequences in the S. mutans genomic database. Thirty individual proteins exhibited altered expression as a result of culture of S. mutans at low pH. Up-regulated proteins (n = 18) included neutral endopeptidase, phosphoglucomutase, 60-kDa
chaperonin
, cell division proteins, enolase, lactate dehydrogenase, fructose bisphosphate aldolase, acetoin reductase, superoxide dismutase, and lactoylglutathione lyase. Proteins down-regulated at pH 5.2 (n = 12) included protein translation elongation factors G, Tu, and Ts, DnaK, small-subunit ribosomal protein S1P, large-subunit ribosomal protein L12P, and components of both phosphoenolpyruvate:protein phosphotransferase and multiple sugar binding transport systems. The identification of proteins differentially expressed following growth at low pH provides new information regarding the mechanisms of survival and has identified new target genes for mutagenesis studies to further assess their physiological significance.
...
PMID:Analysis of Streptococcus mutans proteins modulated by culture under acidic conditions. 1197 12
The present study reports, for the first time, that the recombinant hsp65 from Mycobacterium leprae (
chaperonin
2) displays a proteolytic activity toward oligopeptides. The M. leprae hsp65 proteolytic activity revealed a
trypsin
-like specificity toward quenched fluorescence peptides derived from dynorphins. When other peptide substrates were used (beta-endorphin, neurotensin, and angiotensin I), the predominant peptide bond cleavages also involved basic amino acids in P(1), although, to a minor extent, the hydrolysis involving hydrophobic and neutral amino acids (G and F) was also observed. The amino acid sequence alignment of the M. leprae hsp65 with Escherichia coli HslVU protease suggested two putative threonine catalytic groups, one in the N-domain (T(136), K(168), and Y(264)) and the other in the C-domain (T(375), K(409), and S(502)). Mutagenesis studies showed that the replacement of K(409) by A caused a complete loss of the proteolytic activity, whereas the mutation of K(168) to A resulted in a 25% loss. These results strongly suggest that the amino acid residues T(375), K(409), and S(502) at the C-domain form the catalytic group that carries out the main proteolytic activity of the M. leprae hsp65. The possible pathophysiological implications of the proteolytic activity of the M. leprae hsp65 are now under investigation in our laboratory.
...
PMID:The Mycobacterium leprae hsp65 displays proteolytic activity. Mutagenesis studies indicate that the M. leprae hsp65 proteolytic activity is catalytically related to the HslVU protease. 1204 73
Mutation of all nonessential cysteine residues in rhodanese turns the enzyme into a form (C3S) that is fully active but less stable than wild type (WT). This less stable mutant allowed testing of two hypotheses; (a) the two domains of rhodanese are differentially stable, and (b) the
chaperonin
GroEL can bind better to less stable proteins. Reduced temperatures during expression and purification were required to limit inclusion bodies and obtain usable quantities of soluble C3S. C3S and WT have the same secondary structures by circular dichroism. C3S, in the absence of the substrate thiosulfate, is cleaved by
trypsin
to give a stable 21-kDa species. With thiosulfate, C3S is resistant to proteolysis. In contrast, wild type rhodanese is not proteolyzed significantly under any of the experimental conditions used here. Mass spectrometric analysis of bands from SDS gels of digested C3S indicated that the C-terminal domain of C3S was preferentially digested. Active C3S can exist in a state(s) recognized by GroEL, and it displays additional accessibility of tryptophans to acrylamide quenching. Unlike WT, the sulfur-loaded mutant form (C3S-ES) shows slow inactivation in the presence of GroEL. Both WT and C3S lacking transferred sulfur (WT-E and C3S-E) become inactivated. Inactivation is not due to irreversible covalent modification, since GroEL can reactivate both C3S-E and WT-E in the presence of GroES and ATP. C3S-E can be reactivated to 100%, the highest reactivation observed for any form of rhodanese. These results suggest that inactivation of C3S-E or WT-E is due to formation of an altered, labile conformation accessible from the native state. This conformation cannot as easily be achieved in the presence of the substrate, thiosulfate.
...
PMID:Active rhodanese lacking nonessential sulfhydryl groups contains an unstable C-terminal domain and can be bound, inactivated, and reactivated by GroEL. 1243 28
Achenes and receptacle tissue of Fragaria vesca, L. cultivar Yellow Wonder were shown to contain conjugated indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) that was not soluble in organic solvents and yielded IAA after strong alkaline hydrolysis, suggestive of IAA attached to plant proteins. This solvent insoluble conjugated IAA accounted for between 0.4 and 4 ng of IAA per gram fresh weight of tissue in both achenes and receptacles. To investigate this strawberry conjugate class further, a polyclonal antibody was produced to IAA-glycine attached to BSA that detected neutral indole acid esters, monocarboxylic-amino acid IAA conjugates and IAA proteins. Using immunoblotting, both achenes and receptacles of strawberry were shown to have primarily an immuno-detectable band at 76 kDa. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis yielded a wide band that was analyzed by LC-MS/MS analysis following in-gel
trypsin
digestion. Peptides derived from the immuno-detectable band were tentatively identified by peptide fragment analysis as being from either a
chaperonin
related to the hsp60 class of proteins or, alternatively, an ATP synthase. This is one of the first reports of an IAA modified protein in fruit tissue.
...
PMID:Strawberry fruit protein with a novel indole-acyl modification. 1668 61
Lipid peroxidation yields a variety of electrophiles, which are thought to contribute to the molecular pathogenesis of diseases involving oxidative stress, yet little is known of the scope of protein damage caused by lipid electrophiles. We identified protein targets of the prototypical lipid electrophile 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) in RKO cells treated with 50 or 100 mum HNE. HNE Michael adducts were biotinylated by reaction with biotinamidohexanoic acid hydrazide, captured with streptavidin, and the captured proteins were resolved by one dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, digested with
trypsin
, and identified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Of the 1500+ proteins identified, 417 displayed a statistically significant increase in adduction with increasing HNE exposure concentration. We further identified 18 biotin hydrazide-modified, HNE-adducted peptides by specific capture using anti-biotin antibody and analysis by high resolution liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. A subset of the identified HNE targets were validated with a streptavidin capture and immunoblotting approach, which enabled detection of adducts at HNE exposures as low as 1 mum. Protein interaction network analysis indicated several subsystems impacted by endogenous electrophiles in oxidative stress, including the 26 S proteasomal and
chaperonin
containing TCP-1 (CCT) systems involved in protein-folding and degradation, as well as the COP9 signalosome, translation initiation complex, and a large network of ribonucleoproteins. Global analyses of protein lipid electrophile adducts provide a systems-level perspective on the mechanisms of diseases involving oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Global analysis of protein damage by the lipid electrophile 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. 1905 59
A novel
trypsin
-like protease (PSP) from the psychrotolerant gram-negative microorganism Serratia proteamaculans was purified by ion-exchange chromatography on Q-Sepharose and affinity chromatography on immobilized basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI-Sepharose). PSP formed a tight complex with GroEL
chaperonin
. A method for dissociating the GroEL-PSP complex was developed. Electrophoretically homogeneous PSP had molecular mass of 78 kDa; the N-terminal amino acid sequence 1-10 was determined, and mass-spectral analysis of PSP tryptic peptides was carried out. The enzyme was found to be the previously unknown oligopeptidase B (OpdB). The S. proteamaculans 94 OpdB gene was sequenced and the producer strain Escherichia coli BL-21(DE3) pOpdB No. 22 was constructed. The yield of expressed His(6)-PSP was 1.5 mg/g biomass.
...
PMID:Oligopeptidase B from Serratia proteamaculans. I. Determination of primary structure, isolation, and purification of wild-type and recombinant enzyme variants. 1991 30
Hydrothermal vent mussels Bathymodiolus azoricus are naturally exposed to toxic chemical species originated directly from vent chimneys. The amount of toxic elements varies significantly among vent sites along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and B. azoricus must be able to adapt to changes in hydrothermal fluid composition, temperature and pressure. The aim of this work was to study changes in the proteome in the "gill-bacteria complex" of mussels B. azoricus from three hydrothermal vent sites with distinct environmental characteristics using 2-D Fluorescence Difference Gel Electrophoresis (2-D DIGE). Results showed that 31 proteins had different expression profiles among vent sites and both cluster and principal component analysis confirm a clear separation of mussels between sites. This suggests the existence of specific parameters grouping individuals from the same hydrothermal site. Protein spots of the more abundant differentially expressed proteins were excised, digested with
trypsin
and identified by mass spectrometry. All identified proteins (actin, ubiquinone, S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase, cysteine peptidases,
chaperonin
and catalase) have been related previously with oxidative stress conditions and are known to be affected by ROS inducing stressors, including metals. Results point out to specific adaptations at the proteome level of B. azoricus depending on the level of toxicants present in their environment.
...
PMID:2-D difference gel electrophoresis approach to assess protein expression profiles in Bathymodiolus azoricus from Mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal vents. 2183 77
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