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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)
Hyperthermia, raising the body temperature from normal to above 40 degrees C, has been shown to prevent pancreatitis in an experimental animal model of the disease, but the underlying cellular mechanisms of this protection remain unknown. We induced controlled hyperthermia in either laboratory rats and isolated pancreatic acini or, alternatively, raised the temperature of pancreatic homogenates in vitro from 37 to 41 degrees C. In vitro controlled hyperthermia of up to 41 degrees C increased the autoactivation-induced and
enterokinase
-induced trypsinogen activation as well as free
trypsin
activity. Conversely, in whole animal studies and in living acinar cells hyperthermia reduced or abolished premature intracellular trypsinogen activation in a time- and temperature-dependent manner and this protective effect was independent of either de novo protein synthesis, interference with acinar cell signal transduction, or confirmational changes in pancreatic trypsinogen. We conclude that hyperthermia, in a manner that is independent of the synthesis of pancreatic chaperone or heat shock proteins, can directly abolish the earliest initiating event involved in the onset of pancreatitis, namely the premature and intracellular activation of digestive zymogens.
...
PMID:Effect of hyperthermia on premature intracellular trypsinogen activation in the exocrine pancreas. 1126 86
Hereditary pancreatitis has been found to be associated with germline mutations in the cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1) gene. Here we report a family with hereditary pancreatitis that carries a novel PRSS1 mutation (R122C). This mutation cannot be diagnosed with the conventional screening method using AflIII restriction enzyme digest. We therefore propose a new assay based on restriction enzyme digest with BstUI, a technique that permits detection of the novel R122C mutation in addition to the most common R122H mutation, and even in the presence of a recently reported neutral polymorphism that prevents its detection by the AflIII method. Recombinantly expressed R122C mutant human trypsinogen was found to undergo greatly reduced autoactivation and cathepsin B-induced activation, which is most likely caused by misfolding or disulfide mismatches of the mutant zymogen. The K(m) of R122C
trypsin
was found to be unchanged, but its k(cat) was reduced to 37% of the wild type. After correction for
enterokinase
activatable activity, and specifically in the absence of calcium, the R122C mutant was more resistant to autolysis than the wild type and autoactivated more rapidly at pH 8. Molecular modeling of the R122C mutant
trypsin
predicted an unimpaired active site but an altered stability of the calcium binding loop. This previously unknown trypsinogen mutation is associated with hereditary pancreatitis, requires a novel diagnostic screening method, and, for the first time, raises the question whether a gain or a loss of
trypsin
function participates in the onset of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis caused by a novel PRSS1 mutation (Arg-122 --> Cys) that alters autoactivation and autodegradation of cationic trypsinogen. 1171 9
A cDNA encoding a novel serine protease, which we designated spinesin, has been cloned from human spinal cord. The longest open reading frame was 457 amino acids. A homology search revealed that the human spinesin gene was located at chromosome 11q23 and contained 13 exons, the gene structure being similar to that of TMPRSS3 whose gene is also located on 11q23. Spinesin has a simple type II transmembrane structure, consisting of, from the N terminus, a short cytoplasmic domain, a transmembrane domain, a stem region containing a scavenger receptor-like domain, and a serine protease domain. Unlike TMPRSS3, it carries no low density lipoprotein receptor domain in the stem region. The extracellular region carries five N-glycosylation sites. The sequence of the protease domain carried the essential triad His, Asp, and Ser and showed some similarity to that of TMPRSS2, hepsin, HAT, MT-SP1, TMPRSS3, and corin, sharing 45.5, 41.9, 41.3, 40.3, 39.1, and 38.5% identity, respectively. The putative mature protease domain preceded by H(6)DDDDK was produced in Escherichia coli, purified, and successfully activated by immobilized
enterokinase
. Its optimal pH was about 10. It cleaved synthetic substrates for
trypsin
, which is inhibited by p-amidinophenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride but not by antipain or leupeptin. Northern blot analysis against mRNA from human tissues including liver, lung, placenta, and heart demonstrated a specific expression of spinesin mRNA in the brain. Immunohistochemically, spinesin was predominantly expressed in neurons, in their axons, and at the synapses of motoneurons in the spinal cord. In addition, some oligodendrocytes were clearly stained. These results indicate that spinesin is transported to the synapses through the axons after its synthesis in the cytoplasm and may play important roles at the synapses. Further analyses are required to clarify its roles at the synapses and in oligodendrocytes.
...
PMID:Spinesin/TMPRSS5, a novel transmembrane serine protease, cloned from human spinal cord. 1174 86
Activated mast cells release a variety of potent inflammatory mediators including histamine, cytokines, proteoglycans, and serine proteases. The serine proteases belong to either the chymase (chymotrypsin-like substrate specificity) or
tryptase
(
trypsin
-like specificity) family. In this report we have investigated the substrate specificity of a recently identified mast cell protease, rat mast cell protease-4 (rMCP-4). Based on structural homology, rMCP-4 is predicted to belong to the chymase family, although rMCP-4 has previously not been characterized at the protein level. rMCP-4 was expressed with an N-terminal His tag followed by an
enterokinase
site substituting for the native activation peptide. The
enterokinase
-cleaved fusion protein was labeled by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, demonstrating that it is an active serine protease. Moreover, rMCP-4 hydrolyzed MeO-Suc-Arg-Ala-Tyr-pNA, thus verifying that this protease belongs to the chymase family. rMCP-4 bound to heparin, and the enzymatic activity toward MeO-Suc-Arg-Ala-Tyr-pNA was strongly enhanced in the presence of heparin. Detailed analysis of the substrate specificity was performed using peptide phage display technique. After six rounds of amplification a consensus sequence, Leu-Val-Trp-Phe-Arg-Gly, was obtained. The corresponding peptide was synthesized, and rMCP-4 was shown to cleave only the Phe-Arg bond in this peptide. This demonstrates that rMCP-4 displays a striking preference for bulky/aromatic amino acid residues in both the P1 and P2 positions.
...
PMID:Rat mast cell protease 4 is a beta-chymase with unusually stringent substrate recognition profile. 1189 50
Enteropeptidase (
enterokinase
) is a serine protease highly specific for recognition and cleavage of the target sequence of Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys (D4K). The three-dimensional structure of the enteropeptidase shows that the N-terminal amino acid is buried inside the protein providing molecular interactions necessary to maintain the conformation of the active site. To determine the influence of the N-terminal amino acid of enteropeptidase light chain (EK(L)) on the enzymatic activity, we constructed various mutants including 17 different single amino acid substitutions and three different extensions at the N-terminal end. The mutants of recombinant enteropeptidase (rEK(L)) were expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and secreted into culture medium. Among 20 different mutants tested, the only mutant with the Ile --> Val substitution exhibited significant activity. The kinetic properties of the mutant protein were very similar to those of the wild-type rEK(L). Based on the three-dimensional structure where the N-terminal Ile is oriented into hydrophobic pocket, the results suggest that Val could substitute Ile without affecting the active conformation of the enzyme. The results also explain why all
trypsin
-like serine proteases carry either Ile or Val at the N-termini and none other amino acid residues are found. Moreover, this finding provides a mental framework for expressing the N-terminally engineered enteropeptidase in Escherichia coli, utilizing the known property of the methionine aminopeptidase that exhibits poor activity toward the N-terminal Met-Ile bond, but offers efficient cleavage of the Met-Val bond.
...
PMID:Engineered recombinant enteropeptidase catalytic subunit: effect of N-terminal modification. 1191 64
Enterokinase
(EC 3.4.21.9) is a serine proteinase in the duodenum that exhibits specificity for the sequence (Asp)(4)-Lys. It converts trypsinogen to
trypsin
. Its high specificity for the recognition site makes
enterokinase
(EK) a useful tool for in vitro cleavage of fusion proteins. cDNA encoding the catalytic chain of Chinese bovine
enterokinase
was cloned and its encoding amino acid sequence is identical to the previously reported sequence although there are two one-base mutations which do not change the encoded amino acid. The EK catalytic subunit cDNA was cloned into plasmid pET32a, and fused downstream to the fusion partner thioredoxin (Trx) and the following DDDDK
enterokinase
recognition sequence. The recombinant bovine
enterokinase
catalytic subunit was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), and most products existed in soluble form. After an in vivo autocatalytic cleavage of the recombinant Trx-EK catalytic domain fusion protein, intact, biologically active EK catalytic subunit was released from the fusion protein. The recombinant intact EK catalytic subunit was purified to homogeneity with a specific activity of 720 AUs/mg protein through ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE chromatography, and gel filtration. The purified intact EK catalytic subunit has a K(m) of 0.17 mM, and K(cat) is 20.8s(-1). From 100 ml flask culture, 4.3 mg pure active EK catalytic subunits were obtained.
...
PMID:Expression, purification, and characterization of a biologically active bovine enterokinase catalytic subunit in Escherichia coli. 1213 63
Rat P23 is an isoform of
trypsin
(ogens) synthesized by rat acinar cells. Expression of P23 is stimulated strongly by caerulein, an analogue of cholecystokinin (CCK). However, the physiological relevance of rat P23 in healthy and pathological conditions such as caerulein-induced pancreatitis is largely unknown. Using recombinant P23 trypsinogen and reconstitution analysis of zymogen autoactivation, unique inhibitor-resistance characteristics of P23 were elucidated. P23 cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli periplasm, yielding recombinant P23 trypsinogen. Autoactivation of zymogen granule contents from caerulein-induced rat pancreas was also studied. Activation kinetics of P23 by
enterokinase
was similar to those of rat anionic trypsinogen, which is a major isoform of trypsinogen. Interestingly, rat pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI), which protects against deleterious activation of trypsinogens in zymogen granules, failed to inhibit P23
trypsin
even with four-fold molar excess, at which concentration it effectively inhibited rat anionic
trypsin
to almost 100%. P23
trypsin
also showed marked resistance to proteinaceous
trypsin
inhibitors such as soybean trypsin inhibitor and aprotinin. P23
trypsin
activated by
enterokinase
dramatically accelerated the cascade of autoactivation of anionic trypsinogen even in the presence of PSTI. Taken together with a previous observation that P23 is specifically upregulated 14-fold by 24-h caerulein infusion, these results suggest that elevated levels of P23 should be taken into consideration in the mechanism of trypsinogens within the pancreas in pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Expression and functional analysis of rat P23, a gut hormone-inducible isoform of trypsin, reveals its resistance to proteinaceous trypsin inhibitors. 1238 73
We produced bovine trypsinogen in the yeast Pichia pastoris. Little or no trypsinogen was detected when the gene with its native leader sequence was expressed under the control of the strong aox1 promoter, suggesting that expression of the wild-type bovine trypsinogen was toxic to the cells. We altered the trypsinogen native propeptide sequence by replacing the lysine at position 6 with an aspartic acid, thus destroying the site in the propeptide cleaved by
enterokinase
and by
trypsin
. This mutant accumulated up to 10 mg of trypsinogen per liter in shake flask cultures and about 40 mg/liter in 6-liter fermentors. Trypsinogen could be activated in vitro with a dipeptidyl-aminopeptidase, which selectively removed the modified trypsinogen propeptide; the resulting
trypsin
was fully active and showed evidence of glycosylation. Thus, we have developed a novel protein production scheme that can be used for the expression of proteins, such as proteases, that are deleterious to the producing organism. This system relies on the expression of a zymogen that cannot be activated in vivo coupled with its in vitro purification and activation.
...
PMID:A single mutation in the activation site of bovine trypsinogen enhances its accumulation in the fermentation broth of the yeast Pichia pastoris. 1257 Oct 36
Enteropeptidase (
enterokinase
) (EC 3.4.21.9), a highly specific processing protease, initiating a cascade of reactions activating the digestion enzymes. Catalyzing trypsinogen activation enteropeptidase exhibits unique properties for high efficiency hydrolysis of the polypeptide chain after lysine-15 residue in the -DDDDK15- sequence. In 1998 we found an unusual calcium-dependent autolysis of the enteropeptidase heavy chain leading to the drastic loss of its activity towards trypsinogen: after lysine-360 (-NNYEK360-INCN-), -), arginine-384 (-NEWER384-TQGS-), arginine-422 (-GRRER422-VGLL-) and lysine-465 (-QNMEK465-TIFQ-) residues. We used hepta-nona-peptides as the model substrates for autolysys: human angiotensin II--DRVYIHPF and cattle hemoglobin b-chain fragments: LTAEEKA and MLTAEEKAA. Kinetic parameters of enteropeptidase hydrolysis for these substrates were determined. Recent study demonstrates the ability of enteropeptidase to hydrolyze peptide bonds formed by carboxyl groups of Lys or Arg residues if less than four but at least one negative charged amino acid residue is in any of substrate P2-P5 positions. Ca(2+)-dependent autolysis of enteropeptidase heavy chain and of
trypsin
were compared; the second one serves as the natural defense mechanism against the undesirable premature proenzymes activation in pancreas leading to pancreatitis. The corresponding enteropeptidase inactivation in low Ca2+ environment ought to be the component of the same protective mechanism.
...
PMID:[Hydrolysis by enteropeptidase of nonspecific (model) peptide sequences and possible physiological role of this phenomenon]. 1269 55
Human pancreatic secretions contain two major trypsinogen isoforms, cationic and anionic trypsinogen, normally at a ratio of 2 : 1. Pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer and chronic alcoholism lead to a characteristic reversal of the isoform ratio, and anionic trypsinogen becomes the predominant zymogen secreted. To understand the biochemical consequences of these alterations, we recombinantly expressed and purified both human trypsinogens and documented characteristics of autoactivation, autocatalytic degradation and Ca2+-dependence. Even though the two trypsinogens are approximately 90% identical in their primary structure, we found that human anionic trypsinogen and
trypsin
exhibited a significantly increased (10-20-fold) propensity for autocatalytic degradation, relative to cationic trypsinogen and
trypsin
. Furthermore, in contrast to the characteristic stimulation of the cationic proenzyme, acidic pH inhibited autoactivation of anionic trypsinogen. In mixtures of cationic and anionic trypsinogen, an increase in the proportion of the anionic proenzyme had no significant effect on the levels of
trypsin
generated by autoactivation or by
enterokinase
at pH 8.0 in 1 mm Ca2+- conditions that were characteristic of the pancreatic juice. In contrast, rates of trypsinogen activation were markedly reduced with increasing ratios of anionic trypsinogen under conditions that were typical of potential sites of pathological intra-acinar trypsinogen activation. Thus, at low Ca2+ concentrations at pH 8.0, selective degradation of anionic trypsinogen and
trypsin
caused diminished
trypsin
production; while at pH 5.0, inhibition of anionic trypsinogen activation resulted in lower
trypsin
yields. Taken together, the observations indicate that up-regulation of anionic trypsinogen in pancreatic diseases does not affect physiological trypsinogen activation, but significantly limits
trypsin
generation under potential pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Human anionic trypsinogen: properties of autocatalytic activation and degradation and implications in pancreatic diseases. 1270 65
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