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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.4.21.64 (
proteinase K
)
4,071
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A homogeneous serine proteinase was isolated from cultural filtrates of the extreme halophilic bacteria Halobacterium mediterranei 1538 using affinity chromatography on bacitracin-Sepharose, ultrafiltration and gel filtration on Sephadex G-75, with a 48% yield and 260-fold purification. The enzyme was completely inactivated by specific inhibitors of serine proteinases, PMSF and DFP, as well as by Hg2+ and PCMB. The enzyme activity was strongly dependent of NaCl concentration, the enzyme being inactivated below 0.75 M NaCl. Inactivation of the enzyme was also seen in the presence of 2-7% organic solvents. The pH optimum for Glp-Ala-Ala-Leu-pNA hydrolysis is 8.0-8.5; Km is 0.14 mM, kcat is 36.9 s-1. The stability optimum lies at pH 5.5-8.0, temperature optimum is at 55 degrees C. The enzyme molecular weight is 41,000 Da; pI is 7.5. The substrate specificity of the enzyme is comparable to that of secretory subtilisins; the extent of protein substrate hydrolysis is similar to that of
proteinase K
. The N-terminal sequence of Halobacterium mediterranei serine proteinase, Asp-Thr-Ala-Asn-Asp-Pro-Lys-Tyr-
Gly
-Ser-Gln-Tyr-Ala-Pro-Gln-Lys-Val-Asn- Ala- Asp-, reveals a 50% homology with the aminoterminal sequence of Thermoactinomyces vulgaris serine proteinase. Hence, the serine proteinase secreted by halophilic bacteria may be considered as a structural and functional analog of eubacterial enzymes.
...
PMID:[Serine proteinase from the archaebacterium Halobacterium mediterranei--an analog of eubacterium subtilisin]. 139 Dec 25
Skeletal muscle actin was lightly digested by
proteinase K
, which cleaved the peptide bond between Met-47 and
Gly
-48, producing a C-terminal 35 kDa fragment. Proteinase K-cleaved actin (proK-actin) did not polymerize into F-actin upon addition of salt. In the presence of phalloidin, however, it polymerized slowly into F-actin (proK-F-actin), indicating that the cleaved actin did not dissociate into the individual cleaved fragments but retained the global structure of actin. Electron microscopy showed that proK-F-actin had the typical double-stranded structure of a normal actin filament and formed the arrowhead structure when decorated with HMM. Heavy meromyosin ATPase was weakly activated by proK-F-actin: Vmax = 0.24 s-1, and Kapp = 2.8 microM, while Vmax = 7.6 s-1, and Kapp = 13 microM by F-actin. Correspondingly, in vitro this proK-F-actin slid very slowly on HMM attached to a glass surface at an average velocity of 0.47 microns/s, or 1/12 of that of intact F-actin. The fraction of sliding filaments was less than 50%. Assuming that the nonmotile filaments attached to HMM were not involved in ATPase activation, the sliding velocity correlated with the ATPase activity activated by proK-F-actin.
...
PMID:Muscle actin cleaved by proteinase K: its polymerization and in vitro motility. 149 Oct 13
Heparan sulfate binds to proteins present on the surface of Staphylococcus aureus cells. Binding of 125I-heparan sulfate to S. aureus was time dependent, saturable, and influenced by pH and ionic strength, and cell-bound 125I-heparan sulfate was displaced by unlabelled heparan sulfate or heparin. Other glycosaminoglycans of comparable size (chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate), highly glycosylated glycoprotein (hog gastric mucin), and some anionic polysaccharides (dextran sulfate and RNA) inhibited heparan sulfate binding to various extents. Heat treatment (80 degrees C for 10 min) and treatment of the bacteria with pronase E,
proteinase K
, pepsin, and chymotrypsin considerably reduced their ability to bind 125I-heparan sulfate, but treatment with trypsin and neuraminidase did not affect binding. Scatchard plot analysis indicated the presence of cell surface components with low affinity (Kd = 3 x 10(-5) M) for heparan sulfate. Cell surface components were released by stirring bacteria with 1 M LiCl at 37 degrees C for 2 h. Proteins of this extract that competitively inhibited binding of 125I-heparan sulfate to S. aureus were isolated by affinity chromatography on heparin-Sepharose. Two proteins having molecular masses of approximately 66 and 60 kDa and the ability to bind 125I-heparan sulfate were obtained. The first 9 amino-terminal amino acid residues of the 66-kDa protein are Asp-Trp-Thr-
Gly
-Trp-Leu-Ala-Ala-Ala, and the first 4 amino-terminal amino acid residues of the 60-kDa protein are Met-Leu-Val-Thr.
...
PMID:Binding of heparan sulfate to Staphylococcus aureus. 154 63
An enterotoxin produced by Bacteroides fragilis was purified to homogeneity and characterized as to its biological activity and basic molecular properties. Toxin preparations were prepared by growing B. fragilis VPI 13784 in brain heart infusion broth to early stationary phase, immediately precipitating the culture supernatant fluid with 70% ammonium sulfate, and stabilizing the precipitate with the protease inhibitor TPCK (tolylsulfonyl phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone). The toxin was sequentially purified by anion-exchange chromatography on Q-Sepharose, hydrophobic interaction chromatography on phenyl-agarose, and high-resolution ion-exchange chromatography on Mono Q. The toxin appeared homogeneous as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The estimated molecular weight of the highly purified toxin as determined by gel filtration chromatography on Superose-12 and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is 19,000. It has an isoelectric point of approximately 4.5 and is stable at pHs 5 to 10. The purified toxin is stable at -20 and 4 degrees C and upon freeze-drying, but it is unstable at temperatures above 55 degrees C. It is sensitive to
proteinase K
and Streptomyces protease but is resistant to trypsin and chymotrypsin. The activity of the purified toxin is neutralized by antiserum to a toxigenic strain of B. fragilis but not by antiserum to nontoxigenic strains. N-terminal amino acid analysis reveal an unambiguous sequence of Ala-Val-Pro-Ser-Glu-Pro-Lys-Thr-Val-Tyr-Val-Ile-Xxx-Leu-Arg-Glu-Asn-
Gly
- Ser-Thr . The highly purified toxin induced a strong fluid accumulation response in the lamb ileal-loop assay as well as a cytotoxic response (cell rounding) on HT-29 colon carcinoma cells. Thus, the purified toxin can cause both enterotoxic and cytotoxic activities.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of an enterotoxin from Bacteroides fragilis. 154 60
In the absence of delta mu H+, the in vitro translocation of proOmpA resulted in the stable accumulation of a possible translocation intermediate in addition to a transiently accumulating one. The stable intermediate was detected on a polyacrylamide gel as two
proteinase K
-resistant bands corresponding to a molecular weight of about 28,000. The appearance of the bands was appreciably enhanced when proOmpA was oxidized with ferricyanide. No mature OmpA appeared. When proOmpA reduced with dithiothreitol was used, on the other hand, the bands did not appear at all. Upon the replacement of Cys302 of OmpA with
Gly
, the intermediate accumulation was abolished. The proOmpA treated with dithiothreitol was labeled with N-[3H]-ethylmaleimide, whereas that treated with ferricyanide was not. The ferricyanide-treated proOmpA was translocated into membrane vesicles in the presence of delta mu H+. The mature OmpA thus translocated and processed was not labeled with N-[3H]ethylmaleimide. It is concluded that proOmpA possessing the Cys290-Cys302 disulfide bridge can be translocated without cleavage of the bridge, when delta mu H+ is imposed. The accumulation of the disulfide bridge-containing intermediate was ATP-dependent, whereas its conversion to the translocated mature form was not blocked in the presence of adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate. It is concluded that the early and late stages of the translocation reaction require ATP and delta mu H+ differently.
...
PMID:Translocation of ProOmpA possessing an intramolecular disulfide bridge into membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli. Effect of membrane energization. 221 27
Scrapie-associated fibrils (SAF) are disease-specific structures found in extracts of the brains of animals affected with scrapie. These structures are pathological aggregates of a normal host protein (PrP). Abnormal post-translational modification of PrP has been suggested to explain its aberrant properties in scrapie-affected brains and although there is a form of PrP in SAF indistinguishable in size from the protein in uninfected brain, lower-molecular-mass variants of PrP are also found in SAF fractions. We report the characterisation of the multiple forms of PrP found in SAF fractions purified from mouse brain affected by the ME7 strain of scrapie. The quantitatively major forms of PrP in SAF prepared without the use of
proteinase K
have the amino-terminal sequence Lys-Lys-Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gly-
Gly
-, identical to that predicted for the amino-terminus of normal mouse brain PrP. However N-terminal cleavage of some PrP does occur in vivo within a domain of repetitive sequences at sites similar to but distinct from those cut by
proteinase K
in vitro. This suggests the conformation of the protein in aggregates in vivo does not differ extensively from that in detergent-treated SAF in vitro. We conclude that the size diversity of PrP in SAF is only partly due to N-terminal proteolysis and is independent of the proteolysis that occurs if
proteinase K
is used in the purification of SAF. Apart from proteolytic changes in the structure of PrP, we found a novel, as yet unidentified, amino-acid derivative of the arginine residue at position 3 in mouse PrP, which may predispose PrP to form SAF.
...
PMID:Molecular pathology of scrapie-associated fibril protein (PrP) in mouse brain affected by the ME7 strain of scrapie. 289 84
The topography of membrane-surface-exposed amino acids in the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin (BR) was studied. By limited proteolysis of purple membrane with papain or
proteinase K
, domains were cleaved, separated by SDS-PAGE, and electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes. Fragments transferred were sequenced in a gas-phase sequencer. Papain cleavage sites at
Gly
-65,
Gly
-72, and
Gly
-231, previously only deduced from the apparent molecular weight of the digestion fragments, could be confirmed by N-terminal micro-sequencing. By
proteinase K
, cleavage occurred at Gln-3, Phe-71,
Gly
-72, Tyr-131, Tyr-133, and Ser-226, i.e., in regions previously suggested to be surface-exposed. Additionally, proteinase-K cleavage sites at Thr-121 and Leu-127 were identified, which are sites predicted to be in the alpha-helical membrane-spanning segment D. Our results, especially that the amino acids
Gly
-122 to Tyr-133 are protruding into the aqueous environment, place new constraints on the amino-acid folding of BR across the purple membrane. The validity of theoretical prediction methods of the secondary structure and polypeptide folding for membrane proteins is challenged. The results on BR show that micro-sequencing of peptides separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted to PVDF can be successfully applied to the study of membrane proteins.
...
PMID:Topography of surface-exposed amino acids in the membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin determined by proteolysis and micro-sequencing. 291 38
Peptide substrates of the general structure acetyl-Alan (n = 2-5), acetyl-Pro-Ala-Pro-Phe-Alan-NH2 (n = 0-3), and acetyl-Pro-Ala-Pro-Phe-AA-NH2 (AA = various amino acids) were synthesized and used to investigate the enzyme-substrate interactions of the microbial serine proteases thermitase, subtilisin BPN', and
proteinase K
on the C-terminal side of the scissile bond. The elongation of the substrate peptide chain up to the second amino acid on the C-terminal side (P'2) enhances the hydrolysis rate of thermitase and subtilisin BPN', whereas for
proteinase K
an additional interaction with the third amino acid (P'3) is possible. The enzyme subsite S'1 specificity of the proteases investigated is very similar. With respect to kcat/Km values small amino acid residues such as Ala and
Gly
are favored in this position. Bulky residues such as Phe and Leu were hydrolyzed to a lower extent. Proline in P'1 abolishes the hydrolysis of the substrates. Enzyme-substrate interactions on the C-terminal side of the scissile bond appear to affect kcat more than Km for all three enzymes.
...
PMID:Enzyme-substrate interactions in the hydrolysis of peptide substrates by thermitase, subtilisin BPN', and proteinase K. 351 47
Ejaculated porcine and human spermatozoa, hamster spermatozoa from the cauda epididymidis, isolated hamster sperm heads and hamster cytoplasmic droplets contained activity that hydrolyzed the metalloendoprotease substrate ABZ-Ala-
Gly
-Leu-Ala-NBA (AAGLAN). Hamster sperm heads were isolated by treating spermatozoa with
proteinase K
and removing sperm tails with Dowex-50W beads. Hamster sperm activity was characterized using spermatozoa from which cytoplasmic droplets were removed by sonication and centrifugation. Porcine sperm preparations were essentially free of cytoplasmic droplets, while human sperm preparations retained somewhat more droplet material. Activity from all of these sources was inhibited by the metalloendoprotease inhibitors phosphoramidon, 1,10-phenanthroline, CBZ-D-Phe and CBZ-L-Phe but was not competitively inhibited by the metalloendoprotease substrate CBZ-Ser-Leu-amide. The AAGLAN hydrolyzing activity found in intact spermatozoa of all three species had a pH optimum of 6.2, while the optimum of the hamster sperm cytoplasmic droplet activity was 7.0. In addition, hamster sperm preparations were inhibited by ZnCl2 and dithiothreitol, but were not affected by toluene, benzamidine or chymostatin. The AAGLAN hydrolyzing activity of hamster sperm preparations was reduced, but not eliminated, by dialysis. It is concluded that spermatozoa from all three species, hamster sperm heads and hamster cytoplasmic droplets contain metalloendoprotease activity. Furthermore, metalloendoprotease activity found in hamster cytoplasmic droplets is different from that found in spermatozoa.
...
PMID:Biochemical studies of metalloendoprotease activity in the spermatozoa of three mammalian species. 354 55
The molecular mass of
proteinase K
was determined by gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and by active site labelling with diisopropyl fluorophosphate. Both methods indicate molecular masses in the range of 27 000-29 000 Da. These values differ significantly from that of 18 500 formerly determined by gel filtration (Ebeling et al. (1974) Eur. J. Biochem. 47, 91-97). Proteinase K was inactivated with [3H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate. Afterwards the labelled protein was reduced, S-carboxymethylated and digested with cyanogen bromide. The chain lengths of the isolated CNBr-fragments are indicative of a molecular mass of
proteinase K
of at least 28 000 Da. Two CNBr-fragments were sequenced. The radioactively labelled fragment contains 69 residues and the sequence around the labelled residues was found to be -Ile-Ser-
Gly
-Thr-SER-Met-Ala-Thr-Pro-. This sequence is typical for that around the active site residue of the subtilisins. From the determined sequences it is concluded that the fungal
proteinase K
is phylogenetically related to the bacterial subtilisins.
...
PMID:Proteinase K from Tritirachium album limber. I. Molecular mass and sequence around the active site serine residue. 392 77
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