Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.9 (enterokinase)
675 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Enteropeptidase is a heterodimeric type II membrane protein of the brush border of duodenal enterocytes. In this location, enteropeptidase cleaves and activates trypsinogen, thereby initiating the activation of other intestinal digestive enzymes. Recombinant bovine enteropeptidase was sorted directly to the apical surface of polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Replacement of the cytoplasmic and signal anchor domains with a cleavable signal peptide (mutant proenteropeptidase lacking the amino-terminal signal anchor domain (dSA-BEK)) caused apical secretion. The additional amino-terminal deletion of a mucin-like domain (HL-BEK) resulted in secretion both apically and basolaterally. Further deletion of the noncatalytic heavy chain (L-BEK) resulted in apical secretion. Thus enteropeptidase appears to have at least three distinct sorting signals as follows: the light chain (L-BEK) directs apical sorting, addition of most of the heavy chain (HL-BEK) inhibits apical sorting, and addition of the mucin-like domain (dSA-BEK) restores apical sorting. Inhibition of N-linked glycosylation with tunicamycin or disruption of microtubules with colchicine caused L-BEK to be secreted equally into apical and basolateral compartments, whereas brefeldin A caused basolateral secretion of L-BEK. Full-length BEK was not found in detergent-resistant raft domains of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells or baby hamster kidney cells. These results suggest apical sorting of enteropeptidase depends on N-linked glycosylation of the serine protease domain and an amino-terminal segment that includes an O-glycosylated mucin-like domain and three potential N-glycosylation sites. In contrast to many apically targeted proteins, enteropeptidase does not form detergent-resistant associations with sphingolipid-cholesterol rafts.
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PMID:Apical sorting of bovine enteropeptidase does not involve detergent-resistant association with sphingolipid-cholesterol rafts. 988 May 38

Enteropeptidase is a membrane-bound serine protease that initiates the activation of pancreatic hydrolases by cleaving and activating trypsinogen. The enzyme is remarkably specific and cleaves after lysine residues of peptidyl substrates that resemble trypsinogen activation peptides such as Val-(Asp)4-Lys. To characterize the determinants of substrate specificity, we solved the crystal structure of the bovine enteropeptidase catalytic domain to 2.3 A resolution in complex with the inhibitor Val-(Asp)4-Lys-chloromethane. The catalytic mechanism and contacts with lysine at substrate position P1 are conserved with other trypsin-like serine proteases. However, the aspartyl residues at positions P2-P4 of the inhibitor interact with the enzyme surface mainly through salt bridges with the Nzeta atom of Lys99. Mutation of Lys99 to Ala, or acetylation with acetic anhydride, specifically prevented the cleavage of trypsinogen or Gly-(Asp)4-Lys-beta-naphthylamide and reduced the rate of inhibition by Val-(Asp)4-Lys-chloromethane 22 to 90-fold. For these reactions, Lys99 was calculated to account for 1.8 to 2.5 kcal mol(-1) of the free energy of transition state binding. Thus, a unique basic exosite on the enteropeptidase surface has evolved to facilitate the cleavage of its physiological substrate, trypsinogen.
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PMID:Crystal structure of enteropeptidase light chain complexed with an analog of the trypsinogen activation peptide. 1049 81

Human glandular kallikrein 2 (hK2) is a serine protease expressed mainly by the prostate gland with 80% identity in primary structure to prostate specific antigen (PSA). hK2 has proven to be a useful marker of prostate cancer which can be used in combination with PSA to better discriminate between prostate cancer and benign prostate hyperplasia. The studies on hK2 have been hampered by its very low phyciological levels (6 microgram.mL-1), its close similarity to PSA, and the low expression levels obtained using recombinant procedures to produce hK2 (0.7 mg.L-1). We have now generated propeptide mutations of hK2 which can be used to isolate stable, inactive prohK2 mutants. Compared with wild-type hK2, expression of the propeptide hK2 mutants increases the expression levels up to 15-40-fold giving 10-30 mg hK2.L-1. These results indicate that the low expression levels of wild-type hK2 are related to the activation or autoactivation of the wild-type enzyme and the instability of the active protease in cell culture and possibly also in tissue. The purified mutant hK2 may be activated by either enterokinase or factor Xa to generate an enzyme for use in functional studies with the characteristics of the original wild-type protein. Further, the stable inactive mutant hK2 protein may be used for immunizations to generate novel monoclonal antibodies, used as standard material for clinical assays or in crystallization studies where large quantities of protein are required.
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PMID:Production and activation of recombinant hK2 with propeptide mutations resulting in high expression levels. 1058 1

In order to circumvent the difficulty encountered in the expression and purification of the recombinant products in E. coli system, we have developed a novel and facile method of removing the polyhistidine tag from target proteins after heterologous gene expression. The expression of a serine protease (Tm-5) from Taiwan habu (Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus) is taken as an exemplar to illustrate the basic rationales and protocols involved. In place of an enterokinase recognition site, a polyhistidine tag linked to an autocatalyzed site based on cleavage specificity of the serine protease flanking on the 5'-end of Tm-5 clone sequence was engineered before protein expression in E. coli system. Renaturation of the fusion protein after expression revealed that the recombinant protease had refolded successfully from the inclusion bodies. Upon autocleavage of the expressed protease, the polyhistidine tag with additional amino acid residues appended to the N-terminus of the coding sequence is found to be removed accordingly. The protein expressed and purified by this new strategy possesses a molecular weight of approximately 28,000 in accord with the expected value for this venom protease. Further characterization of the recombinant protein employing a variety of techniques which include immunoblot analysis, RP-HPLC, ESI-MS, and N-terminal amino acid sequencing all shows indistinguishable properties to those of the isolated native protease. Most noteworthy is that the recombinant Tm-5 protease also exhibits amidase activity against N-benzoyl-Pro-Phe-Arg-p-nitroanilide, a unique and strict substrate for native Tm proteases reported previously.
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PMID:Expression of a kallikrein-like protease from the snake venom: engineering of autocatalytic site in the fusion protein to facilitate protein refolding. 1097 23

Tryptase, a serine protease with trypsin-like substrate cleavage properties, is one of the key effector molecules during allergic inflammation. It is stored in large quantities in the mast cell secretory granules in complex with heparin proteoglycan, and these complexes are released during mast cell degranulation. In the present paper, we have studied the mechanism for tryptase activation. Recombinant mouse tryptase, mouse mast cell protease 6 (mMCP-6), was produced in a mammalian expression system. The mMCP-6 fusion protein contained an N-terminal 6 x His tag followed by an enterokinase (EK) site replacing the native activation peptide (6xHis-EK-mMCP-6). In the absence of heparin, barely detectable enzyme activity was obtained after enterokinase cleavage of 6xHis-EK-mMCP-6 over a pH range of 5.5-7.5. However, when heparin was present, 6xHis-EK-mMCP-6 yielded active enzyme when enterokinase cleavage was performed at pH 5.5-6.0 but not at neutral pH. Affinity chromatography analysis showed that mMCP-6 bound strongly to heparin-Sepharose at pH 6.0 but not at neutral pH. After enterokinase cleavage of the sample at pH 6.0, mMCP-6 occurred in inactive monomeric form as shown by FPLC analysis on a Superdex 200 column. When heparin was added at pH 6.0, enzymatically active higher molecular weight complexes were formed, e.g., a dominant approximately 200 kDa complex that may correspond to tryptase tetramers. No formation of active tetramers was observed at neutral pH. When injected intraperitoneally, mMCP-6 together with heparin caused neutrophil influx, but no signs of inflammation were seen in the absence of heparin. The present paper thus indicates a crucial role for heparin in the formation of active mast cell tryptase.
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PMID:Mechanism for activation of mouse mast cell tryptase: dependence on heparin and acidic pH for formation of active tetramers of mouse mast cell protease 6. 1104 73

Enteropeptidase (enterokinase [E.C.3.4.21.9]) is a serine protease of the intestinal brush border in the proximal small intestine. It activates the pancreatic proenzyme trypsinogen, which, in turn, releases active digestive enzymes from their inactive pancreatic precursors. Congenital enteropeptidase deficiency is a rare recessively inherited disorder leading, in affected infants, to severe failure to thrive. The genomic structure of the proenteropeptidase gene (25 exons, total gene size 88 kb) was characterized in order to perform DNA sequencing in three clinically and biochemically proved patients with congenital enteropeptidase deficiency who were from two families. We found compound heterozygosity for nonsense mutations (S712X/R857X) in two affected siblings and found compound heterozygosity for a nonsense mutation (Q261X) and a frameshift mutation (FsQ902) in the third patient. In accordance with the biochemical findings, all four defective alleles identified are predicted null alleles leading to a gene product not containing the active site of the enzyme. These data provide first evidence that proenteropeptidase-gene mutations are the primary cause of congenital enteropeptidase deficiency.
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PMID:Mutations in the proenteropeptidase gene are the molecular cause of congenital enteropeptidase deficiency. 1171 2

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.
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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.
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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.
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PMID:Engineered recombinant enteropeptidase catalytic subunit: effect of N-terminal modification. 1191 64

Secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) is a 11.7 kDa mucosal protein with potent anti-microbial, anti-inflammatory, and wound healing activities. Previous efforts to express and purify the non-glycosylated cationic protein as a recombinant protein in bacteria required extensive denaturation and renaturation to refold the disulfide-rich protein into its biologically active form. To overcome this limitation, we have expressed human SLPI as a polyhistidine-tagged protein (bvHisSLPI) using a recombinant baculovirus expression system. Studies were conducted to determine the timing of maximal protein production following baculovirus infection of Sf21 cells. The 16.4kDa-tagged protein was then overexpressed in Sf21 cells following a 48-h infection with bvHisSLPI-encoding baculovirus, purified by nickel-chelating affinity chromatography under non-denaturing conditions, and analyzed by Coomassie-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blot. Purified bvHisSLPI was further characterized by enterokinase digestion to remove the polyhistidine tag from its N-terminus. In serine protease inhibition assays, purified bvHisSLPI blocked substrate cleavage by two serine proteases, chymotrypsin and cathepsin G, comparable to bacterially expressed SLPI. The baculovirus expression and affinity purification strategy described here will facilitate further studies of the structural and biological properties of this important multifunctional protein.
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PMID:Construction, non-denaturing affinity purification, and characterization of baculovirally expressed human secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor. 1235 86


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