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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.4.21.9 (
enterokinase
)
675
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mixed disulfide of bovine trypsinogen and glutathione refolded with high yields at protein concentrations of 20 microgram/ml or less, at 4-25 degrees C, pH 8.0 to 8.7, in the presence of 3 to 6 mM
cysteine
under anaerobic conditions. The regenerated protein behaved as native trypsinogen as judged by gel exclusion chromatography, isoelectric focusing, and activation with bovine
enterokinase
or trypsin. However, refolded samples that were quenched with iodoacetate and analyzed by disc gel electrophoresis formed two components corresponding to trypsinogen and S-(carboxymethylcysteine)2-(179-203)-trypsinogen. The use of
cysteine
as a disulfide interchange catalyst caused reduction of the 179 to 203 disulfide bond, and quenching of the refolding mixture with iodoacetate produced the carboxymethylated derivative. The overall yield of the regenerated product was 70% and the half-time at 4 degrees C was 55 min.
...
PMID:Refolding of the mixed disulfide of bovine trypsinogen and glutathione. 43 88
Pretreatment of the purified jack bean inhibitor with
enterokinase
activated human pancreatic preparation for 1 hr decreased its inhibitory capacity against crystalline bovine alpha-chymotrypsin by 30% but did not affect its trypsin inhibitory activity. Preincubation of the inhibitor with bovine chymotrypsin for 60 min resulted in partial loss of the inhibitory potency. Complex formation studies by gel chromatography on Sephadex G-100 indicated that the trypsin-inhibitor and chymotrypsin-inhibitor complexes dissociated to release inactivated inhibitor and active proteinases. Gel chromatography of the inhibitor in presence of 1.5 M ammonium sulphate indicated that the inhibitor showed a tendency to aggregate without loss of biological activity. However, in 4.2 M salt medium after 3 hr, antichymotryptic activity was lost completely without any effect on antitryptic activity. Treatment with methylamine, a nucleophile, caused a greater loss of antichymotryptic activity. Trinitrobenzene sulphonate and ethylacetamidate, the amino group modifiers, affected only the antichymotryptic activity. Treatment with ninhydrin, a specific arginine modifier, at pH 9.0 abolished the antitryptic activity whereas only 50% of the antichymotryptic activity was lost. Diethylpyrocarbonate, a histidine reagent, also decreased only the antitryptic activity. Modification of tryptophan and
cysteine
residues of the inhibitor had no effect on its inhibitory potency. Treatment with mercaptoethanol and sodium borohydride caused nearly 50% loss of antitryptic and antichymotryptic activities. Chloramine-T, a reagent that modifies methionine residues, inactivated the inhibitor.
...
PMID:Chemical modification and complex formation studies with jack bean proteinase inhibitor. 181 77
A new method for obtaining HIV-I protease was suggested. Fusion proteins composed of the N-terminal fragment of human gamma-interferon and HIV-I protease connected with (Asp)4Lys (protein I) or Asp-Pro (protein II) linkers were expressed in Escherichia coli cells. The fusion proteins were produced as insoluble inclusion bodies in the 20% yield of total cell protein. Protein I was cleaved by
enterokinase
. The solubility of protein I was increased by treating with Na-sulfite/Na-tetrathionate under denaturing conditions. Optimal conditions for efficient acidic hydrolysis of protein II at Asp-Pro bond were found. The hydrolysis products were separated by reversed-phase FPLC. The amount of tryptophan and
cysteine
residues in the enzyme obtained was estimated. The activity of HIV-I protease was determined using the chromogenic peptide. AlaArgVal NleNphGluAlaNleNH2 and a high-mol-wt substrate consisting of beta-galactosidase and a fragment of gag proteins, including p17-p24 processing site.
...
PMID:HIV-I protease. Cloning, expression, and purification. 910 Mar 48
Jararhagin, a hemorrhagin from Bothrops jararaca venom, is a soluble snake venom component comprising metalloproteinase and disintegrin
cysteine
-rich domains and, therefore, is structurally closely related to the membrane-bound A Disintegrin And Metalloproteinase (ADAMs) protein family. Its hemorrhagic activity is associated with the effects of both metalloproteinase and disintegrin domains; the metalloproteinase enzymatically damages the endothelium and the disintegrin domain inhibits platelet-collagen interactions. The expression of whole jararhagin or its disintegrin domain has never been attempted before. The aim of this study was to investigate whether we could express the disintegrin domain of jararhagin and to verify whether this domain displays an inhibitory effect on the platelet-collagen interaction. Therefore, the cDNA fragment coding for the disintegrin plus
cysteine
-rich domains of jararhagin was cloned into the pET32a vector, used to transform the Escherichia coli AD494(DE3)pLysS strain. The thioredoxin-disintegrin fusion protein was recovered from the soluble extract of the cells, yielding up to 50 mg/liter culture. The fusion protein was isolated using polyhistidine binding resin which resulted in a main band of 45 kDa recognized by anti-native jararhagin antibodies. Antibodies raised in rabbits against the fusion protein had high enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay titers against native jararhagin and detected a band of 52 kDa on Western blots of whole B. jararaca venom demonstrating that these antibodies recognize the parent jararhagin molecule. Treatment of the fusion protein with
enterokinase
, followed by further capture of the enzyme, resulted in a band of 30 kDa, the expected size for jararhagin-C. Further purification of the cleaved disintegrin using FPLC Mono-Q columns resulted in one fraction capable of efficiently inhibiting collagen-induced platelet aggregation in a dose-dependent manner (IC(50) of 8.5 microg/ml).
...
PMID:Jararhagin ECD-containing disintegrin domain: expression in escherichia coli and inhibition of the platelet-collagen interaction. 1048 49
We report the isolation of a cDNA encoding a novel murine serine proteinase, epitheliasin. The cDNA spans 1753 bp and encodes a mosaic protein with a calculated molecular mass of 53529 Da. Its domains include a cytoplasmic tail, a type II transmembrane domain, a low-density lipoprotein receptor class A domain, a
cysteine
rich scavenger receptor-like domain and a serine proteinase domain. The proteinase portion domain shows 46-53% identity with mouse neurotrypsin, acrosin, hepsin and
enteropeptidase
. The gene, located in the telomeric region in the long arm of mouse chromosome 16, consists of 14 exons and 13 introns and spans approximately 18 kb. Epitheliasin is expressed primarily in the apical surfaces of renal tubular and airway epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Cloning, genomic organization, chromosomal assignment and expression of a novel mosaic serine proteinase: epitheliasin. 2014 13
Autodigestion by proteolytic enzymes is thought to represent the critical mechanism by which acute pancreatitis is initiated. Where and why pancreatic proteases, which are physiologically stored and secreted as inactive precursor zymogens, are activated within the pancreas has remained controversial. Here we present data which indicate that: the lysosomal protease cathepsin B can activate trypsinogen in vitro in a manner that is similar to trypsinogen activation by
enterokinase
; that cathepsin B colocalizes with trypsinogen in the secretory compartment of the rat pancreas and of the human pancreas; that trypsinogen activation begins in a secretory compartment that is distinct from mature zymogen granules; and that the inhibition of cathepsin B can either increase or decrease premature trypsinogen activation depending on the concentration of the inhibitor, its specificity and its site of action in the pancreatic acinar cell. These observations elucidate some of the complex relations between
cysteine
and serine proteases in the pancreas with respect to their mechanisms of activation, their subcellular sites of action, and their possible role in the onset of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:The role of cysteine proteases in intracellular pancreatic serine protease activation. 1084 66
(R)-3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (BDH) is a lipid-requiring mitochondrial enzyme with a specific requirement of phosphatidylcholine (PC) for function. A plasmid has been constructed to express human heart (HH) BDH in Escherichia coli as a hexahistidine-tagged fusion protein (HH-Histag-BDH). A rapid two-step affinity purification yields active HH-Histag-BDH (and six mutants) with high specific activity ( approximately 130 micromol of NAD(+) reduced.min(-1).mg(-1)). HH-Histag-BDH has no activity in the absence of phospholipid and exhibits a specific requirement of PC for function. The HH-Histag-BDH-PC complex (and HH-BDH derived therefrom by
enterokinase
cleavage) has apparent Michaelis constants (K(m) values) for NAD(+), NADH, (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (HOB), and acetoacetate (AcAc) similar to those for bovine heart or rat liver BDH. A computed structural model of HH-BDH predicts the two active center sulfhydryls to be C69 (near the adenosine moiety of NAD) and C242. With both sulfhydryls derivatized, BDH has minimal activity, but site-directed mutagenesis of C69 and/or C242 now shows that neither of these cysteines is required for PC activation or catalysis (the double mutant, C69A/C242A, is highly active with essentially normal kinetic parameters). Six
cysteine
mutants each have an increased K(m)(NADH) (2-6-fold) but an unchanged K(m)(NAD)+. The C242S and C69A/C242S enzymes (but not the analogous C242A mutants nor the C69A or C69S mutants) exhibit approximately 10-fold increases in K(m)(HOB) and K(m)(AcAc), reflecting an altered substrate binding site. Thus, although C242 (in the C-terminal lipid binding domain of BDH) is close to the active site, it appears to be in a hydrophobic environment and only indirectly defines the substrate binding site at the catalytic center of BDH.
...
PMID:Phosphatidylcholine activation of human heart (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase mutants lacking active center sulfhydryls: site-directed mutagenesis of a new recombinant fusion protein. 1093 85
Corin is a cardiac transmembrane serine protease. In cell-based studies, corin converted pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (pro-ANP) to mature ANP, suggesting that corin is potentially the pro-ANP convertase. In this study, we evaluated the importance of the transmembrane domain and activation cleavage in human corin. We showed that a soluble corin that consists of only the extracellular domain was capable of processing recombinant human pro-ANP in cell-based assays. In contrast, a mutation at the conserved activation cleavage site, R801A, abolished the function of corin, demonstrating that the activation cleavage is essential for corin activity. These results allowed us to design, express, and purify a mutant soluble corin, EKsolCorin, that contains an
enterokinase
recognition sequence at the activation cleavage site. Purified EKsolCorin was activated by
enterokinase
in a dose-dependent manner. Activated EK-solCorin had hydrolytic activity toward peptide substrates with a preference for Arg and Lys residues in the P-1 position. This activity of EKsolCorin was inhibited by trypsin-like serine protease inhibitors but not inhibitors of chymotrypsin-like,
cysteine
-, or metallo-proteases. In pro-ANP processing assays, purified active EKsolCorin converted recombinant human pro-ANP to biologically active ANP in a highly sequence-specific manner. The pro-ANP processing activity of EKsolCorin was not inhibited by human plasma. Together, our data indicate that the transmembrane domain is not necessary for the biological activity of corin but may be a mechanism to localize corin at specific sites, whereas the proteolytic cleavage at the activation site is an essential step in controlling the activity of corin.
...
PMID:Functional analysis of the transmembrane domain and activation cleavage of human corin: design and characterization of a soluble corin. 1455 95
Puroindolines (PIN) are low molecular weight,
cysteine
-rich, endosperm-specific, basic proteins with a unique tryptophan-rich domain found in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) as well as other members of Triticaceae. PINs appear to be involved in both flour softness as well as resistance against fungal diseases. These proteins are known to be the major components of 'friabilin' associated with the surface of water washed starch grains and possess lipid binding properties. Structural characterization of puroindolines from Triticum monococum was initiated by amplifying and subsequently cloning the corresponding pin gene into an expression vector, known as pET-32a(+). The protein contains five tryptophanin domains and ten
cysteine
residues. The pinB gene was fused with the 109aa Trx.Tag thioredoxin for a high-level expression. The cloning sites used for producing fusion proteins also contained cleavable His.Tag and S.tag sequences for detection and purification. After transformation of competent Origami cells, fusion protein expression was detected by growing a transformant in LB medium in the presence of 0.1 mM IPTG at room temperature for 6 hrs on a shaker. Both soluble and insoluble fusion proteins were extracted from Origami cells after sonication. Ni-NTA column (Qiagen) was used to extract and purify these fractions. Following an overnight digestion of the recombinant protein with
enterokinase
at room temperature, the corresponding fractions were electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gel, electroblotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane and cross-reacted with the anti-friabilin monoclonal antibody. We found that the recombinant PINB protein had a molecular weight of 16 kDa whereas TrxB was 21 kDa. Fusion protein ran at 34 kDa. PINB protein from wheat was shown to be immunologically related to a homologue, tryptophanin, in oat seed. Further study is currently underway to characterize these proteins structurally using NMR.
...
PMID:Cloning and expression of pinB gene from Triticum monococum seeds. 1515 Dec 87
Corin is a type II transmembrane serine protease and functions as the proatrial natriuretic peptide (pro-ANP) convertase in the heart. In the extracellular region of corin, there are two frizzled-like
cysteine
-rich domains, eight low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) repeats, a macrophage scavenger receptor-like domain, and a trypsin-like protease domain at the C terminus. To examine the functional importance of the domain structures in the propeptide of corin for pro-ANP processing, we constructed a soluble corin, EKshortCorin, that consists of only the protease domain and contains an
enterokinase
(EK) recognition sequence at the conserved activation cleavage site. After being activated by EK, EKshortCorin exhibited catalytic activity toward chromogenic substrates but failed to cleave pro-ANP, indicating that certain domain structures in the propeptide are required for pro-ANP processing. We then constructed a series of corin deletion mutants and studied their functions in pro-ANP processing. Compared with that of the full-length corin, a corin mutant lacking frizzled 1 domain exhibited approximately 40% activity, whereas corin mutants lacking single LDLR repeat 1, 2, 3, or 4 had approximately 49, approximately 12, approximately 53, and approximately 77% activity, respectively. We also made corin mutants with a single mutation at a conserved Asp residue that coordinates Ca(2+)-binding in LDLR repeats 1, 2, 3, or 4 (D300Y, D336Y, D373Y, and D410Y) and showed that these mutants had approximately 25, approximately 11, approximately 16, and approximately 82% pro-ANP processing activity, respectively. Our results indicate that frizzled 1 domain and LDLR repeats 1-4 are important structural elements for corin to recognize its physiological substrate, pro-ANP.
...
PMID:Identification of domain structures in the propeptide of corin essential for the processing of proatrial natriuretic peptide. 1519 93
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