Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.32 (bromelain)
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The papain inhibitor from human spleen was purified by extraction in isotonic sucrose, acetone fractionation, papain-Sepharose affinity chromatography and gel filtration on Sephadex G-50. The purified inhibitor was fractionated by electrofocusing into four major isoelectric variants with pI values of 4.7, 5.0, 6.0 and 6.5. These variants can be classified into two groups: the acidic type, comprising the variants with pI 4.7 and 5.0, and the neutral type, comprising the variants with pI 6.0 and 6.5. The following properties distinguish the two types: 1. Immunological properties: antibodies raised against either of the neutral variants precipitated both of these, but not the acidic variants. The antiserum against the human epidermal cysteineproteinase inhibitor precipitated the acidic variants, but not the neutral variants. 2. Molecular size: two-dimensional electrophoresis of the purified inhibitor gave molecular weights of 11400 for the acidic variants and 12000 for the neutral variants. The pI 6.0 variant contained two compounds with molecular weights of 12000 and 12800. 3. Enzyme spectrum: human cathepsin B was inhibited by the acidic type, while the neutral type was a poor inhibitor. Both types inhibited cathepsin H, papain, ficin and bromelain, although the inhibition of bromelain did not exceed 70%. Human cathepsin D, bovine trypsin and chymotrypsin and porcine elastase were not inhibited by either type.
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PMID:Human spleen cysteineproteinase inhibitor. Purification, fractionation into isoelectric variants and some properties of the variants. 618 75

Cysteine proteinases are widely distributed among living organisms. According to the most recent classifications (Rawlings and Barrett, 1993, 1994), they can be subdivided on the basis of sequence homology into 14 or even 20 different families, the most important being the papain and the calpain families. The papain-like cysteine proteinases are the most abundant among the cysteine proteinases. The family consists of papain and related plant proteinases such as chymopapain, caricain, bromelain, actinidin, ficin, and aleurain, and the lysosomal cathepsins B, H, L, S, C and K. Most of these enzymes are relatively small proteins with Mr values in the range 20000-35000 (reviewed in Brocklehurst et al., 1987; Polgar, 1989; Rawlings and Barrett, 1994; Berti and Storer, 1995), with the exception of cathepsin C, which is an oligomeric enzyme with Mr approximately 200000 (Metrione et al., 1970; Dolenc et al., 1995). A number of cysteine proteinases are located within lysosomes. Four of them, cathepsins B, C, H and L, are ubiquitous in lysosomes of animals, whereas cathepsin S has a more restricted localisation (Barrett and Kirschke, 1981; Kirschke and Wiederanders, 1994). The enzymes, except cathepsin C, are endopeptidases (reviewed in Kirschke et al., 1995), although cathepsin B was found also to be a dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase (Aronson and Barrett, 1978) and cathepsin H also an aminopeptidase (Koga et al., 1992). Cathepsin C is a dipeptidyl aminopeptidase, but at higher pH it exhibits also dipeptidyl transferase activity (reviewed in Kirschke et al., 1995). Among the lysosomal cysteine proteinases, cathepsin L was found to be the most active in degradation of protein substrates, such as collagen, elastin and azocasein (Barrett and Kirschke, 1981; Maciewicz et al., 1987; Mason et al., 1989), arid cathepsin B the most abundant (Kirschke and Barrett, 1981). All the enzymes are optimally active at slightly acidic pH, although their pH optima for degradation of synthetic substrates vary from 5.5 for cathepsin L to 6.8 for cathepsin H (reviewed in Kirschke et al., 1995). Several other lysosomal cysteine proteinases, such as cathepsins N, T and K, are known, although their properties are less well characterised (reviewed in Kirschke et al., 1995). In particular cathepsin K has attracted recent interest (Bromme et al., 1996; Shi et al., 1995; Bossard et al., 1996; Drake et al., 1996) and was found to be expressed specifically in osteoclasts (Drake et al., 1996) with properties similar to cathepsin L (Bossard et al., 1996).
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PMID:Structural and functional aspects of papain-like cysteine proteinases and their protein inhibitors. 916 64

A novel inhibitor of cysteine proteinases has been isolated from fruit bodies of a mushroom Clitocybe nebularis. The inhibitor was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography and gel filtration, followed by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. The active inhibitor has an apparent molecular mass of about 34 kDa by gel filtration and by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis without prior boiling of the sample. Boiling in 2.5% SDS or incubation in 6 m guanidine hydrochloride resulted in a single band of 17 kDa, indicating homodimer composition with no intersubunit disulfide bonds. The inhibitor in nondenaturing buffer is resistant to boiling in water, retaining its activity and dimer composition. The mushroom protein is a tight binding inhibitor of papain (K(i) = 0.59 nm), cathepsin L (K(i) = 0.41 nm), cathepsin B (K(i) = 0.48 micrometer), and bromelain (K(i) = 0.16 micrometer) but is inactive toward cathepsin H, trypsin, and pepsin. Its isoelectric point is 4.4, and sugar analysis indicates the absence of carbohydrate. A single protein sequence of 150 amino acids, containing no cysteine or methionine residues, was obtained by amino acid sequencing. The calculated molecular mass of 16854 Da corresponds well with the value obtained by mass spectrometry. A major part of this sequence was verified by molecular cloning. The monomer sequence is clearly devoid of typical cystatin structure elements and has no similarity to any other known cysteine proteinase inhibitors but bears some similarity to a lectin-like family of proteins from mushrooms. The inhibitor, which is present in at least two other members of the Clitocybe genus, has been named clitocypin (Clitocybe cysteine proteinase inhibitor).
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PMID:Clitocypin, a new type of cysteine proteinase inhibitor from fruit bodies of mushroom clitocybe nebularis. 1074 21