Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An aminopeptidase was isolated from the culture filtrate of Clostridium histolyticum and purified to homogeneity. Absence of endopeptidase activity in the purified preparation was demonstrated. Gel filtration on a calibrated column indicates an apparent molecular weight of 340000 for the native enzyme. Gel electrophoresis of the denatured enzyme in the presence of dodecylsulfate in constant acrylamide concentration and in a concentration gradient, resulted in the appearance of a single component for which a molecular weight of 51000 and 59000 respectively, was calculated. From mobilities of crosslinked and denatured protein species a molecular weight of 56000 was obtained for the monomer. Specificity studies show that the enzyme cleaves all types of N-terminel amino acid residues including proline and hydroxyproline from small peptides and from polypeptides. The peptide bond formed between an N-terminal amino acid residue and proline is not cleaved by the enzyme. The combined action of aminopeptidase-P and clostridal aminopeptidase leads to complete hydrolysis of the proline-rich nonapeptide bradykinin. Low rates of hydrolysis was observed for charged residues, and amides of amino acids. Kinetic studies with five tripeptides of the general structure X-Gly-Gly, where X stands for Leu, Phe, Val, Ala, or Pro, show a decrease in Km with the increasing size of the hydrophobic side chain of X. The highest Kcat values are observed with proline and alanine. In the series Pro-Gly, Pro-Gly-Pro, Pro-Gly-Pro-Pro, the last peptide is the best substrate, indicating an active site complementary to at least four amino acid residues. The enzymatic activity is dependent on the presence of divalent cations, maximal activation being reached with Mn2+ and Co2+. The optimal pH for the Mn2+ and Co2+- activated enzyme is 8.6 and 8.2 respectively. The optimal temperature is 40 degrees C. Inhibition of the aminopeptidase was achieved with Zn2+, Cu2+ and p-mercuribenzoate, but not with diisopropylphosphofluoridate.
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PMID:An extracellular aminopeptidase from Clostridium histolyticum. 0 18

The peptides alpha-MSH and MSH/ACTH 4-10 were degraded by rat brain extracts and serum to yield free amino acids among the end-products. Breakdown of these two peptides was double that of a related synthetic hexapeptide Met (0)-Glu-His-Phe-D-Lys-Phe. No significant breakdown of the hexapeptide occurred after incubation with human serum; it also had almost negligible pigmentary effects in vivo and in vitro when compared to alpha-MSH. The patterns of amino acid release indicate possible endopeptidase cleavage at Phe-Arg in alpha-MSH followed by secondary exopeptidase action to release free amino acids. For the hexapeptide, the primary cleavage point occurred at the -His3-Phe4 bond. The stability of this analog in human sera, coupled with its lower rate of degradation in the CNS, may contribute to its more potent behavioral actions in vivo.
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PMID:Biodegradation of alpha-MSH and derived peptides by rat brain extracts, and by rat and human serum. 19 Nov 54

Proteolytic removal of the pre-segment from growing nascent chains of pre-human placental lactogen (hPL) occurred during in vitro translation of placental mRNA if crude membranes derived from ascites lysates, dog pancreas, or rat liver rough endoplasmic reticulum were added to the translation mixtures. The cotranslational proteolytic event was inhibited by the peptide protease inhibitor, chymostatin, but not by leupeptin, antipain, or elastatinal. The proteases involved in cleavage were solubilized with detergent and converted completed pre-hPL to hPL (post-translational processing). Direct assay of the solubilized membranes, with synthetic fluorogenic aminocoumarin peptide substrates, revealed no significant tryptic or elastase-like activity, but activity against a chymotrypsin substrate [(succinyl-Ala-Ala-Phe)-7-amino-4-methyl-coumarin] was found. This activity was dependent upon both an endopeptidase and an aminopeptidase. Although bestatin inhibited the aminopeptidase activity, it had no effect on the endopeptidase or on post-translational cleavage. Although this endopeptidase cleaved on the COOH side of an alanine residue, it was not inhibited by elastatinal. However, it was inhibited by high levels of chymostatin and by some serine protease inhibitors.
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PMID:Characterization of an endopeptidase involved in pre-protein processing. 29 60

The production of two extracellular proteases, an endopeptidase and an aminopeptidase, by the marine bacterium Vibrio SA1 was studied in batch cultures. The production of the proteases was induced during growth of the organism in peptone media and by several amino acids during growth in minimal media. It was repressed by easily metabolisable carbon compounds such as glucose, lactate and succinate during growth in peptone media. During growth in a lactate basal medium, phenylalanine was one of the best inducers and this amino acid was therefore used in further experiments. That lactate did not repress the synthesis of the proteases during growth in the lactate basal medium supplement with 2mM phenylalanine as an inducer, appeared to be a consequence of the low iron content of this medium. Growth curves of Vibrio SA1 on such media showed a period of linear growth during which protease production was observed. When the iron concentration was made sufficiently high to prevent linear growth, the synthesis of the proteases remained repressed. Apparently by imposing an iron limitation on the organism, catabolite repression by lactate was relieved. Similarly, when growth was limited by very low values of the dissolved oxygen tension in the medium, a high rate of protease synthesis was found which was immediately repressed when the oxygen limitation was released. The results indicate that the growth rate and/or a factor associated with the energy metabolism play a role in the regulation of the synthesis of the enzymes.
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PMID:Effect of environmental conditions on the production of two extracellular proteolytic enzymes by Vibrio SA1. 58 92

During growth of Vibrio SA1 in a lactate-limited chemostate in the presence of 2mM phenylalanine as an inducer, the rate of production of two proteolytic enzymes, namely an endopeptidase and an aminopeptidase, was dependent upon the dilution rate. An optimum in the rate of synthesis of both proteases was observed at a dilution rate of 0.23 h-1 and enzyme production only occurred between dilution rates of 0.06 and 0.45 h-1. Without inducer a low rate of aminopeptidase production was found with an optimum at 0.19 h-1, but only trace amounts of endopeptidase were detectable in the culture. In the presence of inducer the rate of enzyme production increased with increasing dilution rates over the range 0.06 to 0.23 h-1 which was explained by an increase in saturation of inducer sites. The progressive decrease in the rate of protease production at higher dilution rates was ascribed to an increasing effect of catabolite repression by the increasing concentration of the growth substrate. It was shown that 5 mM cyclic AMP could not relieve catabolite repression caused by glucose or lactate. Repression of protease production also occurred in the presence of higher concentrations (5 mM) phenylalanine and other amino acids and by ammonium ions. It is suggested that the energy-status of the cell may play an important role in the regulation of protease synthesis in Vibrio SA1.
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PMID:A continuous culture study of the regulation of extracellular protease production in Vibrio SA1. 58 93

Two arylamidases (I and II) were purified from human erythrocytes by a procedure that comprised removal of haemoglobin from disrupted cells with CM-Sephadex D-50, followed by treatment of the haemoglobin-free preparation subsequently with DEAE-cellulose, gel-permeation chromatography on Sephadex G-200, gradient solubilization on Celite, isoelectric focusing in a pH gradient from 4 to 6, gel-permeation chromatography on Sephadex G-100 (superfine), and finally affinity chromatography on Sepharose 4B covalently coupled to L-arginine. In preparative-scale purifications, enzymes I and II were separated at the second gel-permeation chromatography. Enzyme II was obtained as a homogeneous protein, as shown by several criteria. Enzyme I hydrolysed, with decreasing rates, the L-amino acid 2-naphtylamides of lysine, arginine, alanine, methionine, phenylalanine and leucine, and the reactions were slightly inhibited by 0.2 M-NaCl. Enzyme II hydrolysed most rapidly the corresponding derivatives of arginine, leucine, valine, methionine, proline and alanine, in that order, and the hydrolyses were strongly dependent on Cl-. The hydrolysis of these substrates proceeded rapidly at physiological Cl- concentration (0.15 M). The molecular weights (by gel filtration) of enzymes I and II were 85 000 and 52 500 respectively. The pH optimum was approx. 7.2 for both enzymes. The isoelectric point of enzyme II was approx. 4.8. Enzyme I was activated by Co2+, which did not affect enzyme II to any noticeable extent. The kinetics of reactions catalysed by enzyme I were characterized by strong substrate inhibition, but enzyme II was not inhibited by high substrate concentrations. The Cl- activated enzyme II also showed endopeptidase activity in hydrolysing bradykinin.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of two human erythrocyte arylamidases preferentially hydrolysing N-terminal arginine or lysine residues. 74 27

Protease I, a periplasmic endopeptidase from Escherichia coli has been further purified by a modified procedure. While the purified protein consists of a single polypeptide chain of about 21000 daltons, its molecular weight in dilute salt solution was estimated to be near 43000, suggesting that the enzyme has a marked tendency to dimerize. It has only one disulphide bond and is very sensitive to urea. In agreement with previous evidence of a chymotrypsin-like specificity, hydrolytic assays of various p-nitrophenyl esters of N-substituted amino acids showed that phenylalanine and tyrosine derivatives are the best substrates for the enzyme. The Km(app) for N-benzoyloxycarbonyl-L-tyrosin-p-nitrophenyl ester at pH 7.5 In 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer at 25 degrees C was found to be 0.2 mM. In contrast to chymotrypsin, protease I is unable to hydrolyse N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine ethyl ester and its tyrosine analogue. Moreover, the enzyme appears devoid of amidase activity and exhibits a low activity upon polypeptides. At 37 degrees C, it cleaves the carboxymethylated B-chain of bovine insulin at four points: Phe25-Tyr26, Phe24-Phe25, Leu15-Tyr16 and Ser9-His10. From a detailed study of peptides bonds hydrolyzed, it was concluded that protease I has a stringent requirement for both residues forming the scissile bond, and appears to possess an extended hydrophobic binding site.
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PMID:Protease I from Escherichia coli. Some physicochemical properties and substrate specificity. 79 43

The microsomal fraction of rabbit liver contains an endopeptidase that cleaves synthetic peptides that mimic the amino acid sequences of the processing sites of many proproteins, including the vitamin K-dependent proteins. The endopeptidase (M(r) 69,000) was extracted from liver microsomes with 1% Lubrol and purified about 2,700-fold. The substrate employed for isolation and characterization of the enzyme was the decapeptide acetyl-Ala-Arg-Val-Arg-Arg-Ala-Asn-Ser-Phe-Leu (prothrombin peptide), in which hydrolysis occurred on the carboxyl side of the paired Arg-Arg residues. The purified enzyme, whose activity was enhanced 1.8-fold by 0.1 mM CoCl2, has a Km = 80 microM and Vmax = 21,000 nmol.min-1.mg-1 and a pH optimum of 8.7. Proteolytic cleavage of decapeptide substrates was dependent on an arginine residue at positions P1 and P4. The enzyme was completely inhibited by EDTA and 1,10-phenanthroline as well as by p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid and Hg2+. Inhibitors of serine proteases and cysteine proteases had no effect. Based on the substrate preference, the endopeptidase appears to be a good candidate for the enzyme responsible for the precursor processing of the vitamin K-dependent proteins and a number of other proproteins that are synthesized via the secretory pathway in liver and other tissues.
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PMID:A microsomal endopeptidase from liver with substrate specificity for processing proproteins such as the vitamin K-dependent proteins of plasma. 131 98

Stabilization of biologically active conformations of native peptides by cyclization or introduction of hindering residues led to peptidominetics endowed with high affinity and selectivity for one class of receptors and able to cross the blood brain barrier. This is the case of BUBU, Tyr-D-Ser(OtBu)-Gly-Phe-Leu-Thr(OtBu) and BUBUC, Tyr-D-Cys-(OtBu)-Gly-Phe-Leu-Thr(OtBu) for the opioid delta receptors and of BC 254, Boc-gamma-D-Glu-Tyr(SO3H)-Nle-D-Lys-Trp-Nle-Asp-PheNH2 and of BC 264, Boc-Tyr(SO3H)gNle-mGly-Trp-MeNle-Asp-PheNH2 for central CCK-B receptors. Inhibition of metabolizing peptidases such as aminopeptidase N and endopeptidase 24.11 (NEP) for enkephalins and of NEP and ACE for atrial natriuretic peptide and angiotensin I by mixed inhibitors such as kelatorphan and RB 101 or ES14, rationally designed by taking into account the structural differences in the active site of these zinc-metallopeptidases, led to potent analgesics devoid of the major morphine side effects or to new antihypertensives.
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PMID:Peptidomimetics as receptors agonists or peptidase inhibitors: a structural approach in the field of enkephalins, ANP and CCK. 132 Apr 19

The formyl peptide receptor (FPR) and the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-linked type III receptor for the Fc portion of IgG (Fc gamma RIIIB; CD16) play important roles in various inflammatory responses in human neutrophils. The mechanisms of signaling by the glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-anchored Fc gamma RIIIB are not known. Therefore, we investigated the possibility that Fc gamma RIIIB and FPR may act in concert to mediate neutrophil functions. We observed that pretreatment of normal human neutrophils with Fab fragments of a mAb to the Fc gamma RIII (3G8) specifically inhibited their chemotaxis into micropore filters in response to the formylated peptides FMLP or formyl-norleucyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. Pretreatment of neutrophils with a saturating concentration of 3G8 Fab (100 nM or 5 micrograms/ml) followed by exposure to FMLP (0.5 to 500 nM) indicated that significant inhibition of chemotaxis was observed at peptide concentrations greater than 5 nM. However, 3G8 Fab had no effect on the neutrophil response to a wide range (0.05 to 500 nM) of other chemotactic factors, including C5a, leukotriene B4, IL-8 (neutrophil-activating peptide-1), and platelet-activating factor. Moreover, pretreatment of neutrophils with mAb to other cell surface molecules (decay-accelerating factor, Fc gamma RII, and HLA class I) did not affect chemotaxis to FMLP. Inhibition of movement was not due to degradation of FMLP by the cell surface endopeptidase 24.11 (CD10), because neutrophils pretreated with the CD10 inhibitor phosphoramidone and 3G8 Fab displayed the same altered response to FMLP as cells pretreated with 3G8 Fab alone. Ligation of the Fc binding site of Fc gamma RIIIB appears to be essential for altering the FMLP-induced response, since soluble aggregated IgG and other anti-Fc gamma RIII antibodies, all of which recognize the ligand binding site, mimic the inhibitory effect of the 3G8 Fab on FMLP-induced chemotaxis. In contrast, a mAb (214.1) that does not recognize the Fc binding site of Fc gamma RIIIB had no effect on FMLP-induced chemotaxis. Not only did anti-Fc gamma RIII inhibit neutrophil chemotaxis to FMLP in a filter-based migration assay, but 3G8 Fab also inhibited FMLP-induced neutrophil transendothelial migration. Scatchard plot analysis of radioligand binding experiments indicated that 3G8 Fab did not significantly alter the number of FMLP binding sites on neutrophils but significantly increased the affinity of the FPR for [3H]FMLP. Removal of greater than 80% of cell surface Fc gamma RIIIB by phospholipase C abolished the neutrophil chemotactic response to FMLP but did not affect movement toward C5a, IL-8, or leukotriene B4.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Human neutrophil Fc gamma RIIIB and formyl peptide receptors are functionally linked during formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine-induced chemotaxis. 132 56


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