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Query: EC:3.4.24.27 (
thermolysin
)
1,894
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight proteins of diverse lengths, functions, and origin, are examined for compositional non-randomness amino acid by amino acid. The proteins investigated are human fibrinopeptide A, guinea pig
Insulin
, rattlesnake cytochrome c, MS2 phage coat protein, rabbit triosephosphate isomerase, bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease A, bovine glutamate dehydrogenase, and Bacillus thermoproteolyticus
thermolysin
. As a result of this study the experimentally testable hypothesis is put forth that for a large class of proteins the ratio of that fraction of the molecule which exhibits compositional non-randomness to that fraction which does not is on the average, stable about a mean value (estimated as 0.32 plus or minus 0.17) and (nearly) independent of protein length. Stochastic and selective evolutionary forces are viewed as interacting rather than independent phenomena. With respect to amino acid composition, this coupling ameliorates the current controversy over Darwinian vs. non-Darwinian evolution, selectionist vs. neutralist, in favor of neither: Within the context of the quantitative data, the evolution of real proteins is seen as a compromise between the two viewpoints, both important. The compositional fluctuations of the electrically charged amino acids glutamic and aspartic acid, lysine and arginine, are examined in depth for over eighty protein families, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic. For both taxa, each of the acidic amino acids is present in amounts roughly twice that predicted from the genetic code. The presence of an excess of glutamic acid is independent of the presence of an excess of aspartic acid and vice versa.
...
PMID:Deviations from compositional randomness in eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteins: the hypothesis of selective-stochastic stability and a principle of charge conservation. 17 58
1. The reactivities of phenylglyoxal (PGO), glyoxal (GO), and/or methylglyoxal (MGO) with several proteins, including ribonuclease A [EC 3.1.4.22] and its derivatives, alpha-chymotrypsin [EC 3.4.21.1], trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4], lysozyme [EC 3.2.1.17], pepsin [EC 3.4.23.1], rennin [EC 3.4.23.4],
thermolysin
, and
insulin
and its B chain, have been examined. From analyses of the reaction products, PGO was shown to be the most specific for arginine residues. GO and MGO also reacted rapidly with arginine residues, but they also reacted with lysine residues to a significant extent. A side reaction with N-terminal alpha-amino groups was observed with each of these reagents. 2. Two arginine residues out of four in ribonuclease A, two out of three in alpha-chymotrypsin, one out of two in trypsin, one out of two in pepsin, and one out of five in rennin appeared to react with PGO fairly rapidly, indicating a difference in the relative accessibility of these residues by the reagent. Extensive modification of the arginine residues by PGO occurred with RCM-derivatives of ribonuclease A and
insulin
B chain. The N-terminal isoleucine residues of alpha-chymotrypsin and trypsin appeared to be unreactive with PGO because of salt bridge formation with an aspartyl residue. The activity of alpha-chymotrypsin toward N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester and the lytic activity of lysozyme were lost rapidly on treatment with PGO, as in the case of ribonuclease A. Pepsin and rennin were only partially inactivated by reaction with PGO.
...
PMID:Further studies on the reactions of phenylglyoxal and related reagents with proteins. 32 41
Insulin
decomposes by a multitude of chemical reactions [1-3]. It deamidates at two different residues by entirely different mechanisms. In acid, deamidation at AsnA21 is intramolecularly catalyzed by the protonated C-terminal, whereas above pH 6 an intermediate imide formation at residue AsnB3 leads to isoAsp and Asp derivatives. The imide formation requires a large rotation around the alpha-carbon/peptide carbonyl carbon bond at B3, corresponding to a 10 A movement of the B-chain N-terminal. The main determinant for the rate of B3 deamidation, as well as for the ratio between the two products formed, is the local conformational structure, which is highly influenced by various excipients and the physical state of the
insulin
. An amazing
thermolysin
-like, autoproteolytic cleavage of the A-chain takes place in rhombohedral
insulin
crystals, mediated by a concerted catalytic action by several, inter-hexameric functional groups and Zn2+. Intermolecular, covalent cross-linking of
insulin
molecules occurs via several mechanisms. The most prominent type of mechanism is aminolysis by the N-terminals, leading to isopeptide linkages with the A-chain side-chain amides of residues GlnA15, AsnA18 and AsnA21. The same type of reaction also leads to covalent cross-linking of the N-terminal in protamine with
insulin
. Disulfide exchange reactions, initiated by lysis of the A7-B7 disulfide bridge, lead mainly to formation of covalent oligo- and polymers. Activation energy (Ea) for the neutral deamidation and the aminolysis reactions was found to be 80 and 119 KJ/mol, respectively.
...
PMID:Chemical stability of insulin. 4. Mechanisms and kinetics of chemical transformations in pharmaceutical formulation. 129 86
Cells of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus contain a constitutive periplasmic metalloproteinase showing similar properties as the periplasmic metalloproteinase of Escherichia coli. The periplasmic proteinase of A. calcoaceticus was purified, starting from periplasm, by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydrophobic interaction chromatography and chromatofocusing up to the homogeneity of the enzyme in SDS-electrophoresis with a yield of 6.7% and a purification factor of 417. The enzyme has a molecular mass of 108,000 (gel filtration) or 112,000 (native electrophoresis), and consists of four identical subunits with a molecular mass of 27,000 (SDS-electrophoresis). The purified enzyme degrades preferentially polypeptides such as glucagon and
insulin
. Larger proteins are accepted as substrates to a considerably lower extent. All tested synthetic substrates with trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase and
thermolysin
specificity were not cleaved. Therefore, the described enzyme was designated "insulin-cleaving proteinase" (ICP).
...
PMID:Purification of a periplasmic insulin-cleaving proteinase from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus. 151 May 71
The mode of disulfide linkages in bombyxin-IV, an
insulin
superfamily peptide consisting of A- and B-chains, was determined as A6-A11, A7-B10, and A20-B22. An intermolecular bond of A20-B22 was identified by sequencing and mass spectrometric analysis of the fragments generated by
thermolysin
digestion of natural bombyxin-IV. The mode of the remaining two bridges was determined by chemical and selective synthesis of three possible disulfide bond isomers of bombyxin-IV. A- and B-chains were synthesized by solid-phase method, and three disulfide bonds were bridged stepwise and in a fully controlled manner. Retention time on reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC),
thermolysin
digests, and biological activity of the synthetic [A6-A11, A7-B10, A20-B22-cystine]-bombyxin-IV revealed that it was identical with the natural bombyxin-IV. Two other isomers with respect to disulfide bond arrangement, [A6-A7, A11-B10, A20-B22-cystine]- and [A6-B10, A7-A11, A20-B22-cystine]-bombyxin-IVs, were distinguishable from the natural one by use of HPLC,
thermolysin
digestion, and bioassay.
...
PMID:Determination of disulfide bond arrangement in bombyxin-IV, an insulin superfamily peptide from the silkworm, Bombyx mori, by combination of thermolysin digestion of natural peptide and selective synthesis of disulfide bond isomers. 151 30
An extracellular Zn-endopeptidase was purified to homogeneity from the culture filtrates of Streptococcus faecalis (human oral strain 0G1-10) by a procedure that comprised concentration in an Amicon Hollow Fiber System, ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel permeation chromatography, hydrophobic interaction chromatography (batch operation on phenyl-sepharose Cl-4B), followed by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) on a phenyl-Superose HR 5/5 column, and finally FPLC on a Superose 12 HR 10/30 column. The enzyme is a 31.5-kDa strongly hydrophobic protein with an isoelectric point of 4.6 and a broad pH optimum of 6 to 8. The substrate specificity of the enzyme is similar to that of the mammalian membrane endopeptidase-24.11 and Streptococcus thermophilus
thermolysin
(EC 3.4.24.4) in hydrolyzing preferentially the Phe24-Phe25 bond in
insulin
B-chain, followed by cleavage of the His5-Leu6 bond. The enzyme was especially active on Azocoll and gelatin; soluble and insoluble collagens were hydrolyzed at a lower rate. S. faecalis sex pheromone-related peptides and several mammalian bioactive peptides were cleaved at sites involving pronounced hydrophobicity. The enzyme did not hydrolyze small synthetic peptide derivatives (phenylazobenzyloxycarbonyl-L-Pro-L-Leu-Gly-L-Pro-D-Arg and 2-furylacryloyl-L-Leu-Gly-L-Ala) that are typically attacked by "true" bacterial collagenases. Chemical modification indicated the importance of histidyl, carboxyl, and tyrosyl groups in enzyme activity, suggesting that this enzyme may thus be classified as a metalloprotease II (EC 3.4.24.4). The enzyme is strongly inhibited by a 720-kDa factor present in rat inflammatory exudate. The pronounced ability of the enzyme to attack collagenous materials and certain bioactive peptides suggests its participation in inflammatory processes involving the presence of S. faecalis.
...
PMID:Purification and substrate specificity of a strongly hydrophobic extracellular metalloendopeptidase ("gelatinase") from Streptococcus faecalis (strain 0G1-10). 253 44
Radiolabeled
insulin
was affinity cross-linked to purified insulin receptor with six separate bifunctional N-hydroxysuccinimide esters of different lengths. Results were qualitatively identical for each cross-linker in that
insulin
was predominantly cross-linked through its B chain to the receptor's alpha subunit. The maximum efficiencies of cross-linking were 10-15% for the most effective reagents, and this value was dependent upon the concentration and length of the cross-linker. In an effort to locate the cross-linking site, monoiodoinsulin was cross-linked to affinity-purified insulin receptor with disuccinimidyl suberate. Limited proteolysis of the hormone/receptor adduct with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, chymotrypsin, or
thermolysin
in an SDS-containing buffer rapidly generated a 55-kDa,
insulin
-labeled fragment as shown by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We reported earlier that the 55-kDa chymotryptic fragment contained multiple internal disulfide bonds as evidenced by its shifting mobility on an SDS gel after dithiothreitol treatment [Boni-Schnetzler et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 8395-8401]. Here we show that the 55-kDa fragment is also formed by proteolysis of the receptor in the absence of prior
insulin
cross-linking. This fragment was prepared in amounts sufficient for sequence analysis and was purified by passage successively over gel permeation and reverse-phase HPLC columns. The sequence of the fragment's amino terminus corresponds to that of the amino terminus of the receptor's alpha subunit. This fragment also reacts with an antibody raised against a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 242-253 of the receptor's alpha subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Isolation of a proteolytically derived domain of the insulin receptor containing the major site of cross-linking/binding. 274 47
A rat hepatocyte cell line was cultured in Higuchi's medium with fetal calf serum and
insulin
and labeled with 35SO2/4-. The cells were treated with a number of ligands to displace the heparan 35SO4 proteoglycan (HSPG) from the pericellular matrix. Maximum release was obtained with D-mannose-6-PO4 (50 mM), D-glucose-6-PO4 (50 mM), myo-inositol-2-PO4 (2-5 mM), myo-inositol hexaphosphate (2-5 mM), and DL-myo-inositol-1-PO4 (1-2 mM). D-myo-Inositol-1,3,4-(PO4)3 (1 mM) and L-myo-inositol-1-PO4 (2 mM) were intermediate in their ability to release the cell surface HSPG, whereas heparin (2 mg/ml), yeast phosphomannan (4 mg/ml), D-xylose-1-PO4 (50 mM), D-glucose-6-SO4 (50 mM), and myo-inositol hexasulfate (5 mM) were ineffective. When 35SO2/4- was added to cell cultures, the total cell surface HSPG increased linearly, but the percentage of the total cell surface [35SO4]HSPG that was released by myo-inositol-PO4 increased with time during the labeling period, reaching a maximum of 65% after 5 h. When cells were labeled for 12 h without
insulin
in the medium, the maximum amount of cell surface HSPG that was released by myo-inositol-PO4 was reduced to 30%. However, when cells labeled in the absence of
insulin
were treated with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and then myo-inositol-PO4, the release of the cell surface [35SO4]HSPG was increased to 73%. When the [35SO4]HSPG that was released from the cell surface by treatment with myo-inositol-PO4 was added to cultures of unlabeled hepatocytes, it was taken up very rapidly and a portion of the internalized HSPG was converted to free heparan SO4 chains which appeared in the nucleus. Uptake was Ca2+- and Mg2+-independent. The amount of [35SO4]HSPG taken up was markedly reduced when the myo-inositol-PO4-releasable [35SO4]HSPG was pretreated with trypsin,
thermolysin
, alkaline borohydride, or alkaline phosphatase. When the cells were grown in inositol-deficient medium or in the presence of myo-inositol-PO4, the amount of heparan SO4 found in the nucleus was markedly reduced, and the cells no longer exhibited contact inhibition. These effects of myo-inositol deficiency on the growth and nuclear heparan SO4 were accentuated by addition of LiCl to the cultures to prevent phosphatidylinositol synthesis from the endogenous myo-inositol-PO4.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Involvement of phosphatidylinositol and insulin in the coordinate regulation of proteoheparan sulfate metabolism and hepatocyte growth. 295 71
The proteolytic specificities of two zinc hemorrhagic toxins (Ht-c and Ht-d), isolated from Crotalus atrox venom, were investigated by using the oxidized B chain of bovine
insulin
and synthetic peptide substrates. The enzymes cleaved the Ala14-Leu15 bond of the
insulin
B chain most rapidly and the Tyr16-Leu17 slightly more slowly. The His5-Leu6, His10-Leu11, and Gly23-Phe24 bonds were also cleaved but at considerably slower rates. In order to assess the substrate length preferences of the enzymes, peptide analogs of the B chain about the Ala14-Leu15 bond were synthesized ranging in length from four to seven residues. The heptapeptide NH2-Leu-Val-Glu-Ala-Leu-Tyr-Leu-COOH was the best peptide substrate tested with the other peptides having decreasing kcat/Km values with decreasing length. The tetrapeptide NH2-Ala-Leu-Tyr-Leu-COOH was not cleaved by the enzymes. Furthermore, this peptide was shown to serve as a competitive inhibitor of the toxins. The N-acetylated pentapeptides and hexapeptides, synthesized to probe the active site environment of the enzymes, were significantly better substrates than their unacetylated counterparts. The toxins had the highest kcat/Km values for the acetylated peptide Ac-Val-Ala-Leu-Leu-Ala-COOH. The data suggest that the toxins may indeed have extended substrate-binding sites, which may accommodate at least six amino acid residues. The best substrate examined thus far for the toxins is the fluorogenic peptide analog 2-aminobenzoyl-Ala-Gly-Leu-Ala-4-nitrobenzylamide, suggestive of similarities between the toxins and mammalian collagenases as well as
thermolysin
. Mechanisms for inhibition of the enzymes were investigated using amino acid hydroxamates, chloromethyl esters, phosphoramidon and the peptide NH2-Ala-Leu-Tyr-Leu-COOH. All of these inhibitors had Ki values in the 10(-4) M range.
...
PMID:Substrate specificities and inhibition of two hemorrhagic zinc proteases Ht-c and Ht-d from Crotalus atrox venom. 351 16
Using ion-exchange chromatography on QAE-Sephadex A-50, affinity chromatography on DNP-hexamethylenediamine-Sepharose and gramicidin S-Sepharose and gel filtration, a metalloproteinase was isolated from the cultural fluid of L. pneumophila (strain Philadelphia-1) grown for 20 hours. The enzyme was purified 1606-fold with a 31% yield. The enzyme has a Mr of 38,000, pI approximately 4.0 and optimum of proteolytic activity at pH 6.0-7.0, 55 degrees C. The proteinase is the most stable within the pH range of 6.0-9.0. The enzyme contains one atom of zinc per molecule. The amino acid composition of metalloproteinase is close to that of
thermolysin
and is characterized by a high methionine content--17 residues out of 348. In the B-chain of oxidized bovine
insulin
the enzyme hydrolyzes the bonds precedent to the amino groups of leucine, phenylalanine and tyrosine. The enzyme is inhibited by chelating agents--Na2-EDTA and o-phenanthroline as well as by diethylpyrocarbonate. The serine and thiol proteinase inhibitors do not influence the enzyme activity. Under the given conditions of cultivation metalloproteinase is the major endopeptidase produced by L. pneumophila. Thus, the proteolytic system of Legionelles is characterized by the combination of metalloproteinase and the earlier described phenylalanine aminopeptidase.
...
PMID:[Extracellular metalloproteinase from Legionella pneumophila]. 366 68
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