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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alkaline protease from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (E.C. 3.4.24.40), also called pseudomonal serralysin, plays an important role in the infection bacterial process. The
alkaline protease
concentration and activity in the culture supernatants of 23 Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains from patients suffering from cystic fibrosis were determined by using an ELISA procedure and a specific enzymatic activity test. No correlation was demonstrated between the activity and the concentration of
alkaline protease
. This could be explained by the presence of an inactive precursor and a partial hydrolysis of the enzyme, confirmed by
SDS
-PAGE and Western blotting in the supernatants. The activity test is the only one allowing a quantification of the presence of an active form of
alkaline protease
.
...
PMID:Quantitation and enzymatic activity of the alkaline protease from Pseudomonas aeruginosa in culture supernatants from clinical strains. 967 86
The insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) plays an important role in the cellular metabolism of insulin. Recent studies have also suggested a regulatory role for this protein in controlling the activity of cytoplasmic protein complexes, including the
proteasome
[
multicatalytic proteinase
(
MCP
)] and the glucocorticoid and androgen receptors. Binding of IDE to these complexes increases their activity, whereas the addition of substrates for IDE inhibits activity. This provides a potential mechanism of action for internalized insulin and other IDE substrates in the control of protein turnover. To examine further the interactions, partially purified IDE-
MCP
complex was treated with EDTA or EGTA, and activity was measured in the absence and presence of various divalent cations (Ca2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Zn2+) and insulin. EDTA treatment reduced
MCP
activity and eliminated the effect of insulin on the complex. Divalent cations partially or completely restored
MCP
activity, but did not restore the effect of insulin. EGTA treatment had a lesser effect on
MCP
activity, but abolished insulin inhibition of activity. Divalent cations restored the insulin effect. Inhibitors of IDE also blocked the insulin effect on
MCP
activity, as did treatment with
SDS
. These findings suggest that conformational changes in the complex may play a role in the insulin control of
MCP
activity.
...
PMID:Regulation of multicatalytic enzyme activity by insulin and the insulin-degrading enzyme. 975 83
The
proteasome
activator protein PA28 or 11 S regulator may play an important role in facilitating the generation of peptides for presentation by the MHC class I system. PA28 is composed of two homologous subunits termed alpha and beta. Removal of the carboxyl terminal tyrosine of the alpha subunit of PA28 abolishes activity (X. Song et al., 1997, J. Biol. Chem. 272, 27994-28000). To explore the structural basis of this effect the des-tyrosyl analog of PA28alpha prepared by site-directed mutagenesis and PA28alpha were expressed at high levels in a baculovirus system and purified by FPLC. Des-tyrosyl-PA28alpha neither stimulated the
proteasome
nor competed with PA28alpha for binding to the
proteasome
. Hydrophobic interaction chromatography revealed that the hydrophobicity of the mutant protein was considerably greater than PA28alpha. When the mutant protein was chromatographed on a calibrated Superose 6 column a mixture of approximately 25% oligomer and 75% monomer was found. The oligomer weakly stimulated the
proteasome
but this molecule was labile. Very low concentrations of
SDS
(0.005%) dissociated PA28alpha and abolished its stimulatory activity. It is concluded that the lack of activity of des-tyrosyl-PA28alpha is due to conformational changes resulting in dissociation and that the oligomeric form of PA28alpha is required for activation.
...
PMID:Properties of the proteasome activator subunit PA28 alpha and its des-tyrosyl analog. 980 70
Solving the crystallographic structure of the ring-shaped heptamer formed by protective antigen (PA), the B moiety of anthrax toxin, has focused attention on understanding how this oligomer mediates membrane translocation of the toxin's A moieties. We have developed an assay for translocation in which radiolabeled ligands are bound to proteolytically activated PA (PA63) at the surface of CHO or L6 cells, and translocation across the plasma membrane is induced by lowering the pH. The cells are then treated with Pronase E to degrade residual surface-bound material, and protected ligands are quantified after fractionation by
SDS
-PAGE. Translocation was most efficient (35%-50%) with LFN, the N-terminal PA binding domain of the anthrax lethal factor (LF). Intact LF, edema factor (EF), or fusion proteins containing LFN fused to certain heterologous proteins [the diphtheria toxin A chain (DTA) or dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR)] were less efficiently translocated (15%-20%); and LFN fusions to several other proteins were not translocated at all. LFN with different N-terminal residues was found to be degraded according to the N-end rule by the
proteasome
, and translocation of LFN fused to a mutant form of DHFR with a low affinity for methotrexate (MTX) protected cells from the effects of MTX. Both results are consistent with a cytosolic location of protected proteins. Evidence that a protein must unfold to be translocated was obtained in experiments showing that (i) translocation of LFNDTA was blocked by introduction of an artificial disulfide into the DTA moiety, and (ii) translocation of LFNDHFR and LFNDTA was blocked by their ligands (MTX and adenine, respectively). These results demonstrate that the acid-induced translocation by anthrax toxin closely resembles that of diphtheria toxin, despite the fact that these two toxins are unrelated and form pores by different mechanisms.
...
PMID:Characterization of membrane translocation by anthrax protective antigen. 984 79
We sequenced five peptides from subunit 11 (S11), a 43 kDa protein of the human 26S
proteasome
, and used this information to clone its cDNA. The S11 cDNA encodes a 376 amino acid protein with a pI of 5.6 and a molecular mass of 42.9 kDa. Translation of S11 RNA in the presence of [35S]methionine produces a radiolabeled protein that co-migrates with S11 of the human 26S
proteasome
on
SDS
-PAGE. Polyclonal antiserum made against recombinant S11 recognizes a protein of the same size in extracts of bacteria expressing S11 and in purified 26S proteasomes from human red blood cells or rabbit reticulocytes. The S11 sequence does not contain motifs that suggest a biological function. S11 is, however, the human homolog of Rpn9, a recently identified subunit of the yeast 26S
proteasome
.
...
PMID:Identification, molecular cloning, and characterization of subunit 11 of the human 26S proteasome. 1022 35
Two dominant temperature-sensitive (DTS) Drosophila mutants are missense mutations of
proteasome
genes encoding beta-type subunits beta6/C5 (DTS5) and beta2/Z (DTS7). At nonpermissive temperature (29 degrees C), heterozygotes (DTS5/+ and DTS7/+) develop normally until metamorphosis; pupae fail to mature and die before eclosion. Proteasomes were purified from wild-type (WT) and heterozygous adult flies raised at permissive temperature (25 degrees C). Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis separated at least 28 proteins, 13 of which were identified with monospecific antibodies to alpha6/C2 (five species), alpha2/C3 (three species), alpha7/C8 (three species), alpha5/zeta, and beta1/Y subunits. Both quantitative and qualitative differences were observed between WT and DTS/+ proteasomes, with DTS5/+ deviating more from WT than DTS7/+ proteasomes. In DTS5/+ there was a shift to more acidic species of C2 and C3 and a shift to less acidic species of 32-kDa subunits (#3-#7) recognized by an anti-alpha subunit monoclonal antibody (MCP222) and were losses of two 32-kDa subunits (#2 and #3), decreases in Y (25 kDa; 2-fold) and 31-kDa (#9; 2-fold) subunits, and increases in 52-kDa (#1; 1.9-fold) and 24-kDa (#13; 2.3-fold) subunits. In DTS7/+ there was a less pronounced shift to acidic species of C3 and no pI shift in C2 species and subunits #3-#7 and were decreases in #9 (2.5-fold) and #14 (3-fold) and a loss of #2. The three C8 species were similar between WT, DTS5/+, and DTS7/+ proteasomes. Qualitatively, the most dramatic difference was the appearance of a new 24-kDa subunit (#16) in DTS/+ preparations, with about a 14-fold greater amount of #16 in DTS7/+ than in DTS5/+ proteasomes. Catalytically, WT and DTS/+ proteasomes had similar peptidase activities, although the DTS/+ proteasomes were slightly more sensitive to
SDS
and elevated temperatures in vitro. The incorporation of DTS subunits apparently altered
proteasome
assembly and/or processing at permissive temperature with little effect on catalytic activities. These data suggest that at nonpermissive temperature, assembly/processing is more severely affected, producing DTS-containing complexes that lack functions essential for cellular proliferation and differentiation at metamorphosis.
...
PMID:Subunit compositions and catalytic properties of proteasomes from developmental temperature- sensitive mutants of Drosophila melanogaster. 1041 15
A membrane proteinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, called insulin-cleaving membrane proteinase (ICMP), was located in the outer membrane leaflet of the cell envelope. The enzyme is expressed early in the logarithmic phase parallel to the bacterial growth during growth on peptide rich media. It is located with its active center facing to the outermost side of the cell, because its whole activity could be measured in intact cells. The very labile membrane proteinase was solubilized by non-ionic detergents (Nonidet P-40, Triton X-100) and purified in its amphiphilic form to apparent homogeneity in
SDS
-PAGE by copper chelate chromatography and two subsequent chromatographic steps on Red-Sepharose CL-4B (yield 58.3%, purification factor 776.3). It consisted of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular mass of 44.6 kDa, determined by mass spectrometry. ICMP was characterized to be a metalloprotease with pH-optimum in the neutral range. The ICMP readily hydrolyzed Glu(13)-Ala(14) and Tyr(16)-Leu(17) bonds in the insulin B-chain. Phe(25)-Tyr(26) and His(10)-Leu(11) were secondary cleavage sites suggesting a primary specificity of the enzyme for hydrophobic or aromatic residues at P'(1)-position. The ICMP differed from elastase,
alkaline protease
and LasA in its cleavage specificity, inhibition behavior and was immunologically diverse from elastase. The amino acid sequence of internal peptides showed no homologies with the known proteinases. This outer membrane proteinase was capable of specific cleavage of alpha and beta fibrinogen chains. Among the p-nitroanilide substrates tested, substrates of plasminogen activator, complement convertase and kallikrein with arginine residues in the P(1)-subsite were the substrates best accepted, but they were only cleaved at a very low rate.
...
PMID:Characterization and purification of an outer membrane metalloproteinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa with fibrinogenolytic activity. 1045 58
Two new forms of proteasomes, designated as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane-associated
proteasome
(ERa
proteasome
) and ER membrane-bound
proteasome
(ERb
proteasome
), were purified to homogeneity from 0.0125 and 2.5% sodium cholate extracts, respectively, of a rat liver microsomal fraction.
SDS
-PAGE analysis revealed that the purified ERa and ERb proteasomes were composed of multiple subunits similar to the cytosolic 20S
proteasome
. However, electrophoretic, structural and immunochemical differences between the ERa, ERb and cytosolic 20S proteasomes were observed on native PAGE, two-dimensional (2D) PAGE, and immunoblot analyses. Purification of ERb from a 2.5% sodium cholate extract of the trypsin-treated microsomal fraction yielded a trypsin-modified form of ERb (tERb), which lacked the C2 subunit at least. On the other hand, no ERa
proteasome
was obtained from the 0.0125% sodium cholate extract of the trypsin-treated microsomes, suggesting that ERa and ERb are ER membrane-associated and -bound proteasomes, respectively. The ERa, ERb, and cytosolic 20S proteasomes exhibited similar specificities as to peptide hydrolyzing activity, although differences in their activities were noted in the presence of
SDS
and phospholipid. With respect to the proteolysis of protein substrates, only the ERb
proteasome
cleaved beta-casein, and it also degraded reduced and carboxymethylated lysozyme considerably faster than the cytosolic 20S and ERa proteasomes. Collectively our results suggest that the ERa and ERb proteasomes may play roles in intracellular proteolysis distinct from that of the cytosolic 20S
proteasome
.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of two 20S proteasomes from the endoplasmic reticulum of rat liver microsomes. 1050 81
The 19 S regulatory complex (RC) of the 26 S
proteasome
is composed of at least 18 different subunits, including six ATPases that form specific pairs S4-S7, S6-S8, and S6'-S10b in vitro. One of the largest regulatory complex subunits, S2, was translated in reticulocyte lysate containing [(35)S]methionine and used to probe membranes containing
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separated RC subunits. S2 bound to two ATPases, S4 and S7. Association of S2 with regulatory complex subunits was also assayed by co-translation and sedimentation. S2 formed an immunoprecipitable heterotrimer upon co-translation with S4 and S7. The non-ATPase S5b also formed a ternary complex with S4 and S7 and the three proteins assembled into a tetramer with S2. Neither S2 nor S5b formed complexes with S6'-S10b dimers or with S6-S8 oligomers. The use of chimeric ATPases demonstrated that S2 binds the NH(2)-terminal region of S4 and the COOH-terminal two-thirds of S7. Conversely, S5b binds the COOH-terminal two-thirds of S4 and to S7's NH(2)-terminal region. The demonstrated association of S2 with ATPases in the mammalian 19 S regulatory complex is consistent with and extends the recent finding that the yeast RC is composed of two subcomplexes, the lid and the base (Glickman, M. H., Rubin, D. M., Coux, O., Wefes, I., Pfeifer, G., Cejka, Z., Baumeister, W., Fried, V. A., and Finley, D. (1998) Cell 94, 615-623).
...
PMID:Mapping subunit contacts in the regulatory complex of the 26 S proteasome. S2 and S5b form a tetramer with ATPase subunits S4 and S7. 1062 21
It is established that suicide inactivation of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) with guanidine compounds, or inhibition of the hsp90-based chaperone system with geldanamycin, leads to the enhanced proteolytic degradation of nNOS. This regulated proteolysis is mediated, in part, by the
proteasome
. We show here with the use of human embryonic kidney 293 cells transfected with nNOS that inhibition of the
proteasome
with lactacystin leads to the accumulation of immunodetectable higher molecular mass forms of nNOS. Some of these higher molecular mass forms were immunoprecipitated by an anti-ubiquitin antibody, indicating that they are nNOS-polyubiquitin conjugates. Moreover, the predominant nNOS-ubiquitin conjugate detected in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, as well as in rat brain cytosol, migrates on
SDS
-polyacrylamide gels with a mobility near that for the native monomer of nNOS and likely represents a conjugate containing a few or perhaps one ubiquitin. Studies in vitro with the use of (125)I-ubiquitin and reticulocyte extracts could mimic this ubiquitination reaction, which was dependent on ATP. The heme-deficient monomeric form of nNOS is preferentially ubiquitinated over that of the heme-sufficient functionally active homodimer. Thus, we have shown for the first time that ubiquitination of nNOS occurs and is likely involved in the regulated proteolytic removal of non-functional enzyme.
...
PMID:Ubiquitination of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase in vitro and in vivo. 1075 85
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