Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (deaminase)
5,113 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An enzyme displaying proteolytic activity toward the natural substrate casein as well as clotting activity on fibrinogen was purified to homogeneity from Cerastes cerastes (horned viper) venom and characterized. The enzyme is constituted of two identical subunits of mol. wt 48,500 as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and has an isoelectric point of 3.75. N-terminal sequencing up to the 33rd residue evidenced a high homology with other snake venom proteinases. The proteinase is of serine-type as indicated by high sensitivity to DFP and shows both arginine-ester hydrolase and amidase activities on synthetic substrates. Both specific activities were 30-fold higher than the respective activities found in the crude venom. The Km value determined for arginine-containing substrate BAEE was 3.0 x 10(-4) M and the Km for chromogenic substrate CBS 34-47 0.65 x 10(-4) M. The Vm/Km ratio, however, was two-fold higher for BAEE than for CBS 34-47; the arginine-esterase activity of this enzyme is thus slightly higher than its amidase activity.
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PMID:A fibrinogen-clotting serine proteinase from Cerastes cerastes (horned viper) venom with arginine-esterase and amidase activities. Purification, characterization and kinetic parameter determination. 148 36

1. Two chymotrypsins, called chymotrypsin I and II, were purified from the pyloric caeca of rainbow trout, by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, hydrophobic interaction chromatography (phenyl-Sepharose) and ion-exchange chromatography (DEAE-Sepharose). 2. The approximate molecular weights of chymotrypsin I and II were 28,200 (+/- 1200) and 28,800 (+/- 900), respectively, as determined by SDS-PAGE and their isoelectric points were about 5. 3. The pH optima of the enzymes were centered around nine, when assayed for succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Pro-L-Phe-p-nitroanilide (Suc-AAPF-NA) as substrate and both enzymes were unstable at pH values below 5. 4. The amidase activity of both enzymes increased with temperature up to about 55 degrees C. Chymotrypsin I was found to be more heat stable than chymotrypsin II, an effect most likely explained by stronger calcium binding of the former. 5. The trout chymotrypsins were significantly more active than bovine alpha-chymotrypsin when assayed against Suc-AAPF-NA at 25 degrees C and casein at low temperatures (10-20 degrees C), indicating an adaptation of the activities of the trout chymotrypsins to the habitation temperatures of the fish.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of two chymotrypsin-like proteases from the pyloric caeca of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). 149 72

Five sheep (average BW 62 kg) were fed 65% roughage: 35% concentrate diets (CP = 15%) in a 5 x 5 Latin square design to study the effects of combinations of defaunation and N supplements (soybean meal [SBM], corn gluten meal [CGM], blood meal [BM], urea, and casein) differing in ruminal degradation on ruminal microbial numbers and activity. Diets were fed twice daily (DM intake 1,759 g/d). Defaunation was accomplished with doses of 30 ml of alkanate 3SL3.sheep-1.d-1 for 3 d with 2 d of fasting. Treatment 1 (control) involved feeding faunated sheep a diet in which the supplemental N was 67% SBM N and 33% urea N. Treatment 2 involved feeding defaunated sheep the same diet as the control. Treatments 3, 4, and 5 involved feeding defaunated sheep diets in which the supplemental N source was either 67% CGM-BM N (CGM and BM combined on a 1:1 N ratio): 33% urea N, or 33% CGM-BM N:67% urea N or 33% CGM-BM N:33% urea N:33% casein N, respectively. Compared with the faunated control, defaunation (Treatments 2, 3, 4, and 5) increased (P less than .05) total direct counts of ruminal bacteria (2.7 vs 1.3 x 10(11)/ml), fungal zoospores (2.8 vs 1.4 x 10(5)/ml), and ruminal microbial protease activity (1.4 vs 1.0 mg azocasein/[ml ruminal fluid.h]). Defaunation did not have a consistent effect on ruminal microbial deaminase activity. Compared with the control, defaunation resulted in lower (P less than .05) total perchloric acid-soluble amino N in ruminal fluid at 4 and 10 h after the morning feeding. Defaunation did not decrease (P greater than .05) total free amino acid concentrations in ruminal fluid, but it altered the profile of free amino acids. Although defaunation increased (P less than .05) ruminal bacterial numbers, no increases in total microbial CP or OM concentrations in ruminal contents were observed.
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PMID:Effects of defaunation and various nitrogen supplementation regimens on microbial numbers and activity in the rumen of sheep. 206 Dec 56

The effects of tetronasin on ruminal protein metabolism were investigated in vitro using ruminal fluid from cattle receiving tetronasin in the diet, ovine ruminal fluid from animals not receiving tetronasin and pure cultures of proteolytic ruminal bacteria. Ruminal fluid from cattle receiving tetronasin in a predominantly barley diet had lower proteolytic (76% of control, P less than .10) and deaminative (58% of control, P less than .05) activities than controls after 42 d. The effect of deamination disappeared after 84 d, although the proteolytic activity remained lower (P less than .10) than that of controls. When tetronasin was added in vitro to ruminal fluid from sheep not receiving the ionophore, proteolytic activity (14C-labeled casein hydrolysis) was unaffected, but the rate of ammonia production from amino acids was decreased by 87% (P less than .01). Oligopeptide breakdown was inhibited to a lesser extent (21%, P less than .05). Dipeptidase activity (dialanine hydrolysis) was not affected. The addition of tetronasin to cultures of the ruminal bacteria Ruminobacter amylophilus and Bacteroides ruminicola had no influence on their protease, deaminase or dipeptidase activities. However, when the bacteria were adapted to grow in the presence of tetronasin, deamination of amino acids was severely inhibited (87 to 100%, P less than .01), even when tetronasin was absent from the incubation mixture. Tetronasin had no effect on the proteolytic activity of adapted cultures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of the ionophore tetronasin on nitrogen metabolism by ruminal microorganisms in vitro. 233 85

We have identified and isolated two new calcium-activated neutral hydrolases from human ventricular muscles. The one is an esterase, of which molecular weight was 300,000, required millimolar concentration of Ca2+, hydrolyzed Ac-Tyr-OEt X H2O, optiaml pH at 7.0. The other is an amidase, of which molecular weight was 70,000, also required millimolar concentration of Ca2+, hydrolyzed a synthetic substrate for chymotrypsin, Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-MCA, with optimal pH at 7.2. Both enzymes did not degrade casein or contractile proteins (myosin, actin, troponin and tropomyosin). Their activities were not inhibited by exogenous protease inhibitors, leupeptin, antipain, monoiodoacetic acid and chymostatin, while the amidase activity was blocked by the endogenous inhibitor against calcium-activated neutral protease (CANP). Thus, their characters are different from chymotrypsin or CANP and they seems to be new hydrolases in the human heart.
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PMID:Identification of two new calcium dependent hydrolases in the human heart. 301 Sep 97

Proteins of the isolated brush border membrane of Hymenolepis diminuta were hydrolyzed in vitro by chymotrypsin, papain, pepsin, subtilopeptidase A (= subtilisin Carlsberg), and trypsin. Neither proteolytic nor amidase activity was demonstrable in the isolated membrane using proteinaceous (casein and hemoglobin) or chromogenic (benzoyl-arginine-p-nitroanilide and succinyl-alanyl-alanyl-propyl-phenylalanine p-nitroanilide) substrates, and the membrane preparation did not inhibit the proteolytic and amidase activities of these enzymes. Thus, the isolated tegumental membrane of H. diminuta is not inherently resistant to the action of proteolytic enzymes, and it does not inhibit proteolytic activity. In control incubations containing only buffer, the alkaline phosphatase activity of the brush border membrane decreased in a time dependent manner, but in the presence of chymotrypsin, subtilopeptidase A, and trypsin, the membrane retained greater alkaline phosphatase activity (pepsin and papain could not be tested for this effect on alkaline phosphatase activity). A similar time dependent decrease in activity was also noted for each of the proteolytic enzymes in control assays, but subtilopeptidase A and papain retained greater activity in the presence of the isolated membrane preparation when these assays were compared to controls.
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PMID:Hymenolepis diminuta: interactions of the isolated brush border membrane with proteolytic enzymes. 330 86

Rheumatoid synovial fluid contains an activator of latent collagenase from culture medium of pig synovium. The activator was purified by gel chromatography on Ultrogel AcA 44 and affinity chromatography on soybean trypsin inhibitor coupled to Sepharose 4B. The purified material was homogeneous on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with Mr 88 000. The activator had limited proteolytic activity against azo-casein, but showed amidase activity on Pro-Phe-Arg-NMec, Z-Phe-Arg-NMec, D-Val-Leu-Arg-NPhNO2 and D-Pro-Phe-Arg-NPhNO2, with an optimum at pH 8.0. Activity was completely inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, soybean trypsin inhibitor, leupeptin and Pro-Phe-Arg-CH2Cl, whereas lima bean trypsin inhibitor, Tos-Lys-CH2Cl, a specific inhibitor of factor XIIa from maize, EDTA and iodoacetate were not inhibitory. These properties of the activator suggested that it might be plasma kallikrein (EC 3.4.21.34), and the possibility was further examined. The activator was treated with [3H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate, and run in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with reduction; a radioautograph of the gel showed a pair of [3H]diisopropyl phosphoryl-labelled bands (Mr 36 000 and 34 000) identical to those obtained with authentic plasma kallikrein. Double immunodiffusion with monospecific antiserum against human plasma kallikrein confirmed the identification. This is the first demonstration of collagenase-activating activity of plasma kallikrein, and raises the possibility that activation of prokallikrein in the inflamed joint space may contribute to the disease process not only by the production of bradykinin, but also by activating latent collagenase.
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PMID:Identification of plasma kallikrein as an activator of latent collagenase in rheumatoid synovial fluid. 627 61

Intact, metabolically active rumen protozoa prepared by gravity sedimentation and washing in a mineral solution at 10 to 15 degrees C had comparatively low proteolytic activity on azocasein and low endogenous proteolytic activity. Protozoa washed in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.8) at 4 degrees C and stored on ice autolysed when they were warmed to 39 degrees C. They also exhibited low proteolytic activity on azocasein, but they had a high endogenous proteolytic activity with a pH optimum of 5.8. The endogenous proteolytic activity was inhibited by cysteine proteinase inhibitors, for example, iodoacetate (63.1%) and the aspartic proteinase inhibitor, pepstatin (43.9%). Inhibitors specific for serine proteinases and metalloproteinases were without effect. The serine and cysteine proteinase inhibitors of microbial origin, including antipain, chymostatin, and leupeptin, caused up to 67% inhibition of endogenous proteolysis. Hydrolysis of casein by protozoa autolysates was also inhibited by cysteine proteinase inhibitors. Some of the inhibitors decreased endogenous deamination, in particular, phosphoramidon, which had little inhibitory effect on proteolysis. Protozoal and bacterial preparations exhibited low hydrolytic activities on synthetic proteinase and carboxypeptidase substrates, although the protozoa had 10 to 78 times greater hydrolytic activity (per milligram of protein) than bacteria on the synthetic aminopeptidase substrates L-leucine-p-nitroanilide, L-leucine-beta-naphthylamide, and L-leucinamide. The aminopeptidase activity was partially inhibited by bestatin. It was concluded that cysteine proteinases and, to a lesser extent, aspartic proteinases are primarily responsible for proteolysis in autolysates of rumen protozoa. The protozoal autolysates had high aminopeptidase activity; low deaminase activity was observed on endogenous amino acids.
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PMID:Protease activities of rumen protozoa. 636 68

In this paper, we present the results of purification and characterization of an arginine/lysine amidase from the venom of Ophiophagus hannah (OhS1). It was purified by Sephadex G-75 gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B. It is a protein of about 43,000, consisting of a single polypeptide chain. It is a minor component in the venom. The purified enzyme was capable of hydrolysing several tripeptidyl-p-nitroanilide substrates having either arginine or lysine as the C-terminal residue. We studied the kinetic parameters of OhS1 on six these chromogenic substrates. OhS1 did not clot fibrinogen. Electrophoresis of fibrinogen degraded with OhS1 revealed the disappearance of the alpha- and beta-chains and the appearance of lower mol. wt fragments. OhS1 had no hemorrhagic activity. It did not hydrolyse casein, nor did it act on blood coagulation factor X, prothrombin and plasminogen. The activity of OhS1 was completely inhibited by NPGB, PMSF, DFP, benzamidine and soybean trypsin inhibitor, suggesting it is a serine protease. Metal chelator (EDTA) had no effect on it.
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PMID:Characterization of OhS1, an arginine/lysine amidase from the venom of king cobra (Ophiophagus hannah). 807 73

Membrane enzyme reactors constitute an attempt at integrating catalytic conversion, product separation and/or concentration and catalyst recovery into a single operation. Whereas conventional membrane reactors confine an enzyme, in a free form, to one side of a membrane by size exclusion, electrostatic repulsion, or physical or chemical immobilization onto an intermediate support (gel, liposome), the membrane reactor here described is shown to operate under an entirely new principle: enzyme confinement into an isoelectric trap located in a multicompartment electrolyzer operating in an electric field. Two isoelectric membranes, having pI values encompassing both the enzyme pI and the pH of its optimum of activity, act by continuously titrating the enzyme trapped inside, thus preventing it from escaping the reaction chamber. Charged products generated by the enzyme catalysis are continuously electrophoretically transported away from the reaction chamber and collected into other chambers stacked either towards the cathodic or anodic sides. In a urease reactor, ammonia is continuously harvested towards the cathode, thus allowing >95% substrate consumption with maintenance of enzyme integrity over much longer time periods than in a batch reactor. In a trypsin reactor, casein is digested and biologically active peptides are continuously harvested in a pure form into appropriate isoelectric traps. In a third example, pure D-phenylglycine is produced from a racemate mixture, via an acylation reaction onto a cosubstrate (the ester methyl-4-hydroxyphenyl acetate), brought about by the enzyme penicillin G acylase.
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PMID:An isoelectrically trapped enzyme reactor operating in an electric field. 966 67


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