Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C1389183 (
autodigestion
)
317
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the past decade, strains of Bacteroides fragilis that produce an enterotoxin have been implicated in diarrheal disease in animals and humans. The extracellular enterotoxin has been purified and characterized as a single polypeptide (M(r), approximately 20,000). Single specific primer-PCR was used to clone a portion of the B. fragilis enterotoxin gene. The recombinant protein expressed by the cloned gene fragment reacted with monospecific antibodies to B. fragilis enterotoxin by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and immunoblot analysis. The deduced amino acid sequence revealed a signature zinc-binding consensus motif (HEXXHXXGXXH/Met-turn) characteristic of metalloproteases termed metzincins. Sequence comparisons showed close identity to matrix metalloproteases (e.g., human fibroblast collagenase) within the zinc-binding and Met-turn region. Purified enterotoxin contained 1 g-atom of Zn2+ per molecule and hydrolyzed gelatin, azocoll, actin, tropomyosin, and fibrinogen. The enterotoxin also underwent
autodigestion
. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of two
autodigestion
products were identical to the deduced amino acid sequence of the recombinant enterotoxin and revealed cleavage at Cys-Leu and Ser-Leu peptide bonds. Gelatinase (type IV collagenase) activity comigrated with the toxin when analyzed by gel fractionation and zymography, indicating that protease activity is due to the enterotoxin and not to a contaminating protease(s). Optimal proteolytic activity occurred at 37 degrees C and pH 6.5. Primary proteolytic cleavage sites in actin were identified, revealing cleavage at Gly-Met and Thr-Leu peptide bonds. Enzymatic activity was inhibited by metal chelators but not by inhibitors of other classes of proteases. Additionally, cytotoxic activity of the enterotoxin on human carcinoma HT-29 cells was inhibited by acetoxymethyl ester EDTA. The
metalloprotease
activity of the enterotoxin suggests a possible mechanism for enterotoxicity and may have additional implications in the study of disease caused by B. fragilis.
...
PMID:The enterotoxin of Bacteroides fragilis is a metalloprotease. 780 55
Alkaline metalloendopeptidase (
metalloprotease
) AP1 (48 kDa) from Vibrio sp. isolated from the intestine of a five-barred goatfish (Parupeneus trifasciatus) was reported in our previous paper to produce AP2 (36 kDa) by releasing a peptide fragment (molecular mass of about 12 kDa) from the C-terminal end of AP1 by
autodigestion
. AP1 strongly agglutinated fish (flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus) and rabbit erythrocytes, and weakly chicken erythrocytes. In contrast, AP2 had no significant hemagglutinating activity toward any erythrocytes tested, except for weak activity on flounder erythrocytes, suggesting that the C-terminal region of AP1 may be required for the strong hemagglutinating activity. The optimum temperature for the hemagglutinating activity of AP1 was found to be lower than that for the proteolytic activity. At acidic pHs (below pH 7.5), the hemagglutinating activity of AP1 decreased, and its pH profile resembled that of the proteolytic activity. The hemagglutinating activity of AP1 was not observed in the presence of o-phenanthroline or synthetic and proteinous substrates, but different kinds of saccharides and lipids had no effect. While the proteolytic activity of AP1 was not affected by CaCl2, the hemagglutinating activity of AP1 decreased with increases in CaCl2 concentrations. These results suggested that the hemagglutinating activity of these proteases (AP1 and AP2) was most likely caused by their proteolytic action on erythrocyte cell surfaces.
...
PMID:Hemagglutinating activity of extracellular alkaline metalloendopeptidases from Vibrio sp. NUF-BPP1. 969 99
Using an anti-(glutathione S-transferase-UVS.2 cDNA) Ig and uterine egg vitelline envelope (UEVE) protein of Xenopus laevis as probes, the hatching enzyme (HE) from Xenopus was solubilized in hatching medium and purified by gel-filtration and ion-exchange chromatography, and characterized in terms of its molecular mass and enzymatic properties. The hatching medium solubilized the UEVE and contained molecules reactive to the anti-(GST UVS.2) Ig against Xenopus HE. It was found that the HE had a molecular mass of 60 kDa, and often preparations also contained a 40-kDa form. The 60-kDa HE had a high hydrolytic and UEVE-solubilizing activity, and its activities against Boc-Leu-Gly-Arg-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (-NH-Mec) and UEVE were inhibited by anti-(GST UVS.2) Ig in a dose-dependent manner. The 60-kDa form was easily autodigested into a 40-kDa form. The 40-kDa molecule alone had no detectable UEVE-solubilizing activity, even it still had high hydrolytic activity. It probably represents the main protease domain of the 60-kDa form after loss of two CUB repeats during
autodigestion
or digestion. The
autodigestion
of the 60-kDa molecule into 40-kDa molecule is probably a congenital behavior for successfully dissolving the embryo envelope during the hatching process. The two molecules may play different roles at different stages of the hatching process, during which they co-ordinate with each other to achieve complete solubilization of the embryo envelope, similar to the high and low choriolytic enzymes in medaka (Oryzias latipes). Their hydrolytic activity against Boc-Leu-Gly-Arg-NH-Mec was optimal at pH of 7.4, and with an apparent Km value of 200 micromol.L-1 at 30 degrees C. The HE is very sensitive to trypsin-specific inhibitors such as leupeptin, (4-amidino-phenyl)methane sulfonyl fluoride, diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) and N-alpha-tosyl-L-lysylchloromethane (Tos-Lys-CH2Cl), indicates that it is a trypsin-type protease. The results on EDTA and some metal ions, combined with the occurrence of a astacin family
metalloprotease
-specific 'HExHxxGFxHE' sequence in the deduced HE amino-acid sequence, indicates that this HE is a Zn2+
metalloprotease
.
...
PMID:Properties of the hatching enzyme from Xenopus laevis. 1155 58