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Aspartic proteinase from barley grains is related to mammalian lysosomal cathepsin D
Authors:Paula Sarkkinen  Nisse Kalkkinen  Carola Tilgmann  Jari Siuro  Jukka Kervinen  Leena Mikola
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, University of Jyväskylä, Seminaarinkatu 15, SF-40100 Jyväskylä;(2) Institute of Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, Karvaamokuja 3, D-00380 Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:Resting barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) grains contain acid-proteinase activity. The corresponding enzyme was purified from grain extracts by affinity chromatography on a pepstatin-Sepharose column. The pH optimum of the affinity-purified enzyme was between 3.5 and 3.9 as measured by hemoglobin hydrolysis and the enzymatic activity was completely inhibited by pepstatin a specific inhibitor of aspartic proteinases (EC 3.4.23). Further purification on a Mono S column followed by activity measurements and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the affinity-purified enzyme preparation contained two active heterodimeric aspartic proteinases: a larger 48k Da enzyme, consisting of 32-kDa and 16-kDa subunits and a smaller one of 40 kDa, consisting of 29-kDa and 11-kDa subunits. Separation and partial amino acid sequence analysis of each subunit indicate that the 40-kDa enzyme is formed by proteolytic processing of the 48k Da form. Amino-acid sequence alignment and inhibition studies showed that the barley aspartic proteinase resembles mammalian lysosomal cathepsin D (EC 3.4.23.5).
Keywords:Aspartic proteinase  Endopeptidase  Cathepsin D  Hordeum (proteinase)
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