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1.
The biosynthesis and proteolytic processing of type XI procollagen was examined using pulse-chase labelling of 17-day embryonic chick sterna in organ culture with [3H]proline. Products of biosynthesis were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with and without prior reduction of disulfide bonds. Pro-alpha chains, intermediates, and matrix forms were identified by cyanogen bromide or Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. The results show that type XI pro-alpha chains assemble into trimeric molecules with interchain disulfide bonds. Proteolytic processing begins at least 40 min after the start of labeling which is later than that of type II procollagen (25 min). This first processing step involves the loss of the domain containing the interchain disulfide bonds which most likely is the carboxyl propeptide. In the case of the pro-alpha 3 chain, this generates the matrix form, m alpha 3, which retains its amino propeptide. For the pro-alpha 1 and pro-alpha 2 chains, this step generates intermediate forms, p alpha 1 and p alpha 2, which undergo a second proteolytic conversion to m alpha 1 and m alpha 2, and yet retain a pepsin-labile domain. The conversion of p alpha 2 to m alpha 2 is largely complete 2 h after labeling. p alpha 1 is converted to m alpha 1 very slowly and is 50% complete after 18 h of chase in organ culture. The apparent proteolytic processing within the amino propeptide, and the differential rate of processing between two chains in the same molecule are unusual and distinguish type XI from collagen types I, II, and III. It is possible that the extremely slow processing of p alpha 1 affects the formation of the heterotypic cartilage collagen fibrils and may be related to the function of type XI collagen.  相似文献   

2.
Synthesis of procollagen was examined in skin fibroblasts from a patient with a moderately severe autosomal dominant form of osteogenesis imperfecta. Proteolytic removal of the propeptide regions of newly synthesized procollagen, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions, revealed the presence of type I collagen in which two alpha 1(I) chains were linked through interchain disulfide bonds. Fragmentation of the disulfide-bonded alpha 1(I) dimers with vertebrate collagenase and cyanogen bromide demonstrated the presence of a cysteine residue in alpha 1(I)CB8, a fragment containing amino acid residues 124-402 of the alpha 1(I) collagen chain. Cysteine residues are not normally found in the triple-helical domain of type I collagen chains. The heterozygous nature of the molecular defect resulted in the formation of three kinds of type I trimers: a normal type with normal pro-alpha(I) chains, a type I trimer with one mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain and two normal chains, and a type I trimer containing two mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chains and one normal pro-alpha 2(I) chain. The presence of one or two mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chains in trimers of type I procollagen was found to reduce the thermal stability of the protein by 2.5 and 1 degree C, respectively. In addition to post-translational overmodification, procollagen containing one mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain was also cleared more slowly from cultured fibroblasts. The most likely explanation for these disruptive changes in the physical stability and secretion of the mutant procollagen is that a cysteine residue is substituted for a glycine in half of the pro-alpha 1(I) chains synthesized by the patient's fibroblasts.  相似文献   

3.
The collagen phenotype of a 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide-transformed line of Syrian hamster embryo fibroblasts, NQT-SHE, was markedly altered from that of normal Syrian hamster embryo cells, which synthesized mainly type I procollagen [pro-alpha 1(I)]2 pro-alpha 2(I). Total collagen synthesis in the transformant was reduced to about 30% of the control level primarily because synthesis of the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit was completely suppressed. The major collagenous products synthesized consisted of two polypeptides, designated as N-33 and N-50, which could be completely separated by precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 33 and 50% saturation, respectively. N-33 migrated similarly to pro-alpha 2(I) on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and N-50 migrated slightly more slowly. The collagenous regions of these chains were more sensitive to protease than the analogous region of procollagen I, but alpha-chains could be obtained by digestion for 2 h at 4 degrees C with high ratios of protein:pepsin. Staphylococcus V8 protease and cyanogen bromide peptide maps of N-33 alpha and N-50 alpha chains indicated that the chains were homologous with, but different than, alpha 2(I) chains and that they differed from each other. Considering their similarity to pro-alpha 2(I), it was surprising to find that the N-collagens were secreted to the same extent as was type I procollagen from Syrian hamster embryo cells and that there were no disulfide bonds between N-collagen chains. Intrachain disulfides were present. One possible explanation for the unusual collagen phenotype of NQT-SHE cells is that transformation induced one or more mutations in the pro-alpha 2(I) structural gene while suppression of synthesis of the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit may be due to a mutation in the regulatory region of its gene or in a general regulatory gene.  相似文献   

4.
E Crouch  P Bornstein 《Biochemistry》1978,17(25):5499-5509
Second trimester human amniotic fluid cells synthesize and secrete a variety of collagenous proteins in culture. F cells (amniotic fluid fibroblasts) are the most active biosynthetically and synthesize predominantly type I with smaller amounts of type III procollagen. Epithelioid AF cells (the predominating clonable cell type) synthesize a type IV-like procollagen and a procollagen with three identical proalpha chains, structurally and immunologically related to the proalpha1 chains of type I procollagen. The latter procollagen, when cleaved with pepsin and denatured, yields a single non-disulfide-bonded alpha chain that migrates more slowly than F cell or human skin alpha1(I) on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis but coelutes with these chains from carboxymethyl-cellulose. The major cyanogen bromide produced peptides demonstrate a similar behavior relative to peptides derived from alpha1(I). The collagen is characterized by an increased solubility at neutral pH and high ionic strength, relative to type I collagen. The amino acid composition of the pepsin-resistant alpha chain is essentially identical with that of human alpha1(I), except for marked increases in the content of 3- and 4-hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine. Preliminary experiments suggest that these increased posttranslational modifications are responsible for the unusually slow migration of this collagen and its cyanogen bromide peptides on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The procollagen has, therefore, been assigned the chain composition [proalpha1(I)]3. Like type I procollagen, [proalpha1(I)]3 undergoes a time-dependent conversion, in the medium and cell layer, to procollagen intermediates and alpha chains. The production of [proalpha1(I)]3 probably reflects the state of differentiation and/or embryologic derivation of AF cells rather than a characteristic of the fetal phenotype, since F cells do not synthesize significant amounts of the procollagen.  相似文献   

5.
Corneal endothelial cells in culture synthesize basement membrane collagen and secrete it into the medium. This collagen sediments faster than interstitial collagen by velocity sedimentation and is disulfide-bonded. After reduction, two biochemically distinct chains can be determined by cyanogen bromide peptide mapping. These chains migrate close to each other and immediately below beta 12(I) components on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Treatment with pepsin gives rise to a major band which still retains interchain disulfide bonds and which will not convert to components with the mobility of interstitial alpha chain by reduction. However, an alpha chain and three minor collagenase-sensitive and pepsin-resistant peptides are generated if the molecule is reduced and alkylated under nondenaturing conditions prior to pepsin treatment. When collagen which accumulates in the media over a long period of time is compared to the newly synthesized molecules, there is an apparent differential resistance to limited pepsin treatment. However, the products which are generated in both cases share electrophoretic identity.  相似文献   

6.
Matrix-free cells were prepared from sternal cartilages of 17-day-old chick embryos, and procollagen synthesized and secreted by the cells was isolated by ion exchange chromatography on carboxymethyl cellulose and by gel filtration. The isolated protein was homogeneous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate and it appeared to consist of identical pro-α chains linked by interchain disulfide bonds. Amino acid analysis and cyanogen bromide peptide mapping of the purified procollagen demonstrated that it had structures similar to Type II collagen. The amino acid composition was also consistent with the conclusion that the peptide extensions on the pro-α chains of procollagen contained amino acid sequences not found in the collagen portion of the molecule. Segment-long-spacing aggregates were prepared from the procollagen, and aggregates demonstrated the same banding pattern as is found in segment-long-spacing aggregates prepared from Type II collagen. The segment-long-spacing aggregates from procollagen revealed, however, the presence of NH2-terminal extensions of about 150 Å in length. In addition, the procollagen molecules contained irregularly shaped, large extension peptides at the COOH-terminal end of the molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Collagen synthesis by bovine aortic endothelial cells in culture.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
H Sage  E Crouch  P Bornstein 《Biochemistry》1979,18(24):5433-5442
Endothelial cells isolated from bovine aorta synthesize and secrete type III procollagen in culture. The procollagen, which represents the major collagenous protein in culture medium, was specifically precipitated by antibodies to bovine type III procollagen and was purified by diethyl-aminoethylcellulose chromatography. Unequivocal identification of the pepsin-treated collagen was made by direct comparison with type III collagen isolated by pepsin digestion of bovine skin, utilizing peptide cleavage patterns generated by vertebrate collagenase, CNBr, and mast cell protease. The type III collagen was hydroxylated to a high degree, having a hydroxyproline/proline ratio of 1.5:1.0. Pulse-chase studies indicated that the procollagen was not processed to procollagen intermediates or to collagen. Pepsin treatment of cell layers, followed by salt fractionation at acidic and neutral pH, produced several components which were sensitive to bacterial collagenase and which comigrated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with alpha A, alpha B, and type IV collagen chains purified from human placenta by similar techniques. Bovine aortic endothelial cells also secreted fibronectin and a bacterial collagenase-insensitive glycoprotein which, after reduction, had a molecular weight of 135,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (using procollagen molecular weight standards) and which was not precipitable by antibodies to cold-insoluble globulin or to alpha 2-macroglobulin. Collagen biosynthesis by these cells provides an interesting model system for studying the polarity of protein secretion and the attachment of cells to an extracellular matrix. The presence of type III collagen in the subendothelium and the specific interaction of this protein with fibronectin and platelets suggest the involvement of this collagen in thrombus formation following endothelial cell injury.  相似文献   

8.
Syrian hamster embryo fibroblasts transformed by 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide (NQT-SHE cells) failed to synthesize the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit of type I procollagen but continued to synthesize altered forms of the other subunit, pro-alpha 2(I) (Peterkofsky, B., and Prather, W. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16818-16826). This was unusual, since synthesis of the two subunits generally is coordinately regulated. Present experiments using cell-free translation and hybridization of RNA from normal and transformed Syrian hamster fibroblasts with labeled pro-alpha 1(I) DNA probes show that mRNA for pro-alpha 1(I) is absent from the transformant. In contrast, dot-blot and Southern blot hybridizations of cellular DNAs with pro-alpha 1(I) DNA probes demonstrated that the transformed cells contained pro-alpha 1(I) gene sequences and that the gross structure of the gene was unchanged by transformation. mRNA for the other type I procollagen subunit, pro-alpha 2(I), was present in transformed cells and the major collagenous polypeptide translated from this RNA migrated like the normal pro-alpha 2 subunit during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The translated procollagen chain was cleaved to an alpha 2(I)-sized collagen chain by pepsin at 4 degrees C. These studies provide a molecular basis for the observed collagen phenotype of NQT-SHE cells.  相似文献   

9.
R H Kramer  G M Fuh  M A Karasek 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7423-7430
Cultured microvascular endothelial cells isolated from human dermis were examined for the synthesis of basement membrane specific (type IV) collagen and its deposition in subendothelial matrix. Biosynthetically radiolabeled proteins secreted into the culture medium were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis after reduction, revealing a single collagenous component with an approximate Mr of 180 000 that could be resolved into two closely migrating polypeptide chains. Prior to reduction, the 180 000 bands migrated as a high molecular weight complex, indicating the presence of intermolecular disulfide bonding. The 180 000 material was identified as type IV procollagen on the basis of its selective degradation by purified bacterial collagenase, moderate sensitivity to pepsin digestion, immunoprecipitation with antibodies to human type IV collagen, and comigration with type IV procollagen purified from human and murine sources. In the basement membrane like matrix elaborated by the microvascular endothelial cells at their basal surface, type IV procollagen was the predominant constituent. This matrix-associated type IV procollagen was present as a highly cross-linked and insoluble complex that was solubilized only after denaturation and reduction of disulfide bonds. In addition, there was evidence of nonreducible dimers and higher molecular weight aggregates of type IV procollagen. These findings support the suggestion that the presence of intermolecular disulfide bonds and other covalent interactions stabilizes the incorporation of the type IV procollagen into the basement membrane matrix. Cultured microvascular endothelial cells therefore appear to deposit a basal lamina-like structure that is biochemically similar to that formed in vivo, providing a unique model system that should be useful for understanding microvascular basement membrane metabolism, especially as it relates to wound healing, tissue remodeling, and disease processes.  相似文献   

10.
The assembly of reduced pro-alpha chains of type I and type II procollagen into the native triple-helical molecule was examined in vitro in the presence and absence of pure protein disulfide isomerase. The data clearly indicates that protein disulfide isomerase is able to accelerate the formation of native interchain disulfide bonds in these procollagens. It takes about 6 min after disulfide bonding before triple-helical molecules exist, while the time required to produce triple-helical type I procollagen in the presence of protein disulfide isomerase is 9.4 min and that for type II procollagen 17.2 min. These values agree with those obtained for type I and II procollagen in vivo suggesting that protein disulfide isomerase is also an enzyme catalyzing interchain disulfide bond formation in procollagen in vivo. The formation of native disulfide bonds can proceed without any enzyme catalysis but then requires the presence of reduced and oxidized glutathione. Bonding is rather slow in such a case, however, resulting in a delay in the formation of the triple helix.  相似文献   

11.
Two new collagen polypeptide chains have been identified in extracts of lathyritic embryonic chick tendons. The electrophoretic migration of these polypeptides in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels indicates that they have about 20% greater apparent molecular weights than α1 and α2 chains of Type I collagen. These chains are not held by disulfide bonds since reduction does not affect their electrophoretic behavior. Further, they do not represent incompletely cleaved procollagen since their apparent molecular size remains greater than that of Type I collagen polypeptides after limited proteolytic digestion. Because the ratio of these polypeptides in the purified extracts is not 2:1 it appears that they are components of two separate tropocollagen molecules.  相似文献   

12.
Transformed Syrian hamster embryo (NQT-SHE) fibroblasts do not synthesize the pro-alpha 1 subunit of type I procollagen, but secrete two modified forms of the pro-alpha 2(I) subunit that migrate more slowly than the normal chain during gel electrophoresis (Peterkofsky, B., and Prather, W. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16818-16826). By electrophoretic analysis of cyanogen bromide and V8 protease-derived peptides from the collagenous domains of intra- and extracellular pro-alpha 2(I) chains, we find that the modification occurs almost exclusively in secreted molecules, is located in the region spanned by the cyanogen bromide peptide CB3,5, and persists when hydroxylation is inhibited. Thus, modification is due to a post-translational reaction other than hydroxylation. The modified chains appear to be secreted in the denatured state since: 1) helical structures formed at 4 degrees C under acidic conditions were unstable under neutral conditions at 37 degrees C; 2) conditions that destabilize the type I procollagen helix and thus inhibit its secretion, i.e. inhibition of proline hydroxylation or incorporation of the proline analog cis-hydroxyproline, did not affect secretion of the modified chains. The time courses for secretion of nonhelical modified chains from NQT-SHE and of hydroxylated helical procollagen I from control cells, as a proportion of total collagen synthesized, were similar. Although cis-hydroxyproline did not inhibit the secretion of the modified chains, it induced their rapid intracellular degradation.  相似文献   

13.
Cultured skin fibroblasts from a proband with an autosomal dominant variant of osteogenesis inperfecta were found to synthesize approximately equal amounts of normal pro-alpha 2(I) chains of type I procollagen and pro-alpha 2(I) chains which migrated more rapidly when examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The structural alteration was present in alpha 2(I)-CB4, a cyanogen bromide fragment containing amino acid residues 7-327 of the alpha 2 chain, and it appeared to be a deletion of about 30 amino acids. The pro-alpha 2(I) chains with the apparent deletion associated with normal pro-alpha 1(I) chains synthesized by the same fibroblasts and formed triple-helical type I procollagen. The presence of the altered pro-alpha 2 chains in trimers of procollagen had two consequences in terms of the physical properties of the molecule. One was to decrease the thermal stability of the protein as judged by resistance to proteolysis at 37 degrees C and by the helix to coil transition as assayed by circular dichroism. The second consequence was to make type I procollagen containing the shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chains resistant to digestion by procollagen N-proteinase. The simplest explanation for the data is that the apparent deletion in half the pro-alpha 2(I) chains produced a partial unfolding of the N-terminal region of type I procollagen which prevented processing of the protein by procollagen N-proteinase.  相似文献   

14.
A type IV collagen-degrading enzyme activity secreted by a highly metastatic mouse tumor was purified by concanavalin A- and type IV collagen-agarose affinity chromatographies followed by gel filtration on Bio-Gel A-0.5 m. The apparent molecular weight of the enzyme was 160,000 but about 70,000 when Triton X-100 was added to the column buffer. The purified enzyme protein was resolved on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis into two polypeptide chains of about 68,000 and 62,000 daltons. The enzyme activity could be increased by preincubation with trypsin and it is possible that the two chains represent latent and active enzyme forms. The enzyme activity was not reduced in the presence of dithiothreitol, it had a pH optimum of 7.6 and was inhibited by EDTA but not N-ethylmaleimide, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, or Trasylol. The inhibition with EDTA was reversible. The pro-alpha 1(IV) and pro-alpha 2(IV) chains of the type IV procollagen substrate were both degraded at a similar rate to form two pairs of degradation fragments corresponding in molecular weights to about 70 and 30% of the original size chains. The presence of Triton X-100 increased slightly the activity of the enzyme and diminished the reduction of its activity upon freezing, indicating that the enzyme is a hydrophobic protein.  相似文献   

15.
Chick embryo skull bones incorporated radioactive proline and cystein into procollagen in short term organ culture. Pulse-chase experiments showed that individual precursor chains (pro-alpha1 and pro-alpha2) were formed first and that these were subsequently linked by disulfide bounds into trimers. Radioautography showed that labeled material was secreted 30 min after adding label to the cells, and electrophoretic analyses showed that after this time completed labeled collagen molecules appeared. Conversion from disulfide-linked procollagen to collagen proceeded in more than one step. An intermediate form consisting of shorter chains, which were still trimerically linked, was found.  相似文献   

16.
Collagen biosynthesis is a complex process that begins with the association of three procollagen chains. A series of conserved intra- and interchain disulfide bonds in the carboxyl-terminal region of the procollagen chains, or C-propeptide, has been hypothesized to play an important role in the nucleation and alignment of the chains. We tested this hypothesis by analyzing the ability of normal and cysteine-mutated pro-α2(I) chains to assemble into type I collagen heterotrimers when expressed in a cell line (D2) that produces only endogenous pro-α1(I). Pro-α2(I) chains containing single or double cysteine mutations that disrupted individual intra- or interchain disulfide bonds were able to form pepsin resistant type I collagen with pro-α1(I), indicating that individual disulfide bonds were not critical for assembly of the pro-α2(I) chain with pro-α1(I). Pro-α2(I) chains containing a triple cysteine mutation that disrupted both intrachain disulfide bonds were not able to form pepsin resistant type I collagen with pro-α1(I). Therefore, disruption of both pro-α2(I) intrachain disulfide bonds prevented the production and secretion of type I collagen heterotrimers. Although none of the individual disulfide bonds is essential for assembly of the procollagen chains, the presence of at least one intrachain disulfide bond may be necessary as a structural requirement for chain association or to stabilize the protein to prevent intracellular degradation. J.Cell. Biochem. 71:233–242, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Human skin fibroblasts in monolayer culture synthesize and secrete precursor forms of collagen into the culture medium. The type I collagen precursor, the major precursor in the culture medium, was isolated on DEAE cellulose chromatography and subjected to mammalian collagenase cleavage. The amino terminal cleavage fragments had a higher molecular weight than α1A and α2A, but did not contain interchain disulfide bonds. The carboxy-terminal cleavage fragments formed high molecular weight aggregates which contained interchain disulfide bonds. These results indicate that human type I procollagen contains noncollagenous amino and carboxy-terminal extension peptides and that all of the interchain disulfide bonds are on the carboxy-terminal portion of the molecule.  相似文献   

18.
The conversion of type I procollagen to type I collagen was studied by cleaving the protein with partically purified type I procollagen N-proteinase from chick embryos. Examination of the reaction products after incubation for varying times at 30 degrees C indicated that, during the initial stages of the reaction, pro alpha 1(I) and pro alpha 2(I) chains were cleaved at about the same rate. As a result, all the pro alpha 2(I) chains were converted to pC alpha 2(I) chains well before all the pro alpha 1 chains were cleaved. When the reaction products were examined by gel electrophoresis without reduction of interchain disulfide bonds, a distinct band of an intermediate was detected. The same intermediate was seen when the reaction was carried out at 35, 37, and 40 degrees C. The data established that over two-thirds of the type I procollagen was converted to the intermediate and that this intermediate was then slowly converted to the final product of pCcollagen. The kinetics for the reaction, however, did not fit a simple model for precursor-product relationship among substrate, intermediate, and product. Examination of the reaction products with a two-step gel procedure demonstrated that the intermediate consisted of three polypeptide chains in which the N propeptide was cleaved from one pro alpha 1 chain and one pro alpha 2(I) chain but the N propeptide was still present on one of the pro alpha 1(I) chains. In further experiments it was demonstrated that a similar intermediate was seen when a homotrimer of pro alpha 1(I) chains was partially cleaved by the enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The genetic type and molecular structure of the precursor forms of collagen synthesized by matrix-free tendon cells isolated from 17-day old chick embryos were examined by chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques. The [14C]proline-labeled collagenous proteins secreted by the cells resolved on diethylaminoethylcellulose into two peaks, A and B. Both peaks contained type I collagenous proteins since on chromatography on carboxymethylcellulose, after limited pepsin proteolysis, both peaks contained alpha1 and alpha2 chains of collagen in a 2:1 ratio, and cyanogen bromide peptide maps of the 14C-labeled protein in both peaks were similar to cyanogen bromide peptide maps derived from authentic type I collagen. Enzymatic digestion with purified mammalian collagenase demonstrated that the collagen precursor in peak B contained noncollagenous peptide extensions at both the amino- and carboxy-terminal ends of the molecule, while peak A had only carboxy-terminal extension peptides. Although both the amino- and carboxy-terminal extensions incorporated radioactive cystine, only the carboxy-terminal extensions contained interchain disulfide bonds. The carboxy-terminal extensions were also shown to incorporate radioactive tryptophan. Since most of the precursor forms of collagen recovered in the incubation medium chromatographed in peak B, it is concluded that matrix-free tendon cells secrete only type I procollagen with extension peptides at both the amino- and carboxy-terminal ends of the molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Procollagen carboxyl-terminal proteinase, the enzyme which cleaves the carboxyl-terminal propeptides from type I procollagen, was extensively purified in a yield of 25% from pooled culture media of 17-day-old chick embryo tendons using a procedure which involved chromatography on Green A Dye matrix gel, concanavalin A-Sepharose and heparin-Sepharose, and filtration gels of Sephacryl S-300 and S-200. The purified enzyme is a neutral, Ca2+-dependent proteinase which is inhibited by metal chelators, but not by inhibitors for serine and cysteine proteinases. Calcium in a concentration of 5-10 mM is required for optimal activity. The molecular weight of the enzyme was determined to be 97,000-110,000 by gel filtration and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. Other properties of the carboxyl-terminal proteinase are: 1) the Km for the type I procollagen is 96 nM at pH 7.5 and 35 degrees C; 2) the activation energy for the reaction with type I procollagen is 21,000 cal mol-1; 3) amino acid sequencing of the released carboxyl-terminal propeptide indicated the enzyme specifically cleaves an -Ala-Asp- bond in both the pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 2(I) chains; 4) the enzyme specifically cleaves the carboxyl-terminal propeptides of a homotrimer of pro-alpha 1(I) chains and type II and III procollagens, but it does not cleave type IV procollagen. The results suggest that the enzyme is involved in the processing of type I procollagen in vivo.  相似文献   

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