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1.
2.
Bestatin is a dipeptide containing a unique beta-amino acid. It is usually referred to as an aminopeptidase inhibitor. Current interest has focused on the immunostimulating activity of bestatin and several clinical trials have demonstrated that it is an effective adjunct to radiation or chemotherapy in the treatment of certain types of cancer. We found that bestatin was much more effective against human tissue carnosinase than against aminopeptidases. Inhibition was competitive, with a Ki of 0.5nM. Carnosinase did not hydrolyse bestatin and the enzyme-inhibitor complex formed rapidly. A hog kidney dipeptidase similar to human tissue carnosinase was equally sensitive to this inhibitor. Bestatin has a backbone structure identical to that of carnosine; however, our results indicate that the inhibitory activity of this compound is primarily attributable to the side chains of the beta-amino-acid moiety. Human tissue carnosinase is a non-specific dipeptidase, actively hydrolysing many dipeptides, including prolinase substrates. Inhibition of this cytosolic enzyme is probably at least partially responsible for the intracellular accumulation of dipeptides which occurs following the in vivo administration of bestatin.  相似文献   

3.
Carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine) and homocarnosine (gamma-aminobutyric acid-L-histidine) are two naturally occurring dipeptides with potential neuroprotective and neurotransmitter functions in the brain. Peptidase activities degrading both carnosine and homocarnosine have been described previously, but the genes linked to these activities were unknown. Here we present the identification of two novel cDNAs named CN1 and CN2 coding for two proteins of 56.8 and 52.7 kDa and their classification as members of the M20 metalloprotease family. Whereas human CN1 mRNA and protein are brain-specific, CN2 codes for a ubiquitous protein. In contrast, expression of the mouse and rat CN1 orthologues was detectable only in kidney. The recombinant CN1 and CN2 proteins were expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells and purified to homogeneity. CN1 was identified as a homodimeric dipeptidase with a narrow substrate specificity for Xaa-His dipeptides including those with Xaa = beta Ala (carnosine, K(m) 1.2 mM), N-methyl beta Ala, Ala, Gly, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (homocarnosine, K(m) 200 microM), an isoelectric point of pH 4.5, and maximal activity at pH 8.5. CN2 protein is a dipeptidase not limited to Xaa-His dipeptides, requires Mn(2+) for full activity, and is sensitive to inhibition by bestatin (IC(50) 7 nM). This enzyme does not degrade homocarnosine and hydrolyzes carnosine only at alkaline pH with an optimum at pH 9.5. Based on their substrate specificity and biophysical and biochemical properties CN1 was identified as human carnosinase (EC ), whereas CN2 corresponds to the cytosolic nonspecific dipeptidase (EC ).  相似文献   

4.
High performance anion-exchange chromatography was used to separate two carnosine-hydrolysing dipeptidases from hog kidney. Both enzymes (peaks I and II) were cytosolic and were activated and stabilized by Mn2+ and dithiothreitol. Peak I had a narrow specificity when assayed without added metal ions, but a broad specificity in the presence of Mn2+ or Co2+. Peak II was inactive unless both Mn2+ and dithiothreitol were present. Bestatin and leucine inhibited peak II, but not peak I. Peak I had a Km of 0.4 mM carnosine, a pI of 5.5 and a Mr of 57,000. Peak II had a Km of 5 mM carnosine, a pI of 5.0 and a Mr of 70,000. Hog and rat brain and liver carnosinase activity was completely inhibited by bestatin, indicating that these organs contained peak II, with little or no peak I enzyme. Hog kidney peak I contained the classical carnosinase of Hanson and Smith, who first described this enzyme. It also contained activity against homocarnosine ("homocarnosinase") and showed "manganese-independent carnosinase" activity. These three activities could not be separated using 8 different chromatographic procedures; it was concluded that they are attributable to one enzyme. It is recommended that the name carnosinase be retained for this enzyme and the names "homocarnosinase" and "manganese-independent carnosinase" be withdrawn. The properties of hog kidney peak II closely resembled those of human tissue carnosinase (also known as prolinase, a non-specific dipeptidase), mouse "manganese-dependent carnosinase" and a rat brain enzyme termed "beta-Ala-Arg hydrolase". Since these terms appear to represent closely related enzymes with broad specificity, the recommended name for each is "non-specific cytosolic dipeptidase".  相似文献   

5.
Prolyl dipeptidase (iminodipeptidase, L-prolyl-amino acid hydrolase, EC 3.4.13.8) was purified 180-fold from bovine kidney. The enzyme which was obtained in a 10% yield was completely separated from a number of known kidney peptidases including an enzyme of very similar substrate specificity, proline aminopeptidase (L-prolyl-peptide hydrolase, EC 3.4.11.5). The specific activity of the enzyme with L-prolylglycine as substrate is 1600 units of activity per mg protein. Optimum activity of the enzyme is at pH 8.75 and the molecular weight on gel filtration was estimated to be 100 000. The isoelectric point of the enzyme is pH 4.25. Studies of substrate specificity showed that the enzyme preferentially hydrolyzes dipeptides and dipeptidyl amides with L-proline or hydroxy-L-proline at the N-terminus. Longer chain substrates with N-terminal proline were not hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Purification and properties of human pancreas dipeptidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Dipeptidase [EC 3.4.13] was purified from human pancreas; the activity was followed with L-Leu-L-Leu as a substrate. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the final preparation was homogeneous. The molecular weight of the dipeptidase was estimated to be 135,000 by gel filtration. From the result of SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it was found that the enzyme consisted of two subunits with equal molecular weights of 68,000. By atomic absorption analysis, the dipeptidase was shown to be a zinc metalloenzyme containing one atom of zinc for each subunit. Cu2+ and Hg2+ (1 mM) inhibited the enzyme by 50%. o-Phenanthroline strongly inhibited the enzyme. The dipeptidase hydrolyzed dipeptides such as L-Ala-L-Ala, L-Met-L-Met, L-Ala-L-Leu, L-Leu-Gly, and L-Leu-L-Leu but did not hydrolyze tripeptides, Bz-amino acids, CBz-amino acids, or L-amino acid beta-naphthylamides. The dipeptidase from human pancreas was immunologically distinct from human liver dipeptidase.  相似文献   

8.
Human microsomal dipeptidase (MDP, formerly referred to as dehydropeptidase-I or renal dipeptidase) [EC 3.4.13.11] was solubilized from the membrane fraction of kidney by treatment with octyl-beta-D-glucoside and purified by a procedure including ion exchange chromatography and affinity chromatography on cilastatin-immobilized Sepharose. The purified human MDP was found to be homogeneous on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The apparent molecular weight (Mr) was estimated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions to be 130 kDa, comprising a homodimer of two subunits. After treatment with endoglycosidase F, human MDP showed a single band with an apparent Mr of 42 kDa on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Human MDP was found to bind to Con A-Sepharose and the activity was eluted with methyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside, suggesting that human MDP is a glycoprotein. We also examined the substrate specificity of human MDP and found that human MDP catalyzed the hydrolysis of S(substituent)-L-cysteinyl-glycine adducts such as L-cystinyl-bis(glycine) and S-N-ethylmaleimide-L-cysteinyl-glycine, as well as the conversion of leukotriene D4 to leukotriene E4. These results suggest that MDP might play an important role in the metabolism of glutathione and leukotriene.  相似文献   

9.
In separate papers published in 1985, human cytosolic carnosinase and prolinase were purified and characterized for the first time. Prolinase had activity against many dipeptides not containing proline; carnosinase also had broad specificity. The present paper reports that carnosinase and prolinase activities were not separated from one another during chromatography on columns of DEAE-cellulose, AGMP-1, gel filtration media, hydroxylapatite or butyl-agarose. Both activities had identical pH-stability curves at 50 degrees C, being stabilized by manganese ions and dithiothreitol. Prolinase substrates competitively inhibited carnosinase activity and carnosinase substrates inhibited prolinase activity. Bestatin was a potent inhibitor of both activities, while cilastatin inhibited neither. It was concluded that prolinase and carnosinase activities reside in the same enzyme. High performance anion-exchange chromatography of extracts from kidney, liver or brain separated the enzyme into two forms having isoelectric points of 5.6 and 5.1. Because of the broad specificity of this dipeptidase, it is recommended that it be termed "human cytosolic non-specific dipeptidase".  相似文献   

10.
A dipeptidase was isolated from hog kidney; it is the first enzyme described that has the capacity to cleave homocarnosine. It was purified to apparent homogeneity and split carnosine, anserine, and several other dipeptides in addition to homocarnosine. Homocarnosinase had a molecular weight of 57,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis; it appeared to consist of a single polypeptide chain and did not contain sulfhydryl groups or serine residues essential to its activity. The enzyme was activated by Co2+ and by Mn2+, cobaltous ions being much more effective than manganous ions. Its isoelectric point was 5.6 and no evidence of isozymes was seen during isoelectric focusing. Homocarnosinase had a broader specificity, higher solubility, lower stability, and different metal ion sensitivity than hog kidney carnosinase (EC 3.4.13.3). Carnosinase was present in most tissues of the rat, whereas homocarnosinase was detected only in kidney, uterus, lung, and liver.  相似文献   

11.
Purified human renal dipeptidase was shown to exhibit no detectable activity against substrates that are characteristic for other known mammalian peptidases. The enzymic activities that were assayed were: aminopeptidase A, aminopeptidase B, aminopeptidase M, aminopeptidase P, and tripeptidase. A quantitative assay for renal dipeptidase was developed which measures the rate of release of glycine from glycylpeptides by pre-column derivatization of the amino acid with phenylisothiocyanate followed by high-performance liquid chromatography. The ratio of Vmax/Km for a series of dipeptides was used as an index of the enzyme's preference for substrates. According to the data obtained, the enzyme prefers that a bulky, hydrophobic group of the dipeptide be located at the N-terminal position. This suggests that the substrate-binding site of the enzyme may provide a hydrophobic pocket to accommodate the hydrophobic moiety at the N-terminus of the dipeptide. The unsaturated dipeptide substrate, glycyldehydrophenylalanine, was employed in spectrophotometric assays to provide kinetic analyses of enzymic inhibition. The inhibitory effect of dithiothreitol was immediate, and the kinetic data indicated reversible, competitive inhibition. These results suggest that the inhibitor competes with substrate for a coordination site of zinc within the active site of the enzyme. The reaction of renal dipeptidase with the transition-state peptide analog, bestatin, was time dependent, and velocity measurements were made after the inhibitor had been incubated with the enzyme until constant rates were observed. These steady-state rate measurements, made following preincubation of enzyme with inhibitor, were employed to show that bestatin caused apparent non-competitive inhibition of the enzyme. The inhibitory effect of the beta-lactam inhibitor, cilastatin, upon the oligomeric dipeptidase was shown to be competitive. Graphical analysis of this inhibition indicated that the subunits of the enzyme react independently during enzymic catalysis and that the catalytic event is not influenced by cooperativity between sites on the subunits. The conversion of leukotriene D4 to leukotriene E4 in the presence of human renal dipeptidase was demonstrated by HPLC procedures. This bioconversion reaction was quantitated by derivatizing the glycine produced by cleavage of the cysteinylglycine bond and isolating this derivative as a function of time. The relationship between the purified enzyme concentration and enzyme activity against leukotriene D4 was shown to be linear over the enzyme concentration range of 1 ng through 69 ng in this assay.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The lysosomal metallopeptidase is an enzyme that acts preferentially on dipeptides with unsubstituted N- and C-termini. Its activity is highest in slightly acidic pH. Here we describe the isolation and characterization of lysosomal dipeptidase from human kidney. The isolated enzyme has the amino-terminal sequence DVAKAIINLAVY and is a homodimer with a molecular mass of 100 kDa. So far no amino acid sequence has been determined for this metallopeptidase. The complete primary structure as deduced from the nucleotide sequence revealed that the isolated dipeptidase is similar to blood plasma glutamate carboxypeptidase.  相似文献   

13.
14.
In studies on human erythrocyte metabolism in situ, high resolution (400 MHz)1H spin-echo NMR spectroscopy was used to follow the time dependence of hydrolysis of glycylglycine and L-cysteinylglycine in intact cells and their lysates. The concentration dependence of the hydrolysis of L-cysteinylglycine was described by a rectangular hyperbola with Km, 3.5 ± 0.6 mmol/llysate and Vmax, 64.2 ± 3.2 mmol/llysate/h. We demonstrated that glycylglycine readily enters the erythrocyte and we introduce a means of analysing the data from the coupled reaction sequence; the sequence consists of transport followed by enzyme catalysed hydrolysis.  相似文献   

15.
Renal dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.11) was solubilized from pig kidney microvillar membranes with bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and then purified by affinity chromatography on cilastatin-Sepharose. The enzyme was apparently homogeneous on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis with an Mr of 47,000. Immunohistochemical analysis of the distribution of the dipeptidase showed it to be concentrated in the brush-border region of the proximal tubules in close association with endopeptidase-24.11) (EC 3.4.24.11). The purified dipeptidase was shown to contain 1 mol of inositol/mol and to possess the cross-reacting determinant characteristic of the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol membrane-anchoring domain. The glycoprotein nature of renal dipeptidase was confirmed by chemical and enzymic deglycosylation. These results establish renal dipeptidase as a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored ectoenzyme of the microvillar membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Dipetidyl peptidase 9 (DPP9) is a prolyl dipeptidase preferentially cleaving the peptide bond after the penultimate proline residue. The biological function of DPP9 is unknown. In this study, we have significantly improved the yield using Strep·Tactin® purification system and characterized the biochemical property of DPP9. Moreover, the dimer interaction mode was investigated by introducing a mutation (F842A) at the dimer interface, which abolished the enzymatic activity without disrupting its quaternary structure. Furthermore, DPP9 was found ubiquitously expressed in fibroblasts, epithelial, and blood cells. Surprisingly, contrary to previous report, we found that the expression levels of DPP8 and DPP9 did not change upon the activation of the PBMC or Jurkat cells. These results indicate that the biochemical property of DPP9 is very similar to that of DPP8, its homologous protease. DPP9 and DPP8 are likely redundant proteins carrying out overlapping functions in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Human renal dipeptidase is a membrane-bound glycoprotein hydrolyzing dipeptides and is involved in hydrolytic metabolism of penem and carbapenem beta-lactam antibiotics. The crystal structures of the saccharide-trimmed enzyme are determined as unliganded and inhibitor-liganded forms. They are informative for designing new antibiotics that are not hydrolyzed by this enzyme. The active site in each of the (alpha/beta)(8) barrel subunits of the homodimeric molecule is composed of binuclear zinc ions bridged by the Glu125 side-chain located at the bottom of the barrel, and it faces toward the microvillar membrane of a kidney tubule. A dipeptidyl moiety of the therapeutically used cilastatin inhibitor is fully accommodated in the active-site pocket, which is small enough for precise recognition of dipeptide substrates. The barrel and active-site architectures utilizing catalytic metal ions exhibit unexpected similarities to those of the murine adenosine deaminase and the catalytic domain of the bacterial urease.  相似文献   

19.
1. In the epidermis non-specific esterase activity outlines a strongly reactive band between the stratum granulosum and the stratum corneum. In the epidermis of the palm, there is no such esterase-rich band. 2. The outer sheath of active hair follicles has strong enzyme activity. The degenerating hair bulb in catagen follicles is very strongly reactive, and clusters of cells around the hair club in quiescent follicles are rich in enzyme activity. 3. Strong enzyme activity is found in young sebaceous cells, while decaying sebaceous cells and newly formed sebum are unreactive. Old sebum, however, is very intensely reactive. 4. Only the "dark" cells of eccrine sweat glands show a reaction; the "clear" cells are negative. 5. The cells of axillary apocrine glands abound in enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of peptidyl dipeptidase (peptidyldipeptide hydrolase, EC 3.4.15.1), also known as angiotensin-converting enzyme, was studied in small blood vessel preparations isolated from rabbit brain. The vascular preparation contained arterioles and capillaries and was essentially free of extravascular material. Enzymatic activity was demonstrated in microvessel homogenates using both hippuryl-histidyl-leucine and tritium-labeled angiotensin I as substrates. Activity in the microvessels was dependent on the presence of chloride ion and was sensitive to inhibition by converting enzyme inhibitors previously shown to be effective in both vivo and in vitro. Specific activity in the micro-vessels was approximately 20 times that in homogenates of brain, and was almost 60% of that found in rat lung homogenates. The data were consistent with an endothelial localication for peptidyl dipeptidase in the cerebral vasculature and supports the proposal that this enzyme has a physiological role in extrapulmonary vascular beds.  相似文献   

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