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1.
Yamada S  Tanaka Y  Ando S 《The FEBS journal》2005,272(23):6001-6013
Anserinase (Xaa-methyl-His dipeptidase, EC 3.4.13.5) is a dipeptidase that mainly catalyzes the hydrolysis of Nalpha-acetylhistidine in the brain, retina and vitreous body of all poikilothermic vertebrates. The gene encoding anserinase has not been previously identified. We report the molecular identification of anserinase, purified from brain of Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus. The determination of the N-terminal sequence of the purified anserinase allowed the design of primers permitting the corresponding cDNA to be cloned by PCR. The anserinase cDNA has an ORF of 1485 nucleotides and encodes a signal peptide of 18 amino acids and a mature protein of 476 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 53.3 kDa. Sequence analysis showed that anserinase is a member of the M20A metallopeptidase subfamily in MEROPS peptidase database, to which 'serum' carnosinase (EC 3.4.13.20) and cytosolic nonspecific dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.18, CNDP) belong. A cDNA encoding CNDP-like protein was also isolated from tilapia brain. Whereas anserinase mRNA was detected only in brain, retina, kidney and skeletal muscle, CNDP-like protein mRNA was detected in all tissues examined.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Glutathione-degrading enzymes of microvillus membranes   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Microvillus membranes from rat kidney, jejunum, and epididymis have been purified by the Ca precipitation method. The membranes exhibit enrichment in specific activities of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, aminopeptidase M, and a dipeptidase. The latter has been characterized and shown to be the principal activity responsible for the hydrolysis of S derivatives of Cys-Gly (including cystinyl-bis-glycine (Cys-bis-Gly) and 5-hydroxy-6-S-cysteinylglycyl-1-7,9-trans-11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (leukotriene D4)). A method is described for the simultaneous purification of papain-solubilized forms of the three enzymes from renal microvilli. Dipeptidase (Mr = 105,000) appears to be a zinc metalloprotein composed of two Mr = 50,000 subunits. The enzyme is severalfold more effective in the hydrolysis of dipeptides than aminopeptidase M. Dipeptidase, in contrast to aminopeptidase M, is inhibited by thiol compounds; Cys-Gly, in particular, is a potent inhibitor (Ki = 20 microM). The inhibition of dipeptidase by thiols has been employed to probe the relative significance of dipeptidase and aminopeptidase M in the metabolism of glutathione and its derivatives at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

7.
Salmonella typhimurium peptidase active on carnosine.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Wild-type Salmonella typhimurium can use carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine) as a source of histidine, but carnosine utilization is blocked in particular mutants defective in the constitutive enzyme peptidase D, the product of the pepD gene. Biochemical evidence for assigning carnosinase activity to peptidase D (a broad-specificity dipeptidase) includes: (i) coelution of carnosinase and dipeptidase activity from diethylaminoethyl-cellulose and Bio-Gel P-300 columns; (ii) coelectrophoresis of carnosinase and dipeptidase on polyacrylamide gels; and (iii) inactivation of carnosinase and dipeptidase activities at identical rates at both 4 and 42 degrees C. Genetic evidence indicates that mutations leading to loss of carnosinase activity map at pepD. Several independent pepD mutants have been isolated by different selection procedures, and the patterns of peptide utilization of strains carrying various pepD alleles have been studied. Many pepD mutations lead to the production of partially active peptidase D enzymes with substrate specificities that differ strikingly from those of the wild-type enzyme. The growth yields of carnosinase-deficient strains growing in Difco nutrient broth indicate that carnosine is the major utilizable source of histidine in this medium.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Characterization of human tissue carnosinase.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Human tissue carnosinase (EC 3.4.13.3) had optimum activity at pH9.5 and was a cysteine peptidase, being activated by dithiothreitol and inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. By optimizing assay conditions, the activity per g of tissue was increased 10-fold compared with values in the literature. The enzyme was present in every human tissue assayed and was entirely different from serum carnosinase. Highly purified tissue carnosinase had a broader specificity than hog kidney carnosinase. Although tissue carnosinase was very strongly inhibited by bestatin, it did not hydrolyse tripeptides, and thus appears to be a dipeptidase rather than an aminopeptidase. It had a relative molecular mass of 90 000, an isoelectric point of 5.6, and a Km value of 10 mM-carnosine. Two forms of kidney and brain carnosinase were separated by high-resolution anion-exchange chromatography, although only one form was detected by various electrophoretic methods. Homocarnosinase and Mn2+-independent carnosinase were not detected in human tissues, although these enzymes are present in rat and hog kidney.  相似文献   

10.
Oku T  Ando S  Tsai HC  Yamashita Y  Ueno H  Shiozaki K  Nishi R  Yamada S 《Biochimie》2012,94(6):1281-1290
Three enzymes, carnosine dipeptidase I (EC 3.4.13.20, CNDP1), carnosine dipeptidase II (EC 3.4.13.18, CNDP2), and Xaa-methyl-His dipeptidase (or anserinase: EC 3.4.13.5, ANSN), are known to be capable of catalyzing the hydrolysis of carnosine (β-alanyl-l-histidine), in vertebrates. Here we report the purification and identification of two unidentified carnosine-cleaving enzymes from Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica). Two different dipeptidases were successfully purified to homogeneity from the skeletal muscle; one exhibited a broad substrate specificity, while the other a narrow specificity. N-terminal amino-acid sequencing, deglycosylation analysis, and genetic analysis clearly revealed that the former is a homodimer of glycosylated subunits, encoded by ANSN, and the latter is another homodimer of glycosylated subunits, encoded by CNDP1; that is, Xaa-methyl-His dipeptidase, and carnosine dipeptidase I respectively. This is the first report on the identification of carnosine dipeptidase I from a non-mammal. Database search revealed presence of a CNDP1 ortholog only from salmonid fishes, including Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout, but not from other ray-finned fish species, such as zebrafish, fugu, and medaka whose genomes have been completely sequenced. The mRNAs of CNDP1 and ANSN are strongly expressed in the liver of Japanese eel, compared with other tissues, while that of CNDP2 is widely distributed in all tissues tested.  相似文献   

11.
Carnosine synthase is the ATP-dependent ligase responsible for carnosine (β-alanyl-histidine) and homocarnosine (γ-aminobutyryl-histidine) synthesis in skeletal muscle and brain, respectively. This enzyme uses, also at substantial rates, lysine, ornithine, and arginine instead of histidine, yet the resulting dipeptides are virtually absent from muscle or brain, suggesting that they are removed by a “metabolite repair” enzyme. Using a radiolabeled substrate, we found that rat skeletal muscle, heart, and brain contained a cytosolic β-alanyl-lysine dipeptidase activity. This enzyme, which has the characteristics of a metalloenzyme, was purified ≈200-fold from rat skeletal muscle. Mass spectrometry analysis of the fractions obtained at different purification stages indicated parallel enrichment of PM20D2, a peptidase of unknown function belonging to the metallopeptidase 20 family. Western blotting showed coelution of PM20D2 with β-alanyl-lysine dipeptidase activity. Recombinant mouse PM20D2 hydrolyzed β-alanyl-lysine, β-alanyl-ornithine, γ-aminobutyryl-lysine, and γ-aminobutyryl-ornithine as its best substrates. It also acted at lower rates on β-alanyl-arginine and γ-aminobutyryl-arginine but virtually not on carnosine or homocarnosine. Although acting preferentially on basic dipeptides derived from β-alanine or γ-aminobutyrate, PM20D2 also acted at lower rates on some “classic dipeptides” like α-alanyl-lysine and α-lysyl-lysine. The same activity profile was observed with human PM20D2, yet this enzyme was ∼100–200-fold less active on all substrates tested than the mouse enzyme. Cotransfection in HEK293T cells of mouse or human PM20D2 together with carnosine synthase prevented the accumulation of abnormal dipeptides (β-alanyl-lysine, β-alanyl-ornithine, γ-aminobutyryl-lysine), thus favoring the synthesis of carnosine and homocarnosine and confirming the metabolite repair role of PM20D2.  相似文献   

12.
A dipeptidase was purified from a cell extract of Bifidobacterium longum BORI by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and Q-Sepharose columns. The purified dipeptidase had a molecular mass of about 49 kDa and was optimally active at pH 8.0 and 50°C. The enzyme was a strict dipeptidase, being capable of hydrolyzing a range of dipeptides but not tri- and tetrapeptides, p-nitroanilide derivatives of amino acids, or N- or C-terminus-blocked dipeptides. A search of the amino acid sequence of an internal tryptic fragment against protein sequences deduced from the total genome sequence of B. longum NCC2705 revealed that it was identical to an internal sequence of the dipeptidase gene (pepD), which comprised 1,602 nucleotides encoding 533 amino acids with a molecular mass of 60 kDa, and thereby differed considerably from the 49-kDa mass of the purified dipeptidase. To understand this discrepancy, pepD was cloned into an Escherichia coli expression vector (pBAD-TOPO derivative) to generate the recombinant plasmids pBAD-pepD and pBAD-pepD-His (note that His in the plasmid designation stands for a polyhistidine coding region). Both plasmids were successfully expressed in E. coli, and the recombinant protein PepD-His was purified using nickel-chelating affinity chromatography and reconfirmed by internal amino acid sequencing. The PepD sequence was highly homologous to those of the U34 family of peptidases, suggesting that the B. longum BORI dipeptidase is a type of cysteine-type N-terminal nucleophile hydrolase and has a β-hairpin motif similar to that of penicillin V acylase, which is activated by autoproteolytic processing.  相似文献   

13.
A proline dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.9) from guinea pig brain was purified to over 90% homogeneity by a combination of ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, calcium phosphate-cellulose chromatography, chromatofocusing, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. A purification factor of 2718-fold was obtained with a yield of 7%. The purified enzyme was found to have an apparent molecular weight of 132,000 and to consist of two dissimilar subunits of molecular weights 64,000 and 68,000. The substrate specificity of the enzyme is not that of a strict proline dipeptidase. Although it preferentially hydrolyzes proline dipeptides (Leu-Pro) it also hydrolyzes prolyl dipeptides (Pro-Leu) and dipeptides not containing proline (Leu-Leu). The purified enzyme preparation exhibited weak aminoacylproline aminopeptidase activity against Arg-Pro-Pro but it did not exhibit any post-proline dipeptidyl aminopeptidase, post-proline cleaving endopeptidase, proline iminopeptidase, prolyl carboxypeptidase or carboxypeptidase P activities when tested with a large variety of peptides and arylamides. With all of the proline and prolyl dipeptides examined the enzyme exhibited biphasic kinetics (two distinct slopes on Lineweaver-Burk plots). However, with Leu-Leu as substrate normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics were obeyed.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The hydrolysis of dipeptides by purified yeast dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.?) shows marked deviations from Michaelis-Menten kinetics over a wide range of pH. Quite anomalous kinetics is observed between pH 6 and 7, indicating a drastic change in the enzyme's properties. A reasonable explanation is provided by the assumption of a conformational transition brought about either by pH shifts or, at a constant pH, by changes in the substrate concentration. The transition, which may have a half-life on the order of minutes under appropriate conditions, is a distinctly cooperative process, with a dependence on ligand concentration higher than first order. The two forms of the enzyme differ clearly from each other with respect to various properties. The magnitudes and pH dependence of the kinetic parameters as well as the type of inhibition (or activation) exerted by amino acids and other ligands are different, as are their heat stabilities and the rates of inactivation by photooxidation of proteolytic degradation. Neither the molecular weight nor the gross conformation of the enzyme changes during the transition, so it seems to be due to a local isomerization affecting mainly the geometry of the active site. The sensitivity of dipeptidase to changes in the concentrations of substrates and other ligands is most pronounced exactly at the values of pH known to prevail in the living yeast cell. Thus the observed effects, which modulate dipeptidase activities within wide and limits, according to the amounts of dipeptides and amino acids present, are likely to play a role in the regulation of the enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Cysteinyl dipeptidase from Aspergillus oryzae (CdpA) was produced in Escherichia coli and purified. The enzyme showed activity specific toward cysteine-containing dipeptides, but its substrate specificity was distinct from those of other cysteinyl dipeptidases of the M20 family. It was optimally active at pH 7-8 and stable at pH 6-9 and at up to 40 °C.  相似文献   

17.
Kinetic studies of the effect of addition of Co2+ or Mn2+ to a highly purified dipeptidase from Ehrlich-Lettré mouse ascites tumor cells show that these metals specifically activate the hydrolyses of certain classes of dipeptides. This enzyme was previously (S. Hayman and E. K. Patterson, 1971, J. Biol. Chem. 246, 660) reported to be a Zn-metalloenzyme. It is now shown that Zn is the only metal that can partially restore the activity of the EDTA-inhibited dipeptidase in cleaving Ala-Gly. Addition of Co2+ increases the Vmax of N-terminal Gly-dipeptides with increase in Km while addition of Mn2+ primarily activates the hydrolysis of Pro-Gly, again with increases in both Vmax and Km. Prior incubation (5 min, 30 degrees) of the dipeptidase with the appropriate metal ions causes decrease in initial lag time in the Co2+-activated hydrolysis of Gly-Gly and the Mn2+-activated hydrolysis of Pro-Gly. Long-term (6-19 hr, 0 degrees) incubation of the enzyme with Co2+ results in loss of activity toward Ala-Gly with a concomitant 13-fold increase in the rate of Gly-Gly hydrolysis and loss of 70% of the Zn2+ from the dipeptidase; these effects can be partially reversed by addition of Zn2+. In contrast, long-term incubation of the enzyme with Mn2+ results in no loss of Zn2+ and a twofold increase in activity toward Pro-Gly. One affinity constant of 1.4 muM for Co2+ and two constants of 0.23 and 27 muM for Mn2+ were determined by kinetic experiments. Comparison of the properties of this tumor enzyme with a dipeptidase purified in our laboratory from Escherichia coli B, and with mammalian dipeptidases highly purified by others, shows remarkable similarities in molecular weights and molecular activities toward the preferred substrates but in the case of bacterial dipeptidase, differences in substrate specificities and in the effect of metal ions.  相似文献   

18.
Dipeptidase (dipeptide hydrolase [EC 3.4.13.11]) has been purified to homogeneity and crystallized from the cell extract of Bacillus stearothermophilus IFO 12983. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 86,000, and is composed of two subunits identical in molecular weight (43,000). The enzyme contains 2 g atoms of zinc per mol of protein. A variety of dipeptides consisting of glycine or only L-amino acids serve as substrates of the enzyme; Km and Vmax values for L-valyl-L-alanine are 0.5 mM and 68.0 units/mg protein, respectively. The enzyme is significantly stable not only at high temperatures but also on treatment with protein denaturants such as urea and guanidine hydrochloride. The enzyme also catalyzes hydrolysis of several N-acylamino acids with Vmax values 3-30% of those for the hydrolysis of dipeptides. The thermostable dipeptidase shares various properties with bacterial aminoacylase [EC 3.5.1.14]: their subunit molecular weight, metal content and requirement, amino acid composition, and amino acid sequence in the N-terminal region are very similar.  相似文献   

19.
Carnosinase (aminoacyl-L-histidine hydrolase, EC 3.4.13.3) hydrolyzes the dipeptide carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine), which is thought to play a role in cerebral and skeletal muscular function and has been implicated as a neuroaffector in the olfactory bulb. Carnosinase activity is present in many tissues of the mouse including heart, liver and lung, but it is most active in kidney, uterus and nasal olfactory mucosa. Kinetic measurements with 1H-NMR spectroscopy indicate that the enzyme is stereospecific and can hydrolyze L-but not D-carnosine. Anserine is a poorer substrate, while homocarnosine is essentially a non-substrate. However, these two dipeptides are effective inhibitors of the hydrolysis of L-carnosine. Carnosinase activity is unaffected when assayed in 2H2O at 99% isotopic purity. From considerations of the effect of Mn2+ on (1) substrate concentration velocity curves; (2) thermostability, and (3) inhibitor behavior, tissues with carnosinase can be divided into two groups. Kidney, uterus and olfactory mucosa represent one group, while central nervous system, muscle, spleen, etc. represent the second. The validity of this classification is confirmed by immunological evidence. Antiserum prepared against carnosinase purified from kidney cross-reacts with and inhibits the activity of olfactory mucosa, kidney and uterus but not that from central nervous system, heart or liver.  相似文献   

20.
1. A highly active and electrophoretically homogeneous dipeptidase was purified from the soluble extracts of monkey small-intestinal mucosa. 2. By gel-filtration studies the molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be 107000. It is composed of two identical, subunits of molecular weight 54000. 3. A paper-chromatographic method of dipeptidase assay was developed to overcome some of the difficulties encountered in the generally used spectrophotometric procedure. By using this method, the Km and k0 values of a few substrates were determined. 4. The substrate specificity of the enzyme was investigated in great detail with substrates of a wide range of possible structural types. The enzyme hydrolyses a very large proportion of the range of dipeptides tested. This enzyme, which exhibits such a wide range of action, has been termed the `master' dipeptidase of the intestine. Glycylglycine, glycyl-l-proline, glycyl-l-histidine, l-prolylglycine and some of the arginine- and aspartic acid-containing dipeptides were not substrates and are possibly hydrolysed by other peptidases. These results therefore suggest that in the intestine the number of dipeptidases is rather limited. 5. In the light of these findings, the implications on the role of dipeptidases in intestinal peptide transport are discussed.  相似文献   

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