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1.
The total activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.4.1) and the fraction of the enzyme in the active form were assayed in brown fat and liver throughout the development of the rat. In brown adipose tissue, the total activity increased until the late suckling period. After weaning, a decrease was noted. The fraction of the enzyme in the active form did not increase until after 10 days of age, reached its highest level in the late suckling period and remained at this level after weaning. Pyruvate dehydrogenase in liver decreased in both total activity and percentage activity in the early neonatal period. Both parameters increased after this period, reaching their highest levels in the late suckling period. In both fetal liver and fetal brown fat, the total activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase was increased by in vitro incubation with insulin.  相似文献   

2.
Total and specific activity of cathepsin D (EC. 3.4.23.5) were measured in rat liver and brain from 1 to 98 days of age. The activity of cathepsin D in the liver of adult and newborn rats was the same while in the rat brain it was higher in adult than in newborn rats. In the liver maximum specific activity of cathepsin D occurred on the 10th postnatal day and minimum on the fourth day of age. In the brain maximum specific activity of the enzyme occurred on the 14th postnatal day. Total activity of cathepsin D increased after birth in rat liver and brain. These results are discussed in relation to the functional role of cathepsin D in the rat liver and the brain.  相似文献   

3.
The activities of acid proteolytic enzymes were assayed in the liver and muscular tissues of mice (Mus musculus) 1, 6 and 24 hr after the administration of a protease inhibitor leupeptin (i.p., 15.5 mg/kg body wt). Leupeptin administration induced a strong inhibition of cathepsin B and a moderate inhibition of cathepsin C and acid autolytic rate in mouse liver 1 hr after injection. Thereafter the inhibition reduced and disappeared during 24 hr. The activity of cathepsin D was increased in liver 6 and 24 hr after injection. The activity of beta-glucuronidase was not affected by the leupeptin treatment. The administration of leupeptin did not affect the rate of acid autolysis and the activities of cathepsin C and D in cardiac and skeletal muscles. A slight increase in cathepsin B activity was observed 1 hr after leupeptin treatment in calf muscles. The cause of both tissue and enzyme specific changes after leupeptin treatment is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
A cDNA clone encoding the human cysteine protease cathepsin L was expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli in a T7 expression system. The insoluble recombinant enzyme was solubilized in urea and refolded at alkaline pH. 38-kDa procathepsin L was purified by gel filtration at pH 8.0, and a 29-kDa form of the enzyme was purified by gel filtration after autoprocessing of the proenzyme at pH 6.5. The kinetic properties of the 29-kDa species of recombinant cathepsin L were similar to those published for the human liver enzyme (Mason, R. W., Green, G. D. J., and Barrett, A.J. (1985) Biochem. J. 226, 233-241), using benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Arg-7-(4-methyl)coumarylamide as substrate. However, the stability of the recombinant enzyme, and its pH optimum for this substrate was shifted to a higher pH. Structure-function studies of cathepsin L were performed by constructing mutations in either the propeptide portion or the carboxyl-terminal light chain portion of the protein. These constructions were expressed in the E. coli system, and enzymatic activities were assayed following solubilization, renaturation, and gel filtration chromatography of the mutated proteins. Deletions of increasing size in the propeptide resulted in large proportional losses of activity, indicating that the propeptide is essential for proper enzyme folding and/or processing in this renaturation system. Deletion of part of the light chain containing a disulfide-forming cysteine residue or a single amino acid substitution of alanine for this cysteine residue resulted in almost complete loss of activity. These data suggest that the disulfide bond joining the heavy and light chains of cathepsin L is essential for enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

5.
An insoluble preparation of rat liver cathepsin D was obtained by coupling the enzyme to Enzacryl Polyacetal (EPA-cathepsin) and to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. EPA-cathepsin was active toward the synthetic hexapeptides (Gly-Phe-Leu)2 and did not split hemoglobin. The optimum pH of splitting was displaced upward by 1.5 units to pH 5.0. The enzyme exhibited maximum activity at 60 degrees C. No appreciable loss of activity was seen on storage of the enzyme for 4 months or after repeated use of the preparations. Coupling of rat liver cathepsin D to activated Sepharose gave preparations active towards both protein and synthetic substrates. The preparations were totally inactive in acid media and exhibited maximum activity at pH 7.0, that is, under physiological conditions. Optimum temperature was 65 degrees. The specific activity of the preparations (pH 7.0, 65 degrees) was 60-110 percent that of the free enzyme in acid media. Proteolytic activity of the Sepharose-coupled cathepsin D was not inhibited by pepstatin, whereas that of the free enzyme was fully inhibited by this reagent. A sarcoma cathepsin, similar in some of its properties to the rat liver enzyme, was also coupled to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. The preparation split protein substrates at pH 7.0 and possessed enhanced thermostability. The enzymes fixed on Sepharose showed increased stability.  相似文献   

6.
Mouse leukemia L1210 cells contain lysosomes, but cathepsin D, a typical lysosomal enzyme, has an unusual localization. After fractionation of homogenates of L1210 cells by isopycnic density gradient centrifugation, most of the activity for all of the acid hydrolases studied, except cathepsin D, is sedimentable and shows a similar density distribution around a peak having a modal density of 1.16. In contrast, much more of the total activity for cathepsin D is not sedimentable, while the sedimentable activity has a distribution around a peak at a higher density of 1.18. After chromatography on Sephadex G-100 of cell extracts, two molecular weight forms of cathepsin D are found. One has an apparent molecular weight of approx. 45,000, similar to rat liver cathepsin D, while the apparent molecular weight of the second form is approx. 95,000. Both forms are 4-5 times more active than rat liver cathepsin D. The high molecular weight L1210 cathepsin D converts to the low molecular weight form with no loss in activity after treatment with beta-mercaptoethanol. In all respects the unusual intracellular localization and molecular weight forms of cathepsin D in mouse leukemia L1210 cells are similar to the situation found for rat thoracic duct lymphocytes.  相似文献   

7.
We report a sensitive and rapid radioassay method for p-aminobenzoic acid N-acetyltransferase. The principle of this assay involves acetylation of p-aminobenzoic acid with [1-14C] labeled acetyl coenzyme A and direct extraction of enzymically formed radioactive p-acetamidobenzoic acid into nonaqueous scintillation fluid. Using this radiometric assay, hepatic and extrahepatic tissue distributions from rat and rabbit were studied. Rabbit blastocyst and endometrial N-acetyltransferase specific activities were equivalent to hepatic activities. Perinatal development studies in rats and rabbits revealed that fetal and neonatal animals are capable of N-acetylation. Rat liver developmental studies exhibited two peaks of activity with the first peak occurring in the late fetus followed by a second peak 3 days after birth. Rabbit fetal and neonatal enzyme activity increased to adult levels by the second week after birth in liver and gut, however, lung showed a different developmental pattern. These studies demonstrate that fetal extrahepatic tissues, like adult tissues, play an important role in N-acetylation.  相似文献   

8.
An extract of rat neutrophils was found to contain a high hemoglobin-hydrolyzing activity at pH 3.2, about 70% of which does not cross-react with anti-rat liver cathepsin D antibody. A neutrophil non-cathepsin D acid proteinase was successfully isolated from cathepsin D and characterized in comparison with the properties of rat liver cathepsin D. The neutrophil enzyme differed from cathepsin D in chromatographic and electrophoretic behaviors as well as immunological cross-reactivity, and its molecular weight was estimated to be 98,000 by gel filtration on Toyopearl HW 55. These findings strongly suggest that the neutrophil enzyme could be classified as cathepsin E. The enzyme, now designated rat cathepsin E, had an optimal pH at 3.0-3.2, preferred hemoglobin to albumin as substrate, and was markedly resistant to urea denaturation. Rat cathepsins D and E cleaved the insulin B-chain at six and eight sites, respectively; five sites were common for both enzymes. Possible relations among cathepsin E and cathepsin D-like or E-like acid proteinases reported so far were discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The enzymatic activity of two lysosomal enzymes, acid phosphatase and cathepsin D, was determined in fetus and during post-natal development of the rat gastrocnemius muscle in comparison to the histological differentiation of this muscle. The specific activity of cathepsin D and acid phosphatase was 7 and 2.5 fold higher in the muscle during development until 20 days after birth, than that of mature muscle, respectively. A trend of gradual decrease in the activity of these enzymes was observed concomitantly with the differentiation and maturation of the muscle from mononucleated cells in the fetus to myotubes formation at day 1 after birth, followed by the formation of "young" and then striated myofibers in 10- and 20-day old neonates, respectively. However, no correlation could be found between the lysosomal enzyme activity and the developmental stages of the muscle until 20 days after birth. It is suggested that the elevated activity of lysosomal acid hydrolases may be associated with late developmental processes from young to mature myofibers in normal skeletal muscle and not only in various pathological conditions.  相似文献   

10.
The overtime study of changes in the activity of cathepsin D, a lysosomal enzyme, in the splenocytes of CBA mice after their infection with virulent and avirulent Shigella strains of the same origin and with the same antigenic structure has been made. As the result of two months of observations, changes in the activity of this enzyme in the cytoplasmic and lysosomal cell fractions have been found to occur in phases. The activity of cathepsin D has been shown to depend on the virulence of Shigella strains used for inoculation. Virulent Shigella strains induce the pronounced and prolonged activation of the enzyme in the lysosomes, as well as in the cytoplasm. The latter phenomenon is probably indicative of the pathological labilization of the lysosomal membranes, induced by the virulent culture. Avirulent Shigella strains induce only the transient activity of the enzyme in the lysosomes without any essential changes in the permeability of their membranes. These data point to the possibility of differentiating virulent and avirulent Shigella strains by the determination of the enzymatic activity of splenocytes in infected animals.  相似文献   

11.
1. We have investigated the kinetics of inhibition of cathepsin D in heart, liver and skeletal muscle of CD-1 mice following administration of 25, 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg i.p. of pepstatin A, a specific inhibitor of this protease. 2. In the liver, a significant inhibition of cathepsin D occurred up to at least 15 days, whereas, in heart and skeletal muscle, this inhibition lasted for a much shorter period of time. 3. These results show that the recovery of enzyme activity to normal values is dose-dependent and that, at the same dose level, marked differences occur in the recovery of enzyme activity in these organ tissues, the liver being the most sensitive one.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Cathepsin D of human leukocytes was isolated and characterized. Purified leukocytes were lysed under nitrogen pressure and the proteinase activity precipitated by centrifugation at 48,000 x g. The precipitate was extracted by various buffers. The yield of cathepsin D was almost pH-independent but could be increased by Triton X-100. Employing gel chromatography the activity was found at a molecular mass close to 42,000 Da. Purification of the enzyme was performed by a two-step procedure using pepstatin-Sepharose chromatography and ion exchange chromatography. Three multiple forms of the enzyme were separated by ion exchange chromatography. The isoelectric points of the three forms of the enzyme were close to pH 5.0. The enzyme showed the typical characteristics of the acid proteinase cathepsin D. Enzyme activity was influenced by heavy metals such as Hg2 and Fe3 as well as by typical inhibitors for carboxyl-proteinases such as diazoacetyl-DL-norleucine methyl ester, 1,2-epoxy-3-(4-nitrophenoxy)propane and 4-bromo-phenacylbromide. An immunological comparison with cathepsin D from human liver by immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis indicates identity of the two enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Mouse leukemia L1210 cells contain lysosomes, but cathepsin D, a typical lysosomal enzyme, has an unusual localization. After fractionation of homogenates of L1210 cells by isopynic density gradient centrifugation, most of the activity for all of the acid hydrolases studied, except cathepsin D, is sedimentable and shows a similar density distribution around a peak having a modal density of 1.16. In contrast, much more of the total activity for cathepsin D is not sedimentable, while the sedimentable activity has a distribution around a peak at a higher density of 1.18.After chromatography on Sephadex G-100 of cell extracts, two molecular weight forms of cathepsin D are found. One has an apparent molecular weight of approx. 45 000, similar to rat liver cathepsin D, while the apparent molecular weight of the second form is approx. 95 000. Both forms are 4–5 times more active than rat liver cathepsin D. The high molecular weight L1210 cathepsin D converts to the low molecular weight form with no loss activity after treatment with β-mercaptoethanol. In all respects the unusual intracellular localization and molecular weight forms of cathepsin D in mouse luekemia L1210 cells are similar to the situation found for rat thoratic duct lymphocytes.  相似文献   

15.
Two types of acid proteases, cathepsin D and cathepsin E-like enzyme, from rat gastric mucosa and spleen were compared in their biochemical and immunochemical properties. The enzymes were partially purified by employing the same chromatographic procedures and they showed a single proteolytically active band in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two low molecular weight enzymes, cathepsins D, from both tissues showed the same molecular weight and the same sensitivities to various inhibitors, but slightly different electrophoretic mobilities. The rabbit antiserum raised against gastric mucosa cathepsin D precipitated both enzymes. On the other hand, high molecular weight enzymes, gastric mucosa cathepsin D-like acid proteinase and spleen cathepsin E-like acid proteinase, were similar to each other as judged by their chromatographic profiles, electrophoretic mobilities, and high stabilities in urea solution. Furthermore, the antiserum specific to gastric mucosa cathepsin D-like acid proteinase inhibited both enzyme activities in a similar manner. However, the antiserum specific to one type of enzyme did not react with the other type. These results indicate that: gastric mucosa cathepsin D is immunologically identical with spleen cathepsin D; gastric mucosa cathepsin D-like acid proteinase has biochemical and immunological properties quite similar to spleen cathepsin E-like enzyme; these two types of acid proteases are quite different proteins existing in the individual tissues.  相似文献   

16.
Endothelin converting enzyme activities in the soluble fraction of cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells were characterized. The two major endothelin converting enzyme activities were eluted from a hydrophobic chromatography column and the elution profile of the endothelin converting enzyme activities was the same as that of cathepsin D activities. These activities had a same pH optimum at pH 3.5 and were effectively inhibited by pepstatin A. Furthermore, anti-cathepsin D antiserum absorbed these activities as well as cathepsin D activity. Immunoblotting analysis using the antiserum showed the major active fractions have immunostainable components of identical molecular weights with cathepsin D. From these results, we concluded that the major endothelin converting activities in the soluble fraction of endothelial cells are due to cathepsin D. In addition to these cathepsin D activities, a minor endothelin converting enzyme activity with an optimum pH at 3.5 was found, which does not have angiotensin I generating (cathepsin D) activity from renin substrate and needs much higher concentrations of pepstatin A to inhibit the activity than cathepsin D.  相似文献   

17.
G E Conner  G Richo 《Biochemistry》1992,31(4):1142-1147
Procathepsin D is the intracellular aspartyl protease precursor of cathepsin D, a major lysosomal enzyme. Procathepsin D is rapidly processed inside the cell, and, thus, examination of its proteolyic activation and structure has been difficult. To study this proenzyme, a nonglycosylated form of the human fibroblast procathepsin D was expressed in Escherichia coli, refold in vitro, and purified by affinity chromatography on pepstatinyl agarose. Sequence analysis of the refolded, autoactivated enzyme allowed determination of the autoproteolytic cleavage site. The sequence surrounding this cleavage site between residues LeuP26 and IleP27 (in the "pro" region) resembled the first cleavage site found during activation of other aspartyl proteases. Thus, the autoactivated procathepsin D is analogous to the pepsin activation intermediate, which has been termed pseudopepsin. The enzymatic activity, thermal and pH stability, and fluorescence spectra of pseudocathepsin D were compared to mature, predominantly two-chain, cathepsin D isolated from human placenta. The results indicated that pseudocathepsin D and mature enzyme have a similar Km toward a peptide substrate and cleave a protein substrate at identical sites. Temperature stability of the recombinant enzyme was similar to that of the tissue-derived enzyme. However, the recombinant enzyme had increased stability at low pH when compared to the glycosylated tissue-derived two-chain cathepsin D. Fluorescence spectra of the recombinant and tissue-derived enzymes were identical. Thus, the absence of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides and the presence of the remaining segment of propeptide did not significantly alter the structural and enzymatic properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The localization of cathepsin D-like acid proteinase in the rat stomach and other tissues was studied, and its biochemical properties were compared with those of rat gastric cathepsin D (EC 3.4.23.5). Cathepsin D-like acid proteinase existed overwhelmingly in the mucosal layer and was hardly detected in the gastric juice. Its subcellular distribution profile was very similar to that of acid phosphatase, but not to that of pepsinogen. This proteinase-like enzyme activity was also found in rat splenic extract. These results strongly suggest that the proteinase is a lysosomal enzyme. In addition, cathepsin D-like acid proteinase demonstrated an in vitro transition of molecular species during storage at -30 degrees C. Although this molecular change was distinctive in ion-exchange column chromatography and susceptibility to some enzyme inhibitors, it was not accompanied by a significant decrease in molecular weight. To compare cathepsin D-like acid proteinase with ordinary cathepsin D, gastric cathepsin D was newly purified to apparent homogeneity in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its biochemical properties demonstrate that this is a true cathepsin D in rat gastric mucosa. Moreover, this cathepsin D activity was not abolished by treatment with antiserum specific to cathepsin D-like acid proteinase or pepsinogen. From these results, we can conclude that the proteinase is a lysosomal acid proteinase different from newly purified gastric cathepsin D.  相似文献   

19.
The levels of cathepsins D and E in various rat tissues during development were determined with the sensitive assay method we have developed. The level of cathepsin D increased gradually in each tissue during fetal development suggesting the gradual maturation of the lysosomal system in a cell. The level of cathepsin E differed significantly between tissues at various developmental stages. The level in liver increased rapidly from 13-day-gestation fetal stage and decreased gradually at later fetal stages. The level in other tissues such as stomach and spleen began to increase at later fetal stages or the infant stage. Cathepsin E was found in fetal hepatocytes and its gene was hypomethylated when the expression of the gene was elevated. The enzyme was found to be present mainly as a proform suggesting that, after working, an active form is rapidly inactivated.  相似文献   

20.
Degradation of myofibrillar proteins by cathepsins B and D   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
1. The procedure of Barrett [(1973) Biochem. J.131, 809-822] for isolating cathepsins B and D from human liver was modified for use with rat liver and skeletal muscle. The purified enzymes appeared to be similar to those reported in other species. 2. Sephadex G-75 chromatography of concentrated muscle extract resolved two peaks of cathepsin B inhibitory activity, corresponding to molecular weights of 12500 and 62000. 3. The degradation of purified myofibrillar proteins by cathepsins B and D was clearly demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. After incubation with enzyme, the polypeptide bands representing the substrates decreased in intensity and lower molecular weight products appeared. 4. Cathepsins B and D, purified from either rat liver or skeletal muscle, were shown to degrade myosin, purified from either rabbit or rat muscle. Soluble denatured myosin was degraded more extensively than insoluble native myosin. Degradation by cathepsin B was inhibited by lack of reducing agent, or by myoglobin, iodoacetic acid and leupeptin, but not by pepstatin. The same potential modifiers were applied to cathepsin D, and only pepstatin produced inhibition. 5. Rat liver cathepsin B had a pH optimum of 5.2 on native rabbit myosin. The pH optimum of cathepsin D was 4.0, with a shoulder of activity about 1pH unit above the optimum. 6. Rat liver cathepsins B and D were demonstrated to degrade rabbit F-actin at pH5.0, and were inhibited by leupeptin and pepstain, respectively. 7. The degradation of myosin and actin by cathepsin D was more extensive than that by cathepsin B.  相似文献   

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