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1.
The involvement of serine protease(s) in the conidial discharge of Conidiobolus coronatus was investigated using the parent strain and a variant strain with reduced conidial discharge. Time course profiles of protease levels and conidial discharge showed that maximum protease levels coincided with maximum conidial discharge in both the parent and variant strains. Inhibition of serine protease(s) by phenyl methyl sulfonyl fluoride showed that low protease levels resulted in inhibition of the conidial discharge and a minimum activity of 1.0 U/mg protein is essential for triggering the conidial discharge. Using casein to induce proteases, it was further observed that early gain in the protease level (1.0 U/mg protein) leads to early onset of conidial discharge. The above evidence suggests the involvement of protease(s) in the conidial discharge of C. coronatus.  相似文献   

2.
T sujibo , H., M iyamoto , K., H asegawa , T. & I namori , Y. 1990. Purification and characterization of two types of alkaline serine proteases produced by an alkalophilic actinomycete. Journal of Applied Bacteriology 69 , 520–529.
Two types of alkaline serine proteases were isolated from the culture filtrate of an alkalophilic actinomycete, Nocardiopsis dassonvillei OPC-210. The enzymes (protease I and protease II) were purified by acetone precipitation, DEAE-Sephadex A-50, CM-Sepharose CL-6B, Sephadex G-75 and phenyl-Toyopearl 650 M column chromatography. The purified enzymes showed a single band on sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weights of proteases I and II were 21000 and 36000, respectively. The pIs were 6.4 (protease I) and 3.8 (protease II). The optimum pH levels for the activity of two proteases were pH 10–12 (protease I) and pH 10.5 (protease II). The optimum temperature for the activity of protease I was 70°C and that for protease II was 60°C. Protease I was stable in the range of pH 4.0–8.0 up to 60°C and protease II was stable in the range of pH 6.0–12.0 up to 50°C.  相似文献   

3.
Two types of alkaline serine proteases were isolated from the culture filtrate of an alkalophilic actinomycete, Nocardiopsis dassonvillei OPC-210. The enzymes (protease I and protease II) were purified by acetone precipitation, DEAE-Sephadex A-50, CM-Sepharose CL-6B, Sephadex G-75 and phenyl-Toyopearl 650 M column chromatography. The purified enzymes showed a single band on sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weights of proteases I and II were 21,000 and 36,000, respectively. The pIs were 6.4 (protease I) and 3.8 (protease II). The optimum pH levels for the activity of two proteases were pH 10-12 (protease I) and pH 10.5 (protease II). The optimum temperture for the activity of protease I was 70 degrees C and that for protease II was 60 degrees C. Protease I was stable in the range of pH 4.0-8.0 up to 60 degrees C and protease II was stable in the range of pH 6.0-12.0 up to 50 degrees C.  相似文献   

4.
Extracts from white croaker skeletal muscle showed two alkaline proteases and a trypsin inhibitor when they were chromatographed in DEAE-Sephacel. The activity against azocasein was maximal at pH 8.5 and 9.1 for proteases I and II, respectively. Both enzymes showed optimum activity at 60° C. The molecular masses were found to be 132 kDa for protease 1,363 kDa for protease II, and 65 kDa for the inhibitor. Protease I showed the characteristics of a trypsin-like enzyme, and protease II those of a SH-enzyme. These proteins may play important roles in mechanisms of cellular proteolysis.  相似文献   

5.
An alkalophilic Bacillus sp., strain GX6638 (ATCC 53278), was isolated from soil and shown to produce a minimum of three alkaline proteases. The proteases were purified by ion-exchange chromatography and were distinguishable by their isoelectric point, molecular weight, and electrophoretic mobility. Two of the proteases, AS and HS, which exhibited the greatest alkaline and thermal stability, were characterized further. Protease HS had an apparent molecular weight of 36,000 and an isoelectric point of approximately 4.2, whereas protease AS had a molecular weight of 27,500 and an isoelectric point of 5.2. Both enzymes had optimal proteolytic activities over a broad pH range (pH 8 to 12) and exhibited temperature optima of 65 degrees C. Proteases HS and AS were further distinguished by their proteolytic activities, esterolytic activities, sensitivity to inhibitors, and their alkaline and thermal stability properties. Protease AS was extremely alkali stable, retaining 88% of initial activity at pH 12 over a 24-h incubation period at 25 degrees C; protease HS exhibited similar alkaline stability properties to pH 11. In addition, protease HS had exceptional thermal stability properties. At pH 9.5 (0.1 M CAPS buffer, 5 mM EDTA), the enzyme had a half-life of more than 200 min at 50 degrees C and 25 min at 60 degrees C. At pH above 9.5, protease HS readily lost enzymatic activity even in the presence of exogenously supplied Ca2+. In contrast, protease AS was more stable at pH above 9.5, and Ca2+ addition extended the half-life of the enzyme 10-fold at 60 degrees C. In contrast, protease AS was more stable at pH above 9.5, and Ca2+ addition extended the half-life of the enzyme 10-fold at 60 degrees C. The data presented here clearly indicate that these two alkaline proteases from Bacillus sp. strain GX6638 represent novel proteases that differ fundamentally from the proteases previously described for members of the genus Bacillus.  相似文献   

6.
In view of the functional similarities between subtilisin Carlsberg and the alkaline protease fromConidiobolus coronatus, the biochemical and structural properties of the two enzymes were compared. In spite of their similar biochemical properties, e.g., pH optima, heat stability, molecular mass, pI, esterase activity, and inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and phenylmethlysulfonylfluoride, the proteases were structurally dissimilar as revealed by (1) their amino acid compositions, (2) their inhibition by subtilisin inhibitor, (3) their immunological response to specific anti-Conidiobolus protease antibody, and (4) their tryptic peptide maps. Our results demonstrate that although they are functionally analogous, theConidiobolus protease is structurally distinct from subtilisin Carlsberg. TheConidiobolus protease was also different from other bacterial and animal proteases (e.g. pronase, protease K, trypsin, and chymotrypsin) as evidenced by their lack of response to anti-Conidiobolus protease antibody in double diffusion and in neutralization assays. TheConidiobolus serine protease fails to obey the general rule that proteins with similar functions have similar primary sequences and, thus, are evolutionarily related. Our results strengthen the concept of convergent evolution for serine proteases and provide basis for research in evolutionary relationships among fungal, bacterial, and animal proteases.  相似文献   

7.
Purification and characterization of proteases from developing normal maize endosperm and high lysine opaque-2 maize endosperm have been carried out with a view to understand their role in storage protein modification. At day 15, normal maize endosperm had two types of proteolytic enzymes, namely, protease I and protease II, while at day 25 protease n disappeared and in place protease III appeared. However, in opaque-2 maize endosperm at both the stages only one type of enzyme (protease I) was present. These proteases had many properties in common-optimum pH and temperature were respectively, 5.7and 40°C; their activity was inhibited to the extent of 75 –93 % by p-chloromercuribenzoate; trypsin inhibitor inhibited the activity more at early stages of endosperm development; all proteases cleaved synthetic substrates p-tosyl-L-arginine methylesler and N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester and poly-L-glutamic acid. TheKm values of day 15 and 25 normal maize endosperm proteases ranged from 2.73–3.30, while for opaque-2 maize endosperm protease I it was 3.33 mg azocasein per ml assay medium. These enzymes, however, differed with respect to proteolytic activity towards poly-L-lysine. Only normal maize endosperm protease III at day 25 followed by protease II at day 15 showed high activity towards this homopolypeptide suggesting thereby their role in determining the quality of normal maize endosperm protein. Part of Ph.D. thesis submitted by the first author  相似文献   

8.
Cospin (PIC1) from Coprinopsis cinerea is a serine protease inhibitor with biochemical properties similar to those of the previously characterized fungal serine protease inhibitors, cnispin from Clitocybe nebularis and LeSPI from Lentinus edodes, classified in the family I66 of the MEROPS protease inhibitor classification. In particular, it exhibits a highly specific inhibitory profile as a very strong inhibitor of trypsin with K(i) in the picomolar range. Determination of the crystal structure revealed that the protein has a β-trefoil fold. Site-directed mutagenesis and mass spectrometry results have confirmed Arg-27 as the reactive binding site for trypsin inhibition. The loop containing Arg-27 is positioned between the β2 and β3 strands, distinguishing cospin from other β-trefoil-fold serine protease inhibitors in which β4-β5 or β5-β6 loops are involved in protease inhibition. Biotoxicity assays of cospin on various model organisms revealed a strong and specific entomotoxic activity against Drosophila melanogaster. The inhibitory inactive R27N mutant was not entomotoxic, associating toxicity with inhibitory activity. Along with the abundance of cospin in fruiting bodies of C. cinerea and the lack of trypsin-like proteases in the C. cinerea genome, these results suggest that cospin and its homologs are effectors of a fungal defense mechanism against fungivorous insects that function by specific inhibition of serine proteases in the insect gut.  相似文献   

9.
Purified placental lipocortin I but not lipocortin II was proteolyzed during A431 cell membrane-catalyzed phosphorylation reactions. Proteolysis was Ca2+-dependent but was not prevented in the presence of a variety of inhibitors of Ca2+-dependent proteases, suggesting that the Ca2+ effect is a property of lipocortin I itself. Proteolysis was inhibited by Triton X-100 or dithiothreitol and was temperature-dependent, occurring at 30 degrees C but not at 0 degrees C. Tyrosine phosphorylation and proteolysis are distinct events as both phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated lipocortins could be cleaved by the membrane protease, but prephosphorylation enhanced the rate of proteolysis 2-fold during the initial reaction and by 60 min almost half of the phosphorylated lipocortin was proteolyzed. Cleavage of the 38-kDa phosphotyrosyl lipocortin I generated a truncated 37-kDa form of lipocortin which retained the phosphate label, indicating that proteolysis occurred at a site N-terminal to the site of tyrosine phosphorylation, possibly at tryptophan 12. Ando, Y., Imamura, S., Hong, Y.-M., Owada, M.K., Kakunaga, T., and Kannagi, R. [1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 6948-6955) have recently reported that in vitro cleavage at sites in the N-terminal tail region of lipocortin I by exogenously added proteases dramatically enhanced the Ca2+ sensitivity of phospholipid binding by lipocortin. The demonstrated ability of an endogenous membrane protease to catalyze a similar and specific cleavage in a Ca2+-dependent manner indicates that this event may occur in the cell where it would have important effects on the functional properties of lipocortin I.  相似文献   

10.
A protease-producing, crude oil degrading marine isolate was identified as Nocardiopsis sp. on the basis of the morphology, cell wall composition, mycolic acid analysis and DNA base composition. The Nocardiopsis produces two extracellular proteases, both of which are alkaline serine endopeptidases. Protease I was purified to homogeneity by chromatography on CM-Sephadex at pH 5.0 and pH 9.0. Protease II was purified using DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-50, phenyl-Sepharose and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Protease I and II had almost similar M(r) of 21 kDa (Protease I) and 23 kDa (Protease II), pI of 8.3 and 7.0 respectively with pH and temperature optima for activity between 10.0 and 11.0 and about 60 degrees C. Specific activities were 152 and 14 U/mg respectively on casein. However, Protease I was antigenically unrelated to Protease II. Both proteases were endopeptidases and required extended substrate binding for catalysis. Both proteases had collagenolytic and fibrinolytic activity but only Protease I had elastinolytic activity. The proteases were chymotrypsin-like with respect to their amino acid compositions and N-terminal sequences.  相似文献   

11.
In the course of studies on the regulation of plasminogen activator-mediated extracellular matrix degradation in muscle we found the presence of a factor, a cellular inhibitor of serine proteases having features similar to the serpin protease nexin I (PNI). This factor was present in the medium and at maximum concentration following fusion of skeletal muscle cells in culture. The ability of the PNI homologue in mouse muscle to inhibit ECM degradation by urokinase in myoblast medium was compared to that of human PNI purified from human fibroblasts. Stable (to SDS) 1:1 molar ratio complex formation between PNI and proteases, the proposed means by which these enzymes are regulated and removed, was also detected. Cell surface receptors for protease:PNI complexes, the specific binding sites for inactive complex internalization, were found on multinucleated myotubes, while little or no receptor activity was detected on myoblasts. These data suggest that developmental regulation of a) increased PNI proteolytic inhibitory activity expression and b) the appearance of protease:inhibitor complex receptors on muscle cell surfaces during myogenesis may constitute important regulatory features of muscle surface proteolytic activity. They complement previous studies of proteoglycan metabolism in muscle, which itself contains molecules capable of regulating the activity of myotube surface proteases.  相似文献   

12.
Two extracellular proteases have been isolated from the culture supernatant of a virulent strain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The enzymes were purified in a three-step procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, acetone precipitation and column chromatography on DE-52 cellulose. The specific activity of protease I was 22.2 U/mg of protein and protease II 6.6 U/mg of protein. Immunological properties and electrophoretic mobilities of the two forms were different. The two forms differ in substrate specificity (only from I exhibited elastinolytic activity) and pH optimum (pH 7.5 and pH 10 for form I and II, respectively).  相似文献   

13.
The physicochemical and enzymatic properties of five different extracellular proteases of Streptomyces moderatus were studied. The first protease was found to be a metal chelator sensitive protease with a Mr of 21,000 +/- 1000 a and a pI of 4.6. The second enzyme was an anionic trypsin-like protease (Mr 19,000 +/- 1000; pI 3.8) with a Km value of 4.76 X 10(-4) M on N-benzoyl-L-arginine-p-nitroanilide. A Km value of 1.52 X 10(-4) M was obtained when N-benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester was used as the substrate. The other three enzymes were found to be serine alkaline proteases with Mr's of 22,000, 29,000, and 23,000 +/- 1000 and with respective pI's of 7.8, 8.4, and 9.2. All the proteases showed optimum activity in the alkaline pH range. One of the three proteases was found to possess chymotrypsin and elastase-like properties. All five proteases were found to be unstable at temperatures above 60 degrees C. Except the trypsin-like protease, which was stable only in acidic pH, all other enzymes were found to be stable over a wide range of pH.  相似文献   

14.
The resistance of Galleria mellonella, Dendrolimus pini, and Calliphora vicina larvae against infection by the enthomopathogen Conidiobolus coronatus was shown to vary among the studied species. Exposure of both G. mellonella and D. pini larvae to the fungus resulted in rapid insect death, while all the C. vicina larvae remained unharmed. Microscopic studies revealed diverse responses of the three species to the fungal pathogen: (1) the body cavities of D. pini larvae were completely overgrown by fungal hyphae, with no signs of hemocyte response, (2) infected G. mellonella larvae formed melanotic capsules surrounding the fungal pathogen, and (3) the conidia of C. coronatus did not germinate on the cuticle of C. vicina larvae. The in vitro study on the degradation of the insect cuticle by proteases secreted by C. coronatus revealed that the G. mellonella cuticle degraded at the highest rate. The antiproteolytic capacities of insect hemolymph against fungal proteases correlated well with the insects' susceptibility to fungal infection. The antiproteolytic capacities of insect hemolymph against fungal proteases correlated well with the insects' susceptibility to fungal infection. Of all the tested species, only plasmatocytes exhibited phagocytic potential. Exposure to the fungal pathogen resulted in elevated phagocytic activity, found to be the highest in the infected G. mellonella. The incubation of insect hemolymph with fungal conidia and hyphae revealed diverse reactions of hemocytes of the studied insect species. The encapsulation potential of D. pini hemocytes was low. Hemocytes of G. mellonella showed a high ability to attach and encapsulate fungal structures. Incubation of C. vicina hemolymph with C. coronatus did not result in any hemocytic response. Phenoloxidase (PO) activity was found to be highest in D. pini hemolymph, moderate in G. mellonella, and lowest in the hemolymph of C. vicina. Fungal infection resulted in a significant decrease of PO activity in G. mellonela larvae, while that in the larvae of D. pini remained unchanged. PO activity in C. vicina exposed to fungus slightly increased. The lysozyme-like activity increased in the plasma of all three insect species after contact with the fungal pathogen. Anti E. coli activity was detected neither in control nor in infected D. pini larvae. No detectable anti E. coli activity was found in the control larvae of G. mellonella; however, its exposure to C. coronatus resulted in an increase in the activity to detectable level. In the case of C. vicina exposure to the fungus, the anti E. coli activity was significantly higher than in control larvae. The defense mechanisms of D. pini (species of economic importance in Europe) are presented for the first time.  相似文献   

15.
Mulenga A  Erikson K 《Gene》2011,482(1-2):78-93
Parasitic encoded proteases are essential to regulating interactions between parasites and their hosts and thus they represent attractive anti-parasitic druggable and/or vaccine target. We have utilized annotations of Ixodes scapularis proteases in gene bank and version 9.3 MEROPS database to compile an index of at least 233 putatively active and 150 putatively inactive protease enzymes that are encoded by the I. scapularis genome. The 233 putatively active protease homologs hereafter referred to as the degradome (the full repertoire of proteases encoded by the I. scapularis genome) represent ~1.14% of the 20485 putative I. scapularis protein content. Consistent with observations in other animals, the content of the I. scapularis degradome is ~6.0% (14/233) aspartic, ~19% (44/233) cysteine, ~40% (93/233) metallo, ~28.3% (66/233) serine and ~6.4% (15/233) threonine proteases. When scanned against other tick sequences, ~11% (25/233) of I. scapularis putatively active proteases are conserved in other tick species with ≥ 60% amino acid identity levels. The I. scapularis genome does not apparently encode for putatively inactive aspartic proteases. Of the 150 putative inactive protease homologs none are from the aspartic protease class, ~8% (12/150) are cysteine, ~58.7% (88/150) metallo, 30% (45/150) serine and ~3.3% (5/150) are threonine proteases. The I. scapularis tick genome appears to have evolutionarily lost proteolytic activity of at least 6 protease families, C56 and C64 (cysteine), M20 and M23 (metallo), S24 and S28 (serine) as revealed by a lack of the putatively active proteases in these families. The overall protease content is comparable to other organisms. However, the paucity of the S1 chymotrypsin/trypsin-like serine protease family in the I. scapularis genome where it is ~12.7% (28/233) of the degradome as opposed to ~22-48% content in other blood feeding arthropods, Pediculus humanus humanus, Anopheles gambiae, Aedes Aegypti and Culex pipiens quinquefasciatus is notable. The data is presented as a one-stop index of proteases encoded by the I. scapularis genome.  相似文献   

16.
Protease activity was detected in membranes of human bovine erythrocytes prepared by the conventional procedures which include washing and removal of the "buffy layer". The enzyme was extracted by 0.75 M KCNS or (NH4)2SO4 and was activated by 0.4 to 0.5 M of the same salts. Colored, particulate hide powder-azure, membrane fractions and soluble proteins such as hemoglobin, casein or albumin were susceptible to hydrolysis by the membraneous protease. Partial purification of the enzyme was accomplished through disc-gel electrophoresis on polyacrylamide in the presence of 0.25% positively charged detergents like cetyltrimethylammonium bromide. An alkaline protease (pH 7.4) with properties similar to those of the erythrocyte enzyme was found in leucocytes. The similarity between the properties of the leucocytic and erythrocytic proteases and the correlation of the activity in erythrocyte membranes with content of white cells in these preparations, suggest that enzymatic activities in the contaminating leucocytes are responsible for the activity of membraneous proteases in erythrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Targeting CAAX prenyl proteases of Leishmania donovani can be a good approach towards developing a drug molecule against Leishmaniasis. We have modeled the structure of CAAX prenyl protease I and II of L. donovani, using homology modeling approach. The structures were further validated using Ramachandran plot and ProSA. Active site prediction has shown difference in the amino acid residues present at the active site of CAAX prenyl protease I and CAAX prenyl protease II. The electrostatic potential surface of the CAAX prenyl protease I and II has revealed that CAAX prenyl protease I has more electropositive and electronegative potentials as compared CAAX prenyl protease II suggesting significant difference in their activity. Molecular docking with known bisubstrate analog inhibitors of protein farnesyl transferase and peptidyl (acyloxy) methyl ketones reveals significant binding of these molecules with CAAX prenyl protease I, but comparatively less binding with CAAX prenyl protease II. New and potent inhibitors were also found using structure-based virtual screening. The best docked compounds obtained from virtual screening were subjected to induced fit docking to get best docked configurations. Prediction of drug-like characteristics has revealed that the best docked compounds are in line with Lipinski’s rule. Moreover, best docked protein–ligand complexes of CAAX prenyl protease I and II are found to be stable throughout 20 ns simulation. Overall, the study has identified potent drug molecules targeting CAAX prenyl protease I and II of L. donovani whose drug candidature can be verified further using biochemical and cellular studies.  相似文献   

18.
The isoelectric points of three proteases (I, II and III), separated from culture supernatants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAKS-I by isoelectric focusing, were 8.5, 6.6 and 4.5 respectively. Collagenase activity was not detected. More than 75% of the extracellular protease activity of this strain was due to protease II. This enzyme also possessed elastase activity. When purified by ammonium sulphate precipitation, isoelectric focusing and gel chromatography, protease II showed one band on disc electrophoresis and one band on conventional immunoelectrophoresis. The pH optimum, stability and effect of inhibitors and substrate concentration were examined. The molecular weight was 23000 +/- 5000. Protease II was lethal for mice when injected intraperitoneally at a high dose (minimum lethal dose 0.1 mg). Dermonecrosis and subcutaneous haemorrhages were produced in new-born mice upon subcutaneous injection of 10 microgram protease II. A sensitive test for cytotoxicity showed no evidence of cytoplasmic membrane damage to HeLa cells or human diploid embryonic lung fibroblasts by protease II. Morphological changes similar to those produced by trypsin were found.  相似文献   

19.
This paper presents a bioelectrical conception of connective tissue regulation in bone, cartilage, and tendon, as well as other mechanically stressed connective tissues, based on the biological hypothesis of a biosensor and nerve-like signal conducting function of the native collagen fibril in the extracellular matrix. The various levels of existing conceptions of bioelectrical connective tissue regulation as well as some questions of classical connective tissue research (e.g., neutral and acid protease activity) are discussed from this electrophysiological point of view. Part I presented the topic in the form of classical biophysics and physicochemistry. This paper, Part II, makes use of the concept for a discussion of the “living state” of the extracellular matrix, biochemical aspects of acid and neutral protease activity, and nanoelectronic, relativistic, and coherent aspects of connective tissue regulation.  相似文献   

20.
Extracellular and membrane-bound proteases from Bacillus subtilis.   总被引:8,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Bacillus subtilis YY88 synthesizes increased amounts of extracellular and membrane-bound proteases. More than 99% of the extracellular protease activity is accounted for by an alkaline serine protease and a neutral metalloprotease. An esterase having low protease activity accounts for less than 1% of the secreted protease. These enzymes were purified to homogeneity. Molecular weights of approximately 28,500 and 39,500 were determined for the alkaline and neutral proteases, respectively. The esterase had a molecular weight of approximately 35,000. Amino-terminal amino acid sequences were determined, and the actions of a number of inhibitors were examined. Membrane vesicles contained bound forms of alkaline and neutral proteases and a group of previously undetected proteases (M proteases). Membrane-bound proteases were extracted with Triton X-100. Membrane-bound alkaline and neutral proteases were indistinguishable from the extracellular enzymes by the criteria of molecular weight, immunoprecipitation, and sensitivity to inhibitors. The M protease fraction accounted for approximately 7% of the total activity in Triton X-100 extracts of membrane vesicles. The M protease fraction was partially fractionated into four species (M1 through M4) by ion-exchange chromatography. Immunoprecipitation and sensitivity to inhibitors distinguished membrane-bound alkaline and neutral proteases from M proteases. In contrast to alkaline and neutral proteases, proteases M2 and M3 exhibited exopeptidase activity.  相似文献   

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