首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Tryptic treatment of human and porcine proproteinase E, procarboxypeptidase A binary complexes gave rise to active proteinase E after removal of an 11-residue N-terminal activation peptide. By contrast, upon treatment of either complex with active proteinase E, not only was the activation peptide released but also the hydrophobic dipeptide Val12-Val13 of the corresponding enzyme. No serine protease activity on specific synthetic peptide substrates could be detected. The structural homology of inactive proteinase E with subunit III of ruminant procarboxypeptidase A was strengthened by the existence of a functional homology since truncated proteinase E still possessed a weakly functional active site. Thus, subunit III-like proteins are generated by proteinase E-catalyzed limited proteolysis of proproteinase E.  相似文献   

2.
《FEBS letters》1989,250(2):166-170
The characterization, in human pancreatic juice, of a binary complex associating procarboxypeptidase A with a 32 kDa inactive glycoprotein (G32) is reported in this paper. Free G32 was isolated after dissociation of the binary complex. N-terminal sequence analysis revealed a complete homology between this protein and human protease E (HPE 1), except for the two strongly hydrophobic N-terminal residues (Val-Val) which are missing in G32. This protein might be a truncated protease E highly analogous to the subunit III of the ruminant procarboxypeptidase A-S6 ternary complex. The analogy with bovine subunit III is further supported by interspecies reassociation experiments showing that bovine procarboxypeptidase A can specifically bind human G32.  相似文献   

3.
Reversible condensation of the ternary complex form of bovine pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A with 2,3-dimethyl maleic anhydride was investigated at pH 9.0 and low concentration of reagent over the acylable amino groups. After subsequent modification of only a few lysyl residues, subunit III was found to have been released from the quaternary structure leading to the separation of an apparently native protein devoid of any contaminating subunit II, while dissociation of the remaining binary complex occurred upon further addition of the anhydride. This observation suggests that the electrostatic interactions existing between subunits I and III are more rapidly weakened than those between subunits I and II, probably because fewer lysyl residues are involved and/or there is greater accessibility to the chemical reagant. Although completely inactive on the specific substrates of trypsin, chymotrypsin and elastase, subunit III hydrolyzed p-nitrophenyl acetate at a rate similar to that of chymotrypsin but without any burst of p-nitrophenol, which indicates that the weakly functional active site of the subunit is not quite comparable to that of serine protease zymogens. Subunit III already has some of the functional characteristics of the corresponding active enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
The existence of procarboxypeptidase A, in the form of a non-covalent ternary complex containing the apparently inactive serine protease (subunit III), has so far been observed only in the ox pancreas. Evidence, obtained in the present study, shows that a ternary complex of procarboxypeptidase A, with a subunit III highly homologous with that of the bovine complex, is also present in two other ruminant species, sheep and goat. The biological significance of these complex forms of procarboxypeptidase A and the consistently high biosynthesis level of the apparently inactive subunit III in all three ruminant species is still unknown. Yet the synthesis of subunit III is not related to the animal diet since in the horse, which is a non-ruminant herbivorous animal, the procarboxypeptidase A is monomeric. Reassociation assays between either bovine subunits II or III and monomeric as well as binary forms of procarboxypeptidase A from various species show that, unlike subunit II, the recognition site for subunit III is highly conserved in all the procarboxypeptidases A and that bovine subunit II is different from porcine chymotrypsinogen C with regard to association.  相似文献   

5.
Subunit III (BSIII) of the bovine ternary complex of procarboxypeptidase A-S6 (PCPA-S6), a defective serine endopeptidase-like protein, actively synthesized by the pancreas of some ruminant species, is highly homologous to human protease E (HPE). Both proteins possess the same atypical disulfide bridge in position 98-99b. They are structurally related to porcine elastase 1 and human elastase 2 (about 56% identity). However, in contrast to those two enzymes which have an overall positive net charge, BSIII and HPE are negatively charged. Three-dimensional models of BSIII and HPE have been constructed from the crystallographic structure of porcine pancreatic elastase 1. The inhibitor-binding site for TFAI in these three proteins seems to be very similar; the atypical disulfide bridge does not seem to be involved in this binding site. The specific structural features of BSIII and HPE strongly support the assumption that BSIII is a truncated protease E and that both proteins belong to a separate serine endopeptidase family.  相似文献   

6.
C Chapus  A Puigserver  B Kerfélec 《Biochimie》1988,70(9):1143-1151
Up to now, a non-covalent ternary complex in which the pro-carboxypeptidase A (subunit I) is associated to two functionally different proteins (subunits II and III) has only been found in the pancreas of ruminant species. In the other species studied so far, the pro-carboxypeptidase A is secreted either as a monomer or as a binary association with a functionally different protein. Subunit I is the immediate precursor of carboxypeptidase A. Subunit II is a chymotrypsinogen of the C-type, involved, like subunit I, in the degradation of proteins and peptides. Although closely related to the pancreatic serine endopeptidases, subunit III appears to be devoid of any specific enzymatic activity. Information about the spatial organization of the subunits in the ternary complex has been deduced from the sequential dissociation of the complex. In contrast to the mechanism of activation of subunits I and II, which is independent of their aggregation state, the catalytic properties of the resulting enzymes are sensitive to their aggregation state. Moreover, the structural basis of inactivity of subunit III as well as the physiological role of the ternary complex are also discussed in this review.  相似文献   

7.
Subunit III has so far been found only in the pancreas of ruminants in a non-covalent association (procarboxypeptidase A-S6) with two different proteins: the procarboxypeptidase A itself (subunit I) and a C-type chymotrypsinogen (subunit II). In contrast with these latter two proteins, which are zymogens of pancreatic proteases, subunit III seems to be devoid of any activity towards specific substrates of pancreatic proteases. However, it possesses a weakly functional active site which allows it to hydrolyze a non-specific ester, p-nitrophenyl acetate, and to react with several active-site titrants. The binding of proflavin to subunit III shows that this protein owns a non-polar binding site with a very high Kd compared to that of chymotrypsin. The comparison of the amino acid sequences of subunit III and some serine proteases showed that subunit III is closely related to an elastase. Models of the tertiary structure of subunit III suggest a conformational modification that affects the substrate binding and could explain the lack of specific enzymatic activity. The presence of subunit III in the ternary complex is not related to an enzymatic function. This protein does not participate in the activation process of subunit I but prevents the denaturation of this subunit at low pH. This may represent its biological role in the acidic environment of the duodenum in ruminants.  相似文献   

8.
Bovine pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A is secreted as a non-covalent association of three different proteins (pro CPA-S6). The free native subunits can be obtained by dissociation of the complex by dimethylmaleylation. Moreover, two specific binary complexes resulting from the high affinity of procarboxypeptidase A (subunit I) for its other two partners (subunits II and III) can also be obtained.In order to better understand the function of the association, an investigation of the morphology of the ternary complex by solution X-ray scattering has been carried out. The radii of gyration of all the molecular species have been obtained and the experimental results have been interpreted in terms of compact objects of simple shape. The various components correspond to globular particles as shown by the value of the ratio Rg/M1/3. This is confirmed by the moderate anisotropy of the simple geometric shapes determined using an assumed value of 0.3 g H2O/g protein for the hydration. The distances between the centres of gravity of pairs of species strongly suggest that the components are in the closest distance configuration or close to it. However, the binary complex I–III appears to be more open than the complex I–II. Finally, a model of the interaction between carboxpeptidase A and its activation peptide has been constructed by comparing the hypothetical geometric model of subunit I to the crystallographically determined structure of carboxypeptidase A.Abbreviations pro CPA procarboxypeptidase A - pro CPA-S6 (or T.C.) ternary complex with a sedimentation coefficient of 6S - CPA carboxypeptidase A  相似文献   

9.
In some ruminant species, pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A is the central element of a ternary complex involving two other components, a C-type chymotrypsinogen and an inactive protease E. Although the complex is devoted to protein digestion, the fate of this system upon activation of its constituent subunits has, as yet, not been clearly established. In this paper, the activation peptide of procarboxypeptidase A is shown to play a key role in the association of the three subunits and a model is proposed for the in vivo function of the complex.  相似文献   

10.
The metalloexozymogen procarboxypeptidase A is mainly secreted in ruminants as a ternary complex with zymogens of two serine endoproteinases, chymotrypsinogen C and proproteinase E. The bovine complex has been crystallized, and its molecular structure analysed and refined at 2.6 A resolution to an R factor of 0.198. In this heterotrimer, the activation segment of procarboxypeptidase A essentially clamps the other two subunits, which shield the activation sites of the former from tryptic attack. In contrast, the propeptides of both serine proproteinases are freely accessible to trypsin. This arrangement explains the sequential and delayed activation of the constituent zymogens. Procarboxypeptidase A is virtually identical to the homologous monomeric porcine form. Chymotrypsinogen C displays structural features characteristic for chymotrypsins as well as elastases, except for its activation domain; similar to bovine chymotrypsinogen A, its binding site is not properly formed, while its surface located activation segment is disordered. The proproteinase E structure is fully ordered and strikingly similar to active porcine elastase; its specificity pocket is occluded, while the activation segment is fixed to the molecular surface. This first structure of a native zymogen from the proteinase E/elastase family does not fundamentally differ from the serine proproteinases known so far.  相似文献   

11.
In the type III secretion system (T3SS) of Aeromonas hydrophila, the putative needle complex subunit AscF requires both putative chaperones AscE and AscG for formation of a ternary complex to avoid premature assembly. Here we report the crystal structure of AscE at 2.7 A resolution and the mapping of buried regions of AscE, AscG, and AscF in the AscEG and AscEFG complexes using limited protease digestion. The dimeric AscE is comprised of two helix-turn-helix monomers packed in an antiparallel fashion. The N-terminal 13 residues of AscE are buried only upon binding with AscG, but this region is found to be nonessential for the interaction. AscE functions as a monomer and can be coexpressed with AscG or with both AscG and AscF to form soluble complexes. The AscE binding region of AscG in the AscEG complex is identified to be within the N-terminal 61 residues of AscG. The exposed C-terminal substrate-binding region of AscG in the AscEG complex is induced to be buried only upon binding to AscF. However, the N-terminal 52 residues of AscF remain exposed even in the ternary AscEFG complex. On the other hand, the 35-residue C-terminal region of AscF in the complex is resistant to protease digestion in the AscEFG complex. Site-directed mutagenesis showed that two C-terminal hydrophobic residues, Ile83 and Leu84, of AscF are essential for chaperone binding.  相似文献   

12.
A spectrofluorimetric investigation of the interactions between the subunits of the pancreatic bovine procarboxypeptidase A ternary complex was carried out after covalent insertion of a fluorescent probe at the active center of one of the constituent subunits. The specific insertion of an anthraniloyl group at the active center of subunit II free or bound to subunit I, after its conversion into chymotrypsin II, allowed us to determine the value of the dissociation constant between subunit I and anthraniloyl-chymotrypsin II (Kd = 0.7 +/- 0.1 x 10(-7) M) and between subunit III and the binary complex subunit I-anthraniloyl-chymotrypsin II (Kd = 1.6 +/- 0.3 x 10(-7) M). Moreover, the influence of the association on the flexibility of the active center of chymotrypsin II was deduced from fluorescence polarization measurements and rotational correlation time determination of anthraniloyl-chymotrypsin II free or bound to subunit I. The anthraniloyl group has no motion independently of the whole chymotrypsin II molecule and the binding of subunit I to anthraniloyl-chymotrypsin II results in an increase of the rigidity of the active site in the latter protein.  相似文献   

13.
Limited proteolysis of solubilized beef heart mitochondrial complex III with trypsin yields a product previously identified as fragment V" (González-Halphen, D., Lindorfer, M. A., and Capaldi, R. A. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7021-7031). In this work, fragment V" was generated by trypsin treatment of both the intact complex III and the purified Rieske iron-sulfur protein. Thus, in its bound or isolated form, the same sites of subunit V are sensitive to protease action. Fragment V" was a soluble protein that retained its iron-sulfur moiety. It was purified by exclusion from a hydrophobic phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B column followed by gel filtration. In contrast to the pure, intact subunit V, fragment V" did not reconstitute oxidoreductase activity when combined with complex III devoid of subunit V. However, a 20-amino acid synthetic peptide carrying the sequence between amino acids Lys33 and Lys52 of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein competed with intact subunit V in reconstitution assays. The results obtained suggest that the iron-sulfur protein binds to complex III by hydrophobic protein-protein interactions, and that a nontransmembrane 18-amino acid amphipathic stretch accounts for the association of this subunit to the rest of the complex.  相似文献   

14.
A protein capable of inhibiting trypsin and other pancreatic proteases has been purified to homogeneity from Escherichia coli by conventional procedures and affinity chromatography. It is stable for at least 30 min at 100 degrees C and pH 1.0, but it is inactivated by digestion with pepsin. The inhibitor has an apparent molecular weight of 38,000 as determined by gel filtration and must be a homodimer since it contains a single 18,000-dalton subunit upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor has an isoelectric point of 6.1. One dimeric molecule of the inhibitor can bind two trypsin molecules to form a mixed tetrameric complex, in which trypsin molecules are completely inhibited. The inhibitor is not digested by the trypsin. When N-benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide was used as a trypsin substrate, half-maximal inhibition was observed at 22 nM. This protein also inhibits chymotrypsin, pancreatic elastase, rat mast cell chymase, and human serosal urokinase, but it does not inhibit human pulmonary tryptase, kallikrein, papain, pepsin, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, subtilisin, and thermolysin. Surprisingly, it did not inhibit any of the eight soluble endoproteases recently isolated from E. coli (i.e. proteases Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Ci, and Pi) nor the chymotrypsin-like (protease I) and trypsin-like (protease II) esterases in E. coli. The inhibitor is localized to the periplasmic space and its level did not change with different growth media or stages of cell growth. The physiological function of this E. coli trypsin inhibitor is unknown. We suggest that E. coli trypsin inhibitor be named "Ecotin."  相似文献   

15.
Using the Tb3+ luminescence technique, we showed that bovine subunit III, a defective pancreatic serine endopeptidase-like protease, possessed a single metal ion binding site able to bind Tb3+ with a high affinity comparable to that of porcine elastase. The topology of the metal ion binding site in subunit III is predicted from sequence homologies and modeling experiments based on the known crystallographic three-dimensional structures of the equivalent sites in porcine elastase 1 and bovine beta-trypsin. Moreover, the Tb3+ luminescence technique in parallel to a 19F NMR investigation, allowed us to measure the binding of a very potent specific inhibitor of porcine elastase (trifluoroacetyl-L-lysyl-alanyl p-trifluoromethylphenylanilide) to bovine subunit III. These results confirm that, although devoid of any specific activity, subunit III might possess a conformation close to that of an active enzyme and further support the analogy between subunit III and an elastase-like family.  相似文献   

16.
Automated Edman degradation of monomeric procarboxypeptidases A and B from porcine pancreas shows that their N-terminal regions (from residue 1 to 34-37) present a high degree of sequential homology to each other as well as to other related procarboxypeptidases. Conformational predictions based on these sequences confirm their structural homology and indicate the probable existence of two beta-turns, one beta-chain and a long alpha-helix in them. On the other hand, tryptic peptide maps on a reverse-phase column indicate great sequential similarities (if not identity) between monomeric procarboxypeptidase A and the procarboxypeptidase A subunit isolated from its binary complex with proproteinase E.  相似文献   

17.
18.
J K Wright  M Takahashi 《Biochemistry》1977,16(8):1541-1548
The aspartokinase activity of the aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli was affinity labeled with substrates ATP, aspartate, and feedback inhibitor threonine. Exchange-inert ternary adducts of Co(III)-aspartokinase and either ATP, aspartate or threonine were formed by oxidation of corresponding Co(II) ternary complexes with H2O2. The ternary enzyme-Co(III)-threonine adduct (I) had 3.8 threonine binding sites per tetramer, one-half that of the native enzyme. The binding of threonine to I was still cooperative as determined by equilibrium dialysis (nH = 2.2) or by studying inhibition of residual dehydrogenase activity (nH = 2.7). Threonine still protected the SH groups of I against 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) (DTNB) reaction but the number of SH groups reacting with thiol reagents (DTNB) was reduced by 1-2 per subunit in the absence of threonine. This suggests either that Co(III) is bound to the enzyme via sulfhydryl groups or that 1-2SH groups are buried or rendered inaccessible in I. The binding of threonine to sites not blocked by the affinity labeling produced changes in the circular dichroism of the complex comparable to changes produced by threonine binding to native enzyme and also protected against proteolytic digestion. The major conformational changes produced by threonine are thus ascribable to binding at this one class of regulatory sites. The interactions of kinase substrates with various aspartokinase-Co(III) complexes containing ATP, aspartate, or threonine and a threonine-insensitive homoserine dehydrogenase produced by mild proteolysis were studied. The inhibition of homoserine dehydrogenase by kinase substrates is not due to binding of these inhibitors at the kinase active site but was shown to be due to binding to sites within the dehydrogenase domain of the enzyme. L-alpha-Aminobutyrate, a presumed threonine analogue, also inhibits the dehydrogenase by binding at the same or similar sites in the dehydrogenase domain and not at threonine regulatory site.  相似文献   

19.
Three different procarboxypeptidases A and two different procarboxypeptidases B have been isolated for the first time, in a pure and native state, from human pancreatic extracts. These proteins were purified in one or two quick steps by anion-exchange HPLC. All these forms have been biochemically characterized. Two of the procarboxypeptidases A, the A1 and A2 forms, are obtained in a monomeric state while the other, the A3 form, is obtained as a binary complex of a procarboxypeptidase A with a proproteinase E. This complex is stable in aqueous buffers at various ionic strengths and develops carboxypeptidase A and proteinase E activities in the presence of trypsin. The A1 and A2 forms show clear differences in electrophoretic mobility in SDS/polyacrylamide gels, isoelectric point, proteolytic activation process with trypsin and susceptibility to thermal denaturation. In contrast, these properties are similar in the A1 and A3 (binary complex) forms. On the other hand, with respect to the properties listed above, the B1 and B2 forms differ from each other mainly in isoelectric point. An overall comparison of the above properties reveals the unusual character of the A2 form, midway between the other A and B forms. N-terminal extended sequence analysis carried out on these proenzymes confirm that they constitute different isologous forms.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号