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1.
Nägler DK  Tam W  Storer AC  Krupa JC  Mort JS  Ménard R 《Biochemistry》1999,38(15):4868-4874
The specificity of cysteine proteases is characterized by the nature of the amino acid sequence recognized by the enzymes (sequence specificity) as well as by the position of the scissile peptide bond (positional specificity, i.e., endopeptidase, aminopeptidase, or carboxypeptidase). In this paper, the interdependency of sequence and positional specificities for selected members of this class of enzymes has been investigated using fluorogenic substrates where both the position of the cleavable peptide bond and the nature of the sequence of residues in P2-P1 are varied. The results show that cathepsins K and L and papain, typically considered to act strictly as endopeptidases, can also display dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity against the substrate Abz-FRF(4NO2)A and dipeptidyl aminopeptidase activity against FR-MCA. In some cases the activity is even equal to or greater than that observed with cathepsin B and DPP-I (dipeptidyl peptidase I), which have been characterized previously as exopeptidases. In contrast, the exopeptidase activities of cathepsins K and L and papain are extremely low when the P2-P1 residues are A-A, indicating that, as observed for the normal endopeptidase activity, the exopeptidase activities rely heavily on interactions in subsite S2 (and possibly S1). However, cathepsin B and DPP-I are able to hydrolyze substrates through the exopeptidase route even in absence of preferred interactions in subsites S2 and S1. This is attributed to the presence in cathepsin B and DPP-I of specific structural elements which serve as an anchor for the C- or N-terminus of a substrate, thereby allowing favorable enzyme-substrate interaction independently of the P2-P1 sequence. As a consequence, the nature of the residue at position P2 of a substrate, which is usually the main factor determining the specificity for cysteine proteases of the papain family, does not have the same contribution for the exopeptidase activities of cathepsin B and DPP-I.  相似文献   

2.
Cathepsin B is a lysosomal cysteine protease exhibiting mainly dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity, which decreases dramatically above pH 5.5, when the enzyme starts acting as an endopeptidase. Since the common cathepsin B assays are performed at pH 6 and do not distinguish between these activities, we synthesized a series of peptide substrates specifically designed for the carboxydipeptidase activity of cathepsin B. The amino-acid sequences of the P(5)-P(1) part of these substrates were based on the binding fragments of cystatin C and cystatin SA, the natural reversible inhibitors of papain-like cysteine protease. The sequences of the P'(1)-P'(2) dipeptide fragments of the substrates were chosen on the basis of the specificity of the S'(1)-S'(2) sites of the cathepsin B catalytic cleft. The rates of hydrolysis by cathepsin B and papain, the archetypal cysteine protease, were monitored by a continuous fluorescence assay based on internal resonance energy transfer from an Edans to a Dabcyl group. The fluorescence energy donor and acceptor were attached to the C- and the N-terminal amino-acid residues, respectively. The kinetics of hydrolysis followed the Michaelis-Menten model. Out of all the examined peptides Dabcyl-R-L-V-G-F- E(Edans) turned out to be a very good substrate for both papain and cathepsin B at both pH 6 and pH 5. The replacement of Glu by Asp turned this peptide into an exclusive substrate for cathepsin B not hydrolyzed by papain. The substitution of Phe by Nal in the original substrate caused an increase of the specificity constant for cathepsin B at pH 5, and a significant decrease at pH 6. The results of kinetic studies also suggest that Arg in position P(4) is not important for the exopeptidase activity of cathepsin B, and that introducing Glu in place of Val in position P(2) causes an increase of the substrate preference towards this activity.  相似文献   

3.
The carboxypeptidase and endopeptidase activities of cathepsins X and B, as well as their inhibition by E-64 derivatives, have been investigated in detail and compared. The results clearly demonstrate that cathepsins X and B do not share similar activity profiles against substrates and inhibitors. Using quenched fluorogenic substrates, we show that cathepsin X preferentially cleaves substrates through a monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase pathway, while cathepsin B displays a preference for the dipeptidyl pathway. The preference for one or the other pathway is about the same for both enzymes, i. e. approximately 2 orders of magnitude. Cleavage of a C-terminal dipeptide of a substrate by cathepsin X can be observed under conditions that preclude efficient monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity. In addition, an inhibitor designed to exploit the unique structural features responsible for the carboxypeptidase activity of cathepsin X has been synthesized and tested against cathepsins X, B and L. Although of moderate potency, this E-64 derivative is the first reported example of a cathepsin X-specific inhibitor. By comparison, CA074 was found to inactivate cathepsin B at least 34000-fold more efficiently than cathepsin X.  相似文献   

4.
J K McDonald  S Ellis 《Life sciences》1975,17(8):1269-1276
Cathepsin B1 from bovine spleen exhibited its greatest rates of hydrolysis on peptide β-naphthylamide (βNA) derivatives containing paired basic residues, i.e., Cbz-Arg-Arg-βNA, t-Boc-Lys-Lys-βNA, and t-Boc-Lys-Arg-βNA. Internal peptide bonds were not attacked. At its pH 6.5 optimum, cathepsin B1 hydrolyzed Cbz-Arg-Arg-βNA (Km 0.18 mM) 64 times faster than Bz-DL-Arg-βNA (Km 3.3 mM or 1.6 mM for the L isomer) and was therefore chosen to replace the latter as a more soluble and sensitive substrate for the assay of cathepsin B1. Although cathepsin B2 had no action on the β-naphthylamide substrates, it did manifest carboxypeptidase activity by attacking COOH-terminal residues exposed by the action of cathepsin B1. At its pH 5.0 optimum, cathepsin B2 behaved as a SH-dependent, non-specific carboxypeptidase by releasing COOH-terminal amino acids from a variety of Cbz-Gly-X substrates and polypeptides such as glucagon, Val-Leu-Ser-Glu-Gly, and penta-lysine.  相似文献   

5.
Porcine spleen cathepsin B is an exopeptidase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The major cathepsin B isozyme CB-I purified from porcine spleens was studied for its specificity against various peptide and denatured protein substrates. The enzyme degraded all the peptide substrates by an exopeptidase activity. The substrates were degraded mainly by a dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity of the enzyme except for angiotensin I, from which a COOH-terminal leucine residue was released. The enzyme failed to hydrolyze peptides having a proline or cysteic acid in the COOH-terminal, penultimate, and antepenultimate positions. Reduced and carboxymethylated soybean trypsin inhibitor was degraded by the same dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase action of cathepsin B. No significant endopeptidase activity was observed. These results do not support the general assumption that cathepsin B has both endo- and exopeptidase activities, neither do these observations support the postulation that cathepsin B might be involved in the in vivo proteolytic processing of protein precursors. We propose that the biological role of this enzyme is mainly the degradation of tissue proteins in lysosomes.  相似文献   

6.
Several new cysteine proteases of the papain family have been discovered in the past few years. To help in the assignment of physiological roles and in the design of specific inhibitors, a clear picture of the specificities of these enzymes is needed. One of these novel enzymes, cathepsin X, displays a unique specificity, cleaving single amino acid residues at the C-terminus of substrates very efficiently. In this study, the carboxypeptidase activities and substrate specificity of cathepsins X and B have been investigated in detail and compared. Using quenched fluorogenic substrates and HPLC measurements, it was shown that cathepsin X preferentially cleaves substrates through a monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase pathway, while cathepsin B displays a preference for the dipeptidyl pathway. The preference for one or the other pathway is about the same for both enzymes, i.e., approximately 2 orders of magnitude, a result supported by molecular modeling of enzyme-substrate complexes. Cleavage of a C-terminal dipeptide of a substrate by cathepsin X can become more important under conditions that preclude efficient monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity, e.g., nonoptimal interactions in subsites S(2)-S(1). These results confirm that cathepsin X is designed to function as a monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase. Contrary to a recent report [Klemencic, I., et al. (2000) Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 5404-5412], it is shown that cathepsins X and B do not share similar activity profiles, and that reagents are available to clearly distinguish the two enzymes. In particular, CA074 was found to inactivate cathepsin B at least 34000-fold more efficiently than cathepsin X. The insights obtained from this and previous studies have been used to produce an inhibitor designed to exploit the unique structural features responsible for the carboxypeptidase activity of cathepsin X. Although of moderate potency, this E-64 derivative is the first reported example of a cathepsin X-specific inhibitor.  相似文献   

7.
Dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase, endopeptidase, and carboxypeptidase activities of rat liver cathepsin B were investigated using soluble denatured protein substrates, reduced and S-(3-trimethylammonio)propylated proteins and their derivatives. It was found that the soluble denatured proteins were degraded mainly by the dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase activity and in a few cases by the endopeptidase and carboxypeptidase activities. The eipeptidylcarboxypeptidase activity showed broad substrate specificity with broad pH optimum at 4-6. A peptide having the alpha-carboxyl group amidated with methylamine could also be a good substrate for this activity. These results suggest that this activity is dependent not upon the dissociated alpha-carboxyl group at the P2' site but upon the hydrogen-bonding abilities of the alpha-imino moiety and the protonated or amidated alpha-carboxyl moiety at P2'. On the other hand, the endopeptidase and carboxypeptidase activities were observed in a few cases, suggesting that special amino acid sequences in the substrates are responsible for these activities. These activities showed sharp pH optima at 6 and seemed to prefer basic amino acid residues at P1 site. Therefore, we suppose that cathepsin B has a carboxyl group with a pKa of about 5.5 at the S1 subsite which more effectively interacts with a positive charge at the P1 site of the substrate at pH 6 than at pH 5. Based on these results, a model of the binding subsites of this enzyme is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
Our previous studies on carbohydrate structures of purified porcine spleen cathepsin B indicated that there are two cathepsin B isozymes, each containing a different carbohydrate (Takahashi, T., Schmidt, P.G., and Tang, J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6059-6062). We have now isolated these two enzymes and carried out a comparative study on their structures and enzymic properties. The major isozyme (CB-I) is a two-chain enzyme (Mr = 28,000) with a light chain (Mr = 5,000) and a heavy chain (Mr = 23,000), whereas the minor enzyme (CB-II) is a single chain enzyme (Mr = 27,000). The NH2-terminal amino acid residues of CB-I were leucine and valine for the light and heavy chain, respectively. However, the NH2-terminal residue of CB-II was not available for automated Edman degradation. In addition, peptide mapping experiments indicated a difference in the primary structure of these two proteins. Despite such structural differences, they are similar in many enzymic properties. CB-I was more catalytically efficient than CB-II toward synthetic substrates, except for the substrate benzoyl-L-arginine beta-naphthylamide for which the relative catalytic efficiency is reversed. Both isozymes degraded glucagon by a dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity. Under the same conditions, CB-I was 4-5 times more efficient than CB-II. The results indicate that the cathepsin B isozymes are two separate gene products, but they are similar in enzymic properties.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The suitability of Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Leu-MNA and Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA for the assessment of cathepsin D activity was tested in biochemical and histochemical experiments. Substrates were dissolved in dimethylformamide and used at 0.1-0.5 mM in various buffers over a pH range of 3.5-7.4. Homogenates of various rat organs and isolated purified enzymes [cathepsin D from bovine spleen, dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP) IV from porcine kidney and rat lung] were used as enzyme sources. Pepstatin, di-isopropylfluorophosphate (DFP), p-chloromercuribenzoate, o-phenanthroline and a series of DPP IV inhibitors were used in inhibitor experiments. At pH 3.5 and 5.0, substrates were used in a two-step postcoupling procedure with aminopeptidase M and dipeptidyl peptidase IV as auxiliary enzymes and Fast Blue BB as coupling agent. Results were compared with those obtained with haemoglobin. Above pH 5.0 substrates were used in a one-step postcoupling procedure. Cryostat sections of snap-frozen or cold aldehyde-fixed tissue pieces of various rat organs and biopsies of human jejunal mucosa were used in histochemical experiments. As in biochemical tests a two-step procedure was used in the pH range 3.5-5.0, but Fast Blue B was used in the second step for the simultaneous coupling. Above pH 5.0 a one-step simultaneous azo coupling procedure was used with Fast Blue B as coupling agent. At pH 3.5 the hydrolysis rate of both synthetic substrates was about 100x lower than that of haemoglobin when cathepsin D from bovine spleen was used.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
D K N?gler  R Zhang  W Tam  T Sulea  E O Purisima  R Ménard 《Biochemistry》1999,38(39):12648-12654
Cathepsin X is a novel cysteine protease which was identified recently from the EST (expressed sequence tags) database. In a homology model of the mature cathepsin X, a unique three residue insertion between the Gln22 of the oxyanion hole and the active site Cys31 was found to be located in the primed region of the binding cleft as part of a surface loop corresponding to residues His23 to Tyr27, which we have termed the "mini-loop". From the model, it became apparent that this distinctive structural feature might confer exopeptidase activity to the enzyme. To verify this hypothesis, human procathepsin X was expressed in Pichia pastoris and converted to mature cathepsin X using small amounts of human cathepsin L. Cathepsin X was found to display excellent carboxypeptidase activity against the substrate Abz-FRF(4NO(2)), with a k(cat)/K(M) value of 1.23 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) at the optimal pH of 5.0. However, the activity of cathepsin X against the substrates Cbz-FR-MCA and Abz-AFRSAAQ-EDDnp was found to be extremely low, with k(cat)/K(M) values lower than 70 M(-)(1) s(-)(1). Therefore, cathepsin X displays a stricter exopeptidase activity than cathepsin B. No inhibition of cathepsin X by cystatin C could be detected up to a concentration of 4 microM of inhibitor. From a model of the protease complexed with Cbz-FRF, the bound carboxypeptidase substrate is predicted to establish a number of favorable contacts within the cathepsin X binding site, in particular with residues His23 and Tyr27 from the mini-loop. The presence of the mini-loop restricts the accessibility of cystatin C as well as of the endopeptidase and MCA substrates in the primed subsites of the protease. The marked structural and functional differences of cathepsin X relative to other members of the papain family of cysteine proteases will be of great value in designing specific inhibitors useful as research tools to investigate the physiological and potential pathological roles of this novel enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The specificity of bovine spleen cathepsin B2 has been investigated by means of some natural oligo- and polypeptides, i.e. glucagon, melittin, insulin A and B chain, bradykinin, angiotensin I and II, oxytocin ACTH, clupein and salmin. The enzyme is primarily a carboxypeptidase which hydrolyzes peptide linkages of most amino acids common to proteins. In addition, cathepsin B2 displays amidase and esterase activity without requiring a free carboxyl group. The main pH optimum is between 4 and 5, in some cases higher.  相似文献   

13.
1. Cathepsin B1 was isolated from bovine spleen by autolysis, (NH(4))(2)SO(4) fractionation and chromatography on Amberlite IRC-50. Two isoenzyme forms were purified to homogeneity by chromatography on CM-cellulose and DEAE-Sephadex. 2. A collagenolytic cathepsin was separated from cathepsin B1 during purification. The remaining collagenolytic activity of the purified cathepsin-B1 isoenzymes was no greater than 0.3 unit/unit of cathepsin B1 compared with about 5.0 unit/unit of cathepsin B1 in the autolysed spleen extracts. 3. The cathepsin B1 isoenzymes lowered the viscosity of gelatin at 37 degrees C. Optimum activity was at pH4-5. 4. At 28 degrees C the interchain cross-links in native tropocollagen were cleaved most effectively at pH4-5. Insoluble tendon collagen was digested at pH3.5 and 28 degrees C to yield mainly alpha-chain components, with the loss of a short N-terminal sequence. 5. Electron-microscope studies of collagen fibrils showed that cathepsin B1 caused longitudinal splitting and dissociation of the protofilaments. The effect was not general but occurred at selected sites. 6. The isoenzymes of cathepsin B1 cleaved the telopeptide region of calf skin tropocollagen between the lysine-derived cross-link and the triple helix. The CB1 peptide fragments obtained from enzyme-degraded alpha1 chains were hydrolysed at Gly(12)-Ile(13) and Ser(14)-Val(15). The residual alpha2 CB1 peptides were hydrolysed at Ala(8)-Asp(9) and Asp(9)-Phe(10).  相似文献   

14.
Bovine spleen cathepsin B1 and collagenolytic cathepsin were separated by chromatography on Amberlite IRC-50 and collagenolytic cathepsin was partially purified by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex (A-50). 2. Collagenolytic cathepsin degraded insoluble tendon collagen maximally at pH 3.5 and 28 degrees C; mainly alpha-chain components were released into solution. At 28 degrees C the telopeptides in soluble skin collagen were also cleaved to yield alpha-chain components. Collagenolytic cathepsin was thus similar to cathepsin B1 in its action against native collagen, but mixtures of these two enzymes exhibited a synergistic effect. 3. The addition of thiol-blocking compounds produced similar inhibition of collagenolytic cathepsin and cathepsin B1. The enzyme responded similarly to all other compounds tested except to 6-aminohexanoic acid, when collagenolytic cathepsin was slightly activated and cathepsin B1 was almost unaffected. 4. Leupeptin, which is a structural analogue of arginine-containing synthetic substrates, inhibited collagenolytic cathepsin as effectively as cathepsin B1. Collagenolytic cathepsin was shown to retain a low residual activity against alpha-N-benzoyl-DL-arginine p-nitroanilide during purification which was equivalent to 0.2% of the activity of cathepsin B1. 5. Cathepsin B1 and collagenolytic cathepsin could not be separated by affinity chromatography on organomercurial-Sepharose 4B. The two enzymes could be resolved on DEAE-Sephadex (A-50) and by isoelectric focusing in an Ampholine pH gradient. The pI of the major cathepsin B1 isoenzyme was 4.9 and the pI of collagenolytic cathepsin was 6.4. 6. From chromatography on Sephadex G-75 (superfine grade) the molecular weights were calculated to be 26000 for cathepsin B1 and 20000 for collagenolytic cathepsin. The difference in molecular weight was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

15.
The dipeptidyl rhodamine diamide substrates (Z-Phe-Arg)2-R110 and (Z-Arg-Arg)2-R110 are 820- and 360-fold more selective for cathepsin L than for cathepsin B allowing a sensitive determination of cathepsin L activity in the presence of high activity of cathepsin B. The results obtained with cell lysates suggest that the cysteine proteinase activity of vital macrophages detected by flow cytometry with these substrates is mainly due to cathepsin L.  相似文献   

16.
Cathepsin X, purified to homogeneity from human liver, is a single chain glycoprotein with a molecular mass of approximately 33 kDa and pI 5.1-5.3. Cathepsin X was inhibited by stefin A, cystatin C and chicken cystatin (Ki = 1.7-15.0 nM), but poorly or not at all by stefin B (Ki > 250 nM) and L-kininogen, respectively. The enzyme was also inhibited by two specific synthetic cathepsin B inhibitors, CA-074 and GFG-semicarbazone. Cathepsin X was similar to cathepsin B and found to be a carboxypeptidase with preference for a positively charged Arg in P1 position. Contrary to the preference of cathepsin B, cathepsin X normally acts as a carboxymonopeptidase. However, the preference for Arg in the P1 position is so strong that cathepsin X cleaves substrates with Arg in antepenultimate position, acting also as a carboxydipeptidase. A large hydrophobic residue such as Trp is preferred in the P1' position, although the enzyme cleaved all P1' residues investigated (Trp, Phe, Ala, Arg, Pro). Cathepsin X also cleaved substrates with amide-blocked C-terminal carboxyl group with rates similar to those of the unblocked substrates. In contrast, no endopeptidase activity of cathepsin X could be detected on a series of o-aminobenzoic acid-peptidyl-N-[2,-dinitrophenyl]ethylenediamine substrates. Furthermore, the standard cysteine protease methylcoumarine amide substrates (kcat/Km approximately 5.0 x 103 M-1.s-1) were degraded approximately 25-fold less efficiently than the carboxypeptidase substrates (kcat/Km approximately 120.0 x 103 M-1.s-1).  相似文献   

17.
Summary The suitability of Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Leu-MNA and Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA for the assessment of cathepsin D activity was tested in biochemical and histochemical experiments. Substrates were dissolved in dimethylformamide and used at 0.1–0.5 mM in various buffers over a pH range of 3.5–7.4. Homogenates of various rat organs and isolated purified enzymes [cathepsin D from bovine spleen, dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP) I.V from porcine kidney and rat lung] were used as enzyme sources. Pepstatin, di-isopropylfluorophosphate (DFP),p-chloromercuribenzoate,o-phenanthroline and a series of DPP IV inhibitors were used in inhibitor experiments. At pH 3.5 and 5.0, substrates were used in a two-step postcoupling procedure with aminopeptidase M and dipeptidyl peptidase IV as auxiliary enzymes and Fast Blue BB as coupling agent. Results were compared with those obtained with haemoglobin. Above pH 5.0 substrates were used in a one-step postcoupling procedure.Cryostat sections of snap-frozen or cold aldehyde-fixed tissue pieces of various rat organs and biopsies of human jejunal mucosa were used in histochemical experiments. As in biochemical tests a two-step procedure was used in the pH range 3.5–5.0, but Fast Blue B was used in the second step for the simultancous coupling. Above pH 5.0 a onestep simultaneous azo coupling procedure was used with Fast Blue B as coupling agent.At pH 3.5 the hydrolysis rate of both synthetic substrates was about 100 x lower than that of haemoglobin when cathepsin D from bovine spleen was used. The activity was inhibited by pepstatin. With increasing pH the hydrolysis rate of Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA increased, while that of Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Leu-MNA decreased when organ homogenates were used as enzyme sources. However, the activity was not inhibited by pepstatin. It was inhibited by DFP. The extent of the inhibition with other substances was species and organ dependent. Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA was also cleaved by isolated and purified DPP IV of porcine kidney and rat lung and the activity was inhibited by DFP and DPP IV inhibitors.In histochemical experiments the staining obtained with both synthetic substrates at pH 3.5 was weak and rather diffuse, with only slight accentuation or none at all in the lysosomal region of cells. In the pH range 5.5–7.4 a very distinct reaction was observed with Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA only. The reaction product was localized in the brush border of enterocytes and of cells of the proximal kidney tubules. Endothelial cells of glomeruli and capillaries of the propria of the human jejunum also displayed a positive reaction. Lymphocytes in the propria of rat small intestine reacted to some extent. The reaction was inhibited by DFP. The extent of the inhibition with other substances varied.Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Leu-MNA and Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA are not efficient substrates for the assessment of cathepsin D activity. In histochemical studies diffusion artifacts must always be considered. In the pH range 5.5–7.4, Z-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Pro-MNA is cleaved by a serine endopeptidase and by a metalloendopeptidase. It remains to be established whether prolyl endopeptidase or DPP IV (or both) and which metalloendopeptidase are responsible for the cleavage. In the evaluation of enterobiopsies the demonstration of this activity is a sensitive means for the assessment of the state of the brush border.Dedicated to Professor Dr. T.H. Schiebler on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

18.
—Catheptic carboxypeptidase (cathepsin A) is present in lysosomal-enriched fractions of rat brain at levels approximately 5-fold that of cathepsin B1 and of the classical carboxypeptidase A but lower than that of cathepsin C and carboxypeptidase B. Cathepsin A was purified 40-fold by extraction of calf brain with an acetate buffer containing 0.5% desoxycholate followed by heat treatment, salt precipitation and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex. Purification revealed the presence of two distinct isoenzymatic forms of high mol. wt that were very stable when frozen in the presence of sucrose and KCl. Among N-protected dipeptides used as substrates the highest activity was given by Z-Glu-Tyr and Z-Phe-Tyr at a pH optimum of 5.5, Km1.1 mm and Vmax 0.5 μmol (Tyr)/mg protein per min. Brain cathepsin A was completely inhibited by low concentrations of DFP and PCMB but unaffected by thiols, EDTA and specific inhibitors of other cathepsins (pepstatin and chymostatin). The carboxypeptidase A-like specificity of cathepsin A was confirmed by breakdown of Ile5-angiotensin with release of C-terminal Phe. Cathepsin A may play a role in the turnover of selected hormonal peptides containing C-terminal neutral amino acids and in the sequential breakdown of proteins associated with degenerative conditions such as demyelination.  相似文献   

19.
T Fox  E de Miguel  J S Mort  A C Storer 《Biochemistry》1992,31(50):12571-12576
A peptide (PCB1) corresponding to the proregion of the rat cysteine protease cathepsin B was synthesized and its ability to inhibit cathepsin B activity investigated. PCB1 was found to be a potent inhibitor of mature cathepsin B at pH 6.0, yielding a Ki = 0.4 nM. This inhibition obeyed slow-binding kinetics and occurred as a one-step process with a k1 = 5.2 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 and a k2 = 2.2 x 10(-4) s-1. On dropping from pH 6.0 to 4.7, Ki increased markedly, and whereas k1 remained essentially unchanged, k2 increased to 4.5 x 10(-3) s-1. Thus, the increase in Ki at lower pH is due primarily to an increased dissociation rate for the cathepsin B/PCB1 complex. At pH 4.0, the inhibition was 160-fold weaker (Ki = 64 nM) than at pH 6.0, and the propeptide appeared to behave as a classical competitive inhibitor rather than a slow-binding inhibitor. Incubation of cathepsin B with a 10-fold excess of PCB1 overnight at pH 4.0 resulted in extensive cleavage of the propetide whereas no cleavage occurred at pH 6.0, consistent with the formation of a tight complex between cathepsin B and PCB1 at the higher pH. The synthetic propeptide of cathepsin B was found to be a much weaker inhibitor of papain, a structurally similar cysteine protease, and no pH dependence was observed. Inhibition constants of 2.8 and 5.6 microM were obtained for papain inhibition by PCB1 at pH 4.0 and 6.0, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The interactions between egg-white cystatin and the cysteine proteinases papain, human cathepsin B and bovine dipeptidyl peptidase I were studied. Cystatin was shown to be a competitive reversible inhibitor of cathepsin B (Ki 1.7 nM, k-1 about 2.3 X 10(-3) s-1). The inhibition of dipeptidyl peptidase I was shown to be reversible (Ki(app.) 0.22 nM, k-1 about 2.2 X 10(-3) s-1). Cystatin bound papain too tightly for Ki to be determined, but an upper limit of 5 pM was estimated. The association was a second-order process, with k+1 1.0 X 10(7) M-1 X s-1. Papain was shown to form equimolar complexes with cystatin. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of complexes formed between papain or cathepsin B and an excess of cystatin showed no peptide bond cleavage after incubation for 72 h. The reaction of the active-site thiol group of papain with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) at pH 8 and 2,2'-dithiobispyridine at pH 4 was blocked by complex-formation. Dipeptidyl peptidase I and papain were found to compete for binding to cystatin, contrary to a previous report. The two major isoelectric forms of cystatin were found to have similar specific inhibitory activities for papain, and similar affinities for papain, cathepsin B and dipeptidyl peptidase I. This, together with specific oxidation of the N-terminal serine residue with periodate, showed the N-terminal amino group of cystatin 1 to be unimportant for inhibition. General citraconylation of amino groups resulted in a large decrease in the affinity of cystatin for dipeptidyl peptidase I. It is concluded that the interaction of cystatin with cysteine proteinases has many characteristics similar to those of an inhibitor such as aprotinin with serine proteinases.  相似文献   

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