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1.
Extraembryonal degradation of yolk protein is necessary to provide the avian embryo with required free amino acids during early embryogenesis. Screening of proteolytic activity in different compartments of quail eggs revealed an increasing activity in the yolk sac membrane during the first week of embryogenesis. In this tissue, the occurrence of cathepsin B, a lysosomal cysteine proteinase, and cathepsin D, a lysosomal aspartic proteinase, has been described recently (Gerhartz et al., Comp Biochem Physiol, 118B:159-166, 1997). Determination of cathepsin B-like and cathepsin D-like proteolytic activity in the yolk sac membrane indicated a significant correlation between growth of the yolk sac membrane and proteolytic activity, shown by an almost constant specific activity. Both proteinases could be localized in the endodermal cells, which are in direct contact to the yolk. The concentration of proteinases in the endodermal cells appears to be almost unaltered in the investigated early stage of quail development, whereas the amount of endodermal cells increases rapidly, seen by a complicated folding of the yolk sac membrane. In the same cells quail cystatin, a potent inhibitor of quail cathepsin B (Ki 0.6 nM), has been localized at day 8 of embryonic development. Approximately at this stage of development, the quail embryo stops metabolizing yolk. In conclusion, it is strongly indicated that the amount of available free amino acids, produced by proteolytic degradation and supporting embryonic growth, is regulated by the growth of the yolk sac membrane.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this study was to provide evidence on the modulation of lysosomal enzymes in terms of both gene expression and enzymatic activity during follicle maturation. For this purpose three lysosomal enzymes, cathepsins B, D, and L, were studied in relation to yolk formation and degradation, during the main phases of ovarian follicle growth in the pelagophil species, the sea bream Sparus aurata. Specific attention was focused on the gene expression quantification method, on the assay of enzymatic activities, and on the relationship between the proteolytic cleavage of yolk proteins (YPs), cathepsin gene expression and cathepsin activities. For the gene expression study, the cathepsins B-like and L-like mRNAs were isolated and partially or fully characterized, respectively; the sequences were used as design specific primers for the quantification of cathepsin gene expression by real-time PCR, in follicles at different stages of maturation. The enzymatic assays for cathepsins B, D, and L were optimized in terms of specificity, sensitivity and reliability, using specific substrates and inhibitors. In ovulated eggs, the lipovitellin I (LV I) was degraded and the changes in electrophoretic pattern were preceded by an increase in the activity of a cysteine proteinase, cathepsin L, and its mRNA. Cathepsin B did not appear to be involved in YP changes during the final maturation stage.  相似文献   

3.
Cathepsin D Activity in the Vitellogenesis of Xenopus laevis   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
An ovarian extract of Xenopus laevis exhibited in SDS-PAGE analyses an activity cleaving vitellogenin to lipovitellins under mildly acidic conditions. This activity was pepstatin-sensitive and inhibited by monospecific anti-rat liver cathepsin D antibody and thus identified as cathepsin D. Immunoblot analysis showed that two proteins of 43 kDa and 36 kDa immunoreacted with the antibody.
Immunocytochemical staining revealed that the enzyme was located in the cortical cytoplasm of stage I and II oocytes and in small yolk platelets and nascent forms of large yolk platelets in the cortical cytoplasm of stage III oocytes. In stage IV and V oocytes, small yolk platelets retained the immuno-staining but large yolk platelets decreased it. No immuno-positive signals were observed in oocytes at stage VI. When examined by immunoelectron microscopy, gold particles indicated that cathepsin D was located on dense lamellar bodies in the cortical cytoplasm of stage I and II oocytes. The particles were located on primordial yolk platelets and on the superficial layer of small yolk platelets in stage III oocytes, while they were sparse or not present at all on large yolk platelets in stage IV and V oocytes. These results indicate that cathepsin D plays a key role in vitellogenesis by cleaving endocytosed vitellogenin to yolk proteins in developing oocytes.  相似文献   

4.
A cysteine, cathepsin B-like proteinase activity has been found in Drosophila embryos. It appears associated with yolk granules and its activity during embryogenesis correlates well with the degradation of these organelles. In mature oocytes, the enzyme is found in an inactive form which may be activated by limited proteolysis by a serine proteinase also present in oocytes. In early embryos, when solubilized in vitro, the cathepsin B-like proteinase is found in a form of high molecular mass (approx 1000 kDa). This decreases with development down to about 39 kDa, likely the mass of the free proteinase. The heavy form apparently results from the tight association with a yolk protein complex. The proteinase has been found in vitro to degrade readily the yolk polypeptides. The proteinase activity increases during early embryogenesis in parallel with the decrease in molecular weight of the heavy form, and decreases to low values in late embryos. We have also found that ammonium chloride can inhibit in vivo the degradation of yolk and, in parallel, the developmental inactivation of the proteinase. The results altogether suggest that the cathepsin B-like proteinase is implicated in yolk degradation in Drosophila.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we present a propeptide-like cysteine proteinase inhibitor, Drosophila CTLA-2-like protein (D/CTLA-2), a CG10460 (crammer) gene product, with an amino acid sequence significantly similar to the proregion of Drosophila cysteine proteinase 1 (CP1). Recombinant D/CTLA-2, expressed in E. coli, strongly inhibited Bombyx cysteine proteinase (BCP) with a Ki value of 4.7 nM. It also inhibited cathepsins L and H with Ki values of 3.9 (human liver) and 0.43 (rabbit liver) nM, and 7.8 nM (human liver), respectively. Recombinant D/CTLA-2 exhibited low but significant inhibitory activities to cathepsin B with Ki values of 15 nM (human liver) and 110 nM (rat liver), but hardly inhibited papain. We attempted to purify cysteine proteinases inhibited by D/CTLA-2 from total bodies of adult Drosophila. Recombinant D/CTLA-2 significantly inhibited CP1 with a Ki value of 12 nM, indicating that CP1, a cognate enzyme of D/CTLA-2, is a target enzyme of the inhibitor in Drosophila cells. These results indicate that D/CTLA-2 is a selective inhibitor of cathepsin L-like cysteine proteinases similar to other propeptide-like cysteine proteinase inhibitors such as Bombyx cysteine proteinase inhibitors (BCPI) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-2 (CTLA-2). D/CTLA-2 was expressed over the whole life cycle of Drosophila. Strong expression was observed in the garland cells and prothoracic gland in the late stages of embryonic development. These results suggest that D/CTLA-2, implicated in intra- and extra-cellular digestive processes, functions in these tissues by suppressing uncontrolled enzymatic activities of CP1.  相似文献   

6.
1. Increases in activities of muscle muticatalytic proteinase, modori-inducing proteinase (latent trypsin-like proteinase), cathepsin B and L-like proteases and cathepsin D were observed more markedly for male fish than female fish, in the spawning stage. 2. Decreases in inhibitory activities of muscle serine and cysteine protease inhibitors were observed more markedly for male fish than female fish in the spawning stage.  相似文献   

7.
  • 1.1. Two proteinases have been identified in yolk granules of Nereis diversicolor mature oocytes, an aminopeptidase and an acid cysteine proteinase.
  • 2.2. The aminopeptidase was identified as a metallo-enzyme having a molecular weight of about 260 kDa.
  • 3.3. Except that the acid cysteine proteinase is a high molecular weight protein (200 kDa) and has a very low pH optimum (3.0), the enzyme possesses properties resembling those of mammalian cathepsin L.
  • 4.4. The cathepsin L-like proteinase was found to be liable to the in vitro proteolysis of the yolk granule proteins and is therefore suggested to be involved in yolk protein processing.
  相似文献   

8.
Binet MR  Poole RK 《FEBS letters》2000,471(1):67-70
Feeding bioassay results established that the soybean cysteine proteinase inhibitor N (soyacystatin N, scN) substantially inhibits growth and development of western corn rootworm (WCR), by attenuating digestive proteolysis [Zhao, Y. et al. (1996) Plant Physiol. 111, 1299-1306]. Recombinant scN was more inhibitory than the potent and broad specificity cysteine proteinase inhibitor E-64. WCR digestive proteolytic activity was separated by mildly denaturing SDS-PAGE into two fractions and in-gel assays confirmed that the proteinase activities of each were largely scN-sensitive. Since binding affinity to the target proteinase [Koiwa, H. et al. (1998) Plant J. 14, 371-380] governs the effectiveness of scN as a proteinase inhibitor and an insecticide, five peptides (28-33 kDa) were isolated from WCR gut extracts by scN affinity chromatographic separation. Analysis of the N-terminal sequence of these peptides revealed similarity to a cathepsin L-like cysteine proteinase (DvCAL1, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera cathepsin L) encoded by a WCR cDNA. Our results indicate that cathepsin L orthologs are pivotal digestive proteinases of WCR larvae, and are targets of plant defensive cystatins (phytocystatins), like scN.  相似文献   

9.
A papain inhibitor or 22 kDa was isolated from human placenta and shown to be identical to residues Cys246-Leu373 of the third domain of human kininogen. This kininogen domain and recombinant human cystatin C were inactivated by peptide bond cleavages at hydrophobic amino acid residues due to the action of cathepsin D. These results further support the proposed role cathepsin D in the regulation of cysteine proteinase activity.  相似文献   

10.
A pepstatin A-sensitive enzyme involved in yolk formation was purified from the masu salmon (Oncorhynchus masou) ovary using in vitro generation of yolk proteins from purified vitellogenin to assay enzymatic activity. Purification of the enzyme involved precipitation of ovarian extracts by water and ammonium sulfate followed by five steps of column chromatography. After SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, the purified enzyme appeared as a single approximately 42 kDa band that was immunoreactive to anti-human cathepsin D. The course of proteolytic cleavage of the three major yolk proteins (lipovitellin, beta'-component, and phosvitin) in fertilized masu salmon and Sakhalin taimen (Hucho perryi) eggs and embryos was visualized by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using specific antisera. Major yolk protein bands appeared in positions corresponding to 92 kDa, 68 kDa, and 22 kDa (lipovitellin-derived peptides), as well as 17 kDa (beta'-component). During embryo development, the 92 kDa and 22 kDa bands gradually decreased in intensity, becoming undetectable in alevins. The 68 kDa band and a minor 24 kDa band became more intense after the eyed stage. Two additional peptides, corresponding to 40 and 28 kDa, newly appeared in alevins. During embryonic growth, the beta'-component band (17 kDa) persisted and phosvitin appeared to be progressively dephosphorylated. In vitro analysis of lipovitellin proteolysis indicated that the enzyme involved is a Pefabloc SC-sensitive serine protease. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that a cathepsin D-like protease and serine proteases play key roles in yolk formation and degradation, respectively, in salmonid fishes.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
An expressed sequence tag database of the freshwater fish parasite, Ichthyophthirius multifiliis (Ciliophora) was analyzed to seek for proteases potentially involved in the invasion and degradation of host tissues during infection. The translation of the database revealed two cathepsin L cysteine proteases (Icp1 and Icp2) of the C1A peptidase subfamily. The analysis of Icp1 and Icp2 sequences suggested that both proteases would be synthesized as preproproteins, with a mature domain of 27.9 and 22.8 kDa, respectively. Their expression level was determined in the trophont parasitic stage, in the tomont reproductive stage, and in the theront infective stage by real-time RT-PCR. ICP1 and ICP2 were significantly upregulated in trophont and theront stages in comparison with the tomont stage. Mature peptides of Icp1 and Icp2 were identified in crude extracts of I. multifiliis trophonts by LC-MS/MS. Zymograms showed three to seven activity bands at the optimum pH of cathepsin L cysteine proteases. Two bands displaying cysteine protease activity were identified by inhibition with E-64. They represented the major proteolytic activity of the trophont stage at pH 5-7, suggesting that cysteine proteases play an important role in the infection process.  相似文献   

13.
Eggs of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, contain a high level of a proteinase which is most active in acidic pH region. The proteinase was purified from an extract of eggs by a six-step procedure which included conventional chromatographic fractionations. The molecular mass of the proteinase was estimated to be 350 kDa by gel filtration and 47 kDa by electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gels, suggesting an octameric structure. The amino acid composition was found to resemble that of mammalian lysosomal cysteine proteinases, in particular cathepsin L. The NH2-terminal 10-residue sequence is Val-Gln-Phe-Phe-Asp-Leu-Val-Lys-Glu-Glu-. The enzyme appears to be a member of the class of cysteine proteinases since it was strongly inhibited by sulfhydryl-reactive compounds and N-[N-(1,3-trans-carboxyoxiran-2-carbonyl)-L-leucyl]-agmatine (E-64). The enzyme hydrolyzed various protein substrates, such as hemoglobin, vitellogenin, vitellin, and lipophorin, with maximal activity around pH 3-3.5. The specificity of the cleavage sites in the oxidized B chain of insulin was rather well defined and there was high affinity for hydrophobic residues at the P2 and P3 positions. The cysteine proteinase is thought to be involved in protein degradation during embryonic development of silkworm eggs.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of yolk consumption was studied morphologically and biochemically in Japanese quail Coturnix japonica. The amount of yolk granules in the yolk (or 'yolk cell') decreased in two steps during embryonic development. In the first step, during days 0-4 of incubation, the yolk-granule weight decreased at a rate of 13 mg/day. This decrease was due to segregation by endodermal cells that were newly formed in the developing yolk sac. In the second step after day 6, the decrease was drastic at a rate of 29.8 mg/day during days 6-12 and very slow thereafter. The decrease at the second step was due to the enzymatic digestion of yolk granules by cathepsin D that coexisted in yolk spheres. This digesting reaction was triggered by the solubilization of the granules with high concentrations of salts that were supplied after disruption of the limiting membrane of yolk spheres. The 'yolk cell' seemed to die around day 5 of incubation. Thus the digestion products might be taken up together with yolk lipids by endocytosis into the endodermal cells and transported to blood vessels.  相似文献   

15.
Cathepsin D was purified from ovaries of Xenopus laevis by both QAE-cellulose and pepstatin-Sepharose chromatography and then characterized and compared with Xenopus liver cathepsin D. Ovary cathepsin D appeared predominantly as a 43-kilodalton (kDa) molecular mass, as revealed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, whereas the liver enzyme was obtained exclusively as a 36-kDa protein. The purified 43-kDa ovary enzyme cleaved vitellogenin limitedly to produce yolk proteins at pH 5.6. The specific activity of ovary cathepsin D was five to six times lower than that of the liver enzyme, as measured by hemoglobin-hydrolysis at pH 3, but the ovary enzyme was shown to be superior to the liver enzyme in terms of vitellogenin-cleaving activity, as examined at pH 5.6. Ovarian enzyme preparations contained variable amounts of 36-kDa species; this form was considered to be an autolytic product of the 43-kDa form arising during purification, because it was not detected in oocyte extracts but was generated by incubation of the purified 43-kDa enzyme alone in an acid solution. The conversion of the 43-kDa form by hepatic factors was accompanied by a marked increase in hemoglobin-hydrolytic activity.  相似文献   

16.
Summary

Three kinds of yolk proteins (vitellin, egg-specific protein and 30 k-proteins) are found in silkmoth eggs and have been well characterized. Essentially these proteins are considered to be amino acid reserves for developing embryos. Since at an early stage of egg development the cysteine proteinase accounts for the majority of the total proteinase activity, it may be involved in the degradation of yolk proteins. The enzyme is stored in the eggs as an inactive pro-form, indicating that the activation of the enzyme might be one of the key steps in yolk protein degradation. To investigate at the molecular level how yolk proteins degradation takes place, we have studied Bombyx acid cysteine proteinase (BCP) during an early period of embryonic development. We summarize how proteinases are regulated and are involved in the degradation of Bombyx yolk proteins during embryogenesis. These will be discussed mainly in light of recent results obtained from eggs of the silkmoth, Bombyx mori.  相似文献   

17.
Chymotrypsin-like, carboxypeptidase A-like and leucine aminopeptidase-like activities have been detected in the midgut of Colorado potato beetle larvae, Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), in addition to the previously identified cathepsin B, D, and H. We have characterized a new chymotrypsin-like activity using the specific substrates N- succinyl-L-alanyl-L-alanyl-L-prolyl-L-phenylalanine-p-nitroanilide and N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine p-nitroanilide. This novel proteinase, with a pH optimum of 5.5–6.5, was neither activated by thiol compounds nor inhibited by cysteine proteinase inhibitors. Among several serine proteinase inhibitors tested, PMSF was the most effective. Gelatin-containing SDS-PAGE gels and activity staining after gel electrophoresis indicated that chymotrypsin-like activity was associated with a major band of about 63 Kda and a minor band of about 100 Kda. The major exopeptidases found in the larval midgut extracts were leucine aminopeptidase and carboxypeptidase A. Most endo- and exoproteolytic activities studied were evenly distributed among the midgut sections, indicating that there is no clear regional differentiation in the digestion of proteins. Chymotrypsin and cathepsin B, D, and H were mainly located in the endoperitrophic and ectoperitrophic spaces, with only a small activity associated with the midgut epithelium. In contrast, leucine aminopeptidase was mainly located on the wall tissue, although some activity was distributed between the ecto- and endoperitrophic spaces. The potential roles of Colorado potato beetle digestive chymotrypsin in the proteolytic activation of the δ-endotoxin from Bacillus thuringiensis, and in the use of protease inhibitors to disrupt protein digestion, are discussed. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 36:181–201, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Altered lysosomal function in the visceral yolk sac can result in abnormal development. As proteolysis is an important function of the rodent visceral yolk sac during early and mid-gestation, we characterized the lysosomal proteolytic enzyme activity of this extraembryonic membrane and determined the effects of inhibitors of protein degradation on embryonic development. Constituent activities of cysteine and aspartic acid proteinases were measured in rat visceral yolk sac on gestation day 12, and the effects of the cysteine proteinase inhibitors leupeptin, E-64 [trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido(4-guanido)butane] and N-ethylmaleimide and the aspartic acid proteinase inhibitor pepstatin were determined in Sprague-Dawley rat embryos cultured in vitro from gestation days 10-12. It was determined that only cysteine proteinases, primarily cathepsins B and L, are active in the mid-gestation visceral yolk sac. The cysteine proteinase inhibitors leupeptin and E-64 both produced a concentration-related decrease in embryonic growth, as measured by crown-rump length, somite number, and embryonic protein content, and a concentration-related increase in incidence of abnormalities. A characteristic pattern of abnormalities was produced which involved a decrease in neural tube volume and the formation of a subectodermal blister opposite the point of attachment of the vitelline vessels. At high concentrations, anophthalmia was also observed. The decreased neural tube volume was associated with increased osmolality of the exocoelomic fluid, the major extraembryonic fluid compartment. It is possible that the osmotic change decreased neural tube volume by causing water to move to the compartment with a higher solute concentration, out of the embryo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
During cleavage and blastula stages of embryos of the teleost Fundulus heteroclitus all of the cells are both electotonically coupled and dye coupled to one another, as determined by microelectrode impalements and spread of Lucifer Yellow. At about the time that gastrulation begins we observed a specific loss of junctional coupling between the yolk cell and cells of the blastoderm. Passage of Lucifer Yellow between the yolk cell and blastoderm was reduced at stage 12 (late blastula), and not detected at stage 13 and thereafter, although cells of the blastoderm remain dye coupled to one another through gastrula stages. Also, junctional electrical coupling between the yolk cell and blastoderm became substantially reduced at stage 13 and thereafter. The loss of coupling at this specific cell apposition and time and the large size of the yolk cell may prove useful in analyzing the underlying cellular mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
采用阴离子交换层析法,从棉铃虫Helicoverpa armigera卵母细胞中分离纯化到一种半胱氨酸蛋白酶,SDS-PAGE电泳显示为一条带,分子量约为29 kD,原位水解电泳表明其具有蛋白水解活性。对其进行了部分氨基酸序列测定,初步确定这种蛋白酶属于半胱氨酸蛋白酶类中的组织蛋白酶B类。  相似文献   

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