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1.
1. Cathepsin L of the white muscle of chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) in spawning migration was purified to homogeneity by a series of chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex (1st), SP-Sephadex, CM-Sephadex, DEAE-Sephadex (2nd) and Sephadex G-100. 2. The molecular weight of salmon muscle cathepsin L was estimated to be 30,000 and its isoelectric point was 5.2. 3. Cathepsin L had a pH optimum of 5.6, required a thiol-reducing reagent for activation, and was inhibited by cysteine protease inhibitors. 4. The Km and kcat values for Z-Phe-Arg-MCA were determined to be 1.68 microM and 15.8 s-1, respectively. This enzyme hydrolyzed proteins such as insulin B chain, hemoglobin, serum albumin and azocasein easily. 5. The bond specificity to oxidized insulin B chain inferred that the enzyme had a preference for hydrophobic amino acid in P2 and P3 residues.  相似文献   

2.
Selective cleavage of peptide bonds by cathepsins L and B from rat liver   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The selective cleavage of peptide bonds by cathepsin L from rat liver was examined with a hexapeptide, luteinizing hormone releasing hormone, neurotensin and oxidized insulin A chain as model substrates. The specificity of cathepsin L was compared with that of cathepsin B. Cathepsin L cleaved peptide bonds that have a hydrophobic amino acid, such as Phe, Leu, Val, and Trp or Tyr, in position P2. A polar amino acid, such as Tyr, Ser, Gly, Glu, Asp, Gln, or Asn, in position P1. enhanced the susceptibility of the peptide bond to cathepsin L, though the importance of the amino acid residue in position P1' was not as great as that of the amino acid in position P2 for the action of cathepsin L. These results suggest that, in contrast to cathepsin B, cathepsin L shows very clear specificity.  相似文献   

3.
Action of human liver cathepsin B on the oxidized insulin B chain.   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The lysosomal cysteine proteinase cathepsin B (from human liver) was tested for its peptide-bond specificity against the oxidized B-chain of insulin. Sixteen peptide degradation products were separated by high-pressure liquid chromatography and thin-layer chromatography and were analysed for their amino acid content and N-terminal amino acid residue. Five major and six minor cleavage sites were identified; the major cleavage sites were Gln(4)-His(5), Ser(9)-His(10), Glu(13)-Ala(14), Tyr(16)-Leu(17) and Gly(23)-Phe(24). The findings indicate that human cathepsin B has a broad specificity, with no clearly defined requirement for any particular amino acid residues in the vicinity of the cleavage sites. The enzyme did not display peptidyldipeptidase activity with this substrate, and showed a specificity different from those reported for two other cysteine proteinases, papain and rat cathepsin L.  相似文献   

4.
Human liver cathepsin L consists of a heavy chain and a light chain with Mr values of 25,000 and 5000 respectively. The chains have been purified and their N-terminal amino acid sequences have been determined. The 40 amino acids determined from the heavy chain and 42 amino acids sequenced in the light chain are homologous with the N-terminal and C-terminal regions respectively of the superfamily of cysteine proteinases. Therefore it is likely that the two chains of cathepsin L are derived by proteolysis of a single polypeptide precursor. Of the amino acids sequenced, 81% are identical with the homologous portions of a protein sequence for a major cysteine proteinase predicted from a cDNA clone from a mouse macrophage cell line. This is the closest relative amongst the known sequences in the superfamily and strongly indicates that the protein encoded by this mRNA is cathepsin L. The mouse protein is also probably the major excreted protein of a transformed cell line [Gal & Gottesman (1986) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 139, 156-162]. The heavy chain is identical in only 71% of its residues with the sequence of ox cathepsin S, providing further evidence that this latter enzyme is probably not a species variant of cathepsin L. The relationship with a second unidentified cathepsin cDNA clone from a bovine library is much weaker (41% identity), and so this clone remains unidentified.  相似文献   

5.
The specificities of human neutrophile elastase and chymotrypsin-like protease towards oxidized insulin B chain were studied. The neutrophile elastase was found to differ from porcine pancreatic elastase in its specificity towards insulin B chain. The neutrophile elastase preferred mostly valine near the cleaved bond in contrast to pancreatic elastase which preferred alanine as well as valine near the cleaved bond. Human neutrophile chymotrypsin-like protease was found to cleave mostly bonds involving leucine and phenylalanine.  相似文献   

6.
The major excreted protein of transformed mouse fibroblasts (MEP) has recently been identified as the lysosomal cysteine protease, cathepsin L. The synthesis and intracellular trafficking of this protein in mouse fibroblasts are regulated by growth factors and malignant transformation. To further define the basis for this regulation, a cDNA encoding MEP/cathepsin L was isolated from a mouse liver cDNA library and used to compare cathepsin L of normal and Kirsten sarcoma virus-transformed NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. Although cathepsin L message levels were elevated 20-fold in the transformed fibroblasts, normal and transformed cells displayed similar cathepsin L genomic DNA digest patterns and gene copy numbers, and cathepsin L mRNA sequences appeared identical by RNase protection analysis. These findings indicate that (i) cathepsin L is synthesized from the same gene in normal and transformed cells and (ii) cathepsin L polypeptides made by these cells are translated with the same primary sequence. Cathepsin L polypeptides synthesized by quiescent, growing, and transformed cells displayed similar isoelectric focusing patterns, suggesting similar post-translational modification. Site-directed mutagenesis of the mouse liver cDNA and expression in COS monkey cells was used to examine the glycosylation of mouse cathepsin L. The results indicated that only one of the two potential N-linked glycosylation sites (the one at Asn221) is glycosylated. Analysis by ion exchange chromatography on QAE-Sephadex, and affinity chromatography on mannose 6-phosphate receptor-Affi-Gel 10, indicated that the cathepsin L oligosaccharide was phosphorylated similarly in normal and transformed cells. Although several phosphorylated oligosaccharide species were observed, the major species contained two phosphomonoester moieties and bound efficiently to the receptor. These findings suggest that cathepsin L made by normal and transformed mouse fibroblasts are identical and substantiate the hypothesis that trafficking of cathepsin L in these cells is regulated by growth-induced changes in the lysosomal protein transport system.  相似文献   

7.
Cathepsin L is a lysosomal cysteine protease involved in intracellular protein degradation. Recently, several new cysteine proteases have been identified. Human cathepsin V, a thymus- and testis-specific human cysteine protease, shares 78% sequence identity with human cathepsin L. Due to the strong sequence similarity, highly selective reagents are needed to elucidate the physiological functions of the two enzymes. Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been prepared against recombinant human cathepsin L. Antibodies produced by five clones reacted with procathepsin L and mature cathepsin L. They also reacted with cathepsin L in complex with a peptide fragment, which is identical to the alternatively spliced segment of the p41 form of MHC Class II associated invariant chain. Two mAbs, (M105 and H102) were specific for cathepsin L, while three (N135, B145 and D24) cross-reacted with cathepsin V. None of the mAbs cross-reacted with cathepsins B, H and S. We have developed a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for quantifying cathepsin L. This sandwich ELISA uses a combination of two monoclonal antibodies which recognize different, non-overlapping epitopes on the cathepsin L molecule. The lower detection limit of the sandwich ELISA was 5 ng of cathepsin L per ml.  相似文献   

8.
Increased levels of both the cysteine protease, cathepsin L, and the serine protease, uPA (urokinase-type plasminogen activator), are present in solid tumors and are correlated with malignancy. uPA is released by tumor cells as an inactive single-chain proenzyme (pro-uPA) which has to be activated by proteolytic cleavage. We analyzed in detail the action of the cysteine protease, cathepsin L, on recombinant human pro-uPA. Enzymatic assays, SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis revealed that cathepsin L is a potent activator of pro-uPA. As determined by N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis, activation of pro-uPA by cathepsin L is achieved by cleavage of the Lys158-Ile159 peptide bond, a common activation site of serine proteases such as plasmin and kallikrein. Similar to cathepsin B (Kobayashi et al., J. Biol. Chem. (1991) 266, 5147-5152) cleavage of pro-uPA by cathepsin L was most effective at acidic pH (molar ratio of cathepsin L to pro-uPA of 1:2,000). Nevertheless, even at pH 7.0, pro-uPA was activated by cathepsin L, although a 10-fold higher concentration of cathepsin L was required. As tumor cells may produce both pro-uPA and cathepsin L, implications for the activation of tumor cell-derived pro-uPA by cathepsin L may be considered. Different pathways of activation of pro-uPA in tumor tissues may coexist: (i) autocatalytic intrinsic activation of pro-uPA; (ii) activation by serine proteases (plasmin, kallikrein, Factor XIIa); and (iii) activation by cysteine proteases (cathepsin B and L).  相似文献   

9.
10.
Cathepsin L from skeletal muscle of the lizard Agama stellio stellio was purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange and gel-permeation chromatography. The molecular weight of the cathepsin L is estimated to be 34 kD, and its isoelectric point is 5.5. The cathepsin L has a pH optimum of 6.1, requires a thiol-reducing reagent for activation, and is inhibited by cysteine protease inhibitors. The Km and kcat values for Z-Phe-Arg-MCA as substrate are 1.4 microM and 6.2 sec-1, respectively. This enzyme readily hydrolyzes proteins such as insulin B chain, hemoglobin, and serum albumin.  相似文献   

11.
A cysteine proteinase purified from pupae of the blowfly (A. grahami) was tested for its peptide-bond specificity against the oxidized B-chain of insulin. Fifteen peptides were separated on HPLC using both gradient and isocratic elution methods. Analyses of amino acid content and N-terminal amino acids indicated that these were eleven homogeneous peptides produced by digestion and undigested insulin B-chain. Glu13-Ala14 and Tyr26-Thr27 were the major cleavage sites, and Asn3-Gln4, Cys7-Gly8, Tyr16-Leu17, Leu17-Val18 and Cys19-Gly20 were also often cleaved. These findings show the similarity between this enzyme and cathepsin L.  相似文献   

12.
A protease, excreted by a sporogeneous strain of B. megaterium, growing exponentially in a minimum glucose ammonium medium, was isolated. It is a neutral endopeptidase, stabilized by Ca++, inhibited by o-phenanthroline, but not by di-isopropylfluorophosphate. The specificity, studied on insulin B-chain, glucagon, cytochrome c, and dipeptides substrates, indicated the need for a dipeptide backbone with both substituted amino and carboxyl groups. A requirement was observed for a nonpolar lateral chain in the amino acid whose amino group was involved in the peptide bond (Leu, Phe, Ala, He, Val). Rates of hydrolysis varied also with the amino acid whose carboxyl group was involved (e.g., His > Ser > Ala > Gly). In complex medium, supplemented with Yeast Extract, the biosynthesis of the protease was repressed during growth, but the same enzyme was excreted during sporulation. The repression was apparently of the same nature as that controlling sporulation during and after growth (e.g., repression by a mixture of amino acids or high concentration of glucose). An asporogeneous mutant showed a normal product ion of protease under all conditions, and a low intracellular protease turnover after growth. A mutant unable to produce protease showed a normal sporulation and a high protein turnover. This protease, here termed megapeptidase, seems to be a typical growth enzyme, not related to either the sporulation process or to the protein turnover after growth.  相似文献   

13.
Summary K-casein and oxidised insulin were digested with an acid protease extracted fromCynara cardunculus L. The fragments produced were isolated and characterised. In k-casein cleavage occured specifically at Phe 105-Met 106 bond. In oxidised insulin seven fragments were obtained and cleavage was found to occur at the carboxylic side of (Phe, Leu, He)-X, where X was preferentially Val or Tyr. The results obtained with insulin B chain suggest thatCynara cardunculus L. protease possesses a greater specificity than other acid proteases reported.  相似文献   

14.
A cDNA clone encoding the human cysteine protease cathepsin L was expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli in a T7 expression system. The insoluble recombinant enzyme was solubilized in urea and refolded at alkaline pH. 38-kDa procathepsin L was purified by gel filtration at pH 8.0, and a 29-kDa form of the enzyme was purified by gel filtration after autoprocessing of the proenzyme at pH 6.5. The kinetic properties of the 29-kDa species of recombinant cathepsin L were similar to those published for the human liver enzyme (Mason, R. W., Green, G. D. J., and Barrett, A.J. (1985) Biochem. J. 226, 233-241), using benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Arg-7-(4-methyl)coumarylamide as substrate. However, the stability of the recombinant enzyme, and its pH optimum for this substrate was shifted to a higher pH. Structure-function studies of cathepsin L were performed by constructing mutations in either the propeptide portion or the carboxyl-terminal light chain portion of the protein. These constructions were expressed in the E. coli system, and enzymatic activities were assayed following solubilization, renaturation, and gel filtration chromatography of the mutated proteins. Deletions of increasing size in the propeptide resulted in large proportional losses of activity, indicating that the propeptide is essential for proper enzyme folding and/or processing in this renaturation system. Deletion of part of the light chain containing a disulfide-forming cysteine residue or a single amino acid substitution of alanine for this cysteine residue resulted in almost complete loss of activity. These data suggest that the disulfide bond joining the heavy and light chains of cathepsin L is essential for enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

15.
Cathepsin S (CatS) is a lysosomal cysteine protease belonging to the papain superfamily. Because of the relatively broad substrate specificity of this family, a specific substrate for CatS is not yet known. Based on a detailed study of the CatS endopeptidase specificity, using six series of internally quenched fluorescent peptides, we were able to design a specific substrate for CatS. The peptide series was based on the sequence GRWHTVGLRWE-Lys(Dnp)-DArg-NH2, which shows only one single cleavage site between Gly and Leu and where every substrate position between P-3 and P-3' was substituted with up to 15 different amino acids. The endopeptidase specificity of CatS was mainly determined by the P-2, P-1', and the P-3' substrate positions. Based on this result, systematically modified substrates were synthesized. Two of these modified substrates, Mca-GRWPPMGLPWE-Lys(Dnp)-DArg-NH2 and Mca-GRWHPMGAPWE-Lys(Dnp)-DArg-NH2, did not react with the purified cysteine proteases cathepsin B (CatB) and cathepsin L (CatL). Using a specific CatS inhibitor, we could further show that these two peptides were not cleaved by endosomal fractions of antigen presenting cells (APCs), when CatS was inhibited and related cysteine proteases cathepsin B, H, L and X were still active. Although aspartic proteases like cathepsin E and cathepsin D were also present, our substrates were suitable to quantify cathepsin S activity specifically in APCs, including B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells without the use of any protease inhibitor. We find that CatS activity differs significantly not only between the three types of professional APCs but also between endosomal and lysosomal compartments.  相似文献   

16.
1. Lugworm protease C further purified by benzamidine-affinity chromatography, exhibited peptidase specificity for arginyl and lysyl bonds. 2. Protease C consisted of a single polypeptide with a mol. wt of ca 23,000 as determined by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, exhibited a u.v. absorption maximum at 280 with an (mg/ml) extinction coefficient of 0.93 and fluorescence spectra typical of a protein containing tryptophan, and had an amino acid composition similar to trypsins. 3. The Kms of the cleavages of the arginyl bond of oxidized insulin B chain and of the lysyl bond of the gly23-ala30 fragment were determined to be 0.72 and 0.96 mM; the corresponding kcats were 38 sec-1 and 1.5 sec-1. The Km and kcat for TAME were 0.042 mM, and 110 sec-1. 4. Lugworm protease C was confirmed to be a trypsin.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Lon protease from Escherichia coli degraded lambda N protein in a reaction mixture consisting of the two homogeneous proteins, ATP, and MgCl2 in 50 mM Tris, Ph 8.0. Genetic and biochemical data had previously indicated that N protein is a substrate for Lon protease in vivo (Gottesman, S., Gottesman, M., Shaw, J. E., and Pearson, M. L. (1981) Cell 24, 225-233). Under conditions used for N protein degradation, several lambda and E. coli proteins, including native proteins, oxidatively modified proteins, and cloned fragments of native proteins, were not degraded by Lon protease. Degradation of N protein occurred with catalytic amounts of Lon protease and required the presence of ATP or an analog of ATP. This is the first demonstration of the selective degradation of a physiological substrate by Lon protease in vitro. The turnover number for N protein degradation was approximately 60 +/- 10 min-1 at pH 8.0 in 50 mM Tris/HCl, 25 mM MgCl2 and 4 mM ATP. By comparison the turnover number for oxidized insulin B chain was 20 min-1 under these conditions. Kinetic studies suggest that N protein (S0.5 = 13 +/- 5 microM) is intermediate between oxidized insulin B chain (S0.5 = 160 +/- 10 microM) and methylated casein (S0.5 = 2.5 +/- 1 microM) in affinity for Lon protease. N protein was extensively degraded by Lon protease with an average of approximately six bonds cleaved per molecule. In N protein, as well as in oxidized insulin B chain and glucagon, Lon protease preferentially cut at bonds at which the carboxy group was contributed by an amino acid with an aliphatic side chain (leucine or alanine). However, not all such bonds of the substrates were cleaved, indicating that sequence or conformational determinants beyond the cleavage site affect the ability of Lon protease to degrade a protein.  相似文献   

19.
Singlet oxygen is a causal factor in light-induced skin photoaging and the cytotoxic process of tumor cells in photodynamic chemotherapy. To develop a better understanding of the functional consequences of protein modification by singlet oxygen, the effects of naphthalene endoperoxide on lysosomal protease, cathepsin, were examined. When the soluble fraction of normal human fetal skin fibroblast cells was treated with the endoperoxide, the activities of cysteine proteases, cathepsins B and L/S, were inhibited, but that of aspartate protease, cathepsin D/E, was not. The reduction of the endoperoxide-treated soluble fractions by treatment with dithiothreitol barely recovered the activities. Cathepsin B, purified from normal human liver, exhibited similar profiles to that in cytosol. These data suggest that singlet oxygen oxidatively modifies an amino acid residue essential for catalysis and consequently results in the irreversible inactivation of cysteine protease-type cathepsin.  相似文献   

20.
In murine fibroblasts, efficient proteolysis of reovirus outer capsid protein sigma3 during cell entry by virions requires the acid-dependent lysosomal cysteine protease cathepsin L. The importance of cathepsin L for infection of other cell types is unknown. Here we report that the acid-independent lysosomal cysteine protease cathepsin S mediates outer capsid processing in macrophage-like P388D cells. P388D cells supported infection by virions of strain Lang, but not strain c43. Genetic studies revealed that this difference is determined by S4, the viral gene segment that encodes sigma3. c43-derived subvirion particles that lack sigma3 replicated normally in P388D cells, suggesting that the difference in infectivity of Lang and c43 virions is at the level of sigma3 processing. Infection of P388D cells with Lang virions was inhibited by the broad spectrum cysteine protease inhibitor trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane but not by NH(4)Cl, which raises the endocytic pH and thereby inhibits acid-dependent proteases such as cathepsins L and B. Outer capsid processing and infection of P388D cells with Lang virions were also inhibited by a cathepsin S-specific inhibitor. Furthermore, in the presence of NH(4)Cl, cell lines engineered to express cathepsin S supported infection by Lang, but not c43, virions. Our results thus indicate that differences in susceptibility to cathepsin S-mediated sigma3 processing are responsible for strain differences in reovirus infection of macrophage-like P388D cells and other cathepsin S-expressing cells. Additionally, our data suggest that the acid dependence of reovirus infections of most other cell types may reflect the low pH requirement for the activities of most other lysosomal proteases rather, than some other acid-dependent aspect of cell entry.  相似文献   

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