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1.
The carboxypeptidase activity occurring in hog intestinal mucosa is apparently due to two distinct enzymes which may be responsible for the release of basic COOH-terminal amino acids from short peptides. The plasma membrane-bound carboxypeptidase activity which occurs at neutral optimum pH levels was found to be enhanced by CoCl(2) and inhibited by guanidinoethylmercaptosuccinic acid, o-phenanthroline, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid and cadmium acetate; whereas the soluble carboxypeptidase activity which occurs at an optimum pH level of 5.0 was not activated by CoCl(2) and only slightly inhibited by o-phenanthroline, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, NiCl(2) and CdCl(2). The latter activity was presumably due to lysosomal cathepsin B, which is known to be present in the soluble fraction of hog intestinal mucosa. Although the membrane-bound enzyme was evenly distributed along the small intestine, it was not anchored in the phospholipidic bilayer via a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol moiety, as carboxypeptidase M from human placenta is. The enzyme was not solubilized by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, but was solubilized to practically the same extent by several detergents. The purified trypsin-solubilized form is a glycoprotein with a molecular mass of 200 kDa, as determined by performing SDS-PAGE and gel filtration, which differs considerably from the molecular mass of human placental carboxypeptidase M (62 kDa). It was found to cleave lysyl bonds more rapidly than arginyl bonds, which is not so in the case of carboxypeptidase M, and immunoblotting analysis provided further evidence that hog intestinal and human placental membrane-bound carboxypeptidases do not bear much resemblance to each other. Since the latter enzyme has been called carboxypeptidase M, it is suggested that the former might be carboxypeptidase D, the recently described new member of the carboxypeptide B-type family.  相似文献   

2.
A membrane-bound neutral carboxypeptidase B-like enzyme was solubilized from human placental microvilli with 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS) and purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography and affinity chromatography on arginine-Sepharose. It gave a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent Mr of 62,000 with or without reduction. The enzyme is a glycoprotein as shown by its high affinity for concanavalin A-Sepharose and reduction in mass to 47,600 daltons after chemical deglycosylation. It has a neutral pH optimum, is activated by CoCl2, and inhibited by o-phenanthroline, 2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid, or cadmium acetate, indicating it is a metallopeptidase. The enzyme cleaves arginine or lysine from the COOH terminus of synthetic peptides (e.g. Bz-Gly-Arg, Bz-Gly-Lys, Bz-Ala-Lys, dansyl-Ala-Arg, where Bz is benzoyl and dansyl is 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl) as well as from several biologically active substrates: dynorphin A(1-13), Met5-Arg6-enkephalin (Km = 46 microM, kcat = 934 min-1), bradykinin (Km = 16 microM, kcat = 147 min-1), Met5-Lys6-enkephalin (Km = 375 microM, kcat = 663 min-1), and Leu5-Arg6-enkephalin (Km = 63 microM, kcat = 106 min-1). Although the enzyme shares some properties with other carboxypeptidase B-like enzymes, it is structurally, catalytically, and immunologically distinct from pancreatic carboxypeptidase A or B, human plasma carboxypeptidase N, and carboxypeptidase H ("enkephalin convertase"). To denote that the enzyme is membrane-bound, and to distinguish it from other known carboxypeptidases, we propose the name "carboxypeptidase M." Because of its localization on the plasma membrane and optimal activity at neutral pH, carboxypeptidase M could inactivate or modulate the activity of peptide hormones either before or after their interaction with plasma membrane receptors.  相似文献   

3.
A carboxypeptidase B-like enzyme was detected in the soluble fraction of purified insulin secretory granules, and implicated in insulin biosynthesis. To investigate the role of this activity further, we purified the enzyme from rat insulinoma tissue by gel-filtration chromatography and affinity elution from p-aminobenzoyl-arginine. A yield of 42%, with a purification factor of 674 over the homogenate, was achieved. Analysis of the purified carboxypeptidase by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis under either reducing or non-reducing conditions showed it to be a monomeric protein of apparent Mr 55,000. The preparation was also homogeneous by high-performance gel-filtration chromatography. The enzyme bound to concanavalin A, showing it to be a glycoprotein. Amino acid analysis or chemical deglycosylation and SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis indicated a protein Mr of 50,000, suggesting a carbohydrate content of approx. 9% by weight. The purified enzyme was able to remove basic amino acids from the C-terminus of proinsulin tryptic peptides to generate insulin, but did not further degrade the mature hormone. It was inhibited by EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline and guanidinoethylmercaptosuccinic acid, and stimulated 5-fold by CoCl2. The pH optimum of the conversion of diarginyl-insulin into insulin was in the range 5-6, with little activity above pH 6.5. Activity was also expressed towards a dansylated tripeptide substrate (dansyl-phenylalanyl-leucyl-arginine; Km = 17.5 microM), and had a pH optimum of 5.5. These properties are indistinguishable from those of the activity located in secretory granules, and are compatible with the intragranular environment. The insulin-secretory-granule carboxypeptidase shared several properties of carboxypeptidase H from bovine adrenal medulla and pituitary. We propose that the carboxypeptidase that we purified is the pancreatic isoenzyme of carboxypeptidase H (crino carboxypeptidase B; EC 3.4.17.10), and is involved in the biosynthesis of insulin in the pancreatic beta-cell.  相似文献   

4.
A carboxypeptidase capable of cleaving basic amino acids from synthetic peptide substrates is present in fresh human serum, and not in human heparinized plasma. Its activity is generated during the process of coagulation. Because of its unstability at room temperature and at 37 degrees C, we named it unstable carboxypeptidase (carboxypeptidase U). Carboxypeptidase U was partially purified from fresh human serum by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and Mono-Q sepharose and was found to be a 435 kDa protein. We compared this enzyme with carboxypeptidase N, purified from human serum by a two-step affinity chromatography on arginine-Sepharose 4B, followed by ion-exchange chromatography on Mono-Q sepharose. Carboxypeptidase U cleaves hippuryl-L-arginine and hippuryl-L-lysine, but at a different relative rate than carboxypeptidase N, and has no esterase activity on hippuryl-L-argininic acid. Its activity was inhibited by o-phenanthroline, DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid, CoCl2, 2-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol and 4-chloromercuribenzoic acid. These characteristics differentiate carboxypeptidase U from carboxypeptidase N and other known carboxypeptidases.  相似文献   

5.
A carboxypeptidase which cleaves basic C-terminal amino acids from peptides was purified from concentrated human urine by a three-step procedure: chromatography on Affi-Gel Blue, arginine-Sepharose affinity chromatography, and gel filtration by HPLC on a TSK-G3000SW column. Urinary carboxypeptidase was purified 406-fold with an 11% yield and a specific activity of 49 mumol/min/mg with benzoylglycylargininic acid as substrate. It migrated as a single band of Mr 75,700 in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate. It cleaved benzoylglycylarginine, benzoylglycyllysine, benzoylglycylargininic acid, benzoylalanyllysine, and benzoylphenylalanyllysine at different relative rates than human plasma carboxypeptidase N, the Mr 48,000 active subunit of carboxypeptidase N or human pancreatic carboxypeptidase B. Urinary carboxypeptidase did not hydrolyze benzoylglycylphenylalanine, a substrate of carboxypeptidase A, but readily cleaved bradykinin with a Km of 46 microM and a Kcat of 32 min-1. Its activity was enhanced by CoCl2 and inhibited by cadmium acetate, o-phenanthroline, or DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 7.0 and its activity dropped at pH 6.0 by 60%. It was stable for at least 2 h at 37 degrees C (pH 8.0) but was unstable at room temperature below pH 4.5. The molecular weight, electrophoretic mobility, and activity of urinary carboxypeptidase was not affected by trypsin. The effect of pH and stability further distinguished the urinary carboxypeptidase from other human carboxypeptidases. Urinary carboxypeptidase was immunologically distinct from carboxypeptidase N when analyzed by the "Western blot" technique. Thus, human urine contains a basic carboxypeptidase, different from known carboxypeptidases, which may be released into the urine by the kidney. Here it could inactivate kinins and other peptides containing a basic C-terminal amino acid.  相似文献   

6.
Carboxypeptidase B of the human pancreas was purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and CM-cellulose columns. Two forms of the enzyme, named carboxypeptidase B1 and B2, were separated. They have similar mol.wts. (34250 +/- 590) as established by polyacrylamide-gel disc electrophoresis and by gel filtration. Carboxypeptidase B2 migrates further towards the anode in disc electrophoresis. When the amino acid content of the enzymes was analysed, carboxypeptidase B2 had four more glycine and three more aspartic acid residues than had form B1. The amino acid sequence of the human carboxypeptidase B1 differs from that of the bovine enzyme only in two places in the N-terminal 20-amino-acid sequence. The N-terminal amino acid in carboxypeptidase B1 and B2 is alanine. The peptide 'map' of the tryptic digest of carboxypeptidase B1 contained more peptides than did that of form B2. The Km, the Vmax. and the pH optimum of the cleavage of the peptide substrate hippurylarginine and the ester substrate hippurylargininic acid were similar for both enzymes. CoCl2 accelerated the peptidase activity, and cadmium acetate enhanced the esterase activity, of human carboxypeptidases B1 and B2. Urea and sodium dodecyl sulphate inhibited the enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Carboxypeptidase M, a plasma membrane-bound enzyme, is present in many human organs and differs from other carboxypeptidase that cleave basic COOH-terminal amino acids. Cultured Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) distal tubular cells contain a kininase I-type enzyme that inactivates bradykinin by releasing Arg9. We found the properties of this kininase to be identical with carboxypeptidase M. In fractionated cells, carboxypeptidase activity sediments with membranes; and detergents, trypsin, and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C solubilize it, similar to results with human placental carboxypeptidase M. Ten microM 2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid and 1 mM o-phenanthroline inhibit, whereas 1.0 mM CoCl2 activates the enzyme. It has a neutral pH optimum and cleaves COOH-terminal Arg or Lys in bradykinin and in shorter peptides. The relative hydrolysis rates of peptides in the presence or absence of 1 mM CoCl2 were similar to those obtained with human carboxypeptidase M. The carboxypeptidase in MDCK cells (54 kDa) cross-reacts with antibodies to human carboxypeptidase M in Western blotting, but not with antibodies to plasma carboxypeptidase N. The enzyme is a glycoprotein; chemical deglycosylation reduced the size to 48 kDa. The presence of the enzyme on the cell membrane of MDCK cells was also shown with transmission electron microscopy using immunogold, which indicated that the enzyme is on the apical side. In addition, MDCK cells contain neutral endopeptidase 24.11 (enkephalinase) and prolylcarboxypeptidase (angiotensinase C) activities. Partitioning of solubilized carboxypeptidase M into Triton X-114 and water indicates that trypsin and phospholipase C remove a hydrophobic tail, while detergent solubilization leaves the hydrophobic moiety intact. Labeling of MDCK cells with [3H]ethanolamine resulted in the synthesis of radiolabeled carboxypeptidase M as determined by immunoprecipitation and fluorography. Thus, MDCK cells contain membrane-bound carboxypeptidase M, which is anchored to the plasma membrane via phosphatidylinositol-glycan. As a major kininase of the distal tubules, it may regulate salt and water excretion.  相似文献   

8.
The conversion of selected prodynorphin fragments to form the octapeptide Dynorphin A 1–8 was studied in rat brain or spinal cord fractions, and the results compared to the action of purified carboxypeptidases and angiotension converting enzyme. The particulates were shown to convert Dynorphin A or 1–13 to the octapeptide as measured by radioimmunoassay, and by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. Detergent extracts of these particulates contained and enzyme converting 1–13 to 1–12 with release of C-terminal lysine, and active over a wide pH range of 4.8–7.6. Purification of these extracts by affinity chromatography (p-amino-benzoyl-arginine-Sepharose-6B) using Bz-Ala-Arg as the substrate led to isolation of a carboxypeptidase converting 1–13 to 1–12 active over the same pH range. Since Dynorphin 1–13 was converted to 1–8 by the consecutive use of purified carboxypeptidase B and angiotensin converting enzyme, the possibility exists that this mechanism might account for some octapeptide production in situ.

The properties and substrate specificity of the carboxypeptidase B were compared to a carboxypeptidase A active optimally at pH 5.5 and assayed with Z-Glu-Tyr. The carboxypeptidase B acted only on prodynorphins with C-terminal basic residues as contrasted to a nonspecific action by the carboxypeptidase A. The carboxypeptidase B was characterized by a strong activation by -SH agents and Zn2+, and thus could be differentiated from other opioid converting enzymes. The enzyme was inhibited by guanidinoethyl succinic acid (GEMSA), and p-chloromercuriphenyl-sulphonic acid (PCMS) but not by benzylsuccinic acid, a potent inhibitor of carboxypeptidase A.  相似文献   


9.
A carboxypeptidase which cleaves the C-terminal arginine or lysine from peptides was purified by a two-step procedure; gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 and affinity chromatography on arginine-Sepharose. The activity increased 280% after the first step, indicating the removal of an inhibitor from the crude starting material. The activity in the crude seminal plasma eluted from the Sephacryl S-300 column with an apparent Mr 98,000 and after purification with an Mr 67,000, indicating that it binds to another protein in the crude seminal plasma. When analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, a single band at Mr 53,000 was seen which was converted to two smaller bands (Mr 32,000 and/or 26,000) after reduction. The seminal plasma carboxypeptidase has a neutral pH optimum, is inhibited by o-phenanthroline and by the inhibitor of carboxypeptidase B-type enzymes, 2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid, and can be activated by cobalt. The purified enzyme has a high specific activity (67.8 mumol/min/mg) with the ester substrate benzoyl (Bz)-Gly-argininic acid and readily cleaves Bz-Ala-Lys, Bz-Gly-Arg, and Bz-Gly-Lys. It also hydrolyzes biologically active peptides such as bradykinin (Km = 6 microM, kcat = 43 min-1), Arg6-Met5-enkephalin (Km = 103 microM, kcat = 438 min-1), and Lys6-Met5-enkephalin (Km = 848 microM, kcat = 449 min-1). The seminal plasma carboxypeptidase did not cross-react with antiserum to human plasma carboxypeptidase N; other properties distinguish it from the blood plasma enzyme as well as from pancreatic carboxypeptidase B and granular, acid carboxypeptidase H (enkephalin convertase). The carboxypeptidase could be involved in the control of fertility by activating or inactivating peptide hormones in the seminal plasma. In addition it could contribute to the degradation of basic proteins during semen liquefaction.  相似文献   

10.
Carboxypeptidase H, EC 3.4.17.10, also known as enkephalin convertase, carboxypeptidase E, and crino carboxypeptidase B, is an important enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of bioactive peptides. To assay the enzyme, tissues are homogenized in at least 20 vol (ml/g) of 0.025 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8, with 5 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin. After centrifugation, the supernatant is brought to pH 5.6 and centrifuged again. Following a 20-min preincubation in 2 mM CoCl2, the supernatant is incubated with 0.1 mM (final concentration) of the radioactive substrate [3H]benzoyl-Phe-Ala-Arg. The 100-microliters assay is stopped by the addition of 680 microliters of acetonitrile/0.25 M HCl (0.7/1). The 1.5-ml tube is transferred into a scintillation vial and is flushed with 4 ml of Econofluor, a water-immiscible scintillation fluid. The product, [3H]benzoyl-Phe-Ala, recovered in the organic phase, is counted directly with no interference from the substrate remaining in the aqueous phase. The blank is below 1%. Expressed in nanomoles per minute per milligram of tissue, the activity of the soluble enzyme in rat is 0.34 for striatum, 21.0 for pancreatic islet, 16.6 for anterior pituitary, 46.0 for intermediate pituitary, and 10.9 for neural pituitary. In every case 25 microM guanidinoethylmercaptosuccinic acid, an active site-directed inhibitor of carboxypeptidase H, completely inhibits the activity.  相似文献   

11.
The carboxypeptidase which had been shown to be present exclusively in nonfermentative mycoplasmas was found to be associated with cell membranes of Mycoplasma salivarium. The enzyme was released from the membranes with Triton X-100 and purified by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, affinity chromatography on arginine-Sepharose 4B, and chromatofocusing. The purified enzyme had a molecular mass of 218 kilodaltons, as estimated by gel filtration through Sepharose CL-6B, and yielded one band of activity in analytical disc-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis performed in the presence of 0.5% (wt/vol) Triton X-100. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme treated in the presence or absence of 2-mercaptoethanol revealed one band with a molecular mass of 87 kilodaltons. The enzyme catalyzed selectively the cleavage of the C-terminal arginine residue of peptides such as N-benzoylglycyl-L-arginine, tuftsin, and bradykinin and was inhibited considerably by o-phenanthroline and EDTA but only slightly by NiCl2. The inhibition of the enzyme by EDTA was fully reversed by the addition of ZnCl2, whereas the addition of CoCl2 activated the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Conversion of whole cells of Micrococcus lysodeikticus to protoplasts allowed the release of a soluble form of a D-alanine carboxypeptidase into the protoplasting medium. The enzyme cleaves the terminal D-alanine from the radioactively labelled UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-pentapeptide containing L-lysine as the diamino acid. However, the enzyme is only minimally active in this fraction so that it had to be enriched and partially purified before its properties could be studied. Chromatography on carboxymethyl-Sephadex removed the lysozyme used in the protoplasting of the cells. The material which was unadsorbed to the column was applied to an affinity chromatography column of Ampicillin-Sepharose. Most of the contaminating protein was washed from the column while the D-alanine carboxypeptidase adhered to the resin and could be eluted with 0.5 M Tris-HCl buffer pH 8.6. Some of the properties of the enzymic activity were studied using this preparation. The enzyme was activated by Mg2+ ions with a broad optimum from 15--35 mM. It was maximally active when NaCl at a concentrations of 0.06--0.08 M was added to the assay, and the pH curve was biphasic with an alkaline optimum. The Km for substrate was found to be 0.118 mM. Enzymic activity was completely inhibited by low concentrations of Ampicillin and penicillin G.  相似文献   

13.
A carboxypeptidase was purified to homogeneity from upper, unwounded leaves of tomato plants in which carboxypeptidase activity had been induced to increase over three-fold by severely wounding the lower leaves. The carboxypeptidase was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, affinity chromatography, and finally by gel permeation chromatography. Electrophoresis at pH 4.3 and isoelectric focusing showed only a single band. The isoelectric point was 5.2 and the MW 105 000. Tomato carboxypeptidase possessed both peptidase and esterase activities and it sequentially hydrolysed amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal end of insulin chain B. It was optimally active at pH 6–7 on peptidase substrates, and at pH 8 on esterase substrates. The enzyme was inhibited by diisopropylfluorophosphate and incorporated 1 mol of DFP-[3H]. per mol of enzyme. Both peptidase and esterase activities were strongly inhibited by HgCl2 but not by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate or iodoacetamide. Carboxypeptidase inhibitor from potatoes did not inhibit the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Excess zinc ions are a competitive inhibitor for carboxypeptidase A   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
J Hirose  S Ando  Y Kidani 《Biochemistry》1987,26(20):6561-6565
The mechanism for inhibition of enzyme activity by excess zinc ions has been studied by kinetic and equilibrium dialysis methods at pH 8.2, I = 0.5 M. With carboxypeptidase A (bovine pancreas), peptide (carbobenzoxyglycyl-L-phenylalanine and hippuryl-L-phenylalanine) and ester (hippuryl-L-phenyl lactate) substrates were inhibited competitively by excess zinc ions. The Ki values for excess zinc ions with carboxypeptidase A at pH 8.2 are all similar [Ki = (5.2-2.6) X 10(-5) M]. The apparent constant for dissociation of excess zinc ions from carboxypeptidase A was also obtained by equilibrium dialysis at pH 8.2 and was 2.4 X 10(-5) M, very close to the Ki values above. With arsanilazotyrosine-248 carboxypeptidase A ([(Azo-CPD)Zn]), hippuryl-L-phenylalanine, carbobenzoxyglycyl-L-phenylalanine, and hippuryl-L-phenyl lactate were also inhibited with a competitive pattern by excess zinc ions, and the Ki values were (3.0-3.5) X 10(-5) M. The apparent constant for dissociation of excess zinc ions from arsanilazotyrosine-248 carboxypeptidase A, which was obtained from absorption changes at 510 nm, was 3.2 X 10(-5) M and is similar to the Ki values for [(Azo-CPD)Zn]. The apparent dissociation and inhibition constants, which were obtained by inhibition of enzyme activity and spectrophotometric and equilibrium dialysis methods with native carboxypeptidase A and arsanilazotyrosine-248 carboxypeptidase A, were almost the same. This agreement between the apparent dissociation and inhibition constants indicates that the zinc binding to the enzymes directly relates to the inhibition of enzyme activity by excess zinc ions. Excess zinc ions were competitive inhibitors for both peptide and ester substrates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Using affinity chromatography on diasorb-L-arginine and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, soluble carboxypeptidase H (E. C. 3.4.17.10) has been isolated from cat brain cortex and purified 598-fold with a 16% yield. The enzyme has a molecular mass of 50 kDa, consists of one polypeptide chain, and displays the maximum activity at pH 5.6. Carboxypeptidase H is a thiol-dependent metalloenzyme and contains a Zn2+ ion in its active center. The Km and V values for dansyl-Phe-Leu-Arg are 100 +/- 5 microM and 12.5 +/- 1.4 microM/min/mg of protein, respectively. The existence of two forms of soluble carboxypeptidase differing in isoelectric points and pH optima has been demonstrated. The enzyme with a pI of 4.8 has a pH optimum at 5.5-5.6, while that with a pI of 5.25-at 6.0.  相似文献   

16.
A carboxypeptidase was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus. Molecular masses assessed by SDS/PAGE and gel filtration were 42 kDa and 170 kDa, respectively, which points to a tetrameric structure for the molecule. An isoelectric point of 5.9 was also determined. The enzyme was proven to be a metalloprotease, as shown by the inhibitory effects exerted by EDTA and o-phenanthroline; furthermore, dialysis against EDTA led to a complete loss of activity, which could be restored by addition of Zn2+ in the micromolar range, and, to a lesser extent, by Co2+. The enzyme was endowed with a broad substrate specificity, as shown by its ability to release basic, acidic and aromatic amino acids from the respective benzoylglycylated and benzyloxycarbonylated amino acids. An esterase activity of the carboxypeptidase was also demonstrated on different esterified amino acids and dipeptides blocked at the N-terminus. The enzyme displayed broad pH optima ranging over 5.5-7.0, or 5.5-9.0, when using an acidic or a basic benzyloxycarbonylated amino acid, respectively. With regard to thermostability, it was proven to be completely stable on incubation for 15 min at 85 degrees C. Furthermore, thanks to its relatively low activation energy, i.e. 31.0 kJ/mol, it was still significantly active at room temperature. At 40 degrees C, the enzyme could withstand 0.1% SDS and different organic solvents: particularly ethanol up to 99%. Amino acid and N-terminal sequence analyses did not evidence any similarity to carboxypeptidases A nor thermolysin. A weak similarity was only found with bovine carboxypeptidase B.  相似文献   

17.
Carboxypeptidase T, an extracellular carboxypeptidase from Thermoactinomyces sp. was isolated and purified by affinity chromatography on bacitracin adsorbents. The enzyme homogeneity was established by SDS electrophoresis (Mr = 38 000) and isoelectrofocusing in PAAG (pI 5.3). Carboxypeptidase T reveals a mixed specificity in comparison with pancreatic carboxypeptidases A and B and cleaves with nearly the same efficiency the peptide bonds formed by the C-terminal residues of basic and neutral hydrophobic amino acids. The enzyme is insensitive to serine and thiol proteinase inhibitors but is completely inhibited by EDTA and o-phenanthroline. The maximal enzyme activity is observed at pH 7-8. With an increase of temperature from 20 to 70 degrees C the enzyme activity is enhanced approximately 10-fold. In the presence of 1 mM Ca2+ the enzyme thermostability is also increased. In terms of some properties, e.g. substrate specificity carboxypeptidase T is similar to metallocarboxypeptidase secreted by Streptomyces griseus. The N-terminal sequence of carboxypeptidase T: Asp-Phe-Pro-Ser-Tyr-Asp-Ser-Gly- Tyr-His-Asn-Tyr-Asn-Glu-Met-Val-Asn-Lys-Ile-Asn-Thr-Val-Ala-Ser-Asn-Tyr- Pro-Asn - Ile-Val-Lys-Thr-Phe-Ser-Ile-Gly-Lys-Val-Tyr-Glu-Gly-Xaa-Gly-Leu- coincides by 21% with that of pancreatic carboxypeptidases A and B. Thus, it may be concluded that these enzymes originate from a common precursor.  相似文献   

18.
Human hepatoma (Hep G2) cells have been shown to secrete nanogram quantities of carboxypeptidase N (Grimwood, B. G., Plummer, T. H., Jr., and Tarentino, A. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14397-14401). A second carboxypeptidase with an acidic pH optimum (pH 5.5) is also secreted at levels 2-3-fold greater than carboxypeptidase N. This enzyme was partially purified from the conditioned medium and compared with pure bovine pituitary carboxypeptidase H. The two enzymes behaved in a similar fashion in DE52 ion-exchange chromatography and on gel filtration, with the Hep G2 enzyme being slightly larger than the bovine pituitary enzyme (52-54 versus 50-52 kDa). Both enzymes hydrolyzed COOH-terminal basic amino acids from typical synthetic substrates as well as from natural leuenkephalin peptides and were identical based on pH activity profiles, inhibition by EDTA or guanidinoethyl mercaptosuccinic acid, and stimulation by Co2+ ions. Inhibition of enzyme secretion from Hep G2 cells by tunicamycin indicated that the Hep G2 enzyme was glycosylated. This finding was confirmed by a parallel deglycosylation of the Hep G2 and bovine pituitary carboxypeptidase H enzymes with peptide-N4-(N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminyl)asparagine amidase F. Immunoblots using mouse antiserum to bovine pituitary carboxypeptidase H revealed that the Hep G2 enzyme was immunocross-reactive with the bovine enzyme but was slightly larger in size (54 versus 52 kDa). Continuous [35S]methionine labeling and purification to near homogeneity using an affinity matrix corroborated the observations that the secreted Hep G2 carboxypeptidase H was slightly larger than bovine pituitary carboxypeptidase H. The Hep G2-secreted enzyme in pulse-chase experiments was initially detected intracellularly after a 15-min pulse as a single protein of about 54 kDa and was present in the 30-min chase medium with no evidence for pre- or postsecretion proteolytic processing. The human adrenergic cell line IMR-32 continuously labeled with [35S]methionine also secreted carboxypeptidase H of the same size as the Hep G2 enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
A developmentally regulated carboxypeptidase was purified from hyphae of the dimorphic fungus Mucor racemosus. The enzyme, designated carboxypeptidase 3 (CP3), has been purified greater than 900-fold to homogeneity and characterized. The carboxypeptidase migrated as a single electrophoretic band in isoelectric focusing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), with an isoelectric point of pH 4.4. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was estimated by gel filtration to be 52 kDa. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-PAGE under nonreducing conditions revealed the presence of a single polypeptide of 51 kDa. SDS-PAGE of CP3 reacted with 2-mercaptoethanol revealed the presence of two polypeptides of 31 and 18 kDa, indicating a dimer structure (alpha 1 beta 1) of the enzyme with disulfide-linked subunits. By using [1,3-3H]diisopropylfluorophosphate as an active-site labeling reagent, it was determined that the catalytic site resides on the small subunit of the carboxypeptidase. With N-carboben zoxy-L-phenylalanyl-L-leucine (N-CBZ-Phe-Leu) as the substrate, the Km, kcat, and Vmax values were 1.7 x 10(-4) M, 490 s-1, and 588 mumol of Leu released per min per mg of protein, respectively. CP3 was determined to be a serine protease, since its catalytic activity was blocked by the serine protease inhibitors diisopropylfluorophosphate, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 3,4-dichloroi Socoumarin (DCI). The enzyme was strongly inhibited by the mercurial compound p-chloromercuribenzoate. The carboxypeptidase readily hydrolyzed peptides with aliphatic or aromatic side chains, whereas most of the peptides which contained glycine in the penultimate position did not serve as substrates for the enzyme. Although CP3 activity was undetectable in Mucor yeast cells, antisera revealed the presence of the enzyme in the yeast form of the fungus. The partial amino acid sequence of the carboxypeptidase was determined.  相似文献   

20.
In an effort to trace the evolutionary history of the pancreatic metalloexopeptidases, carboxypeptidase has been isolated from the cardia of the crayfish Astacus fluviatilis. The isolation procedure included affinity chromatography on a column of potato carboxypeptidase inhibitor covalently linked to Sepharose. Approximately 25 mg of pure enzyme can be obtained by the present procedure from 50 ml of cardia fluid. The pure enzyme resembles bovine carboxypeptidase B in specificity and is inhibited both by 3-phenyllactate and by 6-aminohexanoate. The pH optimum of activity is about pH 6.5, and the isoelectric point,pH 4.0. Inhibition by typical metal chelating agents (i.e. ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 1,10-phenanthroline) and neutron activation analysis indicate that, like the mammalian enzyme, crayfish carboxypepetidase is a zinc metalloenzyme. The purified enzyme migrates as a single band in cellulose acetate, disc gel and sodium dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition is similar to that of pancreatic carboxypeptidases except for a higher content of acidic amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence of the first 19 amino-terminal residues reveals significant homology to that of pancreatic carboxypeptidases A and B.  相似文献   

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