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1.
The processing of human gastric procathepsin E to its mature form, cathepsin E, was studied at pH 3.5. The results revealed the autocatalytic and apparently one-step conversion of procathepsin E to cathepsin E within 10 min of incubation at 14 degrees C under the conditions used. Analyses of the amino acid sequences of both procathepsin E and cathepsin E showed that cleavage occurred at the Met36-Ile37 bond to produce the mature form, cathepsin E. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of procathepsin E thus determined was identical with that predicted from the cDNA sequence by Azuma et al. except that the NH2-terminal glutamine residue in the latter was converted into a pyroglutamic acid residue in the former and that the glycine residue at position 2 in the latter sequence was deleted in the former. On the other hand, the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of cathepsin E was identical with that reported previously by us.  相似文献   

2.
Human cathepsin K (EC 3.4.22.38) is a member of the cysteine protease family with high primary sequence homology to cathepsins S, L, and B. It has been shown that cathepsin K plays a major role in the resorption of the bone matrix by osteoclasts. Cathepsin K has a potential as a drug target for the diseases related to bone matrix metabolism such as osteoporosis. We have expressed recombinant human procathepsin K in Escherichia coli as inclusion bodies. Purified procathepsin K had size of 38kDa which is in agreement with the predicted mass of the construct. Refolding was done by rapid dilution into 50mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0 buffer containing 5mM EDTA, 10 mM GSH, 1mM GSSG, 0.7 M L-arginine, 0.5 M NaCl, and 1% CHAPS and further dialysis against 25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0 containing 0.5 M NaCl. Mature active cathepsin K was prepared from refolded procathepsin K by incubating at 40 degrees C in pH 4.0 buffers with or without pepsin or cysteine. The presence of pepsin or cysteine in autocatalysis buffer did not have effect on the degree of conversion of nascent to mature cathepsin K, but reduced the autocatalysis time slightly. Proteolytic activity was confirmed using synthetic substrate, and Western blotting identified mature cathepsin K. Active cathepsin K had type I and II collagenolytic activities which could be inhibited by E-64.  相似文献   

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4.
We have constructed and optimized a high yielding Escherichia coli expression system to produce glycosylation-free human procathepsin K and have developed conditions for refolding this enzyme. Recombinant human procathepsin K (EC 3.4.22.38) was expressed in E. coli, refolded from inclusion bodies, and further purified by Superdex 75 size-exclusion chromatography. Purified procathepsin K had a [MH]+ of 35,063 Da which is in agreement with the predicted mass of the construct. Amino-terminal sequence analysis matched the predicted sequence with no secondary sequence detected. Purified procathepsin K activated under autocatalytic conditions to a final specific activity of 23 micromol 7-amido-4-methylcoumarin liberated/min/mg of enzyme using the fluorescent peptide substrate benzyloxycarbonyl-phenylalanine-arginine-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin. This expression and refolding procedure yielded 50 mg of purified, glycosylation-free human procathepsin K from 1 liter of E. coli cell culture and enabled the determination of the structure of human procathepsin K at 2.6 A resolution.  相似文献   

5.
Falcipain-2, a papain family cysteine protease of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, plays a key role in parasite hydrolysis of hemoglobin and is a potential chemotherapeutic target. As with many proteases, falcipain-2 is synthesized as a zymogen, and the prodomain inhibits activity of the mature enzyme. To investigate the mechanism of regulation of falcipain-2 by its prodomain, we expressed constructs encoding different portions of the prodomain and tested their ability to inhibit recombinant mature falcipain-2. We identified a C-terminal segment (Leu155–Asp243) of the prodomain, including two motifs (ERFNIN and GNFD) that are conserved in cathepsin L sub-family papain family proteases, as the mediator of prodomain inhibitory activity. Circular dichroism analysis showed that the prodomain including the C-terminal segment, but not constructs lacking this segment, was rich in secondary structure, suggesting that the segment plays a crucial role in protein folding. The falcipain-2 prodomain also efficiently inhibited other papain family proteases, including cathepsin K, cathepsin L, cathepsin B, and cruzain, but it did not inhibit cathepsin C or tested proteases of other classes. A structural model of pro-falcipain-2 was constructed by homology modeling based on crystallographic structures of mature falcipain-2, procathepsin K, procathepsin L, and procaricain, offering insights into the nature of the interaction between the prodomain and mature domain of falcipain-2 as well as into the broad specificity of inhibitory activity of the falcipain-2 prodomain.  相似文献   

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8.
Various biosynthetic forms of porcine spleen cathepsin D (Erickson, A. H. and Blobel, G. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 11771-11774), isolated by immunoprecipitation of in vivo- and in vitro-synthesized products, have been characterized by partial NH2-terminal sequence analysis. Two short lived and functionally distinct NH2-terminal sequence extensions, a "pre" sequence and a "pro" sequence, have been detected. Both sequence extensions are present in preprocathepsin D which is the primary translation product immunoprecipitated after translation of porcine spleen mRNA in a wheat germ cell-free system. Preprocathepsin D is not glycosylated and has an approximate Mr = 43,000. Its 20-residue pre sequence resembles the signal sequences of presecretory proteins in abundance of Leu residues (7 out of 20 residues). Addition of dog pancreatic microsomal vesicles to the translation system resulted in the cleavage of the pre sequence and yielded segregated and glycosylated procathepsin D (Mr = 46,000) that was indistinguishable from its in vivo-synthesized counterpart detected after pulse-labeling of cultured porcine kidney cells. Some of this in vivo-synthesized procathepsin D was secreted and persisted as such in the culture medium. The remainder was converted within a period of 15 min to 2 h to single chain cathepsin D (Mr = 44,000) by removal of a pro sequence which was estimated to be 44 residues. Its partial sequence showed considerable sequence homology to the 44-residue activation peptide of pepsinogen. It is possible, therefore, that the prosequence of procathepsin D serves as an activation peptide that keeps the enzyme inactive during intracellular transport to the lysosome. The enzymatically active single chain form of cathepsin D undergoes further cleavage into a light and a heavy chain (Mr = 15,000 and 30,000, respectively) over a period of 2-24 h after synthesis. The oligosaccharide moieties of procathepsin D and of the single chain and heavy chain forms of cathepsin D are cleaved by endoglycosidase H. Treatment of cells with tunicamycin arrests the biosynthetic pathway of cathepsin D at procathepsin D. The nonglycosylated procathepsin D is not proteolytically processed and its secretion is greatly inhibited.  相似文献   

9.
G E Conner  G Richo 《Biochemistry》1992,31(4):1142-1147
Procathepsin D is the intracellular aspartyl protease precursor of cathepsin D, a major lysosomal enzyme. Procathepsin D is rapidly processed inside the cell, and, thus, examination of its proteolyic activation and structure has been difficult. To study this proenzyme, a nonglycosylated form of the human fibroblast procathepsin D was expressed in Escherichia coli, refold in vitro, and purified by affinity chromatography on pepstatinyl agarose. Sequence analysis of the refolded, autoactivated enzyme allowed determination of the autoproteolytic cleavage site. The sequence surrounding this cleavage site between residues LeuP26 and IleP27 (in the "pro" region) resembled the first cleavage site found during activation of other aspartyl proteases. Thus, the autoactivated procathepsin D is analogous to the pepsin activation intermediate, which has been termed pseudopepsin. The enzymatic activity, thermal and pH stability, and fluorescence spectra of pseudocathepsin D were compared to mature, predominantly two-chain, cathepsin D isolated from human placenta. The results indicated that pseudocathepsin D and mature enzyme have a similar Km toward a peptide substrate and cleave a protein substrate at identical sites. Temperature stability of the recombinant enzyme was similar to that of the tissue-derived enzyme. However, the recombinant enzyme had increased stability at low pH when compared to the glycosylated tissue-derived two-chain cathepsin D. Fluorescence spectra of the recombinant and tissue-derived enzymes were identical. Thus, the absence of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides and the presence of the remaining segment of propeptide did not significantly alter the structural and enzymatic properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Angiostatin, a potent endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis, is generated by cancer-mediated proteolysis of plasminogen. The culture medium of human prostate carcinoma cells, when incubated with plasminogen at a variety of pH values, generated angiostatic peptides and miniplasminogen. The enzyme(s) responsible for this reaction was purified and identified as procathepsin D. The purified procathepsin D, as well as cathepsin D, generated two angiostatic peptides having the same NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequences and comprising kringles 1-4 of plasminogen in the pH range of 3.0-6.8, most strongly at pH 4.0 in vitro. This reaction required the concomitant conversion of procathepsin D to catalytically active pseudocathepsin D. The conversion of pseudocathepsin D to the mature cathepsin D was not observed by the prolonged incubation. The affinity-purified angiostatic peptides inhibited angiogenesis both in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, procathepsin D secreted by human breast carcinoma cells showed a significantly lower angiostatin-generating activity than that by human prostate carcinoma cells. Since deglycosylated procathepsin D from both prostate and breast carcinoma cells exhibited a similar low angiostatin-generating activity, this discrepancy appeared to be attributed to the difference in carbohydrate structures of procathepsin D molecules between the two cell types. The seminal vesicle fluid from patients with prostate carcinoma contained the mature cathepsin D and procathepsin D, but not pseudocathepsin D, suggesting that pseudocathepsin D is not a normal intermediate of procathepsin D processing in vivo. The present study provides evidence for the first time that cathepsin D secreted by human prostate carcinoma cells is responsible for angiostatin generation, thereby causing the prevention of tumor growth and angiogenesis-dependent growth of metastases.  相似文献   

12.
Musca domestica larvae display in anterior and middle midgut contents, a proteolytic activity with pH optimum of 3.0–3.5 and kinetic properties like cathepsin D. Three cDNAs coding for preprocathepsin D-like proteinases (ppCAD 1, ppCAD 2, ppCAD 3) were cloned from a M. domestica midgut cDNA library. The coded protein sequences included the signal peptide, propeptide and mature enzyme that has all conserved catalytic and substrate binding residues found in bovine lysosomal cathepsin D. Nevertheless, ppCAD 2 and ppCAD 3 lack the characteristic proline loop and glycosylation sites. A comparison among the sequences of cathepsin D-like enzymes from some vertebrates and those found in M. domestica and in the genomes of Aedes aegypti, Drosophila melanogaster, Tribolium castaneum, and Bombyx mori showed that only flies have enzymes lacking the proline loop (as defined by the motif: DxPxPx(G/A)P), thus resembling vertebrate pepsin. ppCAD 3 should correspond to the digestive cathepsin D-like proteinase (CAD) found in enzyme assays because: (1) it seems to be the most expressed CAD, based on the frequency of ESTs found. (2) The mRNA for CAD 3 is expressed only in the anterior and proximal middle midgut. (3) Recombinant procathepsin D-like proteinase (pCAD 3), after auto-activation has a pH optimum of 2.5–3.0 that is close to the luminal pH of M. domestica midgut. (4) Immunoblots of proteins from different tissues revealed with anti-pCAD 3 serum were positive only in samples of anterior and middle midgut tissue and contents. (5) CAD 3 is localized with immunogold inside secretory vesicles and around microvilli in anterior and middle midgut cells. The data support the view that on adapting to deal with a bacteria-rich food in an acid midgut region, M. domestica digestive CAD resulted from the same archetypical gene as the intracellular cathepsin D, paralleling what happened with vertebrates. The lack of the proline loop may be somehow associated with the extracellular role of both pepsin and digestive CAD 3.  相似文献   

13.
BHK cells transfected with human cathepsin D (CD) cDNA normally segregate the autologous hamster cathepsin D while secreting a large proportion of the human proenzyme. In the present work, we have utilized these transfectants to examine to what extent the mannose-6-phosphate-dependent pathway for lysosomal enzyme segregation contributes to the differential sorting of human and hamster CD. We report that, in recipient control BHK cells, the rate of mannose-6-phosphate-dependent endocytosis of human procathepsin D secreted by transfected BHK cells is lower than that of hamster procathepsin D and much lower than that of human arylsulphatase A. The missorted human enzyme bears phosphorylated oligosaccharides and most of its phosphate residues are “uncovered”, like the autologous enzyme. Thus, despite both the Golgi-associated modifications of oligosaccharides, i.e. the phosphorylation of mannose and the uncovering of mannose-6-phosphate residues, which proceed on human and hamster procathepsin D with comparable efficiency, only the latter is accurately packaged into lysosomes. Ammonium chloride partially affects the lysosomal targeting of cathepsin D in control BHK cells, whereas in transfected cells, this drug strongly inhibits the maturation of human procathepsin D and slightly enhances its secretion. These data indicate that: (1) over-expression of a lysosomal protein does not saturate the Golgi-associated reactions leading to the synthesis of mannose-6-phosphate; (2) a portion of cathepsin D is targeted independently of mannose-6-phosphate receptors in the transfected BHK cells; and (3) whichever mechanism for lysosomal delivery of autologous procathepsin D is involved, this is not saturated by the high rate of expression of human cathepsin D.  相似文献   

14.
A Manduca sexta (tobacco hornworm) cysteine protease inhibitor, MsCPI, purified from larval hemolymph has an apparent molecular mass of 11.5 kDa, whereas the size of the mRNA is very large (9 kilobases). MsCPI cDNA consists of a 9,273 nucleotides that encode a polypeptide of 2,676 amino acids, which includes nine tandemly repeated MsCPI domains, four cystatin-like domains and one procathepsin F-like domain. The procathepsin F-like domain protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and processed to its active mature form by incubation with pepsin. The mature enzyme hydrolyzed Z-Leu–Arg–MCA, Z-Phe–Arg–MCA and Boc–Val–Leu–Lys–MCA rapidly, whereas hydrolysis of Suc–Leu–Tyr–MCA and Z-Arg–Arg–MCA was very slow. The protease was strongly inhibited by MsCPI, egg-white cystatin and sunflower cystatin with Ki values in the nanomolar range. When the MsCPI tandem protein linked to two MsCPI domains was treated with proteases, it was degraded by the cathepsin F-like protease. However, tryptic digestion converted the MsCPI tandem protein to an active inhibitory form. These data support the hypothesis that the mature MsCPI protein is produced from the MsCPI precursor protein by trypsin-like proteases. The resulting mature MsCPI protein probably plays a role in the regulation of the activity of endogenous cysteine proteases.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Cathepsin K, the most potent mammalian collagenase, has been implicated in osteoporosis, cancer metastasis, atherosclerosis, and arthritis. Although procathepsin K is stable and readily detected, the active mature cathepsin K eludes detection by in vitro methods due to its shorter half-life and inactivation at neutral pH. We describe, for the first time, reliable detection, visualization, and quantification of mature cathepsin K to femtomole resolution using gelatin zymography. The specificity of the method was validated with cathepsin K knockdown using small interfering RNA (siRNA) transfection of human monocyte-derived macrophages, and enzymatic activity confirmed with benzyloxycarbonyl-glycine-proline-arginine-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (Z-GPR-AMC) substrate hydrolysis was fit to a computational model of enzyme kinetics. Furthermore, cathepsin K zymography was used to show that murine osteoclasts secrete more cathepsin K than is stored intracellularly, and this was opposite to the behavior of the macrophages from which they were differentiated. In summary, this inexpensive, species-independent, antibody-free protocol describes a sensitive method with broad potential to elucidate previously undetectable cathepsin K activity.  相似文献   

17.
Procathepsin E and progastricsin were purified from the gastric mucosa of the guinea pig. They were converted to the active form autocatalytically under acidic conditions. Each active form hydrolyzed protein substrates maximally at around pH 2.5. Pepstatin inhibited cathepsin E very strongly at an equimolar concentration, whereas the inhibition was much weaker for gastricsin. Molecular cloning of the respective cDNAs permitted us to deduce the complete amino acid sequences of their pre-proforms; preprocathepsin E and preprogastricsin consisted of 391 and 394 residues, respectively. Procathepsin E has unique structural and enzymatic features among the aspartic proteinases. Lys at position 37, which is common to various aspartic proteinases and is thought to be important for stabilizing the activation segment, was absent at the corresponding position, as in human procathepsin E. The rate of activation of procathepsin E to cathepsin E is maximal at around pH 4.0. It is very different from the pepsinogens and may be correlated with the absence of Lys37. Native procathepsin E is a dimer, consisting of two monomers covalently bound by a disulfide bridge between 2 Cys37. Interconversion between the dimer and the monomer was reversible and regulated by low concentrations of a reducing reagent. Although the properties of the dimeric and monomeric cathepsins E are quite similar, a marked difference was found between them in terms of their stability in weakly alkaline solution: monomeric cathepsin E was unstable at weakly alkaline pH whereas the dimeric form was stable. The generation of the monomer was thought to be the process leading to inactivation, hence degradation of cathepsin E in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
The secretion and activation of the major cathepsin L1 cysteine protease involved in the virulence of the helminth pathogen Fasciola hepatica was investigated. Only the fully processed and active mature enzyme can be detected in medium in which adult F. hepatica are cultured. However, immunocytochemical studies revealed that the inactive procathepsin L1 is packaged in secretory vesicles of epithelial cells that line the parasite gut. These observations suggest that processing and activation of procathepsin L1 occurs following secretion from these cells into the acidic gut lumen. Expression of the 37-kDa procathepsin L1 in Pichia pastoris showed that an intermolecular processing event within a conserved GXNXFXD motif in the propeptide generates an active 30-kDa intermediate form. Further activation of the enzyme was initiated by decreasing the pH to 5.0 and involved the progressive processing of the 37 and 30-kDa forms to other intermediates and finally to a fully mature 24.5 kDa cathepsin L with an additional 1 or 2 amino acids. An active site mutant procathepsin L, constructed by replacing the Cys(26) with Gly(26), failed to autoprocess. However, [Gly(26)]procathepsin L was processed by exogenous wild-type cathepsin L to a mature enzyme plus 10 amino acids attached to the N terminus. This exogenous processing occurred without the formation of a 30-kDa intermediate form. The results indicate that activation of procathepsin L1 by removal of the propeptide can occur by different pathways, and that this takes place within the parasite gut where the protease functions in food digestion and from where it is liberated as an active enzyme for additional extracorporeal roles.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: Cathepsin E is a major nonlysosomal, intracellular aspartic proteinase that localizes in various cellular compartments such as the plasma membrane, endosome-like organelles, and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To learn the segregation mechanisms of cathepsin E into its appropriate cellular destinations, the present studies were initiated to define the biosynthesis, processing, and intracellular localization as well as the site of proteolytic maturation of the enzyme in primary cultures of rat brain microglia. Immunohistochemical and immunoblot analyses revealed that cathepsin E was the most abundant in microglia among various brain cell types, where the enzyme existed predominantly as the mature enzyme. Immunoelectron microscopy studies showed the presence of the enzyme predominantly in the endosome-like vacuoles and partly in the vesicles located in the trans-Golgi area and the lumen of ER. In the primary cultured microglial cells labeled with [35S]methionine, >95% of labeled cathepsin E were represented by a 46-kDa polypeptide (reduced form) after a 30-min pulse. Most of it was proteolytically processed via a 44-kDa intermediate to a 42-kDa mature form within 4 h of chase. This processing was completely inhibited by bafilomycin A1, a specific inhibitor of vacuolar-type H+-ATPase. Brefeldin A, a blocker for the traffic of secretory proteins from the ER to the Golgi complex, also inhibited the processing of procathepsin E and enhanced its degradation. Procathepsin E, after pulse-labeling, showed complete susceptibility to endoglycosidase H, whereas the mature enzyme almost acquired resistance to endoglycosidases H as well as F. The present studies provide the first evidence that cathepsin E in microglia is first synthesized as the inactive precursor bearing high-mannose oligosaccharides and processed to the active mature enzyme with complex-type oligosaccharides via the intermediate form and that the final proteolytic maturation step occurs in endosome-like acidic compartments.  相似文献   

20.
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