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1.
Three families of proteinase inhibitors, namely, serine, cysteine (thiol) and aspartic (carboxyl) were examined for their inhibitory effects on growth and development of Indian alfalfa weevil (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Proteinase inhibitors are considered as a part of alternate strategy to control the herbivorous insect as they inhibit the digestive enzymes of the insects. Larval leaf feeding, survival, pupation and adult emergence were significantly decreased by pHMB, (p-hydroxy-mercuribenzoic acid), cystatin and E-64 (trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido-(4guanidino)-butane) belonging to cysteine class of proteinases, at a concentration of 0.1 and 0.5%. Serine and aspartic classes of inhibitors have low detrimental effects on larvae. The results demonstrate the inhibitory response of specific proteinase inhibitors on alfalfa weevil larval leaf feeding, survival, pupation and adult emergence. Weevil resistant species, namely, Medicago scutellata showed high level of leaf consumption under forced feeding in vivo bioassay indicated the presence of resistance factors other than proteinase inhibitors.  相似文献   

2.
We characterized the digestive proteinases of eight species of beetles to improve our understanding of the phylogenetic distribution of serine and cysteine proteinases. Serine proteinases function optimally under alkaline pH conditions, whereas cysteine proteinases require acidic pH. The phylogenetic distribution of cysteine proteinases suggests that they first appeared in an early cucujiform ancestor, however, data for some groups is patchy, and there has been speculation that they have been lost in at least one group, the long-horned beetles (Cerambycidae). The pattern we found supports the hypothesized origin of the proteinases and extends their distribution to an additional superfamily. In addition, we confirmed the presence of cysteine proteinases in some Curculionoidea. Cysteine proteinases were absent, however, from all three species of cerambycids surveyed, supporting the hypothesis that this group has reverted to the more ancestral serine (alkaline) digestive strategy. In four species we compared the pH optima for total proteolytic activity to the actual pH of the midgut and found the match between optimal and actual pH to be weaker in the cerambycids. These findings suggest that either a close correlation between midgut pH and the proteolytic pH optimum is not needed for adequate digestive efficiency, or that midgut pH is a more constrained digestive feature and there has been insufficient time for it to shift upwards to maximize serine proteinase activity.  相似文献   

3.
Cathepsin L-like proteinases (CAL) are major digestive proteinases in the beetle Tenebrio molitor. Procathepsin Ls 2 (pCAL2) and 3 (pCAL3) were expressed as recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli, purified and activated under acidic conditions. Immunoblot analyses of different T. molitor larval tissues demonstrated that a polyclonal antibody to pCAL3 recognized pCAL3 and cathepsin L 3 (CAL3) only in the anterior two-thirds of midgut tissue and midgut luminal contents of T. molitor larvae. Furthermore, immunocytolocalization data indicated that pCAL3 occurs in secretory vesicles and microvilli in anterior midgut. Therefore CAL3, like cathepsin L 2 (CAL2), is a digestive enzyme secreted by T. molitor anterior midgut. CAL3 hydrolyses Z-FR-MCA and Z-RR-MCA (typical cathepsin substrates), whereas CAL2 hydrolyses only Z-FR-MCA. Active site mutants (pCAL2C25S and pCAL3C26S) were constructed by replacing the catalytic cysteine with serine to prevent autocatalytic processing. Recombinant pCAL2 and pCAL3 mutants (pCAL2C25S and pCAL3C26S) were prepared, crystallized and their 3D structures determined at 1.85 and 2.1 Å, respectively. While the overall structure of these enzymes is similar to other members of the papain superfamily, structural differences in the S2 subsite explain their substrate specificities. The data also supported models for CAL trafficking to lysosomes and to secretory vesicles to be discharged into midgut contents.  相似文献   

4.
The study of properties of proteolytic enzymes in midgut of imago of the cockroachNauphoeta cinerea Oliv. Has been carried out. It is shown that the total proteolytic activity of digestive proteases, measured with azocasein as substrate, is maximal at pH 11.5 both in the anterior and in the posterior parts of the midgut. The predominant part of this activity (67%) was present in the posterior part. Fractionation of preparation from the posterior part on a column with Sephadex G-50 and subsequent analysis of the activity in the obtained fractions using specificp-nitroanilide substrates and effects of activators and inhibitors of active center have allowed revealing three types of activity of serine proteinases and one cysteine proteinase. No activity of aspartic and metalloproteinases were detected. Among serine proteinases, one trypsin-like, one unusual SHdependent serine, one chymotrypsin-like, and not less than two enzymes hydrolyzing specific substrate of subtilisin were established. The fractionation of the preparation from the anterior part has allowed revealing only three proteinases that were similar by their properties to cysteine, SHdependent serine, and chymotrypsin-like ones in the posterior part of midgut. Their activity was lower in the anterior, than in the posterior part of the midgut. The probable causes of the low proteolytic activity in the anterior part of the midgut are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Increasing levels of inhibitors that target cysteine and/or serine proteinases were fed to Tribolium castaneum larvae, and the properties of digestive proteinases were compared in vitro. Cysteine proteinases were the major digestive proteinase class in control larvae, and serine proteinase activity was minor. Dietary serine proteinase inhibitors had minimal effects on either the developmental time or proteolytic activity of T. castaneum larvae. However, when larvae ingested cysteine proteinase inhibitors, there was a dramatic shift from primarily cysteine proteinases to serine proteinases in the proteinase profile of the midgut. Moreover, a combination of cysteine and serine proteinase inhibitors in the diet prevented this shift from cysteine proteinase-based digestion to serine proteinase-based digestion, and there was a corresponding substantial retardation in growth. These data suggest that the synergistic inhibitory effect of a combination of cysteine and serine proteinase inhibitors in the diet of T. castaneum larvae on midgut proteolytic activity and beetle developmental time is achieved through the prevention of the adaptive proteolytic response to overcome the activity of either type of inhibitor.  相似文献   

6.
Ingestion of proteinase inhibitors leads to hyperproduction of digestive proteinases, limiting the bioavailability of essential amino acids for protein synthesis, which affects insect growth and development. However, the effects of proteinase inhibitors on digestive enzymes can lead to an adaptive response by the insect. In here, we assessed the biochemical response of midgut proteinases from the eucalypt defoliator Thyrinteina arnobia (Stoll) to different concentrations of berenil, a bis-benzamidine proteinase inhibitor, on eucalyptus. Eucalyptus leaves were immersed in berenil solutions at different concentrations and fed to larvae of T. arnobia. Mortality was assessed daily. The proteolytic activity in the midgut of T. arnobia was assessed after feeding on plants sprayed with aqueous solutions of berenil, fed to fifth instars of T. arnobia for 48?h before midgut removal for enzymatic assays. Larvae of T. arnobia were able to overcome the effects of the lowest berenil concentrations by increasing their trypsin-like activity, but not as berenil concentration increased, despite the fact that the highest berenil concentration resulted in overproduction of trypsin-like proteinases. Berenil also prevented the increase of the cysteine proteinases activity in response to trypsin inhibition.  相似文献   

7.
Protein digestion in the lesser grain borer, Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) (Coleoptera: Bostrichidae), results from the action of a complex of serine proteinases present in the midgut. In this study we partially characterized trypsin-like enzyme activity against N-α-benzoyl- -arginine p-nitroanilide (BApNA) in midgut preparations and cloned and sequenced three cDNAs for trypsinogen-like proteins. BApNAase activity in R. dominica midgut was significantly reduced by serine proteinase inhibitors and specific inhibitors of trypsin, whereas BApNAase activity was not sensitive to specific inhibitors of chymotrypsin or aspartic proteinases. However, trans-epoxysuccinyl- -leucylamido-(4-guanidino) butane (E-64) inhibited BApNAase activity by about 30%. BApNAase was most active in a broad pH range from about pH 7 to 9.5. The gut of R. dominica is a tubular tract approximately 2.5 mm in length. BApNAase activity was primarily located in the midgut region with about 1.5-fold more BApNAase activity in the anterior region compared to that in the posterior region. Proteinases with apparent molecular masses of 23–24 kDa that were visualized on casein zymograms following electrophoresis were inhibited by TLCK.Three cDNAs for trypsinogen-like proteins were cloned and sequenced from mRNA of R. dominica midgut. The full cDNA sequences consisted of open reading frames encoding 249, 293, and 255 amino acid residues for RdoT1, RdoT2, and RdoT3, respectively. cDNAs RdoT1, RdoT2, and RdoT3 shared 77–81% sequence identity. The three encoded trypsinogens shared 54–62% identity in their amino acid sequences and had 16–18 residues of signal peptides and 12–15 residues of activation peptides. The three predicted mature trypsin-like enzymes had molecular masses of 23.1, 28, and 23.8 kDa for RdoT1, RdoT2, and RdoT3, respectively. Typical features of these trypsin-like enzymes included the conserved N-terminal residues IVGG62–65, the catalytic amino acid triad of serine proteinase active sites (His109, Asp156, Ser257), three pairs of conserved cysteine residues for disulfide bridges, and the three residues (Asp251, Gly274, Gly284) that determine specificity in trypsin-like enzymes. In addition, RdoT2 has both a PEST-like sequence at the C-terminus and a free Cys158 near the active site, suggesting instability of this enzyme and/or sensitivity to thiol reagents. The sequences have been deposited in GenBank database (accession numbers AF130840 for RdoT1, AF130841 for RdoT2, and AF130842 for RdoT3).  相似文献   

8.
The midgut proteinase activities were characterized from the keratinolytic larvae of two lepidopterans, Hofmannophila pseudospretella (Stainton) (Oecophoridae) and Tineola bisselliella (Hummel) (Tineidae), and one coleopteran, Anthrenocerus australis (Hope) (Dermestidae). The major endopeptidase activities, characterized using specific enzyme inhibitors, were serine proteinases with hydrolytic activity against N-benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide and against N-succinyl-L-alanyl-L-alanyl-L-prolyl-L-leucine-p-nitroanilide. No significant levels of metalloendopeptidase or cysteine endopeptidase activities were detected. Aminopeptidase activity was present in all larvae. The enzyme levels and properties of the two moth larvae were similar to each other and to those of phytophagous lepidopteran larvae but different from those of the beetle larva. Whereas only a limited number of serine proteinase inhibitors inhibited the midgut proteolysis of the lepidopteran larvae, most inhibitors inhibited the midgut proteolysis of the beetle larva. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Bostrichiformia is the less known major series of Coleoptera regarding digestive physiology. The midgut of Dermestes maculatus has a cylindrical ventriculus with anterior caeca. There is no cell differentiation along the ventriculus, except for the predominance of cells undergoing apocrine secretion in the anterior region. Apocrine secretion affects a larger extension and a greater number of cells in caeca than in ventriculus. Ventricular cells putatively secrete digestive enzymes, whereas caecal cells are supposed to secrete peritrophic gel (PG) glycoproteins. Feeding larvae with dyes showed that caeca are water-absorbing, whereas the posterior ventriculus is water-secreting. Midgut dissection revealed a PG and a peritrophic membrane (PM) covering the contents in anterior and posterior ventriculus, respectively. This was confirmed by in situ chitin detection with FITC-WGA conjugates. Ion-exchange chromatography of midgut homogenates, associated with enzymatic assays with natural and synthetic substrates and specific inhibitors, showed that trypsin and chymotrypsin are the major proteinases, cysteine proteinase is absent, and aspartic proteinase probably is negligible. Amylase and trypsin occur in contents and decrease along the ventriculus; the contrary is true for cell-membrane-bound aminopeptidase. Maltase is cell-membrane-bound and predominates in anterior and middle midgut. Digestive enzyme activities in hindgut are negligible. This, together with dye data, indicates that enzymes are recovered from inside PM by a posterior-anterior flux of fluid outside PM before being excreted. The combined results suggest that protein digestion starts in anterior midgut and ends in the surface of posterior midgut cells. All glycogen digestion takes place in anterior midgut.  相似文献   

11.
Digestion in Tenebrio molitor larvae occurs in the midgut, where there is a sharp pH gradient from 5.6 in the anterior midgut (AM) to 7.9 in the posterior midgut (PM). Accordingly, digestive enzymes are compartmentalized to the AM or PM. Enzymes in the AM are soluble and have acidic or neutral pH optima, while PM enzymes have alkaline pH optima. The main peptidases in the AM are cysteine endopeptidases presented by two to six subfractions of anionic proteins. The major activity belongs to cathepsin L, which has been purified and characterized. Serine post‐proline cleaving peptidase with pH optimum 5.3 was also found in the AM. Typical serine digestive endopeptidases, trypsin‐like and chymotrypsin‐like, are compartmentalized to the PM. Trypsin‐like activity is due to one cationic and three anionic proteinases. Chymotrypsin‐like activity consists of one cationic and four anionic proteinases, four with an extended binding site. The major cationic trypsin and chymotrypsin have been purified and thoroughly characterized. The predicted amino acid sequences are available for purified cathepsin L, trypsin and chymotrypsin. Additional sequences for putative digestive cathepsins L, trypsins and chymotrypsins are available, implying multigene families for these enzymes. Exopeptidases are found in the PM and are presented by a single membrane aminopeptidase N‐like peptidase and carboxypeptidase A, although multiple cDNAs for carboxypeptidase A were found in the AM, but not in the PM. The possibility of the use of two endopeptidases from the AM – cathepsin L and post‐proline cleaving peptidase – in the treatment of celiac disease is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Larvae of Baris coerulescens Scop. (Coleoptera: Curculionidæ) exhibit a complex array of gut proteinase activities comprising cysteine and serine proteinases. The major cysteine proteinase activity, showing an optimum at pH 6.0, corresponds to at least 4 different proteinases. On the contrary, the minor serine proteinase activity, with an optimum at pH 9.0, seems to be due essentially to a single proteinase. The cysteine proteinase inhibitor oryzacystatin I (OC-I) inhibits completely the cysteine proteinase activity in vitro. However, larval growth and survival were not significantly different on control and transgenic oilseed rape plants expressing high levels of active OC-I. In larvae grown on transgenic plants, cysteine proteinase activity was dramatically decreased, whereas serine proteinase activity was increased by more than 2-fold, when compared to larvae raised on control plants. For both activities, no new proteinase was detected in insects fed plants expressing OC-I. These results suggest that partial compensation of the inhibition of cysteine proteinase activity by the increase in serine proteinase activity allowed the larvae to overcome the effects of OC-I consumption. This case illustrates problems that could arise when trying to achieve high levels of protection for plants against Coleopteran pests possessing a complex digestive proteinase pool.  相似文献   

13.
Brain myelin membrane preparations contain a metalloproteinase activity which degrades myelin basic protein (MBP). The activity was associated with lentil lectin-binding glycoproteins solubilized from myelin and could be detected in the presence of the detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propane-sulfonate (CHAPS). The metalloproteinase represented about 5% of this glycoprotein fraction and was isolated from it by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, CM-Sepharose, and Superose 6. The proteinase had an apparent relative molecular weight (Mr) of approximately 58,000 both by gel filtration and by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The Mr value was unaffected by the presence of reducing agents but was diminished to about 52,000 by treating the proteinase with endoglycosidase F. The purified proteinase cleaved many bonds in MBP but did not generate trichloroacetic acid-soluble products. Two major polypeptides, putatively MBP1-73 and MBP74-170, were prominent in digests of MBP by either the purified enzyme or myelin membranes. The proteinase was active between pH 7 and 9 and was inhibited by phenanthroline and dithiothreitol but not phosphoramidon or inhibitors of serine or cysteine proteinases. Histones, but not azocasein, also served as substrates for the proteinase. From its enzymic and molecular characteristics the myelin-derived metalloproteinase appears distinct from previously described enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Proteinases of the cellular slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum have been analysed using electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels containing gelatin (gelatin/PAGE). Multiple proteinase forms were apparent in vegetative myxamoebae, but the presence of individual enzyme forms depended on the manner in which the cells were grown. Axenic cells had a characteristic A-pattern of proteinases consisting of six bands, the most active enzymes having apparent Mr values of 51,000 and 45,000 (these have been named ddCP51 and ddCP45, respectively). Some of the proteinases were also present in the medium, the major extracellular form was ddCP42, a 42,000-Mr enzyme. Cells grown in association with bacteria had a distinct B-pattern with three main enzymes that had apparent Mr values of 48,000, 43,000 and 38,000. All of the A- and B-pattern proteinases were most active at acid pH in the presence of dithiothreitol and were inhibited by various agents such as trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane (E64), leupeptin and chymostatin, which inactivate cysteine proteinases. One of the enzymes, ddCP30, was identified as cysteine proteinase B which had been purified and characterized previously [North, M.J. & Whyte, A. (1984) J. Gen. Microbiol. 130, 123-134]. During starvation of axenic cells in shaken suspensions some of the vegetative proteinases disappeared, ddCP42 was released from the cells and one new enzyme with an apparent Mr of 48,000 appeared. Addition of cyclic AMP had little effect on these changes. When the axenically grown myxamoebae underwent development on filters, similar changes in band pattern were observed and the aggregation stage was characterized by the presence of three cysteine proteinase bands (apparent Mr values of 48,000, 45,000 and 43,000). Proteinases, especially ddCP42, were released from the cells and could be collected from the buffer-saturated pads which supported the filters. The results demonstrate that cysteine proteinases are present throughout growth and development of D. discoideum and that the forms present are subject to nutritional and developmental regulation.  相似文献   

15.
The utilization of dietary proteins in crustaceans is facilitated by a set of peptide hydrolases which are often dominated by “trypsin-like” serine proteinases. As expected, the North Sea shrimps Crangon crangon and Crangon allmani showed in their midgut glands high proteolytic activities. However, the majority of animals lacked trypsin and chymotrypsin. Conversely, a minority of about 10% of the animals had elevated trypsin activities. The appearance of trypsin was neither related to the mode of feeding nor to the nutritive state of the animals. When present, trypsin was expressed in both species as a single isoform of apparently 20 kDa. The lack of serine proteinases was also confirmed by inhibitor assays. AEBSF, a serine proteinase inhibitor, slightly reduced total proteinase activity by less than 10%. In contrast E 64, a cysteine proteinase inhibitor, caused a reduction of more than 70% of total proteinase activity, indicating that a substantial share of proteolytic activity is caused by cysteine proteinases. Cathepsin L-like proteinases were identified as major cysteine proteinases.A comparison with the eucarid crustaceans Pandalus montagui, Pagurus bernhardus, Cancer pagurus and Euphausia superba showed a similar high level of total proteinase activity in all species. Trypsin, however, varied significantly between species showing lowest activities in Caridea and the highest activity in E. superba. E 64 suppressed total proteinase activity by more than 70% in Crangon species but not in C. pagurus and E. superba. In contrast, the serine proteinase inhibitor AEBSF had only little effect in Caridea but was most effective in P. bernhardus, C. pagurus and E. superba. The results may indicate different traits of food utilization strategies in some eucarid crustaceans. Caridea may express predominantly cysteine proteinase, while in Anomura, Brachyura and Euphausiacea, serine proteinases may prevail.  相似文献   

16.
Protease inhibitors play an important role in host plant defence against herbivores. However, insects have the ability to elevate the production of proteinases or resort to production of a diverse array of proteinases to offset the effect of proteinase inhibitors. Therefore, we studied the inhibition of pro‐proteinase(s) activation in the midgut of the polyphagous pest Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in response to protease inhibitors to develop appropriate strategies for the control of this pest. Gelatin coating present on X‐ray film was used as a substrate to detect electrophoretically separated pro‐proteinases and proteinases of H. armigera gut extract on native‐ and sodium dodecyl sulphate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Six activated pro‐proteinase bands were detected in H. armigera gut lumen, which were partially purified and characterized using substrate assays. Activated H. armigera midgut pro‐proteinase(s) showed activity maxima at pH 8 and 10, and exhibited optimal activity at 40 °C. The activation of H. armigera gut pro‐proteinase isoforms was observed in the fraction eluted on benzamidine‐sepharose 4B column. Purification and substrate assay studies revealed that 23–70 kDa polypeptides were likely the trypsin/chymotrypsin‐like pro‐proteinases. Larvae of H. armigera fed on a cocktail of synthetic inhibitors (antipain, aprotinin, leupeptin, and pefabloc) showed maximum activation of pro‐proteinases compared with the larvae fed on individual inhibitors. The implications of these results for developing plants expressing proteinase inhibitors for conferring resistance to H. armigera are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of benzyloxycarbonyl-(125I)Tyr-Ala-CHN2 to label cysteine proteinases in a variety of human tissues was investigated. The inhibitor bound only to cathepsin B in tissues homogenized at pH 5.0. When liver was autolysed at pH 4.0 for up to 4 h, the inhibitor also bound to a protein of Mr 25,000. This was identified immunologically and chromatographically as cathepsin L. Both cathepsins B and L were found primarily in kidney, liver and spleen. In spleen, an additional protein of Mr 25,000 was also labelled. This protein could not be precipitated by antibodies to any of cathepsins B, H and L. This protein has tentatively been identified as human cathepsin S by its tissue distribution, chromatographic properties and molecular size. This work clearly shows that peptidyldiazomethanes are specific probes for cysteine proteinases, and that benzyloxycarbonyl-(125I)Tyr-Ala-CHN2 binds to three such enzymes in human tissues.  相似文献   

18.
The major storage proteins in cereals, prolamins, have an abundance of the amino acids glutamine and proline. Storage pests need specific digestive enzymes to efficiently hydrolyze these storage proteins. Therefore, post-glutamine cleaving peptidases (PGP) were isolated from the midgut of the stored-product pest, Tenebrio molitor (yellow mealworm). Three distinct PGP activities were found in the anterior and posterior midgut using the highly-specific chromogenic peptide substrate N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Gln p-nitroanilide. PGP peptidases were characterized according to gel elution times, activity profiles in buffers of different pH, electrophoretic mobility under native conditions, and inhibitor sensitivity. The results indicate that PGP activity is due to cysteine and not serine chymotrypsin-like peptidases from the T. molitor larvae midgut. We propose that the evolutionary conservation of cysteine peptidases in the complement of digestive peptidases of tenebrionid stored-product beetles is due not only to the adaptation of insects to plants rich in serine peptidase inhibitors, but also to accommodate the need to efficiently cleave major dietary proteins rich in glutamine.  相似文献   

19.
The proteinase activity present in homogenates of trophozoites of Giardia lamblia, active on azocasein and urea-denaturated hemoglobin, was separated into two different enzymes by a series of purification procedures. These procedures included gel filtration on Fractogel TSK HW-55 (F), organomercurial agarose affinity chromatography, and ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. By chromatography on Sephadex G-100, two purified enzymes exhibited relative molecular weights of Mr = 95,000 and 35,000 +/- 10%, respectively. On the basis of inhibition by thiol reagents and abrogation of this effect by dithiothreitol and cysteine, they were identified as cysteine proteinases. Proteinase I (Mr = 95,000) and proteinase II (Mr = 35,000) were active against the beta-chain of insulin releasing characteristic fragments. However, differences in substrate specificities of the two enzymes could be observed by using synthetic peptides that represent sequences 1-6, 8-18, and 20-30 of the insulin beta-chain. Furthermore, the synthetic tetrapeptides Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe, Arg-Gly-Leu-Hyp, and Arg-Arg-Phe-Phe were hydrolyzed by the two proteinases releasing Phe-Phe and Leu-Hyp, respectively. Compared with Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe, the rates of hydrolysis of Arg-Gly-Leu-Hyp and Arg-Arg-Phe-Phe at substrate concentrations of 1 mM were 91% and 63% (proteinase I) and 80% and 57% (proteinase II), respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Proteinase activities in the larval midguts of the bruchids Callosobruchus maculatus and Zabrotes subfasciatus were investigated. Both midgut homogenates showed a slightly acidic to neutral pH optima for the hydrolysis of fluorogenic substrates. Proteolysis of epsilon-aminocaproil-Leu-Cys(SBzl)-MCA was totally inhibited by the cysteine proteinase inhibitors E-64 and leupeptin, and was activated by 1.5 mM DTT in both insects, while hydrolysis of the substrate Z-ArgArg-MCA was inhibited by aprotinin and E-64, which suggests that it is being hydrolysed by serine and cysteine proteinases. Gel assays showed that the proteolytic activity in larval midgut of C. maculatus was due to five major cysteine proteinases. However, based on the pattern of E-64 and aprotinin inhibition, proteolytic activity in larval midgut of Z. subfasciatus was not due only to cysteine proteinases. Fractionation of the larval midgut homogenates of both bruchids through ion-exchange chromatography (DEAE-Sepharose) revealed two peaks of activity against Z-ArgArg-MCA for both bruchid species. The fractions from C. maculatus have characteristics of cysteine proteinases, while Z. subfasciatus has one non-retained peak of activity containing cysteine proteinases and another eluted in a gradient of 250-350 mM NaCl. The proteolytic activity of the retained peak is higher at pH 8.8 than at pH 6.0 and corresponds with a single peak that is active against N-p-tosyl-GlyGlyArg-MCA, and sensitive to 250 microM aprotinin (90% inhibition). The peak contains a serine proteinase which hydrolyzes alpha-amylase inhibitor 1 from the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris). Arch.  相似文献   

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