Canine pulmonary angiotensin-converting enzyme. Physicochemical, catalytic and immunological properties. |
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Authors: | J M Conroy J L Hartley R L Soffer |
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Abstract: | Antiontensin-converting enzyme (peptidyldipeptide hydrolase, EC 3.4.15.1) has been solubilized from canine pulmonary particles and purified to apparent homogeneity. A value of approx. 140000 was estimated for the molecular weight of the native and the reduced, denatured forms of the enzyme. No free NH2-terminal residue was detected by the dansylation procedure. Carbohydrate accounted for 17% of the weight of the enzyme, and the major residues were galactose, mannose and N-acetylglucosamine with smaller amounts of sialic acid and fucose. Removal of sialic acid residues with neuraminidase did not alter enzymatic activity. The enzyme contained one molar equivalent of zinc. Addition of this metal reversed stimulation and inhibition of activity observed in the presence of Co2+ and Mn2+, respectively. Immunologic homology of pure dog and rabbit enzymes was demonstrable with goat antisera. Fab fragments and intact IgG antibodies displayed similar inhibition dose vs. response curves with homologous enzyme, whereas the fragments were poor inhibitors of heterologous activity compared to the holoantibodies. The canine glycoprotein was much less active than the rabbit preparation in catalyzing hydrolysis of Hip-His-Leu. In contrast, the two enzymes exhibited comparable kinetic parameters with angiotensin I as substrate. |
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