Department of Bacteriology and Biochemistry, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83843.
Plant Physiol. 1981 Apr;67(4):754-8. doi: 10.1104/pp.67.4.754.
Carboxypeptidases from animal, plant, fungal, and bacterial sources were tested for their ability to bind to the carboxypeptidase inhibitor from Russet Burbank potatoes. Enzymes which participate in the degradation of dietary protein were partially purified from animal species as diverse as the cow and the limpet, and all were potently affected by the inhibitor. However, several zymogens of the enzymes in this group were tested and shown not to bind immobilized inhibitor. With the exception of an enzyme from mast cells and a novel carboxypeptidase A-like enzyme from bovine placenta, all animal carboxypeptidases which were not of digestive tract origin were not affected by the inhibitor. The inhibitor had no effect on the enzymic activities of all plant and most microbial carboxypeptidases. However, a strong association between the inhibitor and Streptomyces griseus carboxypeptidase has been noted previously and a low affinity (K(i) about 10 micromolar) for a carboxypeptidase G(1) from an acinetobacterium was found in this study.
从动物、植物、真菌和细菌来源中筛选了羧肽酶,以检测它们与来自 Russet Burbank 马铃薯的羧肽酶抑制剂结合的能力。从牛和帽贝等不同动物物种中部分纯化了参与膳食蛋白质降解的酶,所有这些酶都受到抑制剂的强烈影响。然而,对该组中的几种酶原进行了测试,结果表明它们不与固定化抑制剂结合。除了来自肥大细胞的一种酶和来自牛胎盘的一种新型羧肽酶 A 样酶外,所有非来源于消化道的动物羧肽酶均不受抑制剂的影响。抑制剂对所有植物和大多数微生物羧肽酶的酶活性均无影响。然而,先前已经注意到抑制剂与灰色链霉菌羧肽酶之间存在很强的关联,并且在本研究中发现了一种对来自不动杆菌的羧肽酶 G1 的低亲和力(K(i)约为 10 微摩尔)。