Saheki T, Holzer H
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1975 Mar 28;384(1):203-14. doi: 10.1016/0005-2744(75)90109-6.
Studies on the mechanism and time course of the activation of proteinases A (EC 3.4.23.8), B (EC 3.4.22.9) and C (EC 3.4.12.--) in crude yeast extracts at pH 5.1 and 25 degrees C showed that the increase in proteinase B activity is paralleled with the disappearance of proteinase B inhibitor. Addition of purified proteinase A to fresh crude extracts accelerates the inactivation of the proteinase B inhibitor and the appearance of maximal activities of proteinases B and C. The decrease of proteinase B inhibitor activity and the increase of proteinase B activity are markedly retarded by the addition of pepstatin. Because 10-minus 7 M pepstatin completely inhibits proteinase A without affecting proteinase B activity, this is another indication for the role of proteinase A during the activation of proteinase B. Whereas extracts of yeast grown on minimal medium reached maximal activation of proteinases B and C after 20 h of incubation at pH 5.1 and 25 degrees C, extracts of yeast grown on complete medium had to be incubated for about 100 h. In the latter case, the addition of proteinas A results in maximal activation of proteinases B and C and disappearance of proteinase B inhibitor activity only after 10--20 h of incubation. With the optimal conditions, the maximal activities of proteinases A, B and C, as well as of the proteinase B inhibitor, were determined in crude extracts of yeast that had been grown batchwise for different lengths of time either on minimal or on complete medium. Upon incubation, all three proteinases were activated by several times their initial activity. This reflects the existence of proteolytically degradable inhibitors of the three proteinases and together with the above mentioned observations it demonstrates that the "activation" of yeast proteinases A, B and C upon incubation results from the proteolytic digestion of inhibitors rather than from activation of inactive zymogens by limited proteolysis.
对粗制酵母提取物在pH 5.1和25℃条件下蛋白酶A(EC 3.4.23.8)、蛋白酶B(EC 3.4.22.9)和蛋白酶C(EC 3.4.12.--)激活机制及时间进程的研究表明,蛋白酶B活性的增加与蛋白酶B抑制剂的消失同时发生。向新鲜粗提物中添加纯化的蛋白酶A会加速蛋白酶B抑制剂的失活以及蛋白酶B和蛋白酶C最大活性的出现。添加胃蛋白酶抑制剂会显著延缓蛋白酶B抑制剂活性的降低和蛋白酶B活性的增加。由于10^-7 M胃蛋白酶抑制剂能完全抑制蛋白酶A而不影响蛋白酶B的活性,这是蛋白酶A在蛋白酶B激活过程中作用的另一个证据。在pH 5.1和25℃孵育20小时后,在基本培养基上生长的酵母提取物中蛋白酶B和蛋白酶C达到最大激活,而在完全培养基上生长的酵母提取物则需要孵育约100小时。在后一种情况下,添加蛋白酶A仅在孵育10 - 20小时后才导致蛋白酶B和蛋白酶C的最大激活以及蛋白酶B抑制剂活性的消失。在最佳条件下,测定了在基本培养基或完全培养基上分批培养不同时间的酵母粗提物中蛋白酶A、蛋白酶B和蛋白酶C以及蛋白酶B抑制剂的最大活性。孵育后,所有三种蛋白酶的活性都被激活至初始活性的数倍。这反映了三种蛋白酶存在可被蛋白水解降解的抑制剂,并且与上述观察结果一起表明,孵育时酵母蛋白酶A、B和C的“激活”是由于抑制剂的蛋白水解消化,而不是通过有限蛋白水解激活无活性的酶原。