PRIMARY STRUCTURE AND SPECIFICITY OF THE MAJOR SERINE PROTEINASE-INHIBITOR OF AMARANTH (AMARANTHUS-CAUDATUS L) SEEDS

Citation
J. Hejgaard et al., PRIMARY STRUCTURE AND SPECIFICITY OF THE MAJOR SERINE PROTEINASE-INHIBITOR OF AMARANTH (AMARANTHUS-CAUDATUS L) SEEDS, Biochimica et biophysica acta. Protein structure and molecular enzymology, 1204(1), 1994, pp. 68-74
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Biology,Biophysics
ISSN journal
01674838
Volume
1204
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
68 - 74
Database
ISI
SICI code
0167-4838(1994)1204:1<68:PSASOT>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
A novel member of the potato inhibitor I family of serine proteinase i nactivating proteins has been isolated from seeds of grain amaranth (A maranthus caudatus L.) and characterized. The mature form of the amara nth trypsin/subtilisin inhibitor (ATSI) with pI approximate to 8.3 and molecular mass 7887 Da contains 69 amino acids in a sequence showing 33-51% identity with members of the inhibitor I family from other plan t families. A minor form with pI approximate to 7.8 and same inhibitor y properties lacked the N-terminal dipeptide Ala-Arg. In accordance wi th the reactive-site bond Lys(45)-Asp(46), which was identified by spe cific cleavage on a subtilisin column, ATSI is a potent inhibitor of t rypsin (K-i approximate to 0.34 nM) and more weakly of plasmin (K-i ap proximate to 38 nM) and Factor XII, (K-i approximate to 440 nM). Howev er, ATSI also inactivates chymotrypsin (K-i approximate to 0.41 nM), c athepsin G (K-i approximate to 122 nM) and several alkaline microbial proteinases, including subtilisin NOVO (K-i approximate to 0.37 nM). I nterestingly, ATSI contains a Trp residue instead of the highly conser ved Arg in position 53 (P'(8)), which is assumed to play a central rol e in stabilization of the active-site loop during complex formation. A TSI was immediately inactivated by pepsin and hardly represents an ant inutritional component in foods or feeds.