A Cysteine Protease That Processes Insect Vitellin
Citations Over TimeTop 22% of 1996 papers
Abstract
A cysteine protease that initiates degradation of vitellin (Vt) in the orthopteran Blattella germanica, and its proprotease precursor, were purified from yolk and partially characterized. The protease, purified 300-fold, contains three peptides of Mr 27,000, 29,000, and 31,000. A comparison of the purified enzyme's action pattern on Vt in vivo and in vitro confirmed its role in Vt processing. Protease-deficient yolk (day 0 postovulation) contained peptides of Mr 35,500, 37,000, 39,000, and 41,000, which were absent from yolk with protease activity. These were replaced by three peptides of approximately Mr 29,000, at days 2-3, the same time in development that protease expression and acidification of yolk granules occur (Nordin, J. H., Beaudoin, E. L., and Liu, X. (1991) Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 18, 177-192). Acidification of purified proprotease converted it to three peptides of approximately Mr 29, 000 with cysteine protease activity. This conversion also required participation of a cysteine protease. Activated proprotease had the same pH activity profile, susceptibility to inhibitors, and cathepsin classification (L) as the protease. These results indicate that the Vt-processing protease is derived from a proprotease, which is activated in vivo by a developmentally regulated decrease in intragranular pH.
Related Papers
- → Cysteine Proteases of Malaria Parasites: Targets for Chemotherapy(2002)180 cited
- → Endogenous cysteine protease inhibitors in upmost pathogenic parasitic protozoa(2022)18 cited
- → Strategies for detection and quantification of cysteine cathepsins-evolution from bench to bedside(2015)12 cited
- → Involvement of Cysteine Protease Inhibitors in the Defense Mechanism Against Parasites(2008)8 cited
- → Inhibitor of Cysteine Protease of Plasmodium malariae Regulates Malapains, Endogenous Cysteine Proteases of the Parasite(2022)1 cited