scholarly journals CRYSTALLINE TRYPSIN

1932 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Northrop ◽  
M. Kunitz

A method is described for isolating a crystalline protein of high tryptic activity from beef pancreas. The protein has constant proteolytic activity and optical activity under various conditions and no indication of further fractionation could be obtained. The loss in activity corresponds to the decrease in native protein when the protein is denatured by heat, digested by pepsin, or hydrolyzed in dilute alkali. The enzyme digests casein, gelatin, edestin, and denatured hemoglobin, but not native hemoglobin. It accelerates the coagulation of blood but has little effect on the clotting of milk. It digests peptone prepared by the action of pepsin on casein, edestin or gelatin. The extent of the digestion of gelatin caused by this enzyme is the same as that caused by crystalline pepsin and is approximately equivalent to tripling the number of carboxyl groups present in the solution. The activity of the preparation is not increased by enterokinase. The molecular weight by osmotic pressure measure is about 34,000. The diffusion coefficient in ½ saturated magnesium sulfate at 6°C. is 0.020 ±0.001 cm.2 per day, corresponding to a molecular radius of 2.6 x 10–7 cm. The isoelectric point is probably between pH 7.0 and pH 8.0. The optimum pH for the digestion of casein is from 8.0–9.0. The optimum stability is at pH 1.8.

1933 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 795-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry W. Scherp

The diffusion coefficient of crystalline trypsin in 0.5 saturated magnesium sulfate at 5°C. is 0.020 ±0.001 cm.2 per day, corresponding to a molecular radius of 2.6 x 10–7 cm. The rate of diffusion of the proteolytic activity is the same as that of the protein nitrogen, indicating that these two properties are held together in chemical combination and not in the form of an adsorption complex.


1924 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin J. Cohn ◽  
Ruth E. L. Berggren

1. The methods of measuring the base-combining capacities of proteins have been considered, and the constants and corrections that are employed in their calculation have been critically examined. 2. The base-combining capacities of ten casein preparations have been determined. These differed from each other to a far greater extent than can be attributed to the experimental errors involved in their measurement and calculation. The variations were, moreover, systematic in manner, and can be explained as dependent upon the method employed in the preparation of the casein. 3. Casein that had never been exposed to greater alkalinities than those in which it exists in nature combined with approximately 0.0014 mols of sodium hydroxide per gm., while casein prepared nach Hammarsten, and casein that was saturated with base during its preparation, combined with approximately 0.0018 mols of sodium hydroxide per gm. 4. 1 mol of sodium hydroxide, therefore, combined with 735 gm. of casein that had not previously been exposed to alkaline reactions, or with 535 gm. of casein that had previously been saturated with base. 5. If the minimal molecular weight of casein, based upon its tryptophane content, is placed at 12,800, the native protein must, therefore, contain approximately eighteen acid groups, and in addition six acid groups that are released in alkaline solutions, and presumably represent internally bound groups. The total base-combining capacity therefore represents that of a substance with a molecular weight of 12,800 and containing twenty-four acid valences. 6. This base-combining capacity is no greater than can be accounted for on the basis of our knowledge of the structure and composition of casein. On the basis of a molecular weight of 12,800 casein contains at least 19 molecules of glutamic acid, 4 of aspartic, and 8 of hydroxyglutamic acid. If the amino acids in the protein molecule are bound to each other in polypeptide linkage, each of these thirty-one dicarboxylic acids should yield terminal groups. The ammonia in casein suggests that twelve of these groups are bound as amides. As many as nineteen carboxyl groups may, therefore, be free in the protein molecule. 7. Casein contains phosphorus. If this phosphorus represents phosphoric acid, and if we consider that all of the valences of this acid are either themselves free, or that they have liberated carboxyl groups by entering into the structure of the protein molecule, casein should contain nine additional acid groups. 8. Recent analytical results, therefore, indicate that casein contains at least nineteen, and possibly twenty-eight, free acid groups. The physicochemical measurements presented suggest that casein combines with base as though it contained twenty-four acid groups, of which six, or one-fourth, appear to be bound in the native protein. These experimental results are therefore in close agreement with the expectation on the basis of the classical theory of protein structure.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo T. Cánepa ◽  
Elena B.C. Llambías

Pig liver ferrochelatase was purified 465-fold with about 30% yield, to apparent homogeneity, by a procedure involving solubilization from mitochondria, ammonium sulfate fractionation, and Sephacryl S-300 chromatography. The fraction of each purification step had cobaltochelatase as well as ferrochelatase activity. A purified protein of molecular weight 40 000 was found by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. A molecular weight of approximately 240 000 was obtained by Sephacryl S-300 chromatography. Both activities of the purified fraction increased linearly with time until 2 h. but nonlinear plots were obtained with increasing concentrations of protein. Their optimum pH values were similar. Km values were, for ferrochelatase activity, 23.3 μM for the metal and 30.3 μM for mesoporphyrin. and for cobaltochelatase activity. 27 and 45.5 μM, respectively. Fe2+ and Co2+ each protected against inactivation by heat. Pb2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, or Hg2+ inhibited both activities, while Mn2+ slightly activated; Mg2+ had no effect, at the concentrations tested. There appeared to be an involvement of sulfhydryl groups in metal insertion. Lipids, in correlation with their degree of unsaturation, activated both purified activities; phospholipids also had activation effects. We conclude that a single protein catalyzes the insertion of Fe2+ or Co2+ into mesoporphyrin.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (11) ◽  
pp. 1551-1555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tony C. M. Seah ◽  
A. R. Bhatti ◽  
J. G. Kaplan

At any stage of growth of a wild-type bakers' yeast, some 20% of the catalatic activity of crude extracts is not precipitable by means of antibody prepared against the typical catalase (catalase T), whose purification and properties have been previously described. Some of this catalatic activity is due to the presence of an atypical catalase (catalase A), a heme protein, with a molecular weight estimated as 170 000 – 190 000, considerably lower than that of the usual catalases (225 000 – 250 000). Preparations of catalase A were found to be homogeneous in the analytical ultracentrifuge and in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its subunit molecular weight, determined from its iron content, was 46 500, virtually the same as that of the major band obtained in gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, suggesting that the native protein is tetrameric. Its specific activity is in the range of those reported for other typical catalases.


1929 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 543-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Northrop ◽  
M. L. Anson

A method is described for determining the diffusion coefficient of solutes by determining the rate of passage of the solute through a thin porous membrane between two solutions of different concentration. The method has been used to determine the diffusion coefficient of carbon monoxide hemoglobin. This was found to be 0.0420 ± 0.0005 cm.2 per day at 5°C. The molecular weight of carbon monoxide hemoglobin calculated by means of Einstein's equation from this quantity is 68,600 ± 1,000.


1962 ◽  
Vol 17 (7) ◽  
pp. 432-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matatiahu Gehatia

The enzyme 20-β-Hydroxy-steroid-dehydrogenase obtained from the culture of Streptomyces hydrogenans and dissolved in 0.05 M Tris puffer, pH 7.3, has been investigated by means of a ultracentrifuge at 20 °C. The sedimentation- as well as the diffusion-coefficients obtained from various solutions at different concentrations were extrapolated to the concentration c = 0. The resulting zero-value for the sedimentation coefficient is s0 = 6.64 s and for the diffusion coefficient is D0 = 5.51 × 10-7 cm2/sec. Supposing the partial specific volume of the enzyme under consideration analogously to other similar proteins is V+=0.749 ml/g, the molecular weight has been estimated as M = 118 400.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Mardiguian ◽  
M Corgier ◽  
M Jouany

Dermatan is a high molecular weight glycosaminoglycan which has been shown to enhance the inhibition of thrombin by heparin-cofactor II. The aim of this study was to establish the influence of the molecular size and the role of the carboxyl group on the in vitro activity of Dermatan Sulfate. Pig skin Dermatan Sulfate was fractionated according to molecular size by gel-chromatography on Ultrogel Ac 44. Each fraction was characterized by its sulfur content and by its mean molecular weight measured on a TSK - 4000 column in reference to standard heparin fractions. Methyl esters of the unfractionated Dermatan Sulfate with varying degree of esterification, where prepared via activation of the carboxyl groups with a carbodiimide and reaction with methanol. The results of this study show that the heparin - cofactor II mediated anti-thrombin activity of Dermatan Sulfate is increasing with the molecular weight and is abolished by esterification of the carboxyl groups. Moreover, it can be speculated that each fraction contains the same amount of high affinity fraction and that, like heparin, the potency of the high affinity component is increasing with the molecular weight.


1963 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 1643-1654 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. K. Paik ◽  
Leo Benoiton

ϵ-Lysine acylase has been purified 160-fold from hog kidney and its properties have been examined. It differs from the enzyme from rat kidney in optimum pH and in that it cannot be dialyzed without loss of activity. Specificity studies have shown that besides hydrolyzing various ϵ-N-acyl-L-lysine derivatives, it also splits off the ϵ-N-acetyl group from a lysine residue when either or both the α-amino and carboxyl groups are linked in a peptide bond.


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