Liberation of enkephalins from enkephalin-containing peptides by brain endo-oligopeptidase A
- PMID: 3135842
- DOI: 10.1016/0300-9084(88)90157-5
Liberation of enkephalins from enkephalin-containing peptides by brain endo-oligopeptidase A
Abstract
Endo-oligopeptidase A, highly purified from the cytosol fraction of bovine brain by immunoaffinity chromatography, has been characterised as a thiol endopeptidase. This enzyme, known to hydrolyse the Phe5-Ser6 bond of bradykinin and the Arg8-Arg9 bond of neurotensin has been shown to produce, by a single cleavage, [Leu]enkephalin or [Met]enkephalin from small enkephalin-containing peptides. Enkephalin formation could be inhibited in a concentration dependent manner by the alternative substrate bradykinin. The optimal substrate size was found to be 8-13 amino acids, with enkephalin the only product released from precursors in which this sequence is immediately followed by a pair of basic residues. However, the specificity constants (kcat/Km) obtained for endo-oligopeptidase A hydrolysis of bradykinin, neurotensin and dynorphin B are of the same order. Taken together, these results indicate that the substrate amino acid sequence is not the only factor determining the cleavage site of this enzyme. Finally, endo-oligopeptidase A and metalloendopeptidase EC 3.4.24.15 are two different enzymes. The latter is not able to liberate enkephalins from metorphamide and dynorphin.
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