Abstract

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), thermolysin and “enkephalinase”, three metallopeptidases cleaving the Gly 3-Phe 4 amide bond of enkephalins, were compared regarding substrate specificity and effects of butanedione, an arginyl-directed reagent. The hydrolysis of enkephalins and analogues was more affected by the nature of P1 and P2 residues in the case of thermolysin than in those of ACE or “enkephalinase”; amidation of the C-terminal carboxylate decreased drastically the hydrolysis by ACE but only marginally by thermolysin and the effect was intermediate for “enkephalinase”. With adequate model substrates, the ratio of dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase to tripeptidylcaroxypeptidase (endopeptidase) activities were of 25 for ACE, 3 for “enkephalinase” and only 0.3 for thermolysin. Finally a butanedione treatment increased thermolysin activity, but abolished ACE activity; it reduced “enkephalinase” activity by 80 % when measured with a free C-terminal carboxylate enkephalin analogue but only slightly with the corresponding amidated derivative. A critical role of an Arg residue in ACE and, to a lesser extent, in “enkephalinase” (but not in thermolysin) is suggested to be responsible for the preferential dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase activity of these two enzymes.

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