Abstract

Cathepsin C (CTSC) is a lysosomal cysteine protease belonging to the papain superfamily. Our previous study showed that CTSC precursor (zymogen) is localized exclusively in cortical rods (CRs) of mature oocyte in the kuruma prawn Marsupenaeus japonicus, suggesting that CTSC might have roles on regulating release and/or formation of a jelly layer. In this study, enzymically active CTSC of the kuruma prawn was prepared by recombinant expression in the High Five insect cell line. The recombinant enzyme with a polyhistidine tag at its C-terminus was considered to be initially secreted into the culture medium as an inactive form of zymogen, because Western blot with anti-CTSC antibody detected a 51 kDa protein corresponding to CTSC precursor. After purification by affinity chromatography on nickel-iminodiacetic acid resin, the enzyme displayed three forms of 51, 31, and 30 kDa polypeptides. All of the forms can be recognized by antiserum raised against C-terminal polyhistidine tag, indicating that the 31 and 30 kDa forms were generated from 51 kDa polypeptide by removal of a portion of the N-terminus of propeptide. Following activation at pH 5.5 and 37°C for 40 hours under native conditions, the recombinant CTSC (rCTSC) exhibited increased activity against the synthetic substrate Gly-Phe-β-naphthylamide and optimal pH at around 5. The purified rCTSC will be useful for further characterization of its exact physiological role on CRs release and/or formation of a jelly layer in kuruma prawn.

Highlights

  • Cathepsin C (CTSC), named cathepsin J, dipeptidyl transferase and dipeptidyl aminopeptidase I (DPPI) (EC 3.4.14.1), is a member of the papain superfamily of lysosmal cysteine protease [1, 2]

  • Each subunit is proteolytically processed into three chains: a significantly long propeptide, and heavy and light chains

  • Since the deduced amino acid of kuruma prawn CTSC possessed a potential glycosylation site [20], the production of recombinant protein using High Five insect cell line was applied to obtain an active enzyme with an arthropod-type sugar chain

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Summary

Introduction

Cathepsin C (CTSC), named cathepsin J, dipeptidyl transferase and dipeptidyl aminopeptidase I (DPPI) (EC 3.4.14.1), is a member of the papain superfamily of lysosmal cysteine protease [1, 2]. Since the deduced amino acid of kuruma prawn CTSC possessed a potential glycosylation site [20], the production of recombinant protein using High Five insect cell line was applied to obtain an active enzyme with an arthropod-type sugar chain. The PCR products were directly cloned to expression plasmid pIB/V5-His-TOPO (Invitrogen), which contains baculovirus promoters and need no other viral factors to activating protein expression in insect cell lines [21].

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