Abstract

Two polypeptides, isolated to electrophoretic homogeneity from Russet Burbank potato tubers, are powerful inhibitors of pancreatic serine proteinases. One of the inhibitors, called polypeptide trypsin inhibitor, PTI, has a molecular weight of 5100, and inhibits bovine trypsin. The inhibitor is devoid of methionine, histidine, and tryptophan and contains eight half-cystine residues as four disulfide bridges. The second inhibitor, polypeptide chymotrypsin inhibitor II, PCI-II, has a molecular weight of 5700 and powerfully inhibits chymotrypsin. This inhibitor is also devoid of methionine and tryptophan but it contains only six of half-cystines as three disulflde bonds. Both polypeptides strongly inhibit pancreatic elastase. In immunological double diffusion assays, polypeptide trypsin inhibitor and polypeptide chymotrypsin inhibitor II exhibit a high degree of immunological identity (a) with each other, (b) with a polypeptide chymotrypsin inhibitor (PCI-I, M r 5400) previously isolated from potato tubers, and (c) with inhibitor II, a larger (monomer M r ~ 12,000) inhibitor of both trypsin and chymotrypsin which has also been previously isolated from potato tubers. The four polypeptide proteinase inhibitors now isolated from Russet Burbank potato tubers cumulatively inhibit all five major intestinal digestive endo- and exoproteinases of animals. The inhibitors are thought to be antinutrients that are present as part of the natural chemical defense mechanisms of potato tubers against attacking pests.

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