Abstract

The proteinase previously found in chromatin prepared from a total rat liver homogenate was purified from the rat liver mitochondrial fraction. The membrane-bound enzyme is solubilized in either 0.6% digitonin or 0.5 m phosphate buffer. After a 1330-fold purification, the enzyme appears homogeneous by acrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation indicated a molecular weight of 22,500, a molecular weight of 23,500 ± 10% has been estimated by acrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The enzyme showed a high substrate specificity. Among several proteins tested, only glucagon, nonhistone chromosomal proteins, and histones are good substrates. A limited proteolysis was found for the very-lysine-rich histone H1, which was split into a high molecular weight fragment ( M r 13,000). The highly phosphorylated histone H1 isolated from regenerating rat liver 24 h after partial hepatectomy exhibited the same susceptibility to the proteinase as H1 from normal liver. Large polypeptides of a nonhistone chromosomal protein fraction were degraded more rapidly than the small ones. N-Acetyl- l-tyrosine ethyl ester was used with alcohol dehydrogenase and NAD in a coupled enzyme assay for the proteinase. The apparent Michaelis constant for the hydrolysis of N-acetyl- l-tyrosine ethyl ester is 5.0 × 10 −3 m. The proteinase has catalytic properties simlar to trypsin and chymotrypsin. The pH optimum was around 8, soybean trypsin inhibitor depressed the enzymatic activity, and the serine modifying reagents diisopropyl phosphofluoridate and phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride inactivated the enzyme. The affinity reagent for chymotrypsin-like active sites, l-1-tosylamido-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone, inactivated the proteinase.

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