Abstract

Japanese monkey progastricsin was shown to be activated to gastricsin exclusively by a two-step process through an intermediate form. The occurrence of this process was substantiated by the isolation of the intermediate form and released peptides. By NH2-terminal sequence analyses of these protein and peptide species, the amino acid sequence of the 43-residue activation segment (propart) was determined to be as follows: (Formula: see text) The NH2-terminal 26-residue peptide was released first, resulting in generation of the intermediate form. The subsequent release of peptides, residues Nos. 27-40 and 27-43, generated two gastricsins as the final products. This two-step process of activation of Japanese monkey progastricsin is in striking contrast to the one-step activation process occurring exclusively for pepsinogen A of the same monkey species. The course of molecular evolution of pepsinogens including progastricsins was deduced from the amino acid sequences of their activation segments by constructing phylogenic trees. The trees divided pepsinogens into 3 clusters, i.e., pepsinogens A, progastricsins and prochymosin, showing that these three groups diverged from one another very early on in the course of the evolution of pepsinogens.

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