Abstract

Two metalloendopeptidases, designated as Streptomyces griseus metalloendopeptidases I and II (SGMPI and SGMPII), were isolated from a commercial Pronase P by a method including affinity chromatography on carbobenzoxy-L-alaninyl-triethylenetetraminyl-Sepharose (Z-Ala-T-Sepharose). The two enzymes differed from each other in behavior on ion-exchange chromatography but showed the same amino-terminal sequence at least up to the 20th residue. Their molecular weights were both estimated to be 37,000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Elemental and amino acid composition analyses indicated that both of them contained about 1 g atom of zinc and one cystine residue per mol of protein. Cleavage specificities of the two enzymes toward synthetic peptide-substrates were very similar to those observed with thermolysin. EDTA, o-phenanthroline, and phosphoramidon strongly inhibited these enzymes, while typical serine-protease inhibitors and cysteine-protease inhibitors had no effect. The findings clearly indicate that SGMPI and SGMPII can be classified into the family of zinc-endopeptidases. It was unexpectedly found, however, that these metalloendopeptidases were strongly inhibited by protein serine-protease inhibitors produced by Streptomycetes, such as Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI), alkaline protease inhibitor-2c' (API-2c'), and plasminostreptin (PS).

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