Abstract

A prophenoloxidase was purified from blood cells of the crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus. The purified proenzyme was homogeneous on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and had a molecular mass of 76 kDa under both non-reducing and reducing conditions. The crayfish prophenoloxidase was a glycoprotein, with an isoelectric point of about 5.4. A 36 kDa serine proteinase, isolated and purified from crayfish blood cells (Aspán et al., 1990b, Insect Biochem. 20, 709–718), could convert the 76 kDa prophenoloxidase to phenoloxidase by an apparent proteolytic cleavage, since the molecular masses of two active enzymes, phenoloxidases, were 60 and 62 kDa. A commercial serine proteinase, trypsin, activated prophenoloxidase to phenoloxidase, and as a result a 60 kDa protein was produced. In the blood cells of crayfish four serine proteinases or 3H-DFP binding proteins are present, with masses of 36, 38, 50 and 67 kDa. However, 3H-DFP labelling of proteins in blood cells lysate, prepared in its inactive form, only yielded labelled bands of 50 and 67 kDa, whereas addition of an elicitor to prophenoloxidase system activation, a β-1,3-glucan, resulted in the appearance of four 3H-DFP labelled proteins, with molecular masses of 67, 50, 38 and 36 kDa, respectively. Thus, the 36 kDa endogenous serine proteinase, the prophenoloxidase activating enzyme, ppA, may be present as an inactive precursor in crayfish blood cells. The 38 and 36 kDa proteinases could both cleave the chromogenic peptide S-2337 [Bz-Ile-Glu-( γ- O-Piperidyl)-Gly-Arg- p-nitroaniline], and specifically bind prophenoloxidase. These results show that crayfish prophenoloxidase, the terminal enzyme of the prophenoloxidase activating cascade, a proposed defence pathway in arthropod blood, can be converted to active enzyme by an apparent proteolytic cleavage, not only by a commercial proteinase, but also by an endogenous serine type proteinase.

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