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Title: Characterization of two uterine proteases and their actions on the estrogen receptor.

Authors: Gregory, M R; Notides, A C

Published In Biochemistry, (1982 Dec 07)

Abstract: We have characterized two previously undetected proteases from the calf uterine cytosol and measured their actions on the estrogen receptor. One is an exopeptidase, purified 60-fold, that hydrolyzed amino acid (lysine-, and alanine-, or leucine-) p-nitroanilide substrates and leucylglycylglycine, did not hydrolyze [14C]methemoglobin, was completely inhibited by 1 mM bestatin or puromycin (specific inhibitors of leucine aminopeptidase like enzymes), and was unable to influence the sedimentation of the 8S form of the estrogen receptor in sucrose gradients containing dilute Tris buffer. A commercial porcine leucine aminopeptidase, like the calf uterine aminopeptidase, did not convert the 8S estrogen receptor to a 4S form. Evidently, removal of the N-terminal amino acid(s) from the estrogen receptor by exopeptidase action cannot alter the sedimentation of the 8S form of the receptor, or the N-terminal amino acid(s) of the receptor is (are) unaccessible or resistant to exopeptidase activity. The second, a receptor-active protease, is an endopeptidase that did not hydrolyze any of the synthetic amide or peptide substrates tested but did possess [14C]methemoglobin-degrading activity and the ability to convert the 8S estrogen receptor to a modified 4S form in sucrose gradients containing dilute Tris buffer. The modified 4S receptor was separable from the native receptor by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The endopeptidase did not require Ca2+ for activity, and its chromatographic properties were distinctly different from a previously isolated Ca2+-activated protease. It was inhibited by leupeptin or dipyridyl disulfide, suggesting the presence of a thiol group that is essential for its activity. These data indicate that a decrease in the sedimentation rate of the estrogen receptor in sucrose gradients with low salt or a change in the receptor's elution on DEAE-cellulose chromatography is not related to receptor activation but is produced by the receptor-active protease or other proteases.

PubMed ID: 6758845 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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