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A novel serine protease cryptolepain from cryptolepis buchanani: purification and biochemical characterization

Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:06
Version 1 2015-09-01, 15:23
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:06 authored by M Pande, VK Dubey, SC Yadav, MV Jagannadham
A novel protease is purified to homogeneity from the latex of a medicinally important plant Cryptolepis buchanani of family Apocynaceae (formerly Asclepiadaceae). The enzyme named cryptolepain has a molecular mass of 50.5 kDa. The isoelectric point and extinction coefficient (epsilon280nm1%) are 6.0 and 26.4, respectively. Cryptolepain contains 15 tryptophans, 41 tyrosines, and eight cysteine residues forming four disulfide bridges. The detectable carbohydrate moiety in the enzyme was found to be 6-7%. Cryptolepain hydrolyzes denatured natural substrates like casein, azocasein, and azoalbumin with high specific activity. The protease is exclusively inhibited by serine protease inhibitors phenylmethansulfonyl fluoride and diisopropyl fluorophosphate. Hydrolysis of azoalbumin by the cryptolepain is optimal in the pH range of 8-10 and temperatures of 65-75 degrees C. The enzyme shows high stability against pH (2.5-11.5), temperature (up to 80 degrees C), and chemical denaturants. The Km value of the enzyme was found to be 10 microM with azocasein as the substrate. The N-terminal sequence of cryptolepain is unique and shows only little homology to other known serine proteases, which makes this enzyme an ideal candidate for our ongoing biochemical and structure-function investigations of proteases. Easy availability of the latex and simple purification procedures make the enzyme a good system for exploring the biophysical chemistry of serine proteases as well as applications in the food industry.

History

Journal

Journal of agricultural and food chemistry

Volume

54

Pagination

10141-10150

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

0021-8561

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, American Chemical Society

Issue

26

Publisher

ACS Publications

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