The Journal of biological chemistry
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Treatment of rat liver plasma membranes with various commercial preparations of crude collagenase from Clostridium histolyticum at concentrations as low as 1 mug/ml, resulted in activation of the adenylate cyclase system. Maximal activation occurred at 50 to 100 mug/ml of collagenase, and promoted a 2- to 3-fold increase in the basal activity as well as in the activities stimulated by catecholamines, glucagon, fluoride, or GTP. This was due to an increase in the maximal velocity of the cyclizing reaction without any increase in the affinity of the enzyme for its substrate. ⋯ The stimulatory substance was nondialyzable, thermolabile, and inhibited by both EDTA and -SH reagents, thus appearing to be a protein. The following observations suggest the effects observed were due to other protease(s) present in crude collagenase: (a) only crude collagenase was active on liver adenylate cyclase: treatment with purified collagenase from C. histolyticum or from Achromobacter iophagus gave no stimulation; (b) the stimulatory activity was irreversible since washing of the membranes after treatment was without effect; (c) crude collagenase contained no lecithinase or sphingomyelinase activity under our conditions of adenylate cyclase assay; (d) after chromatography on Sephadex G-100, the activator appeared as a peak in the 30,000-dalton region and was clearly separated from the collagenase and clostripain peaks, but coincident with elastolytic and caseinolytic activities; (e) the effect of crude collagenase could be prevented by addition of elastin in vitro and was mimicked by purified elastase from hog pancreas. It remains to be seen whether the effects observed result from an increase in the catalytic constant of adenylate cyclase, or an unmasking of new catalytic sites.
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The complete amino acid sequence of human salivary statherin, a peptide which strongly inhibits precipitation from supersaturated calcium phosphate solutions, and therefore stabilizes supersaturated saliva, has been determined. The NH2-terminal half of this Mr=5380 (43 amino acids) polypeptide was determined by automated Edman degradations (liquid phase) on native statherin. The peptide was digested separately with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and Staphylococcus aureus protease, and the resulting peptides were purified by gel filtration. ⋯ The NH2-terminal one-third is highly polar and includes three polar dipeptides: H2PO3-Ser-Ser-H2PO3-Arg-Arg-, and Glu-Glu-. The COOH-terminal two-thirds of the molecule is hydrophobic, containing several repeating dipeptides: four of -Gn-Pro-, three of -Tyr-Gln-, two of -Gly-Tyr-, two of-Gln-Tyr-, and two of the tetrapeptide sequence -Pro-Tyr-Gln-Pro-. Unusual cleavage sites in the statherin sequence obtained with chymotrypsin and S. aureus protease were also noted.