Literature DB >> 26083455

A novel form of ficin from Ficus carica latex: Purification and characterization.

Danielle Baeyens-Volant1, André Matagne2, Rachida El Mahyaoui1, Ruddy Wattiez3, Mohamed Azarkan4.   

Abstract

A novel ficin form, named ficin E, was purified from fig tree latex by a combination of cation-exchange chromatography on SP-Sepharose Fast Flow, Thiopropyl Sepharose 4B and fplc-gel filtration chromatography. The new ficin appeared not to be sensitive to thiol derivatization by a polyethylene glycol derivative, allowing its purification. The protease is homogeneous according to PAGE, SDS-PAGE, mass spectrometry, N-terminal micro-sequencing analyses and E-64 active site titration. N-terminal sequencing of the first ten residues has shown high identity with the other known ficin (iso)forms. The molecular weight was found to be (24,294±10)Da by mass spectrometry, a lower value than the apparent molecular weight observed on SDS-PAGE, around 27 kDa. Far-UV CD data revealed a secondary structure content of 22% α-helix and 26% β-sheet. The protein is not glycosylated as shown by carbohydrate analysis. pH and temperature measurements indicated maxima activity at pH 6.0 and 50 °C, respectively. Preliminary pH stability analyses have shown that the protease conserved its compact structure in slightly acidic, neutral and alkaline media but at acidic pH (<3), the formation of some relaxed or molten state was evidenced by 8-anilino-1-naphtalenesulfonic acid binding characteristics. Comparison with the known ficins A, B, C, D1 and D2 (iso)forms revealed that ficin E showed activity profile that looked like ficin A against two chromogenic substrates while it resembled ficins D1 and D2 against three fluorogenic substrates. Enzymatic activity of ficin E was not affected by Mg(2+), Ca(2+) and Mn(2+) at a concentration up to 10mM. However, the activity was completely suppressed by Zn(2+) at a concentration of 1mM. Inhibitory activity measurements clearly identified the enzyme as a cysteine protease, being unaffected by synthetic (Pefabloc SC, benzamidine) and by natural proteinaceous (aprotinin) serine proteases inhibitors, by aspartic proteases inhibitors (pepstatin A) and by metallo-proteases inhibitors (EDTA, EGTA). Surprisingly, it was well affected by the metallo-protease inhibitor o-phenanthroline. The enzymatic activity was however completely blocked by cysteine proteases inhibitors (E-64, iodoacetamide), by thiol-blocking compounds (HgCl2) and by cysteine/serine proteases inhibitors (TLCK and TPCK). This is a novel ficin form according to peptide mass fingerprint analysis, specific amidase activity, SDS-PAGE and PAGE electrophoretic mobility, N-terminal sequencing and unproneness to thiol pegylation.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Circular dichroism; Cysteine protease; Ficin; Ficus carica; Latex; Mass spectrometry

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26083455     DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2015.05.019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phytochemistry        ISSN: 0031-9422            Impact factor:   4.072


  3 in total

1.  Functional characterization of purified pear protease and its proteolytic activities with casein and myofibrillar proteins.

Authors:  Seung-Hee Nam; Young-Min Kim; Marie K Walsh; Sun-Hee Yim; Jong-Bang Eun
Journal:  Food Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2016-03-31       Impact factor: 2.391

2.  Autolysis control and structural changes of purified ficin from Iranian fig latex with synthetic inhibitors.

Authors:  H Zare; A A Moosavi-Movahedi; M Salami; N Sheibani; K Khajeh; M Habibi-Rezaei
Journal:  Int J Biol Macromol       Date:  2015-12-21       Impact factor: 6.953

3.  Inhibition of apricot polyphenol oxidase by combinations of plant proteases and ascorbic acid.

Authors:  Ala Eddine Derardja; Matthias Pretzler; Ioannis Kampatsikas; Malika Barkat; Annette Rompel
Journal:  Food Chem X       Date:  2019-09-11
  3 in total

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