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1.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) malt contains endoproteinases belonging to all four of the commonly occurring classes, including serine proteinases. It also contains low molecular weight proteins that inhibit the activities of many of these endoproteinases, but it had never been shown that any barley or malt serine proteinases could be inhibited by any of these endogenous proteins. It is now reported that some proteins that were concentrated using an "affinity" method inhibited the activity of a malt serine endoproteinase. Two-dimensional electrophoretic and in vitro analyses showed that the inhibited enzyme was serine endoproteinase 1 (SEP-1) and that the inhibition could be quantified using a semipurified preparation of this enzyme. Amino acid sequencing and MALDI-TOF MS were used to identify the components of the partially purified inhibiting fractions. Only the "trypsin/alpha-amylase inhibitors" or chloroform/methanol (CM) proteins, most of which had truncated N and C termini, and one fragment of beta-amylase were present in the inhibitory fractions. When a CM protein fraction was prepared from barley according to traditional methods, some of its component proteins inhibited the activity of SEP-1 and some did not. This is the first report of the purification and identification of barley malt proteins that can inhibit an endogenous serine proteinase. It shows that some of the CM proteins probably play a role in controlling the activity of barley proteinases during germination, as well as possibly protecting the seed and young plant from microbes or pests.  相似文献   

2.
The proteinases of germinating barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) hydrolyze storage proteins into amino acids and small peptides that can be used by the growing plant or, during brewing, by yeast. They are critical for the malting and brewing processes because several aspects of brewing are affected by the amounts of protein, peptide, and amino acids that are in the wort. This study was carried out to quantitatively measure when endoproteinases form in green malt and whether they are inactivated at the high temperatures that occur during malt kilning. Little endoproteolytic activity was present in ungerminated barley, but the activities began forming 1 day into the "germination" phase of malting, and they were nearly maximal by the third germination day. Quantitative studies with azogelatin "in solution" assays showed that the green malt endoproteolytic activities were not inactivated under commercial kilning conditions that use temperatures as high as 85 degrees C but that some actually increased during the final kilning step. Qualitative (2-D, IEF x PAGE) analyses, which allow the study of individual proteases, showed that some of the enzymes were affected by heating at 68 and 85 degrees C, during the final stages of kilning. These changes obviously did not, however, decrease the overall proteolytic activity.  相似文献   

3.
Gelatinolytic proteinases from common carp dark muscle were purified by 30-60% ammonium sulfate fractionation and a combination of chromatographic steps including ion exchange on DEAE-Sephacel, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200, ion exchange on High-Q, and affinity on gelatin-Sepharose. The molecular masses of these proteinases as estimated by SDS-PAGE were 75, 67, and 64 kDa under nonreducing conditions. The enzymes revealed high activity at a slightly alkaline pH range, and their activities were investigated using gelatin as substrate. Metalloproteinase inhibitors, EDTA, EGTA, and 1,10-phenanthroline, almost completely suppressed the gelatinolytic activity, whereas other proteinase inhibitors did not show any inhibitory effect. Divalent metal ion Ca (2+) is essential for the gelatinolytic activity. Furthermore, these gelatinolytic proteinases hydrolyze native type I collagen effectively even at 4 degrees C, strongly suggesting their involvement in the texture softening of fish muscle during the post-mortem stage.  相似文献   

4.
Both resting and germinated barley seeds (Hordeum vulgare L. ‘Morex’) contain aspartic endopeptidase activities, and the activities increase during germination. We have extracted and partially purified aspartic endopeptidases from both resting seeds and green malt (four-day germinated barley). Six aspartic proteinase activities were found in resting barley seeds while only four activities were detected in green malt. All of the aspartic proteinases had similar pH activity optima (pH 3.5–4.5) and pI values (≈4.5). The purified green malt aspartic proteinases selectively digested a group of barley seed proteins, postulated to serve as defensive proteins, that are coded by the amylase-trypsin inhibitor super gene family. The aspartic proteinases that bound to a pepstatin A affinity column at pH 4.5 cross-reacted with antiserum raised against aspartic proteinases purified from barley seed. However, those that did not bind the affinity column also did not cross-react with the antiserum, indicating that there are two distinct groups of aspartic proteases in germinating barley.  相似文献   

5.
During malting and mashing, the proteinases of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and malt partially hydrolyze their storage proteins. These enzymes are critical because several aspects of the brewing process are affected by the soluble proteins, peptides and/or amino acids that they release. To develop improved malting barleys and/or malting and brewing methods, it is imperative to know whether and when the green malt endoproteinases are inactivated during malting and mashing. These enzyme activities are totally preserved during kilning and, in this study, we have determined when they were inactivated during mashing. Samples were removed from experimental mashes that mirrored those used in commercial breweries and their endoproteolytic activities were analyzed. The malt endoproteinases were stable through the 38 degrees C protein rest phase, but were quickly inactivated when the mash temperature was raised to 72 degrees C for the conversion step. All of the proteinase activities were inactivated at about the same rate. These findings indicate that the soluble protein levels of worts can be varied by adjusting the protein rest phase of mashing, but not by altering the conversion time. The rates of hydrolysis of individual malt proteins probably cannot be changed by altering the mash temperature schedule, since the main enzymes that solubilize these proteins are affected similarly by temperature.  相似文献   

6.
Green malt was kilned at 95 degrees C following two regimens: a standard regimen (SKR) and a rapid regimen (RKR). Both resulting malts were treated further in a tray dryer heated to 120 degrees C, as was green malt previously dried to 65 degrees C (TDR). Each regimen was monitored by determining the color, antioxidant activity (by both ABTS(.+) and FRAP methods), and polyphenolic profile. SKR and RKR malts exhibited decreased L* and increased b* values above approximately 80 degrees C. TDR malts changed significantly less, and color did not develop until 110 degrees C, implying that different chemical reactions lead to color in those malts. Antioxidant activity increased progressively with each regimen, although with TDR malts this became significant only at 110-120 degrees C. The RKR malt ABTS(.+) values were higher than those of the SKR malt. The main phenolics, that is, ferulic, p-coumaric, and vanillic acids, were monitored throughout heating. Ferulic acid levels increased upon heating to 80 degrees C for SKR and to 70 degrees C for RKR, with subsequent decreases. However, the levels for TDR malts did not increase significantly. The increase in free phenolics early in kilning could be due to enzymatic release of bound phenolics and/or easier extractability due to changes in the matrix. The differences between the kilning regimens used suggest that further modification of the regimens could lead to greater release of bound phenolics with consequent beneficial effects on flavor stability in beer and, more generally, on human health.  相似文献   

7.
Proteolysis during cereal germination is vital both to seedling growth and the success of commercial malting and brewing. In this study, proteinases in proteolytic extracts from seeds and germinated grains of 11 Botswana sorghum cultivars were analyzed and partially characterized by one‐dimensional electrophoresis on SDS‐PAGE gels containing incorporated gelatin. Proteinase polymorphism was detected in both germinated and ungerminated sorghum grains. Fifteen distinct proteinase bands, with Mr values of 27,000–100,000 were detected in sorghum malt extract, while ungerminated sorghum displayed a maximum of four bands (Mr ≈ 78,000–100,000). Band numbers and identity varied markedly according to cultivar. More proteinase bands were detected at pH 4.6, than at pH 6.2 and 7.0, suggesting pH optima considerably below neutrality. Cysteine‐proteinases constituted a higher proportion (9 of 15) of the detected sorghum malt proteinases and were most detectable at pH 4.6. Multiple representatives were also detected for both serine‐ and metallo‐proteinases, although these were more active at pH 6.2 and 7.0. 1‐10 Phenanthroline inhibited malt metallo‐proteinase more strongly than EDTA, suggesting that these enzymes were most probably zinc‐dependent. Aspartyl‐proteinases were not detected, probably because of the substrate employed. Results indicate that the sorghum proteinase system is complex.  相似文献   

8.
It was previously shown that ungerminated barley contains inhibitors that suppress the activities of green malt cysteine proteinases. This paper reports the purification and partial characterization of a second barley cysteine endoproteinase inhibitor, a protein called lipid transfer protein 2 (LTP2). The chromatographically purified inhibitor had a molecular mass of 7112. The amino acid composition and sequence data of the purified inhibitor indicated that it was a protein whose gene, but not the protein itself, was isolated earlier from barley aleurone tissue. The purified protein inhibited the activities of electrophoretically separated green malt cysteine proteinases but not the activities of the serine- or metalloproteinases. The purified LTP2 inhibited the same proteases as the LTP1 that was characterized previously but was present in the mature seed in much smaller amounts. Neither LTP1 nor LTP2 has been proven to transport lipids in vivo, and it seems possible that both serve to keep cysteine endoproteinases that are synthesized during barley seed development inactive until the plant needs them. The small amount of LTP2 in the seed made it impossible to determine whether it, like LTP1, is involved in beer foam formation. Because of its proteinase-inhibiting ability and its resistance to heat inactivation, some of the LTP2 may persist in beer.  相似文献   

9.
The cowpea weevil Callosobruchus maculatus is one of the major pests of Vigna unguiculata cowpea. Digestion in the cowpea weevil is facilitated by high levels of cysteine and aspartic acid proteinases. Plants synthesize a variety of molecules, including proteinaceous proteinase inhibitors, to defend themselves against attack by insects. In this work, a trypsin inhibitor (ApTI) isolated from Adenanthera pavonina seeds showed activity against papain. The inhibition of papain by ApTI was of the noncompetitive type, with a K(i) of 1 microM. ApTI was highly effective against digestive proteinases from C. maculatus, Acanthoscelides obtectus (bean weevil), and Zabrotes subfasciatus (Mexican bean weevil) and was moderately active against midgut proteinases from the boll weevil Anthonomus grandis and the mealworm Tenebrio molitor. In C. maculates fed an artificial diet containing 0.25% and 0.5% ApTI (w/w), the latter concentration caused 50% mortality and reduced larval weight gain by approximately 40%. The action of ApTI on C. maculatus larvae may involve the inhibition of ApTI-sensitive cysteine proteinases and binding to chitin components of the peritrophic membrane (or equivalent structures) in the weevil midgut.  相似文献   

10.
Soy isoflavones, present in many processed soy foods, are known for their phytoestrogenic and antioxidant activities. The aim of this work was to study the kinetics of genistein and daidzein degradation at elevated temperatures and to follow changes in their antioxidant activity. Daidzein and genistein in model solutions (pH 7 and 9) were thermally treated at 120 degrees C or incubated at 70, 80, and 90 degrees C. Isoflavone degradation was observed at all temperatures, with apparent first-order kinetics at 70-90 degrees C, and E(a) = 8.4 and 11.6 kcal/mol at pH 9, respectively. Microcalorimetric stability tests showed a similar pattern of degradation, however, with higher E(a) (genistein, 73.7 kcal/mol; daidzein, 34.1 kcal/mol) that may be attributed to the anaerobic conditions. The antioxidant activity of incubated isoflavone solutions, followed by the ABTS test, decreased rapidly at pH 9 for genistein, whereas only moderate reduction was observed for daidzein (pH 7 and 9) or genistein at pH 7. This may indicate different degradation mechanisms for genistein and daidzein.  相似文献   

11.
We report efficient sample extraction and assay methods allowing quantitative determinations of proteinase activities from barley malt. The improved methods are used to assay >2,200 developmental lines of malting barley for two subsets of proteinase activity. The distributions of the resulting activities suggest differences in population structures between the two types of proteinases. Comparison of the activities of the green malt proteinases with standard malting quality measurements show highly significant correlations that differ between the proteinase subsets. The pH 4.5 hydrolysis of the artificial substrate Z-Phe-Arg-AMC correlates well with the traditional malting quality measurements, supporting the role of cysteine-class proteinases in mobilization of grain reserves during malting and mashing. Results from assays of gelatin hydrolysis at pH 6.0 suggest that these proteolytic activities may be involved in other aspects of seed C and N dynamics also linked to malting quality measurements. The differences between the pH 4.5 and 6.0 activities assayed here and their association with malting quality measurements suggest different physiological roles for the two proteinase activities in several aspects of seed germination. Either assay could be useful for population surveys, depending on the particular facet of seed metabolism under study.  相似文献   

12.
We examined the biochemical and structural properties of oryzacystatin-II, a phytocystatin in rice (Oryza sativa L. japonica), under heat-stress conditions. The enzyme inhibitory reactivity of oryzacystatin-II was enhanced by heating in a temperature-dependent manner and reached a maximum level by heating at 65 degrees C for 10 min. Size-exclusion chromatography showed that oryzacystatin-II forms a homodimer at ambient temperature and that the enhancement of inhibitory reactivity is due to the conversion of the dimeric to a monomeric form. The monomeric form of oryzacystatin-II reverted to the dimer during storage at 4 degrees C, suggesting that dimerization is an intrinsic property of oryzacystatin-II. The affinity of the monomer for cysteine proteinases was significantly higher than that of the dimer. This is the first paper to describe the noncovalent dimerization for a cystatin under nonstress conditions.  相似文献   

13.
The analysis of (R)-9- and (S)-9-hydroxy-10E,12Z-octadecadienoic acid as well as (R)-13- and (S)-13-hydroxy-9Z,11E-octadecadienoic acid (HODE) as free acids, esterified in triacylglycerols (storage lipids), and esterified in polar lipids (phospholipids, glycolipids, etc.) in barley, germinating barley, and finished malt was performed using [13-(18)O(1)]-(S)-13-HODE isotope dilution assays with GC-MS and straight- and chiral-phase HPLC. 9- and 13- HODE occur approximately racemically in barley, indicating an autoxidation. The enantiomeric excesses increase to 78% S for free 9-HODE and to 58% S for free 13-HODE in germinating barley as a result of lipoxygenase-2 (LOX-2) catalysis, but free HODEs are at low concentration. More than 90% of HODEs in barley and malt are esterified. In the storage lipids of green malt 53 mg/kg 9-HODE and 147 mg/kg 13-HODE were detected. This ratio of 30:70 reflects the regioselectivity of the LOX-2 enzyme in malt. In the polar lipids 45 mg/kg 9-HODE and 44 mg/kg 13-HODE were characterized. The latter indicate a hitherto unknown 9-lipoxygenase activity with polar lipids as substrates. During kilning the contents of most HODEs decreased significantly due to chemical and enzymatic degradation, whereas polar-esterified (R)-13-HODE increased (43%) in the finished malt.  相似文献   

14.
A new plant endopeptidase was obtained from unripe fruits of Bromelia balansae Mez (Bromeliaceae). Crude extracts were partially purified by ethanol fractionation. This preparation (redissolved ethanol precipitate, REP) showed maximum activity at pH 8.8-9.2, was very stable even at high ionic strength values (no appreciable decrease in proteolytic activity could be detected after 24 h in 1 M sodium chloride solution at 37 degrees C), and exhibited high thermal stability (inactivation required heating for 60 min at 75 degrees C). Anion exchange chromatography allowed the isolation of a fraction purified to mass spectroscopy, SDS-PAGE, and IEF homogeneity, named balansain I, with pI = 5.45 and molecular mass = 23192 (mass spectrometry). The purification factor is low (2.9-fold), but the yield is high (48.3%), a common occurrence in plant organs with high proteolytic activity, where proteases represent the bulk of protein content of crude extracts. Balansain I exhibits a similar but narrower pH profile than that obtained for REP, with a maximum pH value approximately 9.0 and was inhibited by E-64 and other cysteine peptidases inhibitors but not affected by inhibitors of the other catalytic types of peptidases. The alanine and glutamine derivatives of N-alpha-carbobenzoxy-L-amino acid p-nitrophenyl esters was strongly preferred by the enzyme.The N-terminal sequence of balansain I showed a very high homology (85-90%) with other known Bromeliaceae endopeptidases.  相似文献   

15.
The fungal disease Fusarium head blight occurs on wheat (Triticum spp.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and is one of the worldwide problems of agriculture. It can be caused by various Fusarium species. We are characterizing the proteinases of F. culmorum to investigate how they may help the fungus to attack the grain. A trypsin-like proteinase has been purified from a gluten-containing culture medium of F. culmorum. The enzyme was maximally active at about pH 9 and 45 degrees C, but was not stable under those conditions. It was stabilized by calcium ions and by the presence of other proteins. The proteinase was most stable at pH 6-7 at ambient temperatures, but was quickly inactivated at 50 degrees C. It was strongly inhibited by p-amidino phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (p-APMSF), and soybean trypsin and Bowman-Birk inhibitors, and it preferentially hydrolyzed the peptide bonds of the protein substrate beta-purothionin on the C-terminal side of Arg (mainly) and Lys residues. These characteristics show that it is a trypsin-like proteinase. In addition, its N-terminal amino acid sequence was 88% identical to that of the F. oxysporum trypsin-like enzyme. The proteinase hydrolyzed the D hordein and some of the C hordeins (the barley storage proteins). This enzyme, and a subtilisin-like proteinase that we recently purified from the same organism, possibly play roles in helping the fungus to colonize grains.  相似文献   

16.
Today proteases have become an integral part of the food and feed industry, and plant latex could be a potential source of novel proteases with unique substrate specificities and biochemical properties. A new protease named "wrightin" is purified from the latex of the plant Wrightia tinctoria (Family Apocynaceae) by cation-exchange chromatography. The enzyme is a monomer having a molecular mass of 57.9 kDa (MALDI-TOF), an isoelectric point of 6.0, and an extinction coefficient (epsilon1%280) of 36.4. Optimum activity is achieved at a pH of 7.5-10 and a temperature of 70 degrees C. Wrightin hydrolyzes denatured natural substrates such as casein, azoalbumin, and hemoglobin with high specific activity; for example, the Km value is 50 microM for casein as substrate. Wrightin showed weak amidolytic activity toward L-Ala-Ala-p-nitroanilide but completely failed to hydrolyze N-alpha-benzoyl- DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide (BAPNA), a preferred substrate for trypsin-like enzymes. Complete inhibition of enzyme activity by serine protease inhibitors such as PMSF and DFP indicates that the enzyme belongs to the serine protease class. The enzyme was not inhibited by SBTI and resists autodigestion. Wrightin is remarkably thermostable, retaining complete activity at 70 degrees C after 60 min of incubation and 74% of activity after 30 min of incubation at 80 degrees. Besides, the enzyme is very stable over a broad range of pH from 5.0 to 11.5 and remains active in the presence of various denaturants, surfactants, organic solvents, and metal ions. Thus, wrightin might be a potential candidate for various applications in the food and biotechnological industries, especially in operations requiring high temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
A chitosanolytic enzyme was purified from a commercial ficin preparation by affinity chromatographic removal of cysteine protease on pHMB-Sepharose 4B and cystatin-Sepharose 4B and gel filtration on Superdex 75 HR. The purified enzyme exhibited both chitinase and chitosanase activities, as determined by SDS-PAGE and gel activity staining. The optimal pH for chitosan hydrolysis was 4.5, whereas the optimal temperature was 65 degrees C. The enzyme was thermostable, as it retained almost all of its activity after incubation at 70 degrees C for 30 min. A protein oxidizing agent, N-bromosuccinimide (0.25 mM), significantly inhibited the enzyme's activity. The molecular mass of the enzyme was 16.6 kDa, as estimated by gel filtration. The enzyme showed activity toward chitosan polymers exhibiting various degrees of deacetylation (22-94%), most effectively hydrolyzing chitosan polymers that were 52-70% deacetylated. The end products of the hydrolysis catalyzed by this enzyme were low molecular weight chitosan polymers and oligomers (11.2-0.7 kDa).  相似文献   

18.
Aqueous extracts were prepared from five barley crystal malts (color range 15-440 degrees EBC, European Brewing Convention units). Antioxidant activity was determined by using the 2,2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS(*)(+)) radical cation scavenging method. Antioxidant activity increased with increasing color value although the rate of increase decreased with increasing color value. Color was measured in CIELAB space. Extracts of the 15, 23, and 72 degrees EBC malts followed the same dilution pathway as did the 148 degrees EBC sample at higher dilution levels, indicating that they could each be used to give the same color by appropriate dilution. The 440 degrees EBC sample followed a different dilution pathway, indicating that different compounds were responsible for color in this extract. Fifteen selected volatile compounds were monitored using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Levels of methylpropanal, 2-methylbutanal, and 3-methylbutanal were highest for the 72 degrees EBC sample. When odor threshold values of the selected compounds were taken into account, 3-methylbutanal was the most important contributor to flavor. Relationships between levels of the lipid oxidation products, hexanal and (E)-2-nonenal, and antioxidant activity were complex, and increasing antioxidant activity for samples in the range of 15-148 degrees EBC did not result in reduced levels of these lipid-derived compounds. When different colored malt extracts were diluted to give the same a* and b* values, calculated antioxidant activity and amounts of 3-methylbutanal, hexanal, and (E)-2-nonenal decreased with increasing degrees EBC value.  相似文献   

19.
Glutenins, which form the network of gluten protein, are of great importance for the quality of flour products. Glutenins can be divided into HMW and LMW subunits according to molecular weight. Three genes for LMW glutenin subunits (LMW‐GS), named lmw‐cnd1, lmw‐cnd2, and lmw‐cnd3 with open reading frames of 1,053, 903, and 969 bp, respectively, were cloned from wheat cultivar Cheyenne. Heterologous expression vectors of the three LMW‐GS were constructed, and the recombinant proteins LMW‐CND1, LMW‐CND2, and LMW‐CND3 were overexpressed in Escherichia coli. After cell disruption with ultrasound, target proteins of high purity were obtained by using Ni2+ affinity chromatography. Farinograph and TAPlus measurements were used to investigate the effects of the three LMW‐GS on the characteristics of flour and dough. The results showed that the addition of each LMW‐GS can lead to an increase in the elasticity of the dough. Moreover, LMW‐CND2 and LMW‐CND3 promoted the strength of the dough. All three LMW‐GS caused a decrease of hardness and increase of springiness and cohesiveness of dough according to texture profiling results. Consequently, all three LMW‐GS have positive effects on the processing characteristics of dough and can improve bread quality to different extents.  相似文献   

20.
To obtain basic information about enzymatic deterioration of buckwheat flour, triacylglycerol lipase (LIP; EC 3.1.1.3) was purified from buckwheat seed. The LIP consisted of two isozymes, LIP I and LIP II, and they were purified with purification folds of 60 and 143 with final specific activities of 0.108 and 0.727 mumol of fatty acid released per minute per milligram of protein at 30 degrees C using triolein as a substrate. Molecular weights were estimated to be 150 (LIP I) and 28.4 kDa (LIP I) by gel filtration and 171 (LIP I) and 26.5 kDa (LIP II) by SDS-PAGE. Optimal pHs of LIP activities were 3.0 (LIP I) and 6.0 (Lip II) using triolein as a substrate. Both LIP I and II reacted in the acidic pH range. Optimal temperatures were 30 (LIP I) and 40 degrees C (LIP II), and both LIP I and II were stable below 30 degrees C when p-nitrophenyl-laurate was used as a substrate. However, they were inactivated above 60 degrees C. On the other hand, when triolein was used as a substrate, optimal temperatures were 30 degrees C for both LIP I and II, and they retained 40% of their activity after a 4 h incubation of enzymes at 70 degrees C. LIP I and II had higher activity against triolein than monoolein or tri/monopalmitin. Most of the LIP activity was distributed in the embryo.  相似文献   

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