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Degradation of Elastin by a Cysteine Proteinase from Staphylococcus Aureus

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1988 Feb 25
PMID 3422637
Citations 46
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Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus is known to produce three very active extracellular proteinases. One of these enzymes, a cysteine proteinase, after purification to homogeneity was found to degrade insoluble bovine lung elastin at a rate comparable to human neutrophil elastase. This enzyme had no detectable activity against a range of synthetic substrates normally utilized by elastase, chymotrypsin, or trypsin-like proteinases. However, it did hydrolyze the synthetic substrate carbobenzoxy-phenylalanyl-leucyl-glutamyl-p-nitroanilide (Km = 0.5 mM, kcat = 0.16 s-1). The proteolytic activity of the cysteine proteinase was rapidly and efficiently inhibited by alpha 2-macroglobulin and also by the cysteine-specific inhibitor rat T-kininogen (Ki = 5.2 X 10(-7) M). Human kininogens, however, did not inhibit. Human plasma apparently contains other inhibitors of this enzyme, since plasma depleted of alpha 2-macroglobulin retained significant inhibitory capacity. The elastolytic activity of this S. aureus proteinase and its lack of control by human kininogens or cystatin C may explain some of the connective tissue destruction seen in bacterial infections due to this and related organisms such as may occur in septicemia, septic arthritis, and otitis.

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