| Biochemistry. 1976 Oct 19;15(21):4736-41. |
|
Collagenase enzymes from Clostridium: characterization
of individual enzymes.
Lwebuga-Mukasa JS, Harper E, Taylor P.
Four collagenases have been purified to apparent homogeneity from extracts
of Clostridium histolyticum and partially characterized. The four purified
enzymes are devoid of hydrolytic activity against casein and the synthetic
substrate, benzolyarginine naphthylamide, but all retain activity against
native collagen. The enzymes are initially spearated by isoelectric focusing
where three of the enzymes show distinct isoelectric points: collagenase I
= 5.50, collagenase II = 5.65, and collagenases IIIa
and IIIb = 5.90-6.00. Collagenases IIIa and IIIb can be subsequently separated
on diethylaminoethylcellulose. The four purified enzymes show single bands
upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl
sulfate. Calibration of the molecular weights on the basis of migration distance
shows a marked dependence on gel porosity. At high acrylamide concentration,
collagenases I, II, and IIIa appear to converge to a limiting molecular weight
congruent to 81 000, while collagenase IIIb has a distinctly lower value congruent
to 72 000. The similarity between these molecular weight values and those
derived from the sedimentation and diffusion coefficients of the native enzyme
indicates that each collagenase is a single polypeptide chain. All of the
collagenases have comparable catalytic activities against a series of natural
and synthetic substrates and are immunologically cross-reactive. Although
all four enzymes are evident upon initial electrofocusing of the crude extract,
it is possible that the multiplicity of forms is, at least in part, a consequence
of lysis following initial secretion from the cell.
PMID: 184822 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]