Purification and characterization of calpains from pig epidermis and their action on epidermal keratin

Y Ando, Y Miyachi, S Imamura, R Kannagi… - Journal of investigative …, 1988 - Elsevier
Y Ando, Y Miyachi, S Imamura, R Kannagi, T Murachi
Journal of investigative dermatology, 1988Elsevier
Two forms of Ca++-dependent cysteine proteinases, calpain I, requiring low Ca++(μM
concentration), and calpain II, requiring high Ca++(mM concentration), were purified from
the cytosolic fraction of pig epidermis. Calpains I and II were separated on DEAE-cellulose
chromatography, and thereafter they were purified by separate but almost identical
procedures, which included chromatographies on Sephacryl S-300, Blue Sepharose CL-6B,
and DEAE Bio-Gel A. Purified calpains I and II required 10 and 450 μM Ca++ for half …
Two forms of Ca++-dependent cysteine proteinases, calpain I, requiring low Ca++(μM concentration), and calpain II, requiring high Ca++(mM concentration), were purified from the cytosolic fraction of pig epidermis. Calpains I and II were separated on DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and thereafter they were purified by separate but almost identical procedures, which included chromatographies on Sephacryl S-300, Blue Sepharose CL-6B, and DEAE Bio-Gel A. Purified calpains I and II required 10 and 450 μM Ca++ for half-maximal activation, respectively, and had an optimal pH of 7.0 to 8.0. Both enzymes were heterodimers and composed of one heavy subunit (83 kDa for calpain I and 80 kDa for calpain II) and one light subunit (29 kDa for both enzymes). The action of calpains I and II on keratin extracted from the same tissue was studied. Both enzymes rapidly cleaved keratin into small fragments. The cleavage depends on Ca++ and could be blocked by leupeptin and calpastation, an endogenous calpain-specific inhibitor, which was also found in the cytosolic fraction of pig epidermis and partially purified.
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