• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Autolysis parallels activation of μ-calpain
  • Beteiligte: BAKI, Andrea; TOMPA, Péter; ALEXA, Anita; MOLNÁR, Orsolya; FRIEDRICH, Peter
  • Erschienen: Portland Press Ltd., 1996
  • Erschienen in: Biochemical Journal
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1042/bj3180897
  • ISSN: 0264-6021; 1470-8728
  • Schlagwörter: Cell Biology ; Molecular Biology ; Biochemistry
  • Entstehung:
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  • Beschreibung: <jats:p>The kinetics of autolysis and activation of µ-calpain were measured with microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) as a very sensitive substrate. The initial rate of MAP2 hydrolysis was found to be a linear function of the autolysed 76 kDa form of µ-calpain large subunit at both 10 and 300 µM Ca2+, and both straight lines intersected the origin. This finding supports the view that native µ-calpain is an inactive proenzyme and that activation is accompanied by autolysis. The first-order rate constant of autolysis, kI(aut), was determined at different Ca2+ concentrations: the half-maximal value was at pCa2+ = 3.7 (197 µM Ca2+), whereas the maximal value was 1.52 s-1, at 30 °C. The Ca2+-induced activation process was then monitored by using our novel, continuous fluorimetric assay with labelled MAP2 as substrate. The first-order rate constant of activation, kI(act), was derived as the reciprocal of the lag phase (‘transit time’) at the initial part of the progress curve: half-maximum was at pCa2+ = 3.8 (158 µM Ca2+) and the maximum value was 2.15 s-1. The good agreement between the kinetic parameters of µ-calpain autolysis and activation is remarkable. We claim that this is the first kinetically correct determination of the rate constant of autolysis of µ-calpain. Pre-activated µ-calpain has a Ca2+ requirement that is almost three orders of magnitude smaller [half-maximal activation at pCa2+ = 6.22 (0.6 µM Ca2+)]. We cannot exclude the possibility that the activation process involves other mechanistic steps, e.g. the rapid dissociation of the µ-calpain heterodimer, but we state that in our conditions in vitro autolysis and activation run in close parallel.</jats:p>
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