Calcium-binding protein regucalcin increases calcium-independent proteolytic activity in rat liver cytosol

1992 
The effect of regucalcin, isolated from rat liver cytosol, on neutral proteolytic activity in the hepatic cytosol was investigated. The Ca2+-requiring proteinase required 5–10 µM Ca2+ for maximal activity in the presence of a protein substrate (globin). The proteinase activity was markedly elevated by the addition of regucalcin (0.25–2.0 µM) in the absence or presence of Ca2+ (5.0 µM) added. The effect of regucalcin, however, was the greater in the absence of Ca2+ than that in the presence. The pronounced effect of regucalcin on the proteinase activity was also seen in the presence of 1.0 mM EGTA with or without Ca2+ (5.0 µM). In the absence of Ca2+, the regucalcin-increased proteinase activity was clearly inhibited by the presence of anti-regucalcin antiserum (diluted to 240-fold), leupeptin (20 and 200 µg/ml), and heavy metals (25 µM cadmium or 25 µM zinc), although the inhibition was not complete at the concentration used. The present findings suggest that regucalcin increases proteolytic activity in rat liver cytosol, and that regucalcin may activate Ca2+-independent neutral cysteinyl-proteinase.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    17
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []