Cry j 2, a major allergen of Japanese cedar pollen, shows polymethylgalacturonase activity

1995 
We examined Cry j 2, a major allergen of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) pollen, for polygalacturonase enzyme activity, since a nucleotide sequence of cDNA of Cry j 2 showed a significant homology with that of tomato polygalacturonase. Polygalacturonase is well known to depolymerize preferentially polygalacturonic acid (PGA) by hydrolysis. However, Cry j 2 did not act on PGA, but was found to depolymerize pectin and methylesterified PGA in a dose-dependent manner. The substrate specificity of Cry j 2 was different from that of polygalacturonase derived from Aspergillus niger. The depolymerizing activity of Cry j 2 reached a maximum at 50%-60% of methylesterification of PGA. In contrast, polygalacturonase showed its maximum activity to PGA, and the activity decreased as the degree of methylesterification increased. Interestingly, the pectin-depolymerizing activity of Cry j 2 was due to a hydrolysis, but not a lyase, activity which splits the glycosidic bonds by β-elimination, since no unsaturated uronides were found by measurement of absorbance at 235 nm in the reaction mixture. The enzyme activity was markedly inhibited by anti-Cry j 2 antibodies. These results indicate that Cry j 2 probably has polymethyl-galacturonase enzyme activity, as postulated by von Neukom in 1963, although existence of this activity has not yet been proven.
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