Plant Production Science
Online ISSN : 1349-1008
Print ISSN : 1343-943X
Crop Physiology and Ecology
Kunitz Soybean Trypsin Inhibitor is Modified at its C-terminus by Novel Soybean Thiol Protease (Protease T1)
Makoto SugawaraDaisuke ItoKosuke YamamotoMitsuru AkitaSuguru OguriYoshie S. Momonoki
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2007 年 10 巻 3 号 p. 314-321

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Kunitz soybean trypsin inhibitor (KSTI) is hydrolyzed during seed germination to yield amino acids needed to support initial seedling growth. The type of KSTI from Glycine max (L.) Merrill cv. Toyokomachi is KSTI-Tib. The KSTI-Tib from 4-day-old post-germination cotyledons (KSTI-Tib') has 3 or 4 amino acid residues cleaved off at the C-terminus. This KSTI modification is important to understand the mechanism of degradation in seed reserve proteins by proteases. Protease K1 also cleaves amino acid residues at the C-terminus of KSTI but it removes 5 amino acid residues. Therefore, we presumed the KSTI-Tib' was produced by a protease other than protease K1. In this study, the protease T1 responsible for cleavage of KSTI-Tib at the C-terminus was purified. The enzyme was estimated to have a molecular mass of 33 kDa from its mobility on SDS-PAGE gels. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified protease T1 corresponded to amino acids Phe-73 to Phe-92 of both thiol protease isoforms A and B from the soybean leaf, and shared 83% identity with the partial amino acid sequence of the membrane-associated cysteine protease from mung bean seedlings, a protease known to perform post-translational cleavage of C-terminal peptides of target proteins. Finally, this enzyme was shown to convert KSTI-Tib to KSTI-Tib'.
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© 2007 by The Crop Science Society of Japan
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