Artigo Revisado por pares

LTP is not a Cysteine Endoprotease Inhibitor in Barley Grains

1999; Elsevier BV; Volume: 30; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1006/jcrs.1999.0274

ISSN

1095-9963

Autores

Anne Davy, Ib Svendsen, Lene M. Bech, David J. W. Simpson, Verena Cameron‐Mills,

Tópico(s)

Peptidase Inhibition and Analysis

Resumo

Several different protease inhibitors have been identified in the mature barley grain, which are proposed to play a defensive role against potential barley pathogens. Cysteine protease inhibitors have been detected in mature grain and in the early stages of germination. The nature of these inhibitors has recently been investigated, and barley lipid transfer protein (LTP1) has been identified as an effective inhibitor of both cysteine and serine endoprotease activity expressed in germinating grain. We show that barley LTP1, in its native state, is not a cysteine protease inhibitor, but in a denatured state becomes a preferred substrate for the barley endoprotease EP-B and, as such, behaves as a competitive inhibitor for poorer substrates of EP-B. The presence of significant amounts of LTP1 in barley malt beer suggests that this very compact protein is highly resistant to proteolytic attack during malting and mashing and its denaturation during wort boiling coincides with inactivation of the malt endoproteases. Analysis of the cleavage products of denatured LTP1, generated by EP-B, provides further evidence for the cleavage site specificity of this barley cysteine endoprotease, where a hydrophobic residue in the P2position is strongly preferred.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX