- Comparative specificity and kinetic studies on porcine calpain I and calpain II with naturally occurring peptides and synthetic fluorogenic substrates.
Comparative specificity and kinetic studies on porcine calpain I and calpain II with naturally occurring peptides and synthetic fluorogenic substrates.
Homogeneous porcine calpain (Ca2+-dependent cysteine proteinase) was found to hydrolyze a variety of peptides and synthetic substrates. Leu-Trp-Met-Arg-Phe-Ala, eledoisin-related peptide, alpha-neoendorphin, angiotensin I, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, neurotensin, dynorphin, glucagon, and oxidized insulin B chain were cleaved with a general preference for a Tyr, Met, or Arg residue in the P1 position preceded by a Leu or Val residue in the P2 position. No great difference in specificity was found between low-Ca2+-requiring calpain I and high-Ca2+-requiring calpain II. 4-Methylcoumaryl-7-amide (MCA) derivatives having a Leu(or Val)-Met(or Tyr)-MCA or a Leu-Lys-MCA sequence were also cleaved by either calpain I or calpain II with preference for Leu over Val by a factor of 9 to 16. Calpains I and II showed similar but not identical kinetic behavior for individual substrates. The Km and kcat values ranged from 0.23 to 7.08 mM and 0.062 to 0.805 s-1 for the calpains, while kcat/Km values for the calpains were only 1/433 to 1/5 of those for papain with a given substrate. With succinyl-Leu-Met(or Tyr)-MCA, calpains I and II were half-maximally activated at 12 and 260 microM Ca2+, respectively, and competitively inhibited by leupeptin (Ki = 0.32 microM for I and 0.43 microM for II) or antipain (Ki = 1.41 microM for I and 1.45 microM for II). Thus, this is the first report describing the specificity and kinetics of calpains I and II.