A gamma-glutamyl peptide-hydrolysing enzyme was partially purified from Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans. The enzyme required metal ions, and 1 to 2 mM Mn2+ ions, especially, were essential for hydrolytic reaction. Its distribution by treatment of cells with lysozyme-EDTA suggested that the enzyme was a membrane-bound protein. The pI of the enzyme was in range of pH 5.1 to 5.6, and the apparent Km value for gamma-glutamyl-p-nitroanilide was 3.0 x 10(-4) M. The enzyme hydrolysed specifically gamma-glutamyl residues from the N-terminal of gamma-glutamyl compounds such as gamma-Glu-Met, gamma-Glu-Ala, gamma-Glu-Leu and gamma-Glu-Tyr, but did not catalyse the transpeptidation reaction. Neither free amino acids such as Ala-, Pro-, Gly- and Leu-p-nitroanilide nor alpha-glutamyl derivatives were hydrolysed. Its activity was strongly inactivated by metal chelators (EDTA or o-phenanthroline) and amino acids (Glu, Gln). In addition, the activity was specifically inactivated by gamma-glutamyl affinity-labelling reagents such as AT-125, 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine and azaserine, which are inhibitors of the gamma-glutamyl donor sites of mammalian gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase. Antibodies against bovine kidney gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase decreased the activity of the bacterial enzyme by 65%. These results suggested that the active sites in the bacterial enzyme were similar to those in mammalian gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase.
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