Eisenstasin, new antistasin family inhibitor from the earthworm

A couple of new antistasin family serine protease inhibitors have been isolated from the non-hematophagous earthworm, Eisenia andrei. These novel inhibitors have been designated as eisenstasin I and II. Similar to other antistasin family inhibitors, eisenstasin I and II feature 3 and 4 internal repe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biológia 2010-04, Vol.65 (2), p.284-288
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Myung, Eun Tak, Sang Park, Sung Cho, Yoonsoo Hahn, Seong Joo, Do Lee, Chi Ahn, Soon Park
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A couple of new antistasin family serine protease inhibitors have been isolated from the non-hematophagous earthworm, Eisenia andrei. These novel inhibitors have been designated as eisenstasin I and II. Similar to other antistasin family inhibitors, eisenstasin I and II feature 3 and 4 internal repeats, respectively, of a 24–29 amino acid sequence, both of which exhibit a conserved pattern of 6-cysteine/2-glycine at an identical position between the third and fourth cysteine residues. This suggests that the eisenstasins isolated from the earthworm are members of the antistasin family. The eisenstasins are 82% similar with regard to amino acid sequences and exhibit over 70% similarity with the antistasins from the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus, while also displaying less than 40% sequence similarity with the leech antistasins. Earthworm eisenstasins are basic proteins, primarily due to the frequent occurrence of arginine residues in their structure, especially at the C-terminal region. As arginine is a key residue for the substrate specificity of some serine proteases including FXa, it is thought that these multiple arginine residues may play a role in the inhibitory characteristics of the eisenstasins. Considering the structure and number of the internal repeats derived from a variety of animal species, the deletion as well as the duplication of all or part of an internal repeat may be implicated in the evolution of the structure and function of the antistasin family inhibitors.
ISSN:1336-9563
0006-3088
1336-9563
DOI:10.2478/s11756-010-0018-6