Bovine milk procathepsin D and cathepsin D: coagulation and milk protein degradation
1996
Larsen, L.B. | Benfeldt, C. | Rasmussen, L.K. | Petersen, T.E.
Cathepsin D is an indigenous aspartic proteinase in bovine milk. By competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay the amount of immunoreactive cathepsin D and procathepsin D in bovine skim milk was estimated to be 0.4 micrograms/ml. Immunoreactive cathepsin D purified from whey consisted of a small fraction of mature cathepsin D, but the major form was the proenzyme procathepsin D. A preparation of bovine milk procathepsin D was, like mature cathepsin D, able to degrade purified alpha s1-, alpha s-2, beta- and kappa-casein and alpha-lactalbumin, while beta-lactoglobulin was resistant to cleavage. The cleavage sites in these proteins were determined and compared with those of chymosin. Cathepsin D was capable of generating the alpha s1-I, beta-I, beta-II and beta-III fragments originally described from the action of chymosin on the respective caseins, and these fragments were subjected to further proteolysis. Cathepsin D was also able to liberate the caseinomacropeptide from purified kappa-casein, and to coagulate bovine skim milk. This demonstrated that milk contains an indigenous coagulation enzyme present mainly in the whey fraction.
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