A serine protease from mite faecal extract, Dermatophagoides farinae, was purified using DEAE-Sephacel anion exchange chromatography and Superdex 75 pg gel chromatography. The molecular weight of this protease was 34 kD on SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions. The optimal pH and temperature of the protease were 8.0 and 47 degrees C, respectively. In addition, this protease cleaved arginyl or lysyl residue containing substrates selectively and was only inhibited by aprotinin, FUT-175, and soy bean trypsin inhibitor and not by chymostatin, E-64 and iodoacetic acid. These results show that our purified serine protease belongs to the trypsin-type. Purified trypsin-like protease was shown to be allergenic by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Antigenicity of trypsin-like protease was completely different from those of Der f I and Der f II. Both, 20 N-terminal amino acid sequence and amino acid compositions of the purified protease were very similar to those of Der f III. Good similarities were found between trypsin-like protease and Der f III concerning physicochemical properties such as molecular weight on SDS-PAGE and ammonium sulphate solubility. Summarizing the above data, it can be concluded that a trypsin-like protease from mite faecal extract is actually the Der f III allergen and that it may be involved in the digestive process of the mite as it was found not in mite body but in mite faeces.
Characterization of the proteases was performed in the crude mite extract fractionated by Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. Three peaks of protease activities were detected in the fractions. From the results of substrate specificity and susceptibility to the inhibitors, PK.1 protease (about 60 kD) is suggested to be a trypsin-like protease of mites. From the results of susceptibility to various agents, PK.2 (about 30 kD) and PK.3 (about 20 kD) proteases may be cysteine proteases, e.g., papain and cathepsin B. PK.3 protease existed in the precipitate of 60% ammonium sulfate fractionation. The data in the present study suggest the possibility that Dermatophagoides farinae I allergen might be a cysteine protease probably derived from the gastrointestinal tract of the house dust mite.
In order to study the relationship between cysteine protease and Der f l, which is one of the major allergens in the mite, Dermatophagoides farinae, isolation of cysteine protease was attempted using various column chromatographies. Both the potent cysteine protease activity and the allergenic activity were detected in the same fractions by anion exchange chromatography on a DEAE-Sephacel, gel chromatographies and chelating Sepharose 6B chromatography. In the double immunodiffusion test, the finally isolated fraction and rabbit anti-Der f I sera reacted to give a single precipitation line which fused completely with the precipitation line formed by Der f l and anti-Der f l sera. Sequence analysis for the first 10 N-terminal amino acids from cysteine protease and Der f l were identical. These results strongly suggest that cysteine protease of mites may be Der f l allergen and that measuring cysteine protease activity may possibly become a beneficial method for detecting Der f I allergens.
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