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Assay design, using synthetic peptide substrates

One can use all of the above information to design the synthetic peptide substrate for maximal usefulness in these serine protease assays. [Pg.132]

The International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology recommends that the term peptidase be used synonymously with the term peptide hydrolase (IUBMB, 1992). Thus, in this unit the term peptidase is used in reference to any enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of peptide bonds, without distinguishing between exo- and endopeptidase activities. Peptidases may be assayed using native or modified proteins, peptides, or synthetic substrates. In this unit, the focus is on assays based on the hydrolysis of common, commercially available, protein substrates. Thus, the assays are not intended to be selective for a given peptidase they are designed to provide estimates of overall peptidase activity. Other units in this publication focus on synthetic or model substrates, which can be designed for the measurement of specific endo- and/or exopeptidase activities. [Pg.359]


See other pages where Assay design, using synthetic peptide substrates is mentioned: [Pg.579]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.1165]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.493]    [Pg.694]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.133 , Pg.134 , Pg.135 , Pg.136 , Pg.137 , Pg.138 ]




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