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Complexing agents, protease enzyme

All proteolytic enzymes described are fairly non-specific serine endoproteases, cleaving peptide chains preferentially at the carboxyl side of hydrophobic amino acid residues. The enzymes convert their substrates into small, readily soluble fragments which can be removed easily from fabrics. Only serine protease can be used in detergent formulations, as thiol proteases such as papain would be oxidized by the bleaching agents, acidic proteases are not active at common laundry conditions, and metalloproteases such as thermolysin would lose their metal cofactors because of complexation with the water-softening agents or hydroxyl ions. [Pg.138]

Latent forms of MMPs can be activated by mechanisms which cause the dissociation of the intramolecular complex between a particular cysteine residue and the required zinc metal ligand (a complex that blocks the active site) [47], This occurs because the cysteine of the latent enzyme is coordinated to the active site in a particular way that blocks the MMP active site. Collectively, the activation of MMPs occurs through a process which has been termed the cysteine-switch . Activators of the MMPs include proteases (e.g. plasmin), conformational perturbants (SDS, NaSCN), heavy metals and organomercurials (e.g. Au(I) compounds, Hg(II)), oxidants (e.g. OC1-), disulfide compounds (e.g. GSSG) and sulfhydryl alkylating agents (e.g. V-ethylmaleimide) [47 and refs, therein]. [Pg.312]


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