Effect of High-Pressure Treatment on Catalytic and Physicochemical Properties of Pepsin

Molecules. 2017 Oct 11;22(10):1659. doi: 10.3390/molecules22101659.

Abstract

For a long time, high-pressure treatment has been used to destroy the compact structures of natural proteins in order to promote subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis. However, there are few reports evaluating the feasibility of directly improving the catalytic capability of proteases by using high-pressure treatments. In this study, the effects of high-pressure treatment on the catalytic capacity and structure of pepsin were investigated, and the relationship between its catalytic properties and changes in its physicochemical properties was explored. It was found that high-pressure treatment could lead to changes of the sulfhydryl group/disulfide bond content, hydrophobicity, hydrodynamic radius, intrinsic viscosity, and subunit composition of pepsin, and the conformational change of pepsin resulted in improvement to its enzymatic activity and hydrolysis efficiency, which had an obvious relationship with the high-pressure treatment conditions.

Keywords: enzymatic hydrolysis; high-pressure treatment; pepsin; physicochemical properties.

MeSH terms

  • Catalysis
  • Hydrolysis
  • Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions
  • Pepsin A / chemistry*
  • Pressure*

Substances

  • Pepsin A