Pepsin from porcine gastric mucosa lyophilized powder, 2,500 units/mg protein (250mg)

SKU:
P7012-250MG
  • $66.90
  • Description

    P7012 Sigma-Aldrich

    Pepsin from porcine gastric mucosa

    lyophilized powder, ≥2,500 units/mg protein (E1%/280)

    Synonym: Pepsin A, Pepsin from hog stomach

    • CAS Number 9001-75-6

       
    •  Enzyme Commission (EC) Number 3.4.23.1  ( BRENDA | IUBMB )

       
    •  EC Number 232-629-3

       
    •  MDL number MFCD00081840

       
    •  eCl@ss 42010127

       
    •  NACRES NA.54

    Description

    Application

    Pepsin is a peptidase used to digest proteins and is commonly used in the preparation of Fab fragments from antibodies. Pepsin, from porcine gastric mucosa, has been used to hydrolyze dry cervical samples in mice[3].

    The enzyme from Sigma has been used in the digestion of crude wheat gliadin.[1] It has been used along with other enzymes to demonstrate the effects of fixation and enzymatic digestion in immunohistochemical assays, using paraffin embedded tissue. It has been used for digestion (before using immunoperoxidase techniques) to reduce non-specific background staining in sections of bronchial tissues.[4] The enzyme has also been used in the preparation of F(ab)2 fragment from IgG.[2]

    Pepsin cleavage can be used to produce F(ab′)2 fragments of antibodies. pepsin at www.sigma-aldrich.com/enzymeexplorer.

    Packaging

    1, 5, 10, 25, 100 g in poly bottle

    250 mg in poly bottle

    Biochem/physiol Actions

    Pepsin hydrolyzes peptide bonds, not amide or ester linkages. Pepsin cleaves peptides with an aromatic acid on either side of the peptide bond. Sulfur-containing amino acids increase susceptibility to hydrolysis when they are close to the peptide bond. Pepsin preferentially cleaves at the carboxyl side of phenylalanine and leucine and at the carboxyl side of glutamic acid residues. Cleaves Phe-Val, Gln-His, Glu-Ala, Ala-Leu, Leu-Tyr, Tyr-Leu, Gly-Phe, Phe-Phe and Phe-Tyr bonds in the β chain of insulin
    Pepsin is the major proteolytic enzyme produced in the stomach. It digests proteins through the cleavage of interior peptide linkages.

    The enzyme does not cleave at valine, alanine, or glycine linkages.[5] Z-L-tyrosyl-L-phenylalanine, Z-L-glutamyl-L-tyrosine, or Z-L-methionyl-L-tyrosine may be used as substrates for pepsin digestion.[5][6] Pepsin is inhibited by several phenylalanine-containing peptides.[7]

    Preferential cleavage: hydrophobic and aromatic residues in P1 and P1′ postitions. Cleaves Phe-Val, Gln-His, Glu-Ala, Ala-Leu, Leu-Tyr, Tyr-Leu, Gly-Phe, Phe-Phe and Phe-Tyr bonds in the β chain of insulin

    Unit Definition

    One unit will produce a ΔA280 of 0.001 per min at pH 2.0 at 37°C, measured as TCA-soluble products using hemoglobin as substrate. (Final volume = 16mL. Light path = 1cm.)

    Analysis Note

    E1%/280=14.7

    Optimum pH is 2-4. Active in 4 M urea and 3 M guanidine HCl. Stable at 60 °C. Pepsin is irreversibly inactivated at pH 8.0 - 8.5.

    Protein determined by E1%/280

    Properties

    Related Categories 3.4.x.x Peptidases, 3.x.x.x Hydrolases, Antibodies, Antibody Fragmentation, Antibody Modification,
    More...
    form   lyophilized powder
    mol wt   35 kDa
    color   off-white to yellow
    solubility   deionized water: soluble 10 mg/mL
      10 mM HCl: soluble 4 mg/mL (Cold)
    Featured Industry   Diagnostic Assay Manufacturing
    storage temp.   −20°C
    Gene Information   pig ... LOC396892(396892)