Identification and Preliminary Characterization of Two Distinct Bovine Seminal Pz-Peptidases

Abstract
Two peptidases hydrolyzing the Pz-peptide substrate were identified in bovine semen. Each Pz-peptidase was strongly inhibited by chelating agents, suggesting both were metallopeptidases. However, these peptidases could be distinguished by other properties and were designated Pz-peptidases A and B. Pz-peptidase A hydrolyzed the Pz-peptide at the Leu-Gly bond, was inhibited by tosylphenylethylchloromethylketone (TPCK) but not by phosphoramidon and had a pH optimum near 6, whereas Pz-peptidase B cleaved the Pro-Leu bond, was inhibited by phosphoramidon but not by TPCK and had a pH optimum near 7. Seminal plasma, light particulates and cytoplasmic droplets contained almost exclusively Pz-peptidase A, and Pz-peptidase A predominated in sperm extracts. Pz-peptidase B was found primarily in sperm extracts, but Pz-peptidase B activity was also present in ultralight particulates. Pz-peptidase A of spermatozoa required Triton X-100 for complete extraction, but Pz-peptidase B was solubilized from spermatozoa by nitrogen decompression without detergents. Pz-peptidase B was inhibited by several detergents. In particular, addition of 0.1% Hyamine 2389 to sperm extracts inhibited 99% of the Pz-peptidase B activity. Thus, Pz-peptidase B may have been overlooked in previous studies employing extraction of spermatozoa with Hyamine 2389. The properties of both seminal PZ-peptidases were different from those of purified bovine testicular PZ-peptidase, suggesting that PZ-peptidases from these sources were not identical.