Abstract
Cathepsin D was originally known simply as 'cathepsin' and was first purified in the late 1930s. Nowadays the enzyme is purified by conventional column chromatography, and by isoelectric focusing (which resolves isoforms), but affinity chromatography with pepstatin--Sepharose is also important. Cathepsin D is a glycoprotein of about 42,000 molecular weight; sometimes it comprises a single polypeptide chain but often this is found to have been 'nicked' about two-thirds of the way from one end. Cathepsin D is an 'aspartic proteinase' and may be one of the more primitive members of the family. The activity of cathepsin D is expressed exclusively at acidic pH values and the specificity shows a strong preference for cleavage near hydrophobic amino acids. Specific inhibition of cathepsin D with antibodies and pepstatin has provided strong evidence that the enzyme plays a part in intralysosomal proteolysis but there is as yet little evidence for extracellular activity.