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enteropeptidase

Enteropeptidase, also known as enterokinase, is a digestive system serine protease that initiates the activation of pancreatic digestive enzymes in the small intestine. It is produced by the mucosal cells of the duodenum as an inactive zymogen and is activated at the brush border, in part by trypsin.

Functionally, enteropeptidase cleaves the N-terminal activation peptide of trypsinogen at the sequence Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys (the DDDDK motif),

Biochemically, enteropeptidase is a serine protease of the S1 family. It is typically composed of distinct

Clinical significance is limited but notable. Congenital enteropeptidase deficiency is rare and results in impaired activation

In biotechnology, enteropeptidase is widely used to cleave recombinant fusion proteins at the DDDDK recognition site,

releasing
active
trypsin.
The
generated
trypsin
then
activates
other
pancreatic
proenzymes,
such
as
chymotrypsinogen,
proelastase,
and
procarboxypeptidases,
amplifying
the
proteolytic
cascade
essential
for
protein
digestion.
subunits
that
become
a
functional
enzyme
after
proteolytic
processing
and
interacts
with
standard
serine
protease
inhibitors.
of
pancreatic
enzymes,
potentially
causing
malabsorption
and
steatorrhea.
Diagnosis
relies
on
enzymatic
testing,
and
management
may
include
pancreatic
enzyme
replacement
and
dietary
adjustments.
allowing
release
of
the
target
protein
from
affinity
tags.
Commercial
preparations
are
derived
from
porcine
intestine
or
produced
recombinantly;
conditions
are
chosen
to
minimize
nonspecific
cleavage
of
the
protein
of
interest.