The Trypsin and Chymotrypsin Inhibitors in Chick Peas (Cicer arietinum L.)

Abstract
The two principal isoinhibitors P-5 and P-6 isolated earlier from the seeds of chick peas (Cicer arietinum L.) by a procedure involving biospecific affinity chromatography on active, matrix-bound trypsin are shown to be the virgin and trypsin-modified forms of the same inhibitor. The virgin inhibitor P-5 consists of a single peptide chain of 66 amino acid residues cross-linked by seven disulfide bridges. Upon interaction with the matrix-bound trypsin under the conditions used the virgin inhibitor P-5 is about 50% converted to P-6 by cleavage of a single Lys-Ser linkage at position 14-15 in the molecule. The resulting tetradecapeptide remains bound to the rest of the molecule by two or four disulfide bridges, but the two fragments representing residues 1-14 and 15-66 separate readily by molecular-sieve chromatography following reductive or oxidative cleavage of the disulfide linkages. The sequence 1-25 was established by Edman degradation.