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1.
The flaviviral nonstructural 3 protease (NS3pro) is essential for virus replication and is therefore a pharmaceutically relevant target to fight Dengue and West Nile virus (WNV). NS3pro is a chymotrypsin‐like serine protease which requires a polypeptide cofactor (NS2B) for activation. Recent X‐ray crystallography studies have led to the suggestion that the substrate binds to the two‐component NS2B‐NS3pro enzyme by an induced‐fit mechanism. Here, multiple explicit water molecular dynamics simulations of the WNV NS2B‐NS3pro enzyme show that the active conformation of the NS2B cofactor (in which its β‐loop is part of the substrate binding site) is stable over a 50‐ns time scale even in the absence of the inhibitor. The partial and reversible opening of the NSB2 β‐loop and its correlated motion with an adjacent NS3pro loop, both observed in the simulations started from the active conformation, are likely to facilitate substrate binding and product release. Moreover, in five of eight simulations without inhibitor (started from two X‐ray structures both with improperly formed oxyanion hole) the Thr132‐Gly133 peptide bond flips spontaneously thereby promoting the formation of the catalytically competent oxyanion hole, which then stays stable until the end of the runs. The simulation results provide evidence at atomic level of detail that the substrate binds to the NS2B‐NS3pro enzyme by conformational selection, rather than induced‐fit mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
C2a provides the catalytic center to the convertase complexes of the classical and lectin-binding pathways of complement activation. We determined two crystal structures of full-length C2a, with and without a pseudo ligand bound. Both structures reveal a near-active conformation of the catalytic center of the serine protease domains, while the von Willebrand factor A-type domains display an intermediate activation state of helix alpha7 with an open, activated metal-ion-dependent adhesion site. The open adhesion site likely serves to enhance the affinity for the ligand C4b, similar to "inside-out" signaling in integrins. Surprisingly, the N-terminal residues of C2a are buried in a crevice near helix alpha7, indicative of a structural switch between C2 and C2a. Extended loops on the protease domain possibly envelop the protruding anaphylatoxin domain of the substrate C3. Together with a putative substrate-induced completion of the oxyanion hole, this may contribute to the high substrate specificity of the convertases.  相似文献   

3.
Factor IX is the zymogen of the serine protease factor IXa involved in blood coagulation. In addition to a catalytic domain homologous to the chymotrypsin family, it has Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa binding regions needed for full biologic activity. We isolated a nonfunctional factor IX protein designated factor IXEagle Rock (IXER) from a patient with hemophilia B. The variant protein is indistinguishable from normal factor IX (IXN) in its migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, isoelectric point in urea, carbohydrate content and distribution, number of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues, and beta-OH aspartic acid content, and in its binding to an anti-IXN monoclonal antibody which has been shown previously to inhibit the interaction of factor VIIIa with factor IXaN. Further, IXER is cleaved to yield a factor IXa-like molecule by factor XIa/Ca2+ at a rate similar to that observed for IXN. However, in contrast to IXaN, IXaER does not bind to antithrombin-III (specific inhibitor of IXaN) and does not catalyze the activation of factor X (substrate) to factor Xa. To identify the mutation in IXER, all eight exons of IXN and IXER gene were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction technique and cloned. A single point mutation (G----T) which results in the replacement of Val for Gly363 in the catalytic domain of IXER was identified. Gly363 in factor IXa corresponds to the universally conserved Gly193 in the active site sequence of the chymotrypsin serine protease family. X-ray crystallographic data in the literature demonstrate a critical role of this Gly in stabilizing the active conformation of chymotrypsin/trypsin in two major ways: 1) in the formation of the substrate binding site; and 2) in the development of the oxyanion hole. Our computer structural data support a concept that the Gly363----Val change prevents the development of the active site conformation in factor IXa such that the substrate binding site and the oxyanion hole are not formed in the mutated enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Little is known on the role of disulfide bonds in the catalytic domain of serine proteases. The Cys-191-Cys-220 disulfide bond is located between the 190 strand leading to the oxyanion hole and the 220-loop that contributes to the architecture of the primary specificity pocket and the Na+ binding site in allosteric proteases. Removal of this bond in thrombin produces an approximately 100-fold loss of activity toward several chromogenic and natural substrates carrying Arg or Lys at P1. Na+ activation is compromised, and no fluorescence change can be detected in response to Na+ binding. A 1.54-A resolution structure of the C191A/C220A mutant in the free form reveals a conformation similar to the Na+-free slow form of wild type. The lack of disulfide bond exposes the side chain of Asp-189 to solvent, flips the backbone O atom of Gly-219, and generates disorder in portions of the 186 and 220 loops defining the Na+ site. This conformation, featuring perturbation of the Na+ site but with the active site accessible to substrate, offers a possible representation of the recently identified E* form of thrombin. Disorder in the 186 and 220 loops and the flip of Gly-219 are corrected by the active site inhibitor H-D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH(2)Cl, as revealed by the 1.8-A resolution structure of the complex. We conclude that the Cys-191-Cys-220 disulfide bond confers stability to the primary specificity pocket by shielding Asp-189 from the solvent and orients the backbone O atom of Gly-219 for optimal substrate binding. In addition, the disulfide bond stabilizes the 186 and 220 loops that are critical for Na+ binding and activation.  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2019,116(10):1823-1835
A critical step in injury-induced initiation of blood coagulation is the formation of the complex between the trypsin-like protease coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) and its cofactor tissue factor (TF), which converts FVIIa from an intrinsically poor enzyme to an active protease capable of activating zymogens of downstream coagulation proteases. Unlike its constitutively active ancestor trypsin, FVIIa is allosterically activated (by TF). Here, ensemble refinement of crystallographic structures, which uses multiple copies of the entire structure as a means of representing structural flexibility, is applied to explore the impacts of inhibitor binding to trypsin and FVIIa, as well as cofactor binding to FVIIa. To assess the conformational flexibility and its role in allosteric pathways in these proteases, main-chain hydrogen bond networks are analyzed by calculating the hydrogen-bond propensity. Mapping pairwise propensity differences between relevant structures shows that binding of the inhibitor benzamidine to trypsin has a minor influence on the protease flexibility. For FVIIa, in contrast, the protease domain is “locked” into the catalytically competent trypsin-like configuration upon benzamidine binding as indicated by the stabilization of key structural features: the nonprime binding cleft and the oxyanion hole are stabilized, and the effect propagates from the active site region to the calcium-binding site and to the vicinity of the disulphide bridge connecting with the light chain. TF binding to FVIIa furthermore results in stabilization of the 170 loop, which in turn propagates an allosteric signal from the TF-binding region to the active site. Analyses of disulphide bridge energy and flexibility reflect the striking stability difference between the unregulated enzyme and the allosterically activated form after inhibitor or cofactor binding. The ensemble refinement analyses show directly, for the first time to our knowledge, whole-domain structural footprints of TF-induced allosteric networks present in x-ray crystallographic structures of FVIIa, which previously only have been hypothesized or indirectly inferred.  相似文献   

6.
Bile-salt activated lipase (BAL) is a pancreatic enzyme that digests a variety of lipids in the small intestine. A distinct property of BAL is its dependency on bile salts in hydrolyzing substrates of long acyl chains or bulky alcoholic motifs. A crystal structure of the catalytic domain of human BAL (residues 1-538) with two surface mutations (N186D and A298D), which were introduced in attempting to facilitate crystallization, has been determined at 2.3 A resolution. The crystal form belongs to space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with one monomer per asymmetric unit, and the protein shows an alpha/beta hydrolase fold. In the absence of bound bile salt molecules, the protein possesses a preformed catalytic triad and a functional oxyanion hole. Several surface loops around the active site are mobile, including two loops potentially involved in substrate binding (residues 115-125 and 270-285).  相似文献   

7.
Recent crystallography studies have shown that the binding site oxyanion hole plays an important role in inhibitor binding, but can exist in two conformations (active/inactive). We have undertaken molecular dynamics (MD) calculations to better understand oxyanion hole dynamics and thermodynamics. We find that the Zika virus (ZIKV) NS2B/NS3 protease maintains a stable closed conformation over multiple 100-ns conventional MD simulations in both the presence and absence of inhibitors. The S1, S2, and S3 pockets are stable as well. However, in two of eight simulations, the A132-G133 peptide bond in the binding pocket of S1' spontaneously flips to form a 310-helix that corresponds to the inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole, and then maintains this conformation until the end of the 100-ns conventional MD simulations without inversion of the flip. This conformational change affects the S1' pocket in ZIKV NS2B/NS3 protease active site, which is important for small molecule binding. The simulation results provide evidence at the atomic level that the inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole is more favored energetically when no specific interactions are formed between substrate/inhibitor and oxyanion hole residues. Interestingly, however, transition between the active and inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole can be observed by boosting the valley potential in accelerated MD simulations. This supports a proposed induced-fit mechanism of ZIKV NS2B/NS3 protease from computational methods and provides useful direction to enhance inhibitor binding predictions in structure-based drug design.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal structures of an acetyl esterase, HerE, and its complex with an inhibitor dimethylarsinic acid have been determined at 1.30- and 1.45-A resolution, respectively. Although the natural substrate for the enzyme is unknown, HerE hydrolyzes the acetyl groups from heroin to yield morphine and from phenyl acetate to yield phenol. Recently, the activity of the enzyme toward heroin has been exploited to develop a heroin biosensor, which affords higher sensitivity than other currently available detection methods. The crystal structure reveals a single domain with the canonical alpha/beta hydrolase fold with an acyl binding pocket that snugly accommodates the acetyl substituent of the substrate and three backbone amides that form a tripartite oxyanion hole. In addition, a covalent adduct was observed between the active site serine and dimethylarsinic acid, which inhibits the enzyme. This crystal structure provides the first example of an As-containing compound in a serine esterase active site and the first example of covalent modification of serine by arsenic. Thus, the HerE complex reveals the structural basis for the broad scope inhibition of serine hydrolases by As(V)-containing organic compounds.  相似文献   

9.
Factor VIIa (FVIIa) consists of a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain, two epidermal growth factor-like domains, and a protease domain. FVIIa binds seven Ca(2+) ions in the Gla, one in the EGF1, and one in the protease domain. However, blood contains both Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), and the Ca(2+) sites in FVIIa that could be specifically occupied by Mg(2+) are unknown. Furthermore, FVIIa contains a Na(+) and two Zn(2+) sites, but ligands for these cations are undefined. We obtained p-aminobenzamidine-VIIa/soluble tissue factor (sTF) crystals under conditions containing Ca(2+), Mg(2+), Na(+), and Zn(2+). The crystal diffracted to 1.8A resolution, and the final structure has an R-factor of 19.8%. In this structure, the Gla domain has four Ca(2+) and three bound Mg(2+). The EGF1 domain contains one Ca(2+) site, and the protease domain contains one Ca(2+), one Na(+), and two Zn(2+) sites. (45)Ca(2+) binding in the presence/absence of Mg(2+) to FVIIa, Gla-domainless FVIIa, and prothrombin fragment 1 supports the crystal data. Furthermore, unlike in other serine proteases, the amide N of Gly(193) in FVIIa points away from the oxyanion hole in this structure. Importantly, the oxyanion hole is also absent in the benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF structure at 1.87A resolution. However, soaking benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF crystals with d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl ketone results in benzamidine displacement, d-Phe-Pro-Arg incorporation, and oxyanion hole formation by a flip of the 192-193 peptide bond in FVIIa. Thus, it is the substrate and not the TF binding that induces oxyanion hole formation and functional active site geometry in FVIIa. Absence of oxyanion hole is unusual and has biologic implications for FVIIa macromolecular substrate specificity and catalysis.  相似文献   

10.
The backbone dynamics of Fusarium solani pisi cutinase has been studied by a variety of nuclear magnetic resonance experiments to probe internal motions on different time scales. The core of cutinase appears to be highly rigid. The binding site, including the oxyanion hole, is mobile on the microsecond to millisecond time scale, in contrast to the well-defined active site and preformed oxyanion hole elucidated by X-ray crystallography [Martinez, C., de Geus, P., Lauwereys, M., Matthyssens, G., and Cambillau, C. (1992) Nature 356, 615-618]. In this crystal structure, cutinase has a rather open conformation, in which the hydrophobic binding site is exposed. The observed mobility in solution most likely represents the interconversion between open and more closed conformations, like in a true lipase. The opening and closing motions are on a time scale which corresponds with the kinetics of the hydrolysis reaction, i.e., the millisecond range, which suggests that these conformational rearrangements form the rate-limiting step in catalysis. We conclude that the crystal structure probably represents one of the multiple conformations present in solution, which fortuitously is the active conformation. The implications of our findings are discussed with particular reference to the explanation of the lack of interfacial activation as found for cutinase.  相似文献   

11.
Fat digestion in humans requires not only the classical pancreatic lipase but also gastric lipase, which is stable and active despite the highly acidic stomach environment. We report here the structure of recombinant human gastric lipase at 3.0-A resolution, the first structure to be described within the mammalian acid lipase family. This globular enzyme (379 residues) consists of a core domain belonging to the alpha/beta hydrolase-fold family and a "cap" domain, which is analogous to that present in serine carboxypeptidases. It possesses a classical catalytic triad (Ser-153, His-353, Asp-324) and an oxyanion hole (NH groups of Gln-154 and Leu-67). Four N-glycosylation sites were identified on the electron density maps. The catalytic serine is deeply buried under a segment consisting of 30 residues, which can be defined as a lid and belonging to the cap domain. The displacement of the lid is necessary for the substrates to have access to Ser-153. A phosphonate inhibitor was positioned in the active site that clearly suggests the location of the hydrophobic substrate binding site. The lysosomal acid lipase was modeled by homology, and possible explanations for some previously reported mutations leading to the cholesterol ester storage disease are given based on the present model.  相似文献   

12.
Both functional and structural studies of serine beta-lactamases indicate the existence of an oxyanion hole at the active site with an important role in catalysis. The functional presence of the oxyanion hole is demonstrated by the previous observation that thiono-beta-lactams are very poor substrates of beta-lactamases (B. P. Murphy, and R. F. Pratt, 1988, Biochem. J. 256, 669-672) and in the present paper by the inability of these enzymes to catalyze hydrolysis of a thiono analog of a depsipeptide substrate. This thiono effect was first noted and interpreted in regard to classical serine hydrolases although the chemical basis for it has not been firmly established either in those enzymes or in beta-lactamases. In this paper a computational approach to a further understanding of the effect has been taken. The results for a class C beta-lactamase show that the deacylation tetrahedral intermediate interacted more strongly with the enzyme with an O(-) placed in the oxyanion hole than an S(-). On the other hand, the converse was true for acylation tetrahedral intermediate species, a result distinctly not in accord with experiment. These results indicate that the thiono effect does not arise from unfavorable interactions between enzyme and thiono substrate at the tetrahedral intermediate stage but must be purely kinetic in nature, i.e., arise in a transitional species at an early stage of the acylation reaction. The same conclusion as to the origin of the thiono effect was also indicated by a less extensive series of calculations on a class A beta-lactamase and on chymotrypsin.  相似文献   

13.
Pratt RF  McLeish MJ 《Biochemistry》2010,49(45):9688-9697
The β-lactam-recognizing enzymes (BLRE) make up a superfamily of largely bacterial proteins that include, principally, the dd-peptidases and β-lactamases. The former enzymes catalyze the final step in bacterial cell wall biosynthesis and are inhibited by β-lactam antibiotics, while the latter enzymes catalyze the hydrolytic destruction of β-lactams and represent a major source of bacterial resistance to these antibiotics. The active site of this superfamily of enzymes includes a Ser1/Ser2(Tyr)/Lys1(His)/Lys2 tetrad in which Ser1 is a nucleophilic catalyst that becomes acylated in the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate. An oxyanion hole is also present. The amidase signature (AS) enzymes represent another serine amidohydrolase superfamily with no overall structural resemblance to the BLRE. The active site is characterized by a Ser1/Ser2/Lys1/NH tetrad and an oxyanion hole. We point out that there is a close spatial overlap between the two tetrads and speculate that this has arisen from a process of convergent evolution driven by a mechanistic imperative. Conversion of the backbone NH group of the AS tetrad into Lys2 of the BLRE is rationalized and leads to another mechanistic possibility that may dominate BLRE catalysis. The active site triads of other serine amidohydrolases are also briefly and comparatively discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Thrombomodulin is an endothelial cell thrombin receptor that serves as a cofactor for thrombin-catalyzed activation of protein C. Structural requirements for thrombin binding and cofactor activity were studied by mutagenesis of recombinant human thrombomodulin expressed on COS-7 and CV-1 cells. Deletion of the fourth epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domain abolished cofactor activity but did not affect thrombin binding. Deletion of either the fifth or the sixth EGF-like domain markedly reduced both thrombin binding affinity and cofactor activity. Thrombin binding sequences were also localized by assaying the ability of synthetic peptides derived from thrombomodulin to compete with diisopropyl fluorophosphate-inactivated 125I-thrombin binding to thrombomodulin. The two most active peptides corresponded to (a) the entire third loop of the fifth EGF-like domain (Kp = 85 +/- 6 microM) and (b) parts of the second and third loops of the sixth EGF-like domain (Kp = 117 +/- 9 microM). These data suggest that thrombin interacts with two discrete elements in thrombomodulin. Deletion of the Ser/Thr-rich domain dramatically decreased both thrombin binding affinity and cofactor activity and also prevented the formation of a high molecular weight thrombomodulin species containing chondroitin sulfate. Substitutions of this domain with polypeptide segments of decreasing length and devoid of glycosylation sites progressively decreased both cofactor activity and thrombin binding affinity. This correlation suggests that increased proximity of the membrane surface to the thrombin binding site may hinder efficient thrombin binding and the subsequent activation of protein C. Membrane-bound thrombomodulin therefore requires the Ser/Thr-rich domain as an important spacer, in addition to EGF-like domains 4-6, for efficient protein C activation.  相似文献   

15.
Fat digestion in humans requires not only the classical pancreatic lipase but also gastric lipase, which is stable and active despite the highly acidic stomach environment. We have solved the structure of recombinant human gastric lipase at 3.0 A resolution, the first structure to be described within the mammalian acid lipase family. This globular enzyme (379 residues) consists of a core domain, belonging to the alpha/beta hydrolase fold family, and an extrusion domain. It possesses a classical catalytic triad (Ser 153, His 353, Asp 324) and an oxyanion hole (NH groups of Gln 154 and Leu 67). Four N-glycosylation sites were identified on the electron density maps. The catalytic serine is deeply buried under the extrusion domain, which is composed of a 'cap' domain and a segment consisting of 30 residues, which can be defined as a lid. Its displacement is necessary for the substrates to access the active site. A phosphonate inhibitor was positioned in the active site which clearly suggests the location of the hydrophobic substrate binding site.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of thrombin with protein C triggers a key down-regulatory process of the coagulation cascade. Using a panel of 77 Ala mutants, we have mapped the epitope of thrombin recognizing protein C in the absence or presence of the cofactor thrombomodulin. Residues around the Na(+) site (Thr-172, Lys-224, Tyr-225, and Gly-226), the aryl binding site (Tyr-60a), the primary specificity pocket (Asp-189), and the oxyanion hole (Gly-193) hold most of the favorable contributions to protein C recognition by thrombin, whereas a patch of residues in the 30-loop (Arg-35 and Pro-37) and 60-loop (Phe-60h) regions produces unfavorable contributions to binding. The shape of the epitope changes drastically in the presence of thrombomodulin. The unfavorable contributions to binding disappear and the number of residues promoting the thrombin-protein C interaction is reduced to Tyr-60a and Asp-189. Kinetic studies of protein C activation as a function of temperature reveal that thrombomodulin increases >1,000-fold the rate of diffusion of protein C into the thrombin active site and lowers the activation barrier for this process by 4 kcal/mol. We propose that the mechanism of thrombomodulin action is to kinetically facilitate the productive encounter of thrombin and protein C and to allosterically change the conformation of the activation peptide of protein C for optimal presentation to the thrombin active site.  相似文献   

17.
Seventeen murine monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against horseshoe crab clotting factor, factor C, were prepared and characterized. When the binding sites of these mAbs were analyzed by immunoblotting, ten mAbs recognized nonreduced factor C, five mAbs were directed against the heavy chain, and two mAbs were directed against the B chain. Three mAbs, 1H4, 2C12, and 2A7, one selected from each group, were used for further study. The mAb 1H4, which recognized only nonreduced factor C molecule, inhibited the factor C activity in a dose-dependent manner. It also inhibited lipopolysaccharide (LPS)- and alpha-chymotrypsin-mediated activations of the zymogen factor C, suggesting that 1H4 binds close to the active site and/or the substrate-binding site located in the serine protease domain (B chain) of factor C. On the other hand, 2C12 and 2A7 recognized, respectively, an epitope located in the heavy and the B chains, and inhibited LPS-mediated activation of factor C, but not alpha-chymotrypsin-mediated activation of factor C or factor C activity. Both F(ab')2 and Fab' fragments derived from 2C12 inhibited LPS-mediated activation in the same manner. These three mAbs did not bind with LPS, although a factor C-mAb complex was able to bind LPS, suggesting that the LPS-mediated activation of the zymogen factor C was induced through intermolecular interaction between the LPS-bound factor C molecules. The dissociation constants (Kd) for 1H4, 2C12, and 2A7 binding to factor C were determined as 1.9 x 10(-9), 0.6 x 10(-10), and 1.8 x 10(-10) M, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have obtained an important insight into the structural and dynamical changes exerted by a nonaqueous solvent on the serine protease subtilisin Carlsberg. Our findings show that the structural properties of the subtilisin–acetonitrile (MeCN) system were sensitive to the amount of water present at the protein surface. A decrease or lack of water promoted the enzyme–MeCN interaction, which increased structural changes of the enzyme primarily at the surface loops. This effect caused variations on the secondary and tertiary structure of the protein and induced the opening of a pathway for the solvent to the protein core. Also, disturbance of the oxyanion hole was observed due to changes in the orientation in the Asn-155 side chain. The disruption of the oxyanion hole and the changes of the tertiary structure should affect the optimal activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
l-Amino acid oxidase from Rhodococcus opacus (roLAAO) is classified as a member of the GR(2)-family of flavin-dependent oxidoreductases according to a highly conserved sequence motif for the cofactor binding. The monomer of the homodimeric enzyme consists of three well-defined domains: the FAD-binding domain corresponding to a general topology throughout the whole GR(2)-family; a substrate-binding domain with almost the same topology as the snake venom LAAO and a helical domain exclusively responsible for the unusual dimerisation mode of the enzyme and not found in other members of the family so far. We describe here high-resolution structures of the binary complex of protein and cofactor as well as the ternary complexes of protein, cofactor and ligands. This structures in addition to the structural knowledge of snake venom LAAO and DAAO from yeast and pig kidney permit more insight into different steps in the reaction mechanism of this class of enzymes. There is strong evidence for hydride transfer as the mechanism of dehydrogenation. This mechanism appears to be uncommon in a sense that the chemical transformation can proceed efficiently without the involvement of amino acid functional groups. Most groups present at the active site are involved in substrate recognition, binding and fixation, i.e. they direct the trajectory of the interacting orbitals. In this mode of catalysis orbital steering/interactions are the predominant factors for the chemical step(s). A mirror-symmetrical relationship between the two substrate-binding sites of d and l-amino acid oxidases is observed which facilitates enantiomeric selectivity while preserving a common arrangement of the residues in the active site. These results are of general relevance for the mechanism of flavoproteins and lead to the proposal of a common dehydrogenation step in the mechanism for l and d-amino acid oxidases.  相似文献   

20.
HtrA (high temperature requirement A), a periplasmic heat-shock protein, functions as a molecular chaperone at low temperatures, and its proteolytic activity is turned on at elevated temperatures. To investigate the mechanism of functional switch to protease, we determined the crystal structure of the NH(2)-terminal protease domain (PD) of HtrA from Thermotoga maritima, which was shown to retain both proteolytic and chaperone-like activities. Three subunits of HtrA PD compose a trimer, and multimerization architecture is similar to that found in the crystal structures of intact HtrA hexamer from Escherichia coli and human HtrA2 trimer. HtrA PD shares the same fold with chymotrypsin-like serine proteases, but it contains an additional lid that blocks access the of substrates to the active site. A corresponding lid found in E. coli HtrA is a long loop that also blocks the active site of another subunit. These results suggest that the activation of the proteolytic function of HtrA at elevated temperatures might occur by a conformational change, which includes the opening of the helical lid to expose the active site and subsequent rearrangement of a catalytic triad and an oxyanion hole.  相似文献   

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