首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Carboxypeptidase M (CPM), an extracellular glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol(GPI)-anchored membrane glycoprotein belonging to the CPN/E subfamily of "regulatory" metallo-carboxypeptidases, specifically removes C-terminal basic residues from peptides and proteins. Due to its wide distribution in human tissues, CPM is believed to play important roles in the control of peptide hormone and growth factor activity at the cell surface, and in the membrane-localized degradation of extracellular proteins. We have crystallized human GPI-free CPM, and have determined and refined its 3.0A crystal structure. The structure analysis reveals that CPM consists of a 295 residue N-terminal catalytic domain similar to that of duck CPD-2 (but only distantly related to CPA/B), an adjacent 86 residue beta-sandwich C-terminal domain characteristic of the CPN/E family but more conically shaped than the equivalent domain in CPD-2, and a unique, partially disordered 25 residue C-terminal extension to which the GPI membrane-anchor is post-translationally attached. Through this GPI anchor, and presumably via some positively charged side-chains of the C-terminal domain, the CPM molecule may interact with the membrane in such a way that its active centre will face alongside, i.e. well suited to interact with other membrane-bound protein substrates or small peptides. Modelling of the C-terminal part of the natural substrate Arg(6)-Met-enkephalin into the active site shows that the S1' pocket of CPM is particularly well designed to accommodate P1'-Arg residues, in agreement with the preference of CPM for cleaving C-terminal Arg.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of the P1 amino acid on the substrate selectivity, the catalytic parameters K(m) and k(cat), of carboxypeptidase M (CPM) (E.C. 3.4.17.12) was systematically studied using a series of benzoyl-Xaa-Arg substrates. CPM had the highest catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) for substrates with Met, Ala and aromatic amino acids in the penultimate position and the lowest with amino acids with branched side-chains. Substrates with Pro in P1 were not cleaved in similar conditions. The P1 substrate preference of CPM differed from that of two other members of the carboxypeptidase family, CPN (CPN/CPE subfamily) and CPB (CPA/CPB subfamily). Aromatic P1 residues discriminated most between CPM and CPN. The type of P2 residue also influenced the k(cat) and K(m) of CPM. Extending the substrate up to P7 had little effect on the catalytic parameters. The substrates were modelled in the active site of CPM. The results indicate that P1-S1 interactions play a role in substrate binding and turn-over.  相似文献   

3.
Carboxypeptidase R (EC 3.4.17.20) (CPR) and carboxypeptidase N (EC 3.4.17.3) (CPN) cleave carboxy-terminal arginine or lysine residues from biologically active peptides such as kinins or anaphylatoxins in the circulation thereby regulating their activities. Although CPN is present in a stable active form in plasma, CPR is generated from proCPR, a plasma zymogen, by proteolytic enzymes such as thrombin, thrombin-thrombomodulin complex and plasmin. We have isolated rat proCPR and CPN cDNA clones which can induce enzymatic activities in culture supernatants of the transfected cells. mRNA of proCPR was detected only in rat liver by Northern hybridization and showed hepatocyte-specific expression. Expression of proCPR mRNA was enhanced following LPS injection, indicating that proCPR production is increased under inflammatory conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Arginine carboxypeptidase (CPR) is a novel carboxypeptidase which was first described by Campbell and Okada. CPR is generated from a stable precursor of CPR (proCPR) during coagulation or under other circumstances and is promptly inactivated at 37 C. Therefore, it is not easy to determine CPR in blood samples. Since proCPR can be separated from the other basic carboxypeptidase (carboxypeptidase N; CPN) by passing plasma through DEAE gel, we have established a method to determine the amount of proCPR after converting it to active CPR by trypsin treatment. We first separated the proCPR from CPN using a filter cup tube (FC tube) packed with DEAE Sephadex, and measured activity after conversion of the enzyme to its active form using trypsin. With this method, no significant decrease in proCPR was noted in the plasma of patients including those with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), although CPR activity in fresh sera has been reported to be decreased. This discrepancy suggests that proCPR is not depleted in most patient sera, but that the level of activity of the enzyme which converts proCPR into active CPR may be compromised in RA patients.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Carboxypeptidase N (CPN) and carboxypeptidase R (CPR) are present in fresh serum, and cleave C-terminal arginine or lysine residues from bioactive peptides such as anaphylatoxins and kinins resulting in regulation of peptide activity. Although CPN is present in the active form in plasma, CPR is generated from proCPR by trypsin-like enzymes such as thrombin. CPR regulates not only inflammatory peptides but also restricts fibrinolysis. To elucidate the complex role of CPN and CPR in vivo, studies in animal models will be essential. CPR of guinea pig, rat and rabbit decayed at 37 C rapidly as in the case of human CPR. However, at 25 C, CPR of those species decayed to some extent, although human serum CPR did not decay within 60 min. In the presence of thrombin inhibitor, CPR in the sera of animals tested decayed more rapidly than CPR in serum without thrombin inhibitor suggesting that additional generation of CPR may have been prevented during decay evaluation. However, human serum CPR decayed more rapidly in the absence of thrombin inhibitor indicating that thrombin may accelerate the decay in human serum.  相似文献   

7.
The structure of peptidase T, or tripeptidase, was determined by multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) methodology and refined to 2.4 A resolution. Peptidase T comprises two domains; a catalytic domain with an active site containing two metal ions, and a smaller domain formed through a long insertion into the catalytic domain. The two metal ions, presumably zinc, are separated by 3.3 A, and are coordinated by five carboxylate and histidine ligands. The molecular surface of the active site is negatively charged. Peptidase T has the same basic fold as carboxypeptidase G2. When the structures of the two enzymes are superimposed, a number of homologous residues, not evident from the sequence alone, could be identified. Comparison of the active sites of peptidase T, carboxypeptidase G2, Aeromonas proteolytica aminopeptidase, carboxypeptidase A and leucine aminopeptidase reveals a common structural framework with interesting similarities and differences in the active sites and in the zinc coordination. A putative binding site for the C-terminal end of the tripeptide substrate was found at a peptidase T specific fingerprint sequence motif.  相似文献   

8.
In human (h) pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) the pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) is bound to the E1-binding domain of dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase (E2). The C-terminal surface of the E1beta subunit was scanned for the negatively charged residues involved in binding with E2. betaD289 of hE1 interacts with K276 of hE2 in a manner similar to the corresponding interaction in Bacillus stearothermophilus PDC. In contrast to bacterial E1beta, the C-terminal residue of the hE1beta does not participate in the binding with positively charged residues of hE2. This latter finding shows species specificity in the interaction between hE1beta and hE2 in PDC.  相似文献   

9.
A novel, type 1 ribosome-inactivating protein designated charybdin was isolated from bulbs of Charybdis maritima agg. The protein, consisting of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular mass of 29 kDa, inhibited translation in rabbit reticulocytes with an IC50 of 27.2 nm. Plant genomic DNA extracted from the bulb was amplified by PCR between primers based on the N-terminal and C-terminal sequence of the protein from dissolved crystals. The complete mature protein sequence was derived by partial DNA sequencing and terminal protein sequencing, and was confirmed by high-resolution crystal structure analysis. The protein contains Val at position 79 instead of the conserved Tyr residue of the ribosome-inactivating proteins known to date. To our knowledge, this is the first observation of a natural substitution of a catalytic residue at the active site of a natural ribosome-inactivating protein. This substitution in the active site may be responsible for the relatively low in vitro translation inhibitory effect compared with other ribosome-inactivating proteins. Single crystals were grown in the cold room from PEG6000 solutions. Diffraction data collected to 1.6 A resolution were used to determine the protein structure by the molecular replacement method. The fold of the protein comprises two structural domains: an alpha + beta N-terminal domain (residues 4-190) and a mainly alpha-helical C-terminal domain (residues 191-257). The active site is located in the interface between the two domains and comprises residues Val79, Tyr117, Glu167 and Arg170.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli FucU (Fucose Unknown) is a dual fucose mutarotase and ribose pyranase, which shares 44% sequence identity with its human counterpart. Herein, we report the structures of E. coli FucU and mouse FucU bound to l-fucose and delineate the catalytic mechanisms underlying the interconversion between stereoisomers of fucose and ribose. E. coli FucU forms a decameric toroid with each active site formed by two adjacent subunits. While one subunit provides most of the fucose-interacting residues including a catalytic tyrosine residue, the other subunit provides a catalytic His-Asp dyad. This active-site feature is critical not only for the mutarotase activity toward l-fucose but also for the pyranase activity toward d-ribose. Structural and biochemical analyses pointed that mouse FucU assembles into four different oligomeric forms, among which the smallest homodimeric form is most abundant and would be the predominant species under physiological conditions. This homodimer has two fucose-binding sites that are devoid of the His-Asp dyad and catalytically inactive, indicating that the mutarotase and the pyranase activities appear dispensable in vertebrates. The defective assembly of the mouse FucU homodimer into the decameric form is due to an insertion of two residues at the N-terminal extreme, which is a common aspect of all the known vertebrate FucU proteins. Therefore, vertebrate FucU appears to serve for as yet unknown function through the quaternary structural alteration.  相似文献   

11.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase 1 (PDP1) catalyzes dephosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) in the mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC), whose activity is regulated by the phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle by the corresponding protein kinases (PDHKs) and phosphatases. The activity of PDP1 is greatly enhanced through Ca2+ -dependent binding of the catalytic subunit (PDP1c) to the L2 (inner lipoyl) domain of dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2), which is also integrated in PDC. Here, we report the crystal structure of the rat PDP1c at 1.8 A resolution. The structure reveals that PDP1 belongs to the PPM family of protein serine/threonine phosphatases, which, in spite of a low level of sequence identity, share the structural core consisting of the central beta-sandwich flanked on both sides by loops and alpha-helices. Consistent with the previous studies, two well-fixed magnesium ions are coordinated by five active site residues and five water molecules in the PDP1c catalytic center. Structural analysis indicates that, while the central portion of the PDP1c molecule is highly conserved among the members of the PPM protein family, a number of structural insertions and deletions located at the periphery of PDP1c likely define its functional specificity towards the PDC. One notable feature of PDP1c is a long insertion (residues 98-151) forming a unique hydrophobic pocket on the surface that likely accommodates the lipoyl moiety of the E2 domain in a fashion similar to that of PDHKs. The cavity, however, appears more open than in PDHK, suggesting that its closure may be required to achieve tight, specific binding of the lipoic acid. We propose a mechanism in which the closure of the lipoic acid binding site is triggered by the formation of the intermolecular (PDP1c/L2) Ca2+ binding site in a manner reminiscent of the Ca2+ -induced closure of the regulatory domain of troponin C.  相似文献   

12.
Residues 302-326 of the catalytic (gamma) subunit of phosphorylase kinase (PhK) may comprise an autoinhibitory, pseudosubstrate domain that binds calmodulin. To study this, the cDNA corresponding to rabbit muscle PhKgamma was expressed using Escherichia coli. This yielded two stable, high-activity PhKgamma forms (35 and 42 kDa by SDS-PAGE) that were smaller than an authentic sample of rabbit muscle PhKgamma (45 kDa by SDS-PAGE). Each recombinant form was purified to homogeneity. The N-terminal sequence of the larger, 42-kDa form (pk42) matched that of the rabbit muscle enzyme. This suggested that pk42 consisted of PhKgamma residues 1-362, including the putative calmodulin-binding, autoinhibitory domain. Kinetic parameters obtained for pk42 were like those previously reported for the intact gamma subunit. This implied that the lack of 25 PhKgamma C-terminal residues did not affect phosphorylase kinase activity, but greatly improved enzyme stability. An additional 60 residues were removed from the C-terminus of pk42 using the protease m-calpain. This increased the kinase activity 1.5-fold. Consistent with this, the activity of a mutant PhKgamma that consisted of residues 1-300, denoted gamma1-300, was like that of the m-calpain-treated enzyme. Therefore, although the effect was small, some influence by the C-terminus of pk42 was noted. Moreover, when pk42 was incubated with ATP alone, a C-terminal threonine residue became phosphorylated. Although the influence of this autophosphorylation cannot be inferred from this data, it was evidence that the C-terminus accessed the enzyme's active site. Taken together, these data imply that pk42 will be useful to study phosphorylase kinase structure/activity relationships.  相似文献   

13.
It is shown that exchanges of single invariant amino acids in two C-terminal catalytic domain segments of the glucosyltransferase R (GtfR) strongly affect its catalytic properties. Drastic decreases of activity through re- or displacements of Tyr965 demonstrate a crucial role of this residue. Similarly, exchanges of amino acids Asp1004, Val1006, and Tyr1011 profoundly influenced catalytic parameters. These results are interpreted on the basis of a homology model of the catalytic domain. They are consistent with the view that Tyr965 is a constituent of the substrate-binding pocket and directly contacts the sucrose molecule, whereas the other critical residues contribute to the required positioning of Tyr965 and other active site residues.  相似文献   

14.
The S'1 binding pocket of carboxypeptidase Y is hydrophobic, spacious, and open to solvent, and the enzyme exhibits a preference for hydrophobic P'1 amino acid residues. Leu272 and Ser297, situated at the rim of the pocket, and Leu267, slightly further away, have been substituted by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzymes have been characterized kinetically with respect to their P'1 substrate preferences using the substrate series FA-Ala-Xaa-OH (Xaa = Leu, Glu, Lys, or Arg) and FA-Phe-Xaa-OH (Xaa = Ala, Val, or Leu). The results reveal that hydrophobic P'1 residues bind in the vicinity of residue 272 while positively charged P'1 residues interact with Ser297. Introduction of Asp or Glu at position 267 greatly reduced the activity toward hydrophobic P'1 residues (Leu) and increased the activity two- to three-fold for the hydrolysis of substrates with Lys or Arg in P'1. Negatively charged substituents at position 272 reduced the activity toward hydrophobic P'1 residues even more, but without increasing the activity toward positively charged P'1 residues. The mutant enzyme L267D + L272D was found to have a preference for substrates with C-terminal basic amino acid residues. The opposite situation, where the positively charged Lys or Arg were introduced at one of the positions 267, 272, or 297, did not increase the rather low activity toward substrates with Glu in the P'1 position but greatly reduced the activity toward substrates with C-terminal Lys or Arg due to electrostatic repulsion. The characterized mutant enzymes exhibit various specificities, which may be useful in C-terminal amino acid sequence determinations.  相似文献   

15.
l-Gulonate 3-dehydrogenase (GDH) is a bifunctional dimeric protein that functions not only as an NAD+-dependent enzyme in the uronate cycle but also as a taxon-specific λ-crystallin in rabbit lens. Here we report the first crystal structure of GDH in both apo form and NADH-bound holo form. The GDH protomer consists of two structural domains: the N-terminal domain with a Rossmann fold and the C-terminal domain with a novel helical fold. In the N-terminal domain of the NADH-bound structure, we identified 11 coenzyme-binding residues and found 2 distinct side-chain conformers of Ser124, which is a putative coenzyme/substrate-binding residue. A structural comparison between apo form and holo form and a mutagenesis study with E97Q mutant suggest an induced-fit mechanism upon coenzyme binding; coenzyme binding induces a conformational change in the coenzyme-binding residues Glu97 and Ser124 to switch their activation state from resting to active, which is required for the subsequent substrate recruitment. Subunit dimerization is mediated by numerous intersubunit interactions, including 22 hydrogen bonds and 104 residue pairs of van der Waals interactions, of which those between two cognate C-terminal domains are predominant. From a structure/sequence comparison within GDH homologues, a much greater degree of interprotomer interactions (both polar and hydrophobic) in the rabbit GDH would contribute to its higher thermostability, which may be relevant to the other function of this enzyme as λ-crystallin, a constitutive structural protein in rabbit lens. The present crystal structures and amino acid mutagenesis studies assigned the role of active-site residues: catalytic base for His145 and substrate binding for Ser124, Cys125, Asn196, and Arg231. Notably, Arg231 participates in substrate binding from the other subunit of the GDH dimer, indicating the functional significance of the dimeric state. Proper orientation of the substrate-binding residues for catalysis is likely to be maintained by an interprotomer hydrogen-bonding network of residues Asn196, Gln199, and Arg231, suggesting a network-based substrate recognition of GDH.  相似文献   

16.
Biotin protein ligase of Escherichia coli, the BirA protein, catalyses the covalent attachment of the biotin prosthetic group to a specific lysine of the biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP) subunit of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. BirA also functions to repress the biotin biosynthetic operon and synthesizes its own corepressor, biotinyl-5'-AMP, the catalytic intermediate in the biotinylation reaction. We have previously identified two charge substitution mutants in BCCP, E119K, and E147K that are poorly biotinylated by BirA. Here we used site-directed mutagenesis to investigate residues in BirA that may interact with E119 or E147 in BCCP. None of the complementary charge substitution mutations at selected residues in BirA restored activity to wild-type levels when assayed with our BCCP mutant substrates. However, a BirA variant, in which K277 of the C-terminal domain was substituted with Glu, had significantly higher activity with E119K BCCP than did wild-type BirA. No function has been identified previously for the BirA C-terminal domain, which is distinct from the central domain thought to contain the ATP binding site and is known to contain the biotin binding site. Kinetic analysis of several purified mutant enzymes indicated that a single amino acid substitution within the C-terminal domain (R317E) and located some distance from the presumptive ATP binding site resulted in a 25-fold decrease in the affinity for ATP. Our data indicate that the C-terminal domain of BirA is essential for the catalytic activity of the enzyme and contributes to the interaction with ATP and the protein substrate, the BCCP biotin domain.  相似文献   

17.
We describe the sequence of a gene encoding a high molecular weight glutenin subunit (HMW-GS) expressed in the endosperm of the wheat relative Australopyrum retrofractum. Although the subunit has a similar primary structure to that HMW-GS genes present in other Triticeae species, its N-terminal domain is shorter, its central repetitive domain includes a unique dodecameric motif, and its C-terminal domain contain an extra cysteine residue. A phylogenetic analysis showed that the Glu-W1 gene is neither a true x- nor a true y-type subunit, although it is more closely related to the y-type genes present in the K and E genomes than to any other published HMW-GS gene. All these results indicated that this novel subunit may undergo a special evolutionary process different from other Triticeae species. A flour supplementation experiment showed that the Glu-W1 subunit has a negative effect on dough quality, which might be the result of interaction between the two closely placed cysteine residues in the C-terminal region.  相似文献   

18.
Wang H  Du Y  Xiang B  Lin W  Li X  Wei Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(15):4461-4468
Calcineurin is composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). CNA contains the catalytic domain and three regulatory domains: a CNB-binding domain (BBH), a C-terminal calmodulin-binding domain (CBD), and an autoinhibitory domain (AID). We constructed a series of mutants of CNA to explore the regulatory role of its C-terminal regulatory domain and CaM. We demonstrated a more precise mechanism of CNA regulation by C-terminal residues 389-511 in the presence of CNB. First, we showed that residues 389-413, which were identified in previous work as constituting a CaM binding domain (CBD), also have an autoinhibiting function. We also found that residues 389-413 were not sufficient for CaM binding and that the CBD comprises at least residues 389-456. In conclusion, two distinct segments of the C-terminal regulatory region (389-511) of CNA inhibit enzyme activity: residues 389-413 interact with the CNB binding helix (BBH), and residues 457-482 with the active center of CNA.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of domain II of duck carboxypeptidase D, a prohormone/propeptide processing enzyme integrated in a three repeat tandem in the natural system, has been solved, constituting a prototype for members of the regulatory metallocarboxypeptidase subfamily. It displays a 300 residue N-terminal alpha/beta-hydrolase subdomain with overall topological similarity to and general coincidence of the key catalytic residues with the archetypal pancreatic carboxypeptidase A. However, numerous significant insertions/deletions in segments forming the funnel-like access to the active site explain differences in specificity towards larger protein substrates or inhibitors. This alpha/beta-hydrolase subdomain is followed by a C-terminal 80 residue beta-sandwich subdomain, unique for these regulatory metalloenzymes and topologically related to transthyretin and sugar-binding proteins. The structure described here establishes the fundamentals for a better understanding of the mechanism ruling events such as prohormone processing and will enable modelling of regulatory carboxypeptidases as well as a more rational design of inhibitors of carboxypeptidase D.  相似文献   

20.
Limited proteolysis with trypsin has been used to study the domain structure of the dihydrolipoyltransacetylase (E2) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Azotobacter vinelandii. Two stable end products were obtained and identified as the N-terminal lipoyl domain and the C-terminal catalytic domain. By performing proteolysis of E2, which was covalently attached via its lipoyl groups to an activated thiol-Sepharose matrix, a separation was obtained between the catalytic domain and the covalently attached lipoyl domain. The latter was removed from the column after reduction of the S-S bond and purified by ultrafiltration. The lipoyl domain is monomeric with a mass of 32.6 kDa. It is an elongated structure with f/fo = 1.62. Circulair dichroic studies indicates little secondary structure. The catalytic domain is polymeric with S20.w = 17 S and mass = 530 kDa. It is a compact structure with f/fo = 1.24 and shows 40% of the secondary structure of E2. The cubic structure of the native E2 is retained by this fragment as observed by electron microscopy. Ultracentrifugation in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride in the presence of 2 mM dithiothreitol yields a mass of 15.8 kDa. An N-terminal sequence of 36 amino acids is homologous with residues 370-406 of Escherichia coli E2. The catalytic domain possesses the catalytic site, but in contrast to the E. coli subunit binding domain the pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) and lipoamide dehydrogenase (E3) binding sites are lost during proteolysis. From comparison with the E. coli E2 sequence a model is presented in which the several functions, such as lipoyl domain, the E3 binding site, the catalytic site, the E2/E2 interaction sites, and the E1 binding site, are indicated.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号