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1.
Kojima S  Iwahara A  Yanai H 《FEBS letters》2005,579(20):4430-4436
Pleurotus ostrearus proteinase A inhibitor 1 (POIA1), which was discovered as a protease inhibitor, is unique in that it shows sequence homology to the propeptide of subtilisin, which functions as an intramolecular of a cognate protease. In this study, we demonstrate that POIA1 can function as an intramolecular chaperone of subtilisin by in vitro and in vivo experiments. The specific cleavage between POIA1 and the mature region of subtilisin BPN' occurred in a refolding process of a chimera protein, and Bacillus cells transformed with a chimera gene formed a halo on a skim milk plate. The mutational analyses of POIA1 in the chimera protein suggested that the tertiary structure of POIA1 is required for such a function, and that an increase in its ability to bind to subtilisin BPN' makes POIA1 a more effective intramolecular chaperone.  相似文献   

2.
In vitro processing of pro-subtilisin produced in Escherichia coli   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
In a previous paper (Ikemura, H., Takagi, H., and Inouye, M. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 7859-7864), we demonstrated that the pro-sequence consisting of 77 amino acid residues at the amino terminus of subtilisin is essential for the production of active subtilisin. When the aggregates of pro-subtilisin produced in Escherichia coli were solubilized in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride and dialyzed against 200 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.1 or 6.2), pro-subtilisin was efficiently processed to active subtilisin. When more than 14 residues were removed from the amino terminus of the pro-sequence, active subtilisin was no longer produced as in the in vivo experiments. Similarly, active subtilisin would not renature under the same conditions once solubilized in guanidine hydrochloride. When the aspartic acid residue at the active site (Asp32) was altered to asparagine, processing of mutant pro-subtilisin was not observed even in the presence of wild-type pro-subtilisin. Inhibitors such as phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride or Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor did not block the processing of wild-type pro-subtilisin. These facts indicate that processing or pro-subtilisin is carried out by an intramolecular, self-processing mechanism. When the sample was dialyzed against 20 mM sodium phosphate (pH 6.2), no active subtilisin was found, suggesting that the highly charged nature of the pro-sequence plays an important role in the process of refolding of denatured pro-subtilisin.  相似文献   

3.
Subtilisin is produced as a precursor that requires its N-terminal propeptide to chaperone the folding of its protease domain. Once folded, subtilisin adopts a remarkably stable conformation, which has been attributed to a high affinity Ca(2+) binding site. We investigated the role of the metal ligand in the maturation of pro-subtilisin, a process that involves folding, autoprocessing and partial degradation. Our results establish that although Ca(2+) ions can stabilize the protease domain, the folding and autoprocessing of pro-subtilisin take place independent of Ca(2+) ion. We demonstrate that the stabilizing effect of calcium is observed only after the completion of autoprocessing and that the metal ion appears to be responsible for shifting the folding equilibrium towards the native conformation in both mature subtilisin and the autoprocessed propeptide:subtilisin complex. Furthermore, the addition of active subtilisin to unautoprocessed pro-subtilisin in trans does not facilitate precursor maturation, but rather promotes rapid autodegradation. The primary cleavage site that initiates this autodegradation is at Gln19 in the N-terminus of mature subtilisin. This corresponds to the loop that links alpha-helix-2 and beta-strand-1 in mature subtilisin and has indirect effects on the formation of the Ca(2+) binding site. Our results show that the N-terminus of mature subtilisin undergoes rearrangement subsequent to propeptide autoprocessing. Since this structural change enhances the proteolytic stability of the precursor, our results suggest that the autoprocessing reaction must be completed before the release of active subtilisin in order to maximize folding efficiency.  相似文献   

4.
Subtilisin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1 is a member of the subtilisin family. T. kodakaraensis subtilisin in a proform (T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin), as well as its propeptide (T. kodakaraensis propeptide) and mature domain (T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin), were independently overproduced in E. coli, purified, and biochemically characterized. T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin was inactive in the absence of Ca2+ but was activated upon autoprocessing and degradation of propeptide in the presence of Ca2+ at 80 degrees C. This maturation process was completed within 30 min at 80 degrees C but was bound at an intermediate stage, in which the propeptide is autoprocessed from the mature domain (T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*) but forms an inactive complex with T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, at lower temperatures. At 80 degrees C, approximately 30% of T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin was autoprocessed into T. kodakaraensis propeptide and T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, and the other 70% was completely degraded to small fragments. Likewise, T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin was inactive in the absence of Ca2+ but was activated upon incubation with Ca2+ at 80 degrees C. The kinetic parameters and stability of the resultant activated protein were nearly identical to those of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, indicating that T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin does not require T. kodakaraensis propeptide for folding. However, only approximately 5% of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin was converted to an active form, and the other part was completely degraded to small fragments. T. kodakaraensis propeptide was shown to be a potent inhibitor of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin* and noncompetitively inhibited its activity with a Ki of 25 +/- 3.0 nM at 20 degrees C. T. kodakaraensis propeptide may be required to prevent the degradation of the T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin molecules that are activated later by those that are activated earlier.  相似文献   

5.
Pleurotus ostreatus proteinase A inhibitor 1 (POIA1) has been shown to be unique among the various serine protease inhibitors in that its C-terminal region appears to be the reactive site responsible for its inhibitory action toward proteases. To investigate in more detail the mechanism of inhibition by POIA1, we have been studying its structural requirements for stable inhibition of proteases. In this study, we focused on hydrophobic Phe residues, which are generally located in the interior of protein molecules. A Phe-->Ala replacement at position 44 or 56 was introduced into a 'parent' mutant of POIA1 that had been converted into a strong and resistant inhibitor of subtilisin BPN' by replacement of its six C-terminal residues with those of the propeptide of subtilisin BPN' and the effects on inhibitory properties and structural stability were examined. Both of the mutated POIA1 molecules not only were found to exhibit decreased ability to bind to subtilisin BPN' (80-fold for the F44A mutant and 13-fold for the F56A mutant), but were also converted to temporary inhibitors that were degraded by the protease. The structural stability of the mutated POIA1 was also lowered, as shown by a 13 degrees C decrease in melting temperature for the F56A mutant. In particular, the F44A mutant was found to lose its tertiary structure, as judged from the circular dichroism spectrum, demonstrating that Phe44 is a strict requirement for structural formation by the POIA1 molecule. These results clearly indicate that stabilization of POIA1 by hydrophobic residues in its molecular interior is required for stable inhibition of the protease. This requirement for a stable tertiary structure is shared with other serine protease inhibitors, but other structural requirements seem to differ, in that strong binding with the protease is required for POIA1 whereas conformational rigidity around the reactive site is essential for many other protease inhibitors.  相似文献   

6.
Yeast proteinase B inhibitor 2 (YIB2), which is composed of 74 amino acid residues, is an unusual serine protease inhibitor, since it lacks disulfide bonds. To identify its reactive site for proteases, we constructed an expression system for a synthetic YIB2 gene and then attempted to change the inhibitory properties of YIB2 by amino acid replacements. The purified wild-type YIB2 inhibited the activity of subtilisin BPN', a protein homologous to yeast proteinase B, although its binding ability was not strong, and a time-dependent decrease in its inhibitory activity was observed, demonstrating that wild-type YIB2 behaves as a temporary inhibitor when subtilisin BPN' is the target protease. Since YIB2 exhibits sequence homology to the propeptide of subtilisin, which inhibits a cognate protease using its C-terminal region, we replaced the six C-termi nal residues of YIB2 with those of the propeptide of subtilisin BPN' to make the mutant YIB2m1. This mutant exhibited markedly increased inhibitory activity toward subtilisin BPN' without a time-dependent decrease in its inhibitory activity. Replacement of only the C-terminal Asn of YIB2 by Tyr, or deletion of the C-terminal Tyr of YIB2m1, inhibited subtilisin, but the ability of these mutants to bind subtilisin and their resistance to proteolytic attack were weaker than those of YIB2m1, indicating that the C-terminal residue contributes to the interaction with the protease to a greater extent than the preceding five residues and that the resistance of YIB2 to proteolyic attack is closely related to its ability to bind a protease. These results demonstrate that YIB2 is a unique protease inhibitor that involves its C-terminal region in the interaction with the protease.  相似文献   

7.
Kumamolisin, an extracellular proteinase derived from an acido/thermophilic Bacillus, belongs to the sedolisin family of endopeptidases characterized by a subtilisin-like fold and a Ser-Glu-Asp catalytic triad. In kumamolisin, the Asp82 carboxylate hydrogen bonds to Glu32-Trp129, which might act as a proton sink stabilizing the catalytic residues. The 1.2/1.3 A crystal structures of the Glu32-->Ala and Trp129-->Ala mutants show that both mutations affect the active-site conformation, causing a 95% activity decrease. In addition, the 1.2 A crystal structure of the Ser278-->Ala mutant of pro-kumamolisin was determined. The prodomain exhibits a half-beta sandwich core docking to the catalytic domain similarly as the equivalent subtilisin prodomains in their catalytic-domain complexes. This pro-kumamolisin structure displays, for the first time, the uncleaved linker segment running across the active site and connecting the prodomain with the properly folded catalytic domain. The structure strongly points to an initial intramolecular activation cleavage in subtilases, as presumed for pro-subtilisin and pro-furin.  相似文献   

8.
Pleurotus ostreatus proteinase A inhibitor 1 (POIA1), which is composed of 76 residues without disulfide bridges, is a unique inhibitor in that it exhibits sequence similarity to the propeptides of subtilisins. In order to elucidate the inhibitory mechanism of POIA1, we constructed an expression system for a synthetic POIA1 gene. The wild-type POIA1 was found to inhibit subtilisin BPN' with an inhibitor constant (K(i)) of 3.2 x 10(-9) M, but exhibited a time-dependent decrease of inhibitory activity as a consequence of degradation by the protease, showing that the wild-type POIA1 was a temporary inhibitor when subtilisin BPN' was used as a target protease. Since POIA1 shows sequence similarity to the propeptide of subtilisin, which is known to inhibit the protease via its C-terminal region, the C-terminal six residues of POIA1 were replaced with those of the propeptide of subtilisin BPN'. The mutated POIA1 inhibited subtilisin BPN' with a K(i) value of 2.8 x 10(-11) M and did not exhibit time-dependent decrease of inhibitory activity, showing about 100-fold increases in binding affinity for, and resistance to, the protease. These results clearly indicate that the C-terminal region of POIA1 plays an important role in determining the inhibitory activity toward the protease, and that the increase in binding ability to the protease is closely related to resistance to proteolytic degradation. Therefore, the inhibitory properties of POIA1 can be altered by mutation of its C-terminal region.  相似文献   

9.
It has been shown that the P1 site (the center of the reactive site) of protease inhibitors corresponds to the specificity of the cognate protease, and consequently specificity of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) can be altered by substitution of a single amino acid at the P1 site. In this paper, to investigate whether similar correlation between inhibitory activity of mutated SSI and substrate preference of protease is observed for subtilisin BPN', which has broad substrate specificity, a complete set of mutants of SSI at the reaction site P1 (position 73) was constructed by cassette and site-directed mutagenesis and their inhibitory activities toward subtilisin BPN' were measured. Mutated SSIs which have a polar (Ser, Thr, Gln, Asn), basic (Lys, Arg), or aromatic amino acid (Tyr, Phe, Trp, His), or Ala or Leu, at the P1 site showed almost the same strong inhibitory activity toward subtilisin as the wild type (Met) SSI. However, the inhibitory activity of SSI variants with an acidic (Glu, Asp), or a beta-branched aliphatic amino acid (Val, Ile), or Gly or Pro, at P1 was decreased. The values of the inhibitor constant (Ki) of mutated SSIs toward subtilisin BPN' were consistent with the substrate preference of subtilisin BPN'. A linear correlation was observed between log(1/Ki) of mutated SSIs and log(1/Km) of synthetic substrates. These results demonstrate that the inhibitory activities of P1 site mutants of SSI are linearly related to the substrate preference of subtilisin BPN', and indicate that the binding mode of the inhibitors with the protease may be similar to that of substrates, as in the case of trypsin and chymotrypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Aqualysin I, a thermostable homologue of subtilisin, requires its propeptide (ProA) to function as an intramolecular chaperone (IMC). To decipher the mechanisms through which propeptides can initiate protein folding, we characterized ProA in terms of its sequence, structure and function. Our results show that, in contrast to ProS (propeptide of subtilisin), ProA can fold spontaneously, reversibly and cooperatively into a stable monomeric alpha-beta conformation, even when isolated from its cognate protease-domain. ProA displays an indiscernible amount of tertiary structure with a considerable solvent-accessible hydrophobic surface, but is not a classical molten-globule folding intermediate. Moreover, despite showing only 21 % sequence identity with ProS, ProA can not only inhibit enzymatic activity with a magnitude tenfold greater than ProS, but can also chaperone subtilisin folding, albeit with a lower efficiency. The structure of ProA complexed with subtilisin is different from that of isolated ProA. Hence, additional interactions seem necessary to induce ProA into a compact structure. Our results also suggest that: (a) propeptides that are potent inhibitors are not necessarily better IMCs; (b) propeptides within the subtilase family appear polymorphic and; (c) the intrinsic instability within propeptides may be necessary for rapid activation of the cognate protein.  相似文献   

11.
The amino-terminal pro-sequence consisting of 77 amino acid residues is required to guide the folding of secreted subtilisin E, a serine protease, into active, mature enzyme (ikemura et al., 1987). Furthermore, denatured subtilisin E can be folded to active enzyme in an intermolecular process with the aid of an exogenously added pro-subtilisin E, the active site of which was mutated (Zhu et al., 1989). In this report, we have synthesized the pro-peptide of 77 residues (corresponding to -1 to -77 in the sequence, where residue +1 is the N-terminal amino acid residue of the mature protein), and have found that it could intermolecularly complement the folding of denatured subtilisin E to active enzyme. Furthermore, we have found that the synthetic pro-peptide exhibits specific strong binding to the active mature enzyme by inhibiting it competitively at its active centre with an upper limit to a Ki of 5.4 x 10(-7). In contrast, synthetic pro-peptides corresponding to -44 to -77, -1 to -64 and -1 to -43 inhibited the enzyme with Ki values weaker by two orders of magnitude. The results indicate that the sequence extending from -1 to -77 is essential for specificity of interaction, perhaps generating a conformation that accounts for both roles found hitherto, i.e. specific binding to the active centre, and guiding of the refolding to active enzyme. Thus these results suggest that the pro-peptide functions as an intramolecular chaperone [corrected].  相似文献   

12.
The formation of active subtilisin E from pro-subtilisin E requires the removal of the N-terminal pro-sequence of 77 residues. Pro-subtilisin E produced in Escherichia coli using a pINIII-ompA vector was first extracted with 6 M guanidine-HCl and 5 M urea and purified to homogeneity in the presence of 5 M urea. Upon drop dialysis against 0.2 M sodium phosphate buffer (pH 6.2), the purified pro-subtilisin in 5 M urea was processed to active subtilisin of which the N-terminal sequence and migration in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were identical to those of authentic active subtilisin E. This process was found to be very sensitive to the ionic strengths and anions used. Under the optimum conditions (dialysis against 0.5 M (NH4)2SO4 and 1 mM CaCl2 in 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.0) at 4 degrees C for 1 h), approximately 20% of pro-subtilisin E was converted to active subtilisin E. The activation process was not inhibited by Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor, and pro-subtilisin E in which the active site was mutated (Asp32 to Asn) was unable to be processed under the optimum conditions. These results confirmed the previous hypothesis that the processing of pro-subtilisin occurs by an intramolecular, autoprocessing mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
The 77 residue propeptide at the N-terminal end of subtilisin E plays an essential role in subtilisin folding as a tailor-made intramolecular chaperone. Upon completion of folding, the propeptide is autoprocessed and removed by subtilisin digestion. This propeptide-mediated protein folding has been used as a paradigm for the study of protein folding. Here, we show by three independent methods, that the propeptide domain and the subtilisin domain show distinctive intrinsic stability that is obligatory for efficient autoprocessing of the propeptide domain. Two tryptophan residues, Trp106 and Trp113, on the surface of subtilisin located on one of the two helices that form the interface between the propeptide and the subtilisin domains play a key role in maintaining the distinctive instability of the propeptide domain, after completion of folding. When either of the Trp residues was substituted with Tyr, the characteristic biphasic heat denaturation profile of two domains unfolding was not observed, resulting in a single transition of denaturation. The results provide evidence that the propeptide not only plays an essential role in subtilisin folding, but upon completion of folding it behaves as an independent domain. Once the propeptide-mediated folding is completed, the propeptide domain is readily eliminated without interference from the subtilisin domain. This "autotomic" behavior of the propeptide may be a prevailing principle in propeptide-mediated protein folding.  相似文献   

14.
Incorporation of a stabilizing Ca(2+)-binding loop into subtilisin BPN'.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
S Braxton  J A Wells 《Biochemistry》1992,31(34):7796-7801
A rational approach was taken to improve the stability of subtilisin BPN' to autoproteolysis. Two sites of autoproteolysis were identified by isolation of early autolysis products and amino-terminal sequence analysis. These studies showed that subtilisin rapidly cleaves Ala48-Ser49 and Ser163-Thr164 peptide bonds at elevated temperatures. These two sites appear in regions of high mobility as estimated from crystallographic B-factors and are in extended surface loops. To improve the resistance to thermal-induced autolysis, we replaced sequences around these two sites with sequences derived from a thermophilic homologue of subtilisin, thermitase. Thermitase contains a Ca(2+)-binding site in the region surrounding Ser49. When the Ca(2+)-binding segment of thermitase corresponding to residues 45-63 of subtilisin BPN' was installed into subtilisin BPN', the chimeric protein gained the ability to bind another Ca2+ with moderate affinity (Kd approximately 100 microM). This enzyme had the same kcat as wild-type, had a KM value 8-fold larger than wild-type, and was slightly less stable to thermal inactivation in EDTA. However, in 10 mM CaCl2, the mutant subtilisin BPN' was 10-fold more stable to irreversible inactivation at 60 degrees C than wild-type subtilisin BPN' as measured by residual activity against the substrate sAAPF-pna. Next, mutations and deletions derived from thermitase were introduced near the second autolysis loop in subtilisin BPN' (residues 158-165). However, all of these mutants were less stable than wild-type subtilisin. Thus, some (but not all) mutations derived from a thermophilic homologue near sites of autolysis can be stabilizing to a mesophilic protease.  相似文献   

15.
Crystal structure of thermitase at 1.4 A resolution   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The crystal structure of thermitase, a subtilisin-type serine proteinase from Thermoactinomyces vulgaris, was determined by X-ray diffraction at 1.4 A resolution. The structure was solved by a combination of molecular and isomorphous replacement. The starting model was that of subtilisin BPN' from the Protein Data Bank, determined at 2.5 A resolution. The high-resolution refinement was based on data collected using synchrotron radiation with a Fuji image plate as detector. The model of thermitase refined to a conventional R factor of 14.9% and contains 1997 protein atoms, 182 water molecules and two Ca ions. The tertiary structure of thermitase is similar to that of the other subtilisins although there are some significant differences in detail. Comparison with subtilisin BPN' revealed two major structural differences. The N-terminal region in thermitase, which is absent in subtilisin BPN', forms a number of contacts with the tight Ca2+ binding site and indeed provides the very tight binding of the Ca ion. In thermitase the loop of residues 60 to 65 forms an additional (10) beta-strand of the central beta-sheet and the second Ca2+ binding site that has no equivalent in the subtilisin BPN' structure. The observed differences in the Ca2+ binding and the increased number of ionic and aromatic interactions in thermitase are likely sources of the enhanced stability of thermitase.  相似文献   

16.
Single amino acid mutations of Met103 in the hydrophobic core of a serine protease inhibitor, Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor, caused little change in the inhibitory activity, as measured by the inhibitor constant, although some altered the thermodynamic stability of the protein considerably. (1)H NMR investigations showed that the conformational stress caused by the replacement of Met103 with Gly, Ala, Val, and Ile, namely, the effects of the cavities generated by replacements with smaller side-chains and of the steric distortions generated by beta-branched side-chains, caused considerable changes in the structural arrangement of the side-chains within the core. However, these structural changes were absorbed within the hydrophobic core, without distorting the structure of the reactive site essential for the protein function. These results provide an excellent example of the conformational flexibility of a protein core and the degree of its tolerance of an amino acid replacement. The results also reveal the crucially designed structural relationship between the core of the inhibitor and the enzyme-binding segment with the reactive site in a serine protease inhibitor.  相似文献   

17.
The subtilisin propeptide functions as an intramolecular chaperone (IMC) that facilitates correct folding of the catalytic domain while acting like a competitive inhibitor of proteolytic activity. Upon completion of folding, subtilisin initiates IMC degradation to complete precursor maturation. Existing data suggest that the chaperone and inhibitory functions of the subtilisin IMC domain are interdependent during folding. Based on x-ray structure of the IMC-subtilisin complex, we introduce a point mutation (E112A) to disrupt three hydrogen bonds that stabilize the interface between the protease and its IMC domain. This mutation within subtilisin does not alter the folding kinetics but dramatically slows down autoprocessing of the IMC domain. Inhibition of E112A-subtilisin activity by the IMC added in trans is 35-fold weaker than wild-type subtilisin. Although the IMC domain displays substantial loss of inhibitory function, its ability to chaperone E112A-subtilisin folding remains intact. Our results show that (i) the chaperone activity of the IMC domain is not obligatorily linked with its ability to bind with and inhibit active subtilisin; (ii) degradation and not autoprocessing of the IMC domain is the rate-limiting step in precursor maturation; and (iii) the Glu(112) residue within the IMC-subtilisin interface is not crucial for initiating folding but is important in maintaining the IMC structure capable of binding subtilisin.  相似文献   

18.
Sixteen residues in stalk segment S5 of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum were studied by site-directed mutagenesis. The rate of the Ca(2+) binding transition, determined at 0 degrees C, was enhanced relative to wild type in mutants Ile(743) --> Ala, Val(747) --> Ala, Glu(748) --> Ala, Glu(749) --> Ala, Met(757) --> Gly, and Gln(759) --> Ala and reduced in mutants Asp(737) --> Ala, Asp(738) --> Ala, Ala(752) --> Leu, and Tyr(754) --> Ala. In mutant Arg(762) --> Ile, the rate of the Ca(2+) binding transition was wild type like at 0 degrees C, whereas it was 3.5-fold reduced relative to wild type at 25 degrees C. The rate of dephosphorylation of the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme was increased conspicuously in mutants Ile(743) --> Ala and Tyr(754) --> Ala (close to 20-fold in the absence of K(+)) and increased to a lesser extent in Asn(739) --> Ala, Glu(749) --> Ala, Gly(750) --> Ala, Ala(752) --> Gly, Met(757) --> Gly, and Arg(762) --> Ile, whereas it was reduced in mutants Asp(737) --> Ala, Val(744) --> Gly, Val(744) --> Ala, Val(747) --> Ala, and Ala(752) --> Leu. In mutants Ile(743) --> Ala, Tyr(754) --> Ala, and Arg(762) --> Ile, the apparent affinities for vanadate were enhanced 23-, 30-, and 18-fold, respectively, relative to wild type. The rate of Ca(2+) dissociation was 11-fold increased in Gly(750) --> Ala and 2-fold reduced in Val(747) --> Ala. Mutants with alterations to Arg(751) either were not expressed at a significant level or were completely nonfunctional. The findings show that S5 plays a crucial role in mediating communication between the Ca(2+) binding pocket and the catalytic domain and that Arg(751) is important for both structural and functional integrity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Jia Y  Liu H  Bao W  Weng M  Chen W  Cai Y  Zheng Z  Zou G 《FEBS letters》2010,584(23):4789-4796
Here, we show that during in vivo folding of the precursor, the propeptide of subtilisin nattokinase functions as an intramolecular chaperone (IMC) that organises the in vivo folding of the subtilisin domain. Two residues belonging to β-strands formed by conserved regions of the IMC are crucial for the folding of the subtilisin domain through direct interactions. An identical protease can fold into different conformations in vivo due to the action of a mutated IMC, resulting in different kinetic parameters. Some interfacial changes involving conserved regions, even those induced by the subtilisin domain, blocked subtilisin folding and altered its conformation. Insight into the interaction between the subtilisin and IMC domains is provided by a three-dimensional structural model.  相似文献   

20.
The refined crystal structure of subtilisin Carlsberg at 2.5 A resolution   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
We report here the X-ray crystal structure of native subtilisin Carlsberg, solved at 2.5 A resolution by molecular replacement and refined by restrained least squares to a crystallographic residual (Formula see text): of 0.206. we compare this structure to the crystal structure of subtilisin BPN'. We find that, despite 82 amino acid substitutions and one deletion in subtilisin Carlsberg relative to subtilisin BPN', the structures of these enzymes are remarkably similar. We calculate an r.m.s. difference between equivalent alpha-carbon positions in subtilisin Carlsberg and subtilisin BPN' of only 0.55 A. This confirms previous reports of extensive structural homology between these two subtilisins based on X-ray crystal structures of the complex of eglin-c with subtilisin Carlsberg [McPhalen, C.A., Schnebli, H.P. and James, M.N.G. (1985) FEBS Lett., 188, 55; Bode, W., Papamokos, E. and Musil, D. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem., 166, 673-692]. In addition, we find that the native active sites of subtilisins Carlsberg and BPN' are virtually identical. While conservative substitutions at residues 217 and 156 may have subtle effects on the environments of substrate-binding sites S1' and S1 respectively, we find no obvious structural correlate for reports that subtilisins Carlsberg and BPN' differ in their recognition of model substrates. In particular, we find no evidence that the hydrophobic binding pocket S1 in subtilisin Carlsberg is 'deeper', 'narrower' or 'less polar' than the corresponding binding site in subtilisin BPN'.  相似文献   

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