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1.
Previous mutagenesis studies along with molecular modeling using the x-ray coordinates of the rabbit 15-lipoxygenase have led to the suggestion that the size of the substrate binding pocket may play an essential role in determining the oxygenation specificity of 5-, 12-, and 15-lipoxygenases. Based on the x-ray crystal structure of rabbit 15-lipoxygenase, Ile(593) appeared to be important in defining size and shape of the substrate-binding site in 15-lipoxygenases. We found that substitution of Ile(593) with alanine shifted the positional specificity of this enzyme toward 12-lipoxygenation. To compare the importance of position 593 with previously defined determinants for the oxygenation specificity, we introduced small (alanine-scan) or large amino acids (phenylalanine-scan) at critical positions surrounding the putative fatty acid-binding site, so that the volume of the pocket was either increased or decreased. Enlargement or alteration in packing density within the substrate binding pocket in the rabbit 15-lipoxygenase increased the share of 12-lipoxygenase products, whereas a smaller active site favored 15-lipoxygenation. Simultaneous substitution of both large and small residues in the context of either a 15- or 12-lipoxygenase indicated that there is a functional interplay of the sequence determinants for lipoxygenation specificity. If the 15-lipoxygenase active site is enlarged excessively, however, no lipoxygenation was observed anymore. Together these results indicate the importance of the overall size and shape of the arachidonic acid binding pocket in defining the specificity of lipoxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

2.
Inhibition of insulin-regulated aminopeptidase (IRAP) has been demonstrated to facilitate memory in rodents, making IRAP a potential target for the development of cognitive enhancing therapies. In this study, we generated a 3-D model of the catalytic domain of IRAP based on the crystal structure of leukotriene A4 hydrolase (LTA4H). This model identified two key residues at the 'entrance' of the catalytic cleft of IRAP, Ala427 and Leu483, which present a more open arrangement of the S1 subsite compared with LTA4H. These residues may define the size and 3-D structure of the catalytic pocket, thereby conferring substrate and inhibitor specificity. Alteration of the S1 subsite by the mutation A427Y in IRAP markedly increased the rate of substrate cleavage V of the enzyme for a synthetic substrate, although a corresponding increase in the rate of cleavage of peptide substrates Leu-enkephalin and vasopressin was was not apparent. In contrast, [L483F]IRAP demonstrated a 30-fold decrease in activity due to changes in both substrate affinity and rate of substrate cleavage. [L483F]IRAP, although capable of efficiently cleaving the N-terminal cysteine from vasopressin, was unable to cleave the tyrosine residue from either Leu-enkephalin or Cyt6-desCys1-vasopressin (2-9), both substrates of IRAP. An 11-fold reduction in the affinity of the peptide inhibitor norleucine1-angiotensin IV was observed, whereas the affinity of angiotensin IV remained unaltered. In additionm we predict that the peptide inhibitors bind to the catalytic site, with the NH2-terminal P1 residue occupying the catalytic cleft (S1 subsite) in a manner similar to that proposed for peptide substrates.  相似文献   

3.
Peptide deformylase proteins (PDFs) participate in the N-terminal methionine excision pathway of newly synthesized peptides. We show that the human PDF (HsPDF) can deformylate its putative substrates derived from mitochondrial DNA-encoded proteins. The first structural model of a mammalian PDF (1.7 Å), HsPDF, shows a dimer with conserved topology of the catalytic residues and fold as non-mammalian PDFs. The HsPDF C-terminus topology and the presence of a helical loop (H2 and H3), however, shape a characteristic active site entrance. The structure of HsPDF bound to the peptidomimetic inhibitor actinonin (1.7 Å) identified the substrate-binding site. A defined S1′ pocket, but no S2′ or S3′ substrate-binding pockets, exists. A conservation of PDF-actinonin interaction across PDFs was observed. Despite the lack of true S2′ and S3′ binding pockets, confirmed through peptide binding modeling, enzyme kinetics suggest a combined contribution from P2′and P3′ positions of a formylated peptide substrate to turnover.  相似文献   

4.
Inoue M  Hiratake J  Suzuki H  Kumagai H  Sakata K 《Biochemistry》2000,39(26):7764-7771
gamma-Glutamyltranspeptidase (EC 2.3.2.2) is the enzyme involved in glutathione metabolism and catalyzes the hydrolysis and transpeptidation of gamma-glutamyl compounds such as glutathione and its derivatives. The reaction is thought to proceed via a gamma-glutamyl-enzyme intermediate where a hitherto unknown catalytic nucleophile is gamma-glutamylated. Neither affinity labeling nor site-directed mutagenesis of conserved amino acids has succeeded so far in identifying the catalytic nucleophile. We describe here the identification of the catalytic nucleophile of Escherichia coli gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase by a novel mechanism-based affinity labeling agent, 2-amino-4-(fluorophosphono)butanoic acid (1), a gamma-phosphonic acid monofluoride derivative of glutamic acid. Compound 1 rapidly inactivated the enzyme in a time-dependent manner (k(on) = 4.83 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)). The inactivation rate was decreased by increasing the concentration of the substrate. The inactivated enzyme did not regain its activity after prolonged dialysis, suggesting that 1 served as an active-site-directed affinity label by phosphonylating the putative catalytic nucleophile. Ion-spray mass spectrometric analyses revealed that one molecule of 1 phosphonylated one molecule of the small subunit. LC/MS experiments of the proteolytic digests of the phosphonylated small subunit identified the N-terminal peptide Thr391-Lys399 as the phosphonylation site. Subsequent MS/MS experiments of this peptide revealed that the phosphonylated residue was Thr-391, the N-terminal residue of the small subunit. We conclude that the N-terminal Thr-391 is the catalytic nucleophile of E. coli gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. This result strongly suggests that gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase is a new member of the N-terminal nucleophile hydrolase family.  相似文献   

5.
Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are zinc proteases that cleave SNARE proteins to elicit flaccid paralysis by inhibiting the fusion of neurotransmitter-carrying vesicles to the plasma membrane of peripheral neurons. There are seven serotypes of BoNT, termed A-G. The molecular basis for SNAP25 recognition and cleavage by BoNT serotype E is currently unclear. Here we define the multiple pocket recognition of SNAP25 by LC/E. The initial recognition of SNAP25 is mediated by the binding of the B region of SNAP25 to the substrate-binding (B) region of LC/E comprising Leu166, Arg167, Asp127, Ala128, Ser129, and Ala130. The mutations at these residues affected substrate binding and catalysis. Three additional residues participate in scissile bond cleavage of SNAP25 by LC/E. The P3 site residues, Ile178, of SNAP25 interacted with the S3 pocket in LC/E through hydrophobic interactions. The S3 pocket included Ile47, Ile164, and Ile182 and appeared to align the P1' and P2 residues of SNAP25 with the S1' and S2 pockets of LC/E. The S1' pocket of LC/E included three residues, Phe191, Thr159, and Thr208, which contribute hydrophobic and steric interactions with the SNAP25 P1' residue Ile181. The S2 pocket residue of LC/E, Lys224, binds the P2 residue of SNAP25, Asp179, through ionic interactions. Deletion mapping indicates that main chain interaction(s) of residues 182-186 of SNAP25 contribute to substrate recognition by LC/E. Understanding the mechanism for substrate specificity provides insight for the development of inhibitors against the botulinum neurotoxins.  相似文献   

6.
The activity of the avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) or the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease on peptide substrates which represent cleavage sites found in the gag and gag-pol polyproteins of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) and HIV-1 has been analyzed. Each protease efficiently processed cleavage site substrates found in their cognate polyprotein precursors. Additionally, in some instances heterologous activity was detected. The catalytic efficiency of the RSV protease on cognate substrates varied by as much as 30-fold. The least efficiently processed substrate, p2-p10, represents the cleavage site between the RSV p2 and p10 proteins. This peptide was inhibitory to the AMV as well as the HIV-1 and HIV-2 protease cleavage of other substrate peptides with Ki values in the 5-20 microM range. Molecular modeling of the RSV protease with the p2-p10 peptide docked in the substrate binding pocket and analysis of a series of single-amino acid-substituted p2-p10 peptide analogues suggested that this peptide is inhibitory because of the potential of a serine residue in the P1' position to interact with one of the catalytic aspartic acid residues. To open the binding pocket and allow rotational freedom for the serine in P1', there is a further requirement for either a glycine or a polar residue in P2' and/or a large amino acid residue in P3'. The amino acid residues in P1-P4 provide interactions for tight binding of the peptide in the substrate binding pocket.  相似文献   

7.
PKI(6-22)amide is a 17 residue peptide corresponding to the active portion of the heat-stable inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The peptide is a potent (Ki = 1.6 nM), competitive inhibitor of the enzyme. The photoreactive peptide analog (4-azidophenylalanine10)PKI(6-22)amide was synthesized in both its non-radiolabeled and tritiated forms by chemical modification of precursor peptides that were prepared by stepwise solid-phase synthesis. (4-Amino[3,5-3H]phenylalanine10)PKI(6-22)amide, the precursor for the radiolabeled arylazide peptide, was obtained by catalytic reduction of the corresponding peptide containing the 3,5-diiodo-4-aminophenylalanine residue at position 10. The purified PKI peptides were analyzed by HPLC, amino acid analysis, and u.v. spectra. In the dark, (4-azidophenylalanine10)PKI(6-22)amide inhibited the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase with a Ki value of 2.8 nM. The photoreactivity of the arylazide peptide was demonstrated by time-dependent u.v. spectral changes on exposure to light. Photolysis of the catalytic subunit (4-azido[3,5-3H]phenylalanine10)PKI(6-22)amide complex resulted in specific covalent labeling of the enzyme. The data indicate that this peptide is a useful photoaffinity labeling reagent for the active site of the protein kinase.  相似文献   

8.
Clostridium botulinum neurotoxins are the most potent toxins to humans. The recognition and cleavage of SNAREs are prime evente in exhibiting their toxicity. We report here the crystal structure of the catalytically active full-length botulinum serotype E catalytic domain (BoNT E) in complex with SNAP-25 (a SNARE protein) substrate peptide Arg(180)-Ile(181)-Met(182)-Glu(183) (P1-P3'). It is remarkable that the peptide spanning the scissile bond binds to but bypasses cleavage by the enzyme and inhibits the catalysis fairly with K(i) approximately 69 microm. The inhibitory peptide occupies the active site of BoNT E and shows well defined electron density. The catalytic zinc and the conserved key residue Tyr(350) of the enzyme facilitate the docking of Arg(180) (P1) by interacting with its carbonyl oxygen that displaces the nucleophilic water. The general base Glu(212) side chain interacts with the main chain amino group of P1 and P1'. Conserved Arg(347) of BoNT E stabilizes the proper docking of the Ile(181) (P1') main chain, whereas the hydrophobic pockets stabilize the side chains of Ile(181) (P1') and Met(182) (P2'), and the 250 loop stabilizes Glu(183) (P3'). Structural and functional analysis revealed an important role for the P1' residue and S1' pocket in driving substrate recognition and docking at the active site. This study is the first of its kind and rationalizes the substrate cleavage strategy of BoNT E. Also, our complex structure opens up an excellent opportunity of structure-based drug design for this fast acting and extremely toxic high priority BoNT E.  相似文献   

9.
2-Hydroxyl-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HPDA) hydrolase (the BphD enzyme) hydrolyzes a ring-cleavage product of an aromatic compound generated in a biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) degradation pathway of bacteria. The crystal structure of the BphD enzyme has been determined at 2.4 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The final refined model of the BphD enzyme yields an R-factor of 17.5 % at 2.4 A resolution with reasonable geometry. The BphD enzyme is an octameric enzyme with a 422 point-group symmetry. The subunit can be divided into core and lid domains. The active site of the enzyme is situated in the substrate-binding pocket, which is located between the two domains. The substrate-binding pocket can be divided into hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions. This feature of the pocket seems to be necessary for substrate binding, as the substrate is composed of hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts. The proposed orientation of the substrate seems to be consistent with the general catalytic mechanism of alpha/beta-hydrolases.  相似文献   

10.
Signal peptide peptidase (SPP) and gamma-secretase are intramembrane aspartyl proteases that bear similar active site motifs but with opposite membrane topologies. Both proteases are inhibited by the same aspartyl protease transition-state analogue inhibitors, further evidence that these two enzymes have the same basic cleavage mechanism. Here we report that helical peptide inhibitors designed to mimic SPP substrates and interact with the SPP initial substrate-binding site (the "docking site") inhibit both SPP and gamma-secretase, but with submicromolar potency for SPP. SPP was labeled by helical peptide and transition-state analogue affinity probes but at distinct sites. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which shift the site of proteolysis by SPP and gamma-secretase, did not affect the labeling of SPP or gamma-secretase by the helical peptide or transition-state analogue probes. On the other hand, another class of previously reported gamma-secretase modulators, naphthyl ketones, inhibited SPP activity as well as selective proteolysis by gamma-secretase. These naphthyl ketones significantly disrupted labeling of SPP by the helical peptide probe but did not block labeling of SPP by the transition-state analogue probe. With respect to gamma-secretase, the naphthyl ketone modulators allowed labeling by the transition-state analogue probe but not the helical peptide probe. Thus, the naphthyl ketones appear to alter the docking sites of both SPP and gamma-secretase. These results indicate that pharmacological effects of the four different classes of inhibitors (transition-state analogues, helical peptides, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and naphthyl ketones) are distinct from each other, and they reveal similarities and differences with how they affect SPP and gamma-secretase.  相似文献   

11.
Fibroblast activation protein alpha (FAPalpha) is highly expressed in epithelial cancers and has been implicated in extracellular matrix remodeling, tumor growth, and metastasis. We present the first high resolution structure for the apoenzyme as well as kinetic data toward small dipeptide substrates. FAPalpha exhibits a dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV)-like fold, featuring an alpha/beta-hydrolase domain and an eight-bladed beta-propeller domain. Known DPPIV dipeptides are cleaved by FAPalpha with an approximately 100-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency compared with DPPIV. Moreover, FAPalpha, but not DPPIV, possesses endopeptidase activity toward N-terminal benzyloxycarbonyl (Z)-blocked peptides. Comparison of the crystal structures of FAPalpha and DPPIV revealed one major difference in the vicinity of the Glu motif (Glu(203)-Glu(204) for FAPalpha; Glu(205)-Glu(206) for DPPIV) within the active site of the enzyme. Ala(657) in FAPalpha, instead of Asp(663) as in DP-PIV, reduces the acidity in this pocket, and this change could explain the lower affinity for N-terminal amines by FAPalpha. This hypothesis was tested by kinetic analysis of the mutant FAPalpha/A657D, which shows on average an approximately 60-fold increase in the catalytic efficiency, as measured by k(cat)/K(m), for the cleavage of dipeptide substrates. Furthermore, the catalytic efficiency of the mutant is reduced by approximately 350-fold for cleavage of Z-Gly-Pro-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin. Our data provide a clear understanding of the molecular determinants responsible for the substrate specificity and endopeptidase activity of FAPalpha.  相似文献   

12.
Fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (FACS, fatty acid:CoA ligase, AMP-forming, EC ) catalyzes the esterification of fatty acids to CoA thioesters for further metabolism and is hypothesized to play a pivotal role in the coupled transport and activation of exogenous long-chain fatty acids in Escherichia coli. Previous work on the bacterial enzyme identified a highly conserved region (FACS signature motif) common to long- and medium-chain acyl-CoA synthetases, which appears to contribute to the fatty acid binding pocket. In an effort to further define the fatty acid-binding domain within this enzyme, we employed the affinity labeled long-chain fatty acid [(3)H]9-p-azidophenoxy nonanoic acid (APNA) to specifically modify the E. coli FACS. [(3)H]APNA labeling of the purified enzyme was saturable and specific for long-chain fatty acids as shown by the inhibition of modification with increasing concentrations of palmitate. The site of APNA modification was identified by digestion of [(3)H]APNA cross-linked FACS with trypsin and separation and purification of the resultant peptides using reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. One specific (3)H-labeled peptide, T33, was identified and following purification subjected to NH(2)-terminal sequence analysis. This approach yielded the peptide sequence PDATDEIIK, which corresponded to residues 422 to 430 of FACS. This peptide is immediately adjacent to the region of the enzyme that contains the FACS signature motif (residues 431-455). This work represents the first direct identification of the carboxyl-containing substrate-binding domain within the adenylate-forming family of enzymes. The structural model for the E. coli FACS predicts this motif lies within a cleft separating two distinct domains of the enzyme and is adjacent to a region that contains the AMP/ATP signature motif, which together are likely to represent the catalytic core of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Evidence is presented, based on sequence comparison and secondary structure prediction, of structural and evolutionary relationship between chymotrypsin-like serine proteases, cysteine proteases of positive strand RNA viruses (3C proteases of picornaviruses and related enzymes of como-, nepo- and potyviruses) and putative serine protease of a sobemovirus. These observations lead to re-identification of principal catalytic residues of viral proteases. Instead of the pair of Cys and His, both located in the C-terminal part of 3C proteases, a triad of conserved His, Asp(Glu) and Cys(Ser) has been identified, the first two residues resident in the N-terminal, and Cys in the C-terminal beta-barrel domain. These residues are suggested to form a charge-transfer system similar to that formed by the catalytic triad of chymotrypsin-like proteases. Based on the structural analogy with chymotrypsin-like proteases, the His residue previously implicated in catalysis, together with two partially conserved Gly residues, is predicted to constitute part of the substrate-binding pocket of 3C proteases. A partially conserved ThrLys/Arg dipeptide located in the loop preceding the catalytic Cys is suggested to confer the primary cleavage specificity of 3C toward Glx/Gly(Ser) sites. These observations provide the first example of relatedness between proteases belonging, by definition, to different classes.  相似文献   

14.
The co-translational modification of N-terminal acetylation is ubiquitous among eukaryotes and has been reported to have a wide range of biological effects. The human N-terminal acetyltransferase (NAT) Naa50p (NAT5/SAN) acetylates the α-amino group of proteins containing an N-terminal methionine residue and is essential for proper sister chromatid cohesion and chromosome condensation. The elevated activity of NATs has also been correlated with cancer, making these enzymes attractive therapeutic targets. We report the x-ray crystal structure of Naa50p bound to a native substrate peptide fragment and CoA. We found that the peptide backbone of the substrate is anchored to the protein through a series of backbone hydrogen bonds with the first methionine residue specified through multiple van der Waals contacts, together creating an α-amino methionine-specific pocket. We also employed structure-based mutagenesis; the results support the importance of the α-amino methionine-specific pocket of Naa50p and are consistent with the proposal that conserved histidine and tyrosine residues play important catalytic roles. Superposition of the ternary Naa50p complex with the peptide-bound Gcn5 histone acetyltransferase revealed that the two enzymes share a Gcn5-related N-acetyltransferase fold but differ in their respective substrate-binding grooves such that Naa50p can accommodate only an α-amino substrate and not a side chain lysine substrate that is acetylated by lysine acetyltransferase enzymes such as Gcn5. The structure of the ternary Naa50p complex also provides the first molecular scaffold for the design of NAT-specific small molecule inhibitors with possible therapeutic applications.  相似文献   

15.
In contrast to typical membrane proteins that span the lipid bilayer via transmembrane alpha-helices, bacterial outer membrane proteins adopt a beta-barrel architecture composed of antiparallel transmembrane beta-strands. The topology of outer membrane proteins is difficult to predict accurately using computer algorithms, and topology mapping protocols commonly used for alpha-helical membrane proteins do not work for beta-barrel proteins. We present here the topology of the PapC usher, an outer membrane protein required for assembly and secretion of P pili by the chaperone/usher pathway in uropathogenic Escherichia coli. An initial attempt to map PapC topology by insertion of protease cleavage sites was largely unsuccessful due to lack of cleavage at most sites and the requirement to disrupt the outer membrane to identify periplasmic sites. We therefore adapted a site-directed fluorescence labeling technique to permit topology mapping of outer membrane proteins using small molecule probes in intact bacteria. Using this method, we demonstrated that PapC has the potential to encode up to 32 transmembrane beta-strands. Based on experimental evidence, we propose that the usher consists of an N-terminal beta-barrel domain comprised of 26 beta-strands and that a distinct C-terminal domain is not inserted into the membrane but is located instead within the lumen of the N-terminal beta-barrel similar to the plug domains encoded by the outer membrane iron-siderophore uptake proteins.  相似文献   

16.
The rabbit reticulocyte-type 15-lipoxygenase is capable of oxygenating biomembranes and lipoproteins without the preceding action of ester lipid cleaving enzymes. This reaction requires an efficient membrane binding, and the N-terminal beta-barrel domain of the enzyme has been implicated in this process. To obtain detailed information on the structural requirements for membrane oxygenation, we expressed the rabbit wild-type 15-lipoxygenase, its beta-barrel deletion mutant (catalytic domain), and several lipoxygenase point mutations as His-tagged fusion proteins in Escherichia coli and tested their membrane binding characteristics. We found that: (i) the beta-barrel deletion mutant was catalytically active and its enzymatic properties (K(M), V(max), pH optimum, substrate specificity) were similar to those of the wild-type enzyme; (ii) when compared with the wild-type lipoxygenase, the membrane binding properties of the N-terminal truncation mutant were impaired but not abolished, suggesting a role of the catalytic domain in membrane binding; and (iii) Phe-70 and Leu-71 (constituents of the beta-barrel domain) but also Trp-181, which is located in the catalytic domain, were identified as sequence determinants for membrane binding. Mutation of these amino acids to more polar residues (F70H, L71K, W181E) impaired the membrane binding capacity of the recombinant enzyme. These data indicate that the C-terminal catalytic domain of the rabbit 15-lipoxygenase is enzymatically active and that the membrane binding properties of the enzyme are determined by a concerted action of the N-terminal beta-barrel and the C-terminal catalytic domain.  相似文献   

17.
Maturation of gamma-secretase requires an endoproteolytic cleavage in presenilin-1 (PS1) within a peptide loop encoded by exon 9 of the corresponding gene. Deletion of the loop has been demonstrated to cause familial Alzheimer's disease. A synthetic peptide corresponding to the loop sequence was found to inhibit gamma-secretase in a cell-free enzymatic assay with an IC(50) of 2.1 microM, a value similar to the K(m) (3.5 microM) for the substrate C100. Truncation at either end, single amino acid substitutions at certain residues, sequence reversal, or randomization reduced its potency. Similar results were also observed in a cell-based assay using HEK293 cells expressing APP. In contrast to small-molecule gamma-secretase inhibitors, kinetic inhibition studies demonstrated competitive inhibition of gamma-secretase by the exon 9 peptide. Consistent with this finding, inhibitor cross-competition kinetics indicated noncompetitive binding between the exon 9 peptide and L685458, a transition-state analogue presumably binding at the catalytic site, and ligand competition binding experiments revealed no competition between L685458 and the exon 9 peptide. These data are consistent with the proposed gamma-secretase mechanism involving separate substrate-binding and catalytic sites and binding of the exon 9 peptide at the substrate-binding site, but not the catalytic site of gamma-secretase. NMR analyses demonstrated the presence of a loop structure with a beta-turn in the middle of the exon 9 peptide and a loose alpha-helical conformation for the rest of the peptide. Such a structure supports the hypothesis that this exon 9 peptide can adopt a distinct conformation, one that is compact enough to occupy the putative substrate-binding site without necessarily interfering with binding of small molecule inhibitors at other sites on gamma-secretase. We hypothesize that gamma-secretase cleavage activation may be a result of a cleavage-induced conformational change that relieves the inhibitory effect of the intact exon 9 loop occupying the substrate-binding site on the immature enzyme. It is possible that the DeltaE9 mutation causes Alzheimer's disease because cleavage activation of gamma-secretase is no longer necessary, alleviating constraints on Abeta formation.  相似文献   

18.
Analysis of the sequence and nature of protein N termini has many applications. Defining the termini of proteins for proteome annotation in the Human Proteome Project is of increasing importance. Terminomics analysis of protease cleavage sites in degradomics for substrate discovery is a key new application. Here we describe the step-by-step procedures for performing terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates (TAILS), a 2- to 3-d (depending on method of labeling) high-throughput method to identify and distinguish protease-generated neo-N termini from mature protein N termini with all natural modifications with high confidence. TAILS uses negative selection to enrich for all N-terminal peptides and uses primary amine labeling-based quantification as the discriminating factor. Labeling is versatile and suited to many applications, including biochemical and cell culture analyses in vitro; in vivo analyses using tissue samples from animal and human sources can also be readily performed. At the protein level, N-terminal and lysine amines are blocked by dimethylation (formaldehyde/sodium cyanoborohydride) and isotopically labeled by incorporating heavy and light dimethylation reagents or stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture labels. Alternatively, easy multiplex sample analysis can be achieved using amine blocking and labeling with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification, also known as iTRAQ. After tryptic digestion, N-terminal peptide separation is achieved using a high-molecular-weight dendritic polyglycerol aldehyde polymer that binds internal tryptic and C-terminal peptides that now have N-terminal alpha amines. The unbound naturally blocked (acetylation, cyclization, methylation and so on) or labeled mature N-terminal and neo-N-terminal peptides are recovered by ultrafiltration and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Hierarchical substrate winnowing discriminates substrates from the background proteolysis products and non-cleaved proteins by peptide isotope quantification and bioinformatics search criteria.  相似文献   

19.
Hsp70 chaperones assist protein folding by reversible interaction with extended hydrophobic segments of substrate polypeptides. We investigated the contribution of three structural elements of the substrate- binding cavity of the Escherichia coli homologue, DnaK, to substrate specificity by investigating mutant DnaK proteins for binding to cellulose-bound peptides. Deletion of the C-terminal subdomain (Delta539-638) and blockage of the access to the hydrophobic pocket in the substrate-binding cavity (V436F) did not change the specificity, although the latter exchange reduced the affinity to all peptides investigated. Mutations (A429W, M404A/A429W) that affect the formation of a hydrophobic arch spanning over the bound substrate disfavored DnaK binding, especially to peptides with short stretches of consecutive hydrophobic residues flanked by acidic residues, while binding to most other peptides remained unchanged. The arch thus contributes to the substrate specificity of DnaK. This finding is of particular interest, since of all the residues of the substrate-binding cavity that contact bound substrate, only the arch-forming residues show significant variation within the Hsp70 family.  相似文献   

20.
High-resolution crystal structures are described for seven macrocycles complexed with HIV-1 protease (HIVPR). The macrocycles possess two amides and an aromatic group within 15-17 membered rings designed to replace N- or C-terminal tripeptides from peptidic inhibitors of HIVPR. Appended to each macrocycle is a transition state isostere and either an acyclic peptide, nonpeptide, or another macrocycle. These cyclic analogues are potent inhibitors of HIVPR, and the crystal structures show them to be structural mimics of acyclic peptides, binding in the active site of HIVPR via the same interactions. Each macrocycle is restrained to adopt a beta-strand conformation which is preorganized for protease binding. An unusual feature of the binding of C-terminal macrocyclic inhibitors is the interaction between a positively charged secondary amine and a catalytic aspartate of HIVPR. A bicyclic inhibitor binds similarly through its secondary amine that lies between its component N-terminal and C-terminal macrocycles. In contrast, the corresponding tertiary amine of the N-terminal macrocycles does not interact with the catalytic aspartates. The amine-aspartate interaction induces a 1.5 A N-terminal translation of the inhibitors in the active site and is accompanied by weakened interactions with a water molecule that bridges the ligand to the enzyme, as well as static disorder in enzyme flap residues. This flexibility may facilitate peptide cleavage and product dissociation during catalysis. Proteases [Aba67,95]HIVPR and [Lys7,Ile33,Aba67,95]HIVPR used in this work were shown to have very similar crystal structures.  相似文献   

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