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1.
Tk-subtilisin [the mature domain of Pro-Tk-subtilisin in active form (Gly70-Gly398)] from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis is matured from Pro-Tk-subtilisin [a subtilisin homologue from T. kodakaraensis in pro form (Gly1-Gly398)] upon autoprocessing and degradation of propeptide. Pro-Tk-subtilisin is characterized by extremely slow maturation at mild temperatures, but this maturation rate is greatly increased by a single Gly56 → Ser mutation in the propeptide region. To analyze the role of Gly56, which assumes a left-handed conformation, Pro-Tk-subtilisin variants with complete amino acid substitutions at Gly56 were constructed. A comparison of their halo-forming activities suggests that all variants, except for Pro-G56W [Pro-G56X, Pro-Tk-subtilisin with Gly56 → X mutation (X = any amino acid)], mature faster than WT. Pro-G56W and Pro-G56E with the lowest and highest maturation rates, respectively, among 19 variants, as well as WT and Pro-G56S, were overproduced, purified, and characterized. SDS-PAGE analyses and Tk-subtilisin activity assay indicated that their maturation rates increased in the order WT ≤ Pro-G56W < Pro-G56S < Pro-G56E. The propeptides of these variants were also overproduced, purified, and characterized. The stability and inhibitory potency of these propeptides decreased in the order Tk-propeptide [propeptide of Tk-subtilisin (Gly1-Leu69)] ≥ G56W-propeptide > G56S-propeptide > G56E-propeptide, indicating that they are inversely correlated with the maturation rates of Pro7-Tk-subtilisin and its derivatives. The crystal structures of these propeptides determined in complex with S324A-subtilisin indicate that the conformation of the propeptide is altered by the mutation, such that nonglycine residues at position 56 assume a right-handed conformation and hydrophobic interactions at the core region decrease. These results indicate that Gly56 is required in stabilizing the propeptide fold. Stabilization of this fold leads to strong binding of Tk-propeptide to Tk-subtilisin, high resistance of Tk-propeptide to proteolytic degradation, and slow maturation of Pro-Tk-subtilisin.  相似文献   

2.
The gene encoding subtilisin-like protease T. kodakaraensis subtilisin was cloned from a hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1. T. kodakaraensis subtilisin is a member of the subtilisin family and composed of 422 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 43,783. It consists of a putative presequence, prosequence, and catalytic domain. Like bacterial subtilisins, T. kodakaraensis subtilisin was overproduced in Escherichia coli in a form with a putative prosequence in inclusion bodies, solubilized in the presence of 8 M urea, and refolded and converted to an active molecule. However, unlike bacterial subtilisins, in which the prosequence was removed from the catalytic domain by autoprocessing upon refolding, T. kodakaraensis subtilisin was refolded in a form with a putative prosequence. This refolded protein of recombinant T. kodakaraensis subtilisin which is composed of 398 amino acid residues (Gly(-82) to Gly(316)), was purified to give a single band on a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel and characterized for biochemical and enzymatic properties. The good agreement of the molecular weights estimated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (44,000) and gel filtration (40,000) suggests that T. kodakaraensis subtilisin exists in a monomeric form. T. kodakaraensis subtilisin hydrolyzed the synthetic substrate N-succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-p-nitroanilide only in the presence of the Ca(2+) ion with an optimal pH and temperature of pH 9.5 and 80 degrees C. Like bacterial subtilisins, it showed a broad substrate specificity, with a preference for aromatic or large nonpolar P1 substrate residues. However, it was much more stable than bacterial subtilisins against heat inactivation and lost activity with half-lives of >60 min at 80 degrees C, 20 min at 90 degrees C, and 7 min at 100 degrees C.  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.
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   

5.
The single‐crystal structure of the collagen‐like peptide (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4‐Hyp‐Asp‐Gly‐(Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4, was analyzed at 1.02 Å resolution. The overall average helical twist (θ = 49.6°) suggests that this peptide adopts a 7/2 triple‐helical structure and that its conformation is very similar to that of (Gly‐Pro‐Hyp)9, which has the typical repeating sequence in collagen. High‐resolution studies on other collagen‐like peptides have shown that imino acid‐rich sequences preferentially adopt a 7/2 triple‐helical structure (θ = 51.4°), whereas imino acid‐lean sequences adopt relaxed conformations (θ < 51.4°). The guest Gly‐Hyp‐Asp sequence in the present peptide, however, has a large helical twist (θ = 61.1°), whereas that of the host Pro‐Pro‐Gly sequence is small (θ = 46.7°), indicating that the relationship between the helical conformation and the amino acid sequence of such peptides is complex. In the present structure, a strong intermolecular hydrogen bond between two Asp residues on the A and B strands might induce the large helical twist of the guest sequence; this is compensated by a reduced helical twist in the host, so that an overall 7/2‐helical symmetry is maintained. The Asp residue in the C strand might interact electrostatically with the N‐terminus of an adjacent molecule, causing axial displacement, reminiscent of the D‐staggered structure in fibrous collagens. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 436–447, 2013.  相似文献   

6.
Circulating low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc) is regulated by membrane‐bound LDL receptor (LDLr). Upon LDLc and LDLr interaction the complex is internalized by the cell, leading to LDLc degradation and LDLr recycling back to the cell surface. The proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) protein regulates this cycling. PCSK9 is secreted from the cell and binds LDLr. When the complex is internalized, PCSK9 prevents LDLr from shuttling back to the surface and instead targets it for degradation. PCSK9 is a serine protease expressed as a zymogen that undergoes autoproteolysis, though the two resulting protein domains remain stably associated as a heterodimer. This PCSK9 autoprocessing is required for the protein to be secreted from the cell. To date, direct analysis of PCSK9 autoprocessing has proven challenging, as no catalytically active zymogen has been isolated. A PCSK9 loss‐of‐function point mutation (Q152H) that reduces LDLc levels two‐fold was identified in a patient population. LDLc reduction was attributed to a lack of PCSK9(Q152H) autoprocessing preventing secretion of the protein. We have isolated a zymogen form of PCSK9, PCSK9(Q152H), and a related mutation (Q152N), that can undergo slow autoproteolysis. We show that the point mutation prevents the formation of the mature form of PCSK9 by hindering folding, reducing the rate of autoproteolysis, and destabilizing the heterodimeric form of the protein. In addition, we show that the zymogen form of PCSK9 adopts a structure that is distinct from the processed form and is unable to bind a mimetic peptide based on the EGF‐A domain of the LDLr.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The propeptide of subtilisin BPN', which functions as an intramolecular chaperone and a temporary inhibitor of subtilisin, is unique in that it acquires its three-dimensional structure by formation of a complex with the cognate protease. We previously showed that the successive amino acid replacements Ala47-->Phe, Gly13-->Ile, and Val65-->Ile in the propeptide to increase its hydrophobicity resulted in formation of a tertiary structure, accompanied by increased ability to bind to the protease and increased resistance to proteolysis. In this study, we examined the effects of these tertiary-structure-forming mutations on the intramolecular chaperone activity of the propeptide. The successive amino acid replacements mentioned above were introduced into pro-subtilisin*, possessing a Ser221-->Ala mutation in the catalytic residue. Refolding experiments were started by rapid dilution of the denatured pro-subtilisin*, and formation of tertiary structure in subtilisin was monitored kinetically by increase in tryptophan fluorescence. The wild-type pro-subtilisin* was found to refold with a rate constant of 4.8 x 10(-3) s(-1) in the equation describing an intramolecular process. The Ala47-->Phe replacement in the propeptide resulted in a 1.2-fold increase in the rate constant of subtilisin refolding. When the additional replacement Gly13-->Ile was introduced, refolding of subtilisin was substantially accelerated, and its kinetics could be fitted to a double exponential process composed of a fast phase with a rate constant of 2.1 x 10(-2) s(-1) and a slow phase with a rate constant of 4.5 x 10(-3) s(-1). The rate constant of the fast phase was increased slightly by a further replacement, Val65-->Ile. Since the slow phase is considered to correspond to proline isomerization, we concluded that tertiary-structure-forming mutations in the propeptide produce positive effects on its intramolecular chaperone activity through acceleration of the propeptide-induced formation of the tertiary structure of subtilisin BPN'.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the structural role played by isostructural unbranched alkyl‐chains on the conformational ensemble and stability of β‐turn structures, the conformational properties of a designed model peptide: Plm‐Pro‐Gly‐Pda ( 1 , Plm: H3C—(CH2)14—CONH—; Pda: —CONH— (CH2)14—CH3) have been examined and compared with the parent peptide: Boc‐Pro‐Gly‐NHMe ( 2 , Boc: tert‐butoxycarbonyl; NHMe: N‐methylamide). The characteristic 13C NMR chemical‐shifts of the Pro Cβ and Cγ resonances ascertained the incidence of an all‐trans peptide‐bond in low polarity deuterochloroform solution. Using FTIR and 1H NMR spectroscopy, we establish that apolar alkyl‐chains flanking a β‐turn promoting Pro‐Gly sequence impart definite incremental stability to the well‐defined hydrogen‐bonded structure. The assessment of 1H NMR derived thermodynamic parameters of the hydrogen‐bonded amide‐NHs via variable temperature indicate that much weaker hydrophobic interactions do contribute to the stability of folded reverse turn structures. The far‐UV CD spectral patterns of 1 and 2 in 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol are consistent with Pro‐Gly specific type II β‐turn structure, concomitantly substantiate that the flanking alkyl‐chains induce substantial bias in enhanced β‐turn populations. In view of structural as well as functional importance of the Pro‐Gly mediated secondary structures, besides biochemical and biological significance of proteins lipidation via myristoylation or palmytoilation, we highlight potential convenience of the unbranched Plm and Pda moieities not only as main‐chain N‐ and C‐terminal protecting groups but also to mimic and stabilize specific isolated secondary and supersecondary structural components frequently observed in proteins and polypeptides. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 419–426, 2013.  相似文献   

10.
Tk-subtilisin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakarensis matures from Pro-Tk-subtilisin (Pro-TKS) upon autoprocessing and degradation of propeptide. Pro-TKS contains the insertion sequence (IS1) at the N-terminus of the mature domain as compared to bacterial pro-subtilisins. To analyze the role of IS1, the Pro-TKS derivative without IS1 (?IS1-Pro-TKS) and its active-site mutants (?IS1-Pro-S324A and ?IS1-Pro-S324C) were constructed and characterized. ?IS1-Pro-S324A and ?IS1-Pro-TKS represent an unautoprocessed and autoprocessed form of ?IS1-Pro-TKS, respectively. The CD and ANS fluorescence spectra of these proteins indicate that folding of ?IS1-Pro-TKS is not completed by binding of Ca2+ ions but is completed by the subsequent autoprocessing reaction. Thermal denaturation of these proteins analyzed by DSC and CD spectroscopy indicates that unautoprocessed ?IS1-Pro-TKS is less stable than autoprocessed ?IS1-Pro-TKS by 26.3?°C in T m. The stability of autoprocessed ?IS1-Pro-TKS is comparable to that of Pro-TKS, which is slightly lower than that of unautoprocessed Pro-TKS. These results suggest that ?IS1-Pro-TKS is fully folded and greatly stabilized by autoprocessing. ?IS1-Pro-TKS more slowly matured to ?IS1-Tk-subtilisin than Pro-TKS did, due to a decrease in the autoprocessing rate. We propose that IS1 is required not only for hyperstabilization of Pro-TKS but also for its rapid maturation.  相似文献   

11.
The collagen triple helix has a larger accessible surface area per molecular mass than globular proteins, and therefore potentially more water interaction sites. The effect of deuterium oxide on the stability of collagen model peptides and Type I collagen molecules was analyzed by circular dichroism and differential scanning calorimetry. The transition temperatures (Tm) of the protonated peptide (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)10 were 25.4 and 28.7°C in H2O and D2O, respectively. The increase of the Tm of (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)10 measured calorimetrically at 1.0°C min?1 in a low pH solution from the protonated to the deuterated solvent was 5.1°C. The increases of the Tm for (Gly‐Pro‐4(R)Hyp)9 and pepsin‐extracted Type I collagen were measured as 4.2 and 2.2°C, respectively. These results indicated that the increase in the Tm in the presence of D2O is comparable to that of globular proteins, and much less than reported previously for collagen model peptides [Gough and Bhatnagar, J Biomol Struct Dyn 1999, 17, 481–491]. These experimental results suggest that the interaction of water molecules with collagen is similar to the interaction of water with globular proteins, when the ratio of collagen to water is very small and collagen is monomerically dispersed in the solvent. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 93: 93–101, 2010. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

12.
The crystal structure of an active site mutant of pro-Tk-subtilisin (pro-S324A) from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis was determined at 2.3 A resolution. The overall structure of this protein is similar to those of bacterial subtilisin-propeptide complexes, except that the peptide bond linking the propeptide and mature domain contacts with the active site, and the mature domain contains six Ca2+ binding sites. The Ca-1 site is conserved in bacterial subtilisins but is formed prior to autoprocessing, unlike the corresponding sites of bacterial subtilisins. All other Ca2+-binding sites are unique in the pro-S324A structure and are located at the surface loops. Four of them apparently contribute to the stability of the central alphabetaalpha substructure of the mature domain. The CD spectra, 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonic acid fluorescence spectra, and sensitivities to chymotryptic digestion of this protein indicate that the conformation of pro-S324A is changed from an unstable molten globule-like structure to a stable native one upon Ca2+ binding. Another active site mutant, pro-S324C, was shown to be autoprocessed to form a propeptide-mature domain complex in the presence of Ca2+. The CD spectra of this protein indicate that the structure of pro-S324C is changed upon Ca2+ binding like pro-S324A but is not seriously changed upon subsequent autoprocessing. These results suggest that the maturation process of Tk-subtilisin is different from that of bacterial subtilisins in terms of the requirement of Ca2+ for folding of the mature domain and completion of the folding process prior to autoprocessing.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate early intermediates of β2‐microglobulin (β2m) amyloidogenesis, we solved the structure of β2m containing the amyloidogenic Pro32Gly mutation by X‐ray crystallography. One nanobody (Nb24) that efficiently blocks fibril elongation was used as a chaperone to co‐crystallize the Pro32Gly β2m monomer under physiological conditions. The complex of P32G β2m with Nb24 reveals a trans peptide bond at position 32 of this amyloidogenic variant, whereas Pro32 adopts the cis conformation in the wild‐type monomer, indicating that the cis to trans isomerization at Pro32 plays a critical role in the early onset of β2m amyloid formation.  相似文献   

14.
Subtilisin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis (Tk-subtilisin) is matured from Pro-Tk-subtilisin upon autoprocessing and degradation of the propeptide. The crystal structures of the autoprocessed and mature forms of Tk-subtilisin were determined at 1.89 A and 1.70 A resolution, respectively. Comparison of these structures with that of unautoprocessed Pro-Tk-subtilisin indicates that the structure of Tk-subtilisin is not seriously changed during maturation. However, one unique Ca(2+)-binding site (Ca-7) is identified in these structures. In addition, the N-terminal region of the mature domain (Gly70-Pro82), which binds tightly to the main body in the unautoprocessed form, is disordered and mostly truncated in the autoprocessed and mature forms, respectively. Interestingly, this site is formed also in the unautoprocessed form when its crystals are soaked with 10 mM CaCl(2), as revealed by the 1.87 A structure. Along with the formation of this site, the N-terminal region (Leu75-Thr80) is disordered, with the scissile peptide bond contacting with the active site. These results indicate that the calcium ion binds weakly to the Ca-7 site in the unautoprocessed form, but is trapped upon autoprocessing. We propose that the Ca-7 site is required to promote the autoprocessing reaction by stabilizing the autoprocessed form, in which the new N terminus of the mature domain is structurally disordered. Furthermore, the crystal structure of the Tk-propeptide:S324A-subtilisin complex, which was formed by the addition of separately expressed proteins, was determined at 1.65 A resolution. This structure is virtually identical with that of the autoprocessed form, indicating that the interaction between the two domains is highly intensive and specific.  相似文献   

15.
Tk-subtilisin (a subtilisin homologue from Thermococcus kodakaraensis) is matured from Pro-Tk-subtilisin upon autoprocessing and degradation of Tk-propeptide. To analyze the folding mechanism of Tk-subtilisin, the crystal structure of the active site mutant of Tk-subtilisin (S324A-subtilisin), which was refolded in the presence of Ca2+ and absence of Tk-propeptide, was determined at 2.16 Å resolution. This structure is essentially the same as that of Tk-subtilisin matured from Pro-Tk-subtilisin. S324A-subtilisin was refolded with a rate constant of 0.17 and 1.8 min−1 at 30 °C in the absence and presence of Tk-propeptide, respectively, indicating that Tk-subtilisin does not require Tk-propeptide for folding but requires it for acceleration of folding.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Regulated autoprocessing of HIV Gag-Pol precursor is required for the production of mature and fully active protease. We previously reported that H69E mutation in a pseudo wild type protease sequence significantly (>20-fold) impedes protease maturation in an in vitro autoprocessing assay and in transfected mammalian cells.

Results

Interestingly, H69E mutation in the context of a laboratory adapted NL4-3 protease showed only moderate inhibition (~4-fold) on protease maturation. There are six point mutations (Q7K, L33I, N37S, L63I, C67A, and C95A) between the NL4-3 and the pseudo wild type proteases suggesting that the H69E effect is influenced by other residues. Mutagenesis analyses identified C95 as the primary determinant that dampened the inhibitory effect of H69E. L63 and C67 also demonstrated rescue effect to a less extent. However, the rescue was completely abolished when H69 was replaced by aspartic acid in the NL4-3 backbone. Charge substitutions of surface residues (E21, D30, E34, E35, and F99) to neutral or positively charged amino acids failed to restore protease autoprocessing in the context of H69E mutation.

Conclusions

Taken together, we suggest that residue 69 along with other amino acids such as C95 plus L63 and C67 to a less extent modulate precursor structures for the regulation of protease autoprocessing in the infected cell.  相似文献   

17.
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed with the chromophore-bearing N-terminal domain of oat phytochrome A apoprotein (amino acid residues 1-595). Except for Trp366, which was replaced by Phe (W366F), all the residues exchanged are in close proximity to the chromophore-binding Cys321 (i.e. P318A, P318K, H319L, S320K, H322L and the double mutant L323R/Q324D). The mutants were characterized by their absorption maxima, and the kinetics of chromophore-binding and the Pr-->Pfr conversion. The strongest effect of mutation on the chromoprotein assembly, leading to an almost complete loss of the chromophore binding capability, was found for the exchanges of His322 by Leu (H322L) and Pro318 by Lys (P318K), whereas a corresponding alanine mutant (P318A) showed wild-type behavior. The second histidine (H319) is also involved in chromophore fixation, as indicated by a slower assembly rate upon mutation (H319L). For the other mutants, an assembly process very similar to that of the wild-type protein was found. The light-induced Pr-->Pfr conversion kinetics is altered in the mutations H319L and S320K and in the double mutant L323R/Q324D, all of which exhibited a significantly faster I700 decay and accelerated Pfr formation. P318 is also involved in the Pr-->Pfr conversion, the millisecond steps (formation of Pfr) being significantly slower for P318A. Lacking sufficient amounts of W366F, assembly kinetics could not be determined in this case, while the fully assembled mutant underwent the Pr-->Pfr conversion with kinetics similar to wild-type protein.  相似文献   

18.
Structures of (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4‐Xaa‐Yaa‐Gly‐(Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4 (ppg9‐XYG) where (Xaa, Yaa) = (Pro, Hyp), (Hyp, Pro) or (Hyp, Hyp) were analyzed at high resolution using synchrotron radiation. Molecular and crystal structures of these peptides are very similar to those of the (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)9 peptide. The results obtained in this study, together with those obtained from related compounds, indicated the puckering propensity of the Hyp in the X position: (1) Hyp(X) residues involved in the Hyp(X):Pro(Y) stacking pairs prefer the down‐puckering conformation, as in ppg9‐OPG, and ppg9‐OOG; (2) Hyp(X) residues involved in the Hyp(X):Hyp(Y) stacking pairs prefer the up‐puckering conformation if there is no specific reason to adopt the down‐puckering conformation. Water molecules in these peptide crystals are classified into two groups, the 1st and 2nd hydration waters. Water molecules in the 1st hydration group have direct hydrogen bonds with peptide oxygen atoms, whereas those in the 2nd hydration group do not. Compared with globular proteins, the number of water molecules in the 2nd hydration shell of the ppg9‐XYG peptides is very large, likely due to the unique rod‐like molecular structure of collagen model peptides. In the collagen helix, the amino acid residues in the X and Y positions must protrude outside of the triple helix, which forces even the hydrophobic side chains, such as Pro, to be exposed to the surrounding water molecules. Therefore, most of the waters in the 2nd hydration shell are covering hydrophobic Pro side chains by forming clathrate structures. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 361–372, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

19.
Modification of substrate specificity of an autoprocessing enzyme is accompanied by a risk of significant failure of self-cleavage of the pro-region essential for activation. Therefore, to enhance processing, we engineered the pro-region of mutant subtilisins E of Bacillus subtilis with altered substrate specificity. A high-activity mutant subtilisin E with Ile31Leu replacement (I31L) as well as the wild-type enzyme show poor recognition of acid residues as the P1 substrate. To increase the P1 substrate preference for acid residues, Glu156Gln and Gly166Lys/Arg substitutions were introduced into the I31L gene based upon a report on subtilisin BPN' [Wells et al. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 1219-1223]. The apparent P1 specificity of four mutants (E156Q/G166K, E156Q/G166R, G166K, and G166R) was extended to acid residues, but the halo-forming activity of Escherichia coli expressing the mutant genes on skim milk-containing plates was significantly decreased due to the lower autoprocessing efficiency. A marked increase in active enzyme production occurred when Tyr(-1) in the pro-region of these mutants was then replaced by Asp or Glu. Five mutants with Glu(-2)Ala/Val/Gly or Tyr(-1)Cys/Ser substitution showing enhanced halo-forming activity were further isolated by PCR random mutagenesis in the pro-region of the E156Q/G166K mutant. These results indicated that introduction of an optimum arrangement at the cleavage site in the pro-region is an effective method for obtaining a higher yield of active enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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