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1.
Aspartic peptidase inhibitors, which are themselves proteins, are strong inhibitors (small inhibition constants) of some aspartic peptidases but not others. However, there have been no studies of the kinetics of the interaction between a proteinaceous aspartic peptidase inhibitor and aspartic peptidases. This paper describes an analysis of rate constants for the interaction between recombinant squash aspartic peptidase inhibitor (rSQAPI) and a panel of aspartic peptidases that have a range of inhibition constants for SQAPI. Purified rSQAPI completely inhibits pepsin at a 1:1 molar ratio of pepsin to rSQAPI monomer (inhibition constant 1 nM). The interaction of pepsin with immobilized rSQAPI, at pH values between 3.0 and 6.0, was monitored using surface plasmon resonance. Binding of pepsin to rSQAPI was slow (association rate constants ca 10(4)M (-1)s(-1)), but rSQAPI was an effective pepsin inhibitor because dissociation of the rSQAPI-pepsin complex was much slower (dissociation rate constants ca 10(-4)s(-1)), especially at low pH values. Similar results were obtained with a His-tagged rSQAPI. Strong inhibition (inhibition constant 3 nM) of one isoform (rSap4) of the family of Candida albicans-secreted aspartic peptidases was, as with pepsin, characterized by slow binding of rSap4 and slower dissociation of the rSap4-inhibitor complex. In contrast, weaker inhibition of the Glomerella cingulata-secreted aspartic peptidase (inhibition constant 7 nM) and the C. albicans rSap1 and Sap2 isoenzymes (inhibition constants 25 and 400 nM, respectively) was, in each case, characterized by a larger dissociation rate constant.  相似文献   

2.
Human gastric juice contains 3 major proteolytic components (pepsins1,3 and 5 or gastricsin). Pepsin 1 is increased in peptic ulcer and it's properties are relatively poorly understood. Studies with pepstatin the highly specific aspartic-protease inhibitor have therefore been carried out on individual active and proenzymes to assess any enzymic similarities. Human pepsin 1 was inhibited with high affinity similar to pepsin 3, whereas pepsin 5(gastricsin) was at least 40 times less sensitive. Inhibition of human pepsinogens 1,3 and 5 and pig pepsinogen A showed similar trends to the active enzymes. Studies using Sephadex gel filtration showed that pepstatin does not bind to pepsinogens and inhibition arises from pepstatin binding the pepsins released upon activation. Pepstatin inhibition was shown to be relatively independent of pH between 1.5 and 3.8 although at higher pH inhibition was less effective. The evidence suggests that pepsin 1 is similar to pepsin 3 and pepstatin inhibits by a one to one molecular binding to the active site. The explanation for the reduced affinity of pepstatin to pepsin 5(gastricsin) needs further study by co-crystallisation X-ray analysis.  相似文献   

3.
Human gastric juice contains 3 major proteolytic components (pepsins1,3 and 5 or gastricsin). Pepsin 1 is increased in peptic ulcer and it's properties are relatively poorly understood. Studies with pepstatin the highly specific aspartic-protease inhibitor have therefore been carried out on individual active and proenzymes to assess any enzymic similarities. Human pepsin 1 was inhibited with high affinity similar to pepsin 3, whereas pepsin 5(gastricsin) was at least 40 times less sensitive. Inhibition of human pepsinogens 1,3 and 5 and pig pepsinogen A showed similar trends to the active enzymes. Studies using Sephadex gel filtration showed that pepstatin does not bind to pepsinogens and inhibition arises from pepstatin binding the pepsins released upon activation. Pepstatin inhibition was shown to be relatively independent of pH between 1.5 and 3.8 although at higher pH inhibition was less effective. The evidence suggests that pepsin 1 is similar to pepsin 3 and pepstatin inhibits by a one to one molecular binding to the active site. The explanation for the reduced affinity of pepstatin to pepsin 5(gastricsin) needs further study by co-crystallisation X-ray analysis.  相似文献   

4.
A doubleheaded protease inhibitor showing inhibition of bovine pancreatic trypsin and α-chymotrypsin was isolated and purified from the seeds of Phaseolus mungo. The molecular weight of the protease inhibitor was found to be 14.2 kD by SDS-PAGE analysis and gel filtration. The native inhibitor inhibited trypsin and α-chymotrypsin stoichiometrically at the molar ratio 1:1 and 2:1 respectively. The Ki app for trypsin was found to be 0.35 nM and for α-chymotrypsin to be 2.4 nM. Bovine pepsin was not inhibited by the inhibitor. However, the pepsin treated inhibitor was still able to inhibit trypsin and α-chymotrypsin. The inhibitor was stable in 8M urea. Addition of 0.2 M mercaptoethanol resulted in significant loss of inhibitory activity. The inhibitor was extremely heat stable with only 50% loss of inhibitory activity after heating for 100°C for 20 min. Thus, the Phaseolus mungo trypsin/chymotrypsin inhibitor resembles other Bowman-Birk protease inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
The nematode Ascaris suum primarily infects pigs, but also causes disease in humans. As part of its survival mechanism in the intestinal tract of the host, the worm produces a number of protease inhibitors, including pepsin inhibitor-3 (PI3), a 17 kDa protein. Recombinant PI3 expressed in E. coli has previously been shown to be a competitive inhibitor of a subgroup of aspartic proteinases: pepsin, gastricsin and cathepsin E. The previously determined crystal structure of the complex of PI3 with porcine pepsin (p. pepsin) showed that there are two regions of contact between PI3 and the enzyme. The first three N-terminal residues (QFL) bind into the prime side of the active site cleft and a polyproline helix (139-143) in the C-terminal domain of PI3 packs against residues 289-295 that form a loop in p. pepsin. Mutational analysis of both inhibitor regions was conducted to assess their contributions to the binding affinity for p. pepsin, human pepsin (h. pepsin) and several malarial aspartic proteases, the plasmepsins. Overall, the polyproline mutations have a limited influence on the Ki values for all the enzymes tested, with the values for p. pepsin remaining in the low-nanomolar range. The largest effect was seen with a Q1L mutant, with a 200-fold decrease in Ki for plasmepsin 2 from Plasmodium falciparum (PfPM2). Thermodynamic measurements of the binding of PI3 to p. pepsin and PfPM2 showed that inhibition of the enzymes is an entropy-driven reaction. Further analysis of the Q1L mutant showed that the increase in binding affinity to PfPM2 was due to improvements in both entropy and enthalpy.  相似文献   

6.
The three-dimensional structures of pepsin inhibitor-3 (PI-3) from Ascaris suum and of the complex between PI-3 and porcine pepsin at 1. 75 A and 2.45 A resolution, respectively, have revealed the mechanism of aspartic protease inhibition by this unique inhibitor. PI-3 has a new fold consisting of two domains, each comprising an antiparallel beta-sheet flanked by an alpha-helix. In the enzyme-inhibitor complex, the N-terminal beta-strand of PI-3 pairs with one strand of the 'active site flap' (residues 70-82) of pepsin, thus forming an eight-stranded beta-sheet that spans the two proteins. PI-3 has a novel mode of inhibition, using its N-terminal residues to occupy and therefore block the first three binding pockets in pepsin for substrate residues C-terminal to the scissile bond (S1'-S3'). The molecular structure of the pepsin-PI-3 complex suggests new avenues for the rational design of proteinaceous aspartic proteinase inhibitors.  相似文献   

7.
F Cumin  D Nisato  J P Gagnol  P Corvol 《Biochemistry》1987,26(24):7615-7621
The in vitro binding of [3H]SR42128 (Iva-Phe-Nle-Sta-Ala-Sta-Arg), a potent inhibitor of human renin activity, to purified human renin and a number of other aspartic proteases was examined. SR42128 was found to be a competitive inhibitor of human renin, with a Ki of 0.35 nM at pH 5.7 and 2.0 nM at pH 7.4; it was thus more effective at pH 5.7 than at pH 7.4. Scatchard analysis of the interaction binding of [3H]SR42128 to human renin indicated that binding was reversible and saturable at both pH 5.7 and pH 7.4. There was a single class of binding sites, and the KD was 0.9 nM at pH 5.7 and 1 nM at pH 7.4. The association rate was 10 times more rapid at pH 5.7 than at pH 7.4, but there was no difference between the rates of dissociation of the enzyme-inhibitor complex at the two pHs. The effect of pH on the binding of [3H]SR42128 to human renin, cathepsin D, pepsin, and gastricsin was also examined over the pH range 3-8. All the aspartic proteases had a high affinity for the inhibitor at low pH. However, at pH 7.4, [3H]SR42128 was bound only to human renin and to none of the other aspartic proteases. Competitive binding studies with [3H]SR42128 and a number of other inhibitors on human renin or cathepsin D were used to examine the relationships between structure and activity in these systems.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Heparin depresses the second-order rate constant kass for the inhibition of neutrophil elastase by alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor. For high and low molecular weight heparin the decrease in kass is 290-fold and 40-fold, respectively. This is due to a tight binding of the polymer to elastase: Kd = 3.3 nM or 89 nM for high or low molecular weight heparin respectively. In contrast heparin increases the rate of inhibition of elastase by mucus proteinase inhibitor. For low molecular weight heparin, there is a 27-fold increase in kass. This is due to a strong binding of the polymer to the inhibitor (Kd = 50 nM) which undergoes a conformational change.  相似文献   

9.
In male subjects, peripheral aromatization of androgens accounts for most of the estrogen production, and skin is an important site of such enzymatic activity. We have studied the effects of a mechanism-based, irreversible aromatase inhibitor, 10-(2-propynyl)-estr-4-ene-3,17-dione (MDL 18,962) on androgen action and metabolism in cultured human foreskin fibroblasts. Cells were incubated simultaneously in the presence of substrate, androstenedione, and inhibitor, MDL 18,962. Aromatase activity was linear with time up to 3 h of incubation at 37 degrees C in the absence and presence of 1.0-10 nM inhibitor. The IC50 for four different cell strains ranged from 4.0 to 8.6 nM MDL 18,962. Kinetic analysis of competitive inhibition by the Eadie-Hofstee method yielded an apparent Ki of 2.75 nM for the inhibitor. Preincubation of cells with MDL 18,962 resulted in irreversible inhibition of aromatase activity which was time- and concentration-dependent. We calculated a Ki of 7.6 nM for MDL 18,962. Preincubation of cells with 25 nM MDL 18,962 suppressed enzyme activity for up to 6 h following removal of the inhibitor, before a return of enzyme activity due to synthesis of new enzyme. MDL 18,962 (0.2-20 microM) did not influence the 5 alpha-reduction of testosterone (200 nM). In addition, binding of dihydrotestosterone (2 nM) to androgen receptors was not affected by MDL 18,962 (25-1000 nM). In summary, MDL 18,962 is a specific, high potency inhibitor of aromatase. By virtue of its high binding affinity to the enzyme active site, it competes very effectively with substrate, resulting in irreversible inactivation of aromatase.  相似文献   

10.
The binding to carboxypeptidase A of two phosphonic acid analogues of 2-benzylsuccinate, 2-DL-2-benzyl-3-phosphonopropionic acid (inhibitor I) and 2-DL-2-benzyl-3-(-O-ethylphosphono)propionic acid (inhibitor II) was studied by observing their 31P resonances when free and bound to the enzyme in the range of pH from 5 to 10. The binding of I by co-ordination to the active-site Zn(II) lowered the highest pKa of I from a value of 7.66(+/- 0.10) to a value of 6.71(+/- 0.17). No titration of any protons on II occurred over the pH range studied. The enzyme-bound inhibitor II also did not titrate over the pH range 6.17-7.60. The pH-dependencies of the apparent inhibition constants for I and II were also investigated by using N-(-2-(furanacryloyl)-L-phenylalanyl-L-phenylalanine as substrate. Two enzymic functional groups with pKa values of 5.90(+/- 0.06) and 9.79(+/- 0.14) must be protonated for binding of inhibitor I, and two groups with pKa values of 6.29(+/- 0.10) and 9.19(+/- 0.15) for binding of inhibitor II. Over the pH range from 6.71 to 7.66, inhibitor I binds to the enzyme in a complex of the enzyme in a more protonated form, and the inhibitor in a less protonated form than the predominant unligated forms at this pH. Mock & Tsay [(1986) Biochemistry 25, 2920-2927] made a similar finding for the binding of L-2-(1-carboxy-2-phenylethyl)-4-phenylazophenol over a pH range of nearly 4 units. The true inhibition constant for the dianionic form of inhibitor I (racemic) was calculated to be 54.0(+/- 5.9) nM and that of the trianionic form to be 5.92(+/- 0.65) nM. The true inhibition constant of the fully ionized II (racemic) was calculated to be 79.8(+/- 6.4) nM.  相似文献   

11.
A serine protease inhibitor was purified from plasma of the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica. The inhibitor is a 7609.6 Da protein consisting of 71 amino acids with 12 cysteine residues that are postulated to form 6 intra-chain disulfide bridges. Sequencing of the cloned cDNA identified an open reading frame encoding a polypeptide of 90 amino acids, with the 19 N-terminal amino acids forming a signal peptide. No sequence similarity with known proteins was found in sequence databases. The protein inhibited the serine proteases subtilisin A, trypsin and perkinsin, the major extracellular protease of the oyster protozoan parasite, Perkinsus marinus, in a slow binding manner. The mechanism of inhibition involves a rapid binding of inhibitor to the enzyme to form a weak enzyme-inhibitor complex followed by a slow isomerization to form a very tight binding enzyme-inhibitor complex. The overall dissociation constants K(i) with subtilisin A, perkinsin and trypsin were 0.29 nM, 13.7 nM and 17.7 nM, respectively. No inhibition of representatives of the other protease classes was detected. This is the first protein inhibitor of proteases identified from a bivalve mollusk and it represents a new protease inhibitor family. Its tight binding to subtilisin and perkinsin suggests it plays a role in the oyster host defense against P. marinus.  相似文献   

12.
Dash C  Phadtare S  Deshpande V  Rao M 《Biochemistry》2001,40(38):11525-11532
We present here the first report of a hydrophilic peptidic inhibitor, ATBI, from an extremophilic Bacillus sp. exhibiting a two-step inhibition mechanism against the aspartic proteases, pepsin and F-prot from Aspergillus saitoi. Kinetic analysis shows that these proteases are competitively inhibited by ATBI. The progress curves are time-dependent and consistent with slow-tight binding inhibition: E + I right arrow over left arrow (k(3), k(4)) EI right arrow over left arrow (k(5), k(6)) EI. The K(i) values for the first reversible complex (EI) of ATBI with pepsin and F-prot were (17 +/- 0.5) x 10(-9) M and (3.2 +/- 0.6) x 10(-6) M, whereas the overall inhibition constant K(i) values were (55 +/- 0.5) x 10(-12) M and (5.2 +/- 0.6) x 10(-8) M, respectively. The rate constant k(5) revealed a faster isomerization of EI for F-prot [(2.3 +/- 0.4) x 10(-3) s(-1)] than pepsin [(7.7 +/- 0.3) x 10(-4) s(-1)]. However, ATBI dissociated from the tight enzyme-inhibitor complex (EI) of F-prot faster [(3.8 +/- 0.5) x 10(-5) s(-1)] than pepsin [(2.5 +/- 0.4) x 10(-6) s(-1)]. Comparative analysis of the kinetic parameters with pepstatin, the known inhibitor of pepsin, revealed a higher value of k(5)/k(6) for ATBI. The binding of the inhibitor with the aspartic proteases and the subsequent conformational changes induced were monitored by exploiting the intrinsic tryptophanyl fluorescence. The rate constants derived from the fluorescence data were in agreement with those obtained from the kinetic analysis; therefore, the induced conformational changes were correlated to the isomerization of EI to EI. Chemical modification of the Asp or Glu by WRK and Lys residues by TNBS abolished the antiproteolytic activity and revealed the involvement of two carboxyl groups and one amine group of ATBI in the enzymatic inactivation.  相似文献   

13.
A cysteine protease inhibitor (CPI) with an apparent molecular mass of 11.5kDa was purified from larval hemolymph of the tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) by gel filtration on Sephadex G-50 followed by hydrophobic and ion-exchange column chromatographies. The purified cysteine proteinase inhibitor, denoted as MsCPI, strongly inhibited the plant cysteine protease, papain, with a K(i) value of 5.5 x 10(-9)M. Nucleotide sequence analysis of a partial cDNA encoding MsCPI indicated that MsCPI consists of 105 amino acid residues in a sequence that is similar to sarcocystatin A from Sarcophaga peregrina. However, northern blotting and PCR analyses using the specific primers of MsCPI suggested that the mRNA encoding MsCPI had a size of more than 12 kilobases, which included at least six tandemly repeated MsCPI segments. MsCPI was expressed in Escherichia coli and the recombinant protein effectively inhibited cysteine proteases from plants as well as from animals such as cathepsins B (K(i), 6.8 nM), H (3.0 nM), and L (0.87 nM). There was no inhibition exhibited toward trypsin, chymotrypsin, subtilisin, pepsin or themolysin.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetics of binding of bovine trypsin to a proteinaceous inhibitor of trypsin from buckwheat seeds (BWI-1a) has been studied. The association rate constant (k(ass)) was 2.2 x 10(6) M-1 x sec-1 and the dissociation rate constant (k(off)) of the enzyme--inhibitor complex was 3.5 x 10(-3) sec-1; the inhibition constant Ki was 1.5 nM. The inhibitor BWI-1a is of the slow, tightly binding type. The mechanism of the inhibition of bovine trypsin by the trypsin inhibitor BWI-1a was studied. The mechanism of inhibition was found to involve two steps according to the kinetic data.  相似文献   

15.
Inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinases (IP3K) A, B, and C as well as inositol polyphosphate multikinase (IPMK) catalyze the first step in the formation of the higher phosphorylated inositols InsP5 and InsP6 by metabolizing Ins(1,4,5)P3 to Ins(1,3,4,5)P4. In order to clarify the special role of these InsP3 phosphorylating enzymes and of subsequent anabolic inositol phosphate reactions, a search was conducted for potent enzyme inhibitors starting with a fully active IP3K-A catalytic domain. Seven polyphenolic compounds could be identified as potent inhibitors with IC50 < 200 nM (IC50 given): ellagic acid (36 nM), gossypol (58 nM), (-)-epicatechin-3-gallate (94 nM), (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG, 120 nM), aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA, 150 nM), hypericin (170 nM), and quercetin (180 nM). All inhibitors displayed a mixed-type inhibition with respect to ATP and a non-competitive inhibition with respect to Ins(1,4,5)P3. Examination of these inhibitors toward IP3K-A, -B, and -C and IPMK from mammals revealed that ATA potently inhibits all kinases while the other inhibitors do not markedly affect IPMK but differentially inhibit IP3K isoforms. We identified chlorogenic acid as a specific IPMK inhibitor whereas the flavonoids myricetin, 3',4',7,8-tetrahydroxyflavone and EGCG inhibit preferentially IP3K-A and IP3K-C. Mutagenesis studies revealed that both the calmodulin binding and the ATP [corrected] binding domain in IP3K are involved in inhibitor binding. Their absence in IPMK and the presence of a unique insertion in IPMK were found to be important for selectivity differences from IP3K. The fact that all identified IP3K and IPMK inhibitors have been reported as antiproliferative agents and that IP3Ks or IPMK often are the best binding targets deserves further investigation concerning their antitumor potential.  相似文献   

16.
A method for the determination of inhibition constants for catalytically-debilitated mutant enzymes is described. The inhibitor is partitioned between the mutant and wild-type enzymes. Catalytic rates of the wild-type enzyme are used as the signal of inhibitor binding to the mutant enzyme. The method is validated with scytalone dehydratase, the Y50F mutant, and a potent inhibitor. The K(i) value for Y50F determined by this method is 0.49 +/- 0.10 nM. The K(i) value determined using the Y50F catalytic report for inhibitor binding in the absence of wild-type enzyme is 0.20 +/- 0.030 nM. The wild-type enzyme binds the inhibitor ten-fold less tightly, thus indicating that the hydrogen-bonding interaction between the Y50 hydroxyl group and the inhibitor (suggested by X-ray crystallography) is weak. The method is most useful when the catalytic activity of the wild-type enzyme is the most sensitive report of inhibitor binding and the mutant enzyme is greatly crippled in catalytic activity.  相似文献   

17.
Lavendustin-A was reported to be a potent tyrosine kinase inhibitor of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (Onoda, T., Iinuma, H., Sasaki, Y., Hamada, M., Isshibi, K., Naganawa, H., Takeuchi, T., Tatsuta, K., and Umezawa, K. (1989) J. Nat. Prod. 52, 1252-1257). Its inhibition kinetics was studied in detail using the baculovirus-expressed recombinant intracellular domain of the EGF receptor (EGFR-IC). Lavendustin-A (RG 14355) is a slow and tight binding inhibitor of the receptor tyrosine kinase. The pre-steady state kinetic analysis demonstrates that the inhibition corresponds to a two-step mechanism in which an initial enzyme-inhibitor complex (EI) is rapidly formed followed by a slow isomerization step to form a tight complex (EI*). The dissociation constant for the initial rapid forming complex is 370 nM, whereas the overall dissociation constant is estimated to be less than or equal to 1 nM. The difference between the two values is due to the tight binding nature of the inhibitor to the enzyme in EI*. The kinetic analysis using a preincubation protocol to pre-equilibrate the enzyme with the inhibitor in the presence of one substrate showed that Lavendustin-A is a hyperbolic mixed-type inhibitor with respect to both ATP and the peptide substrate, with a major effect on the binding affinities for both substrates. An analogue of Lavendustin-A (RG 14467) showed similar inhibition kinetics to that of Lavendustin-A. The results of the pre-steady state analysis are also consistent with the proposed two-step mechanism. The dissociation constant for the initial fast forming complex in this case is 3.4 microM, whereas the overall dissociation constant is estimated to be less than or equal to 30 nM. It is a partial (hyperbolic) competitive inhibitor with respect to ATP. Its inhibition is reduced to different extents by different peptide substrates, when the peptide is added to the enzyme simultaneously with the inhibitor. When studied with the least protective peptide, K1 (a peptide containing the major autophosphorylation site of the EGF receptor), RG 14467 acts as a hyperbolic noncompetitive inhibitor with respect to the peptide.  相似文献   

18.
Cosgrove S  Rogers L  Hewage CM  Malthouse JP 《Biochemistry》2007,46(39):11205-11215
Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal (where Z is benzyloxycarbonyl) has been shown to be a competitive inhibitor of pepsin with a Ki = 89 +/- 24 nM at pH 2.0 and 25 degrees C. Both the ketone carbon (R13COCHO) and the aldehyde carbon (RCO13CHO) of the glyoxal group of Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal have been 13C-enriched. Using 13C NMR, it has been shown that when the inhibitor is bound to pepsin, the glyoxal keto and aldehyde carbons give signals at 98.8 and 90.9 ppm, respectively. This demonstrates that pepsin binds and preferentially stabilizes the fully hydrated form of the glyoxal inhibitor Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal. From 13C NMR pH studies with glyoxal inhibitor, we obtain no evidence for its hemiketal or hemiacetal hydroxyl groups ionizing to give oxyanions. We conclude that if an oxyanion is formed its pKa must be >8.0. Using 1H NMR, we observe four hydrogen bonds in free pepsin and in pepsin/Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal complexes. In the pepsin/pepstatin complex an additional hydrogen bond is formed. We examine the effect of pH on hydrogen bond formation, but we do not find any evidence for low-barrier hydrogen bond formation in the inhibitor complexes. We conclude that the primary role of hydrogen bonding to catalytic tetrahedral intermediates in the aspartyl proteases is to correctly orientate the tetrahedral intermediate for catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
R R Schmidt  H Betz  H Rehm 《Biochemistry》1988,27(3):963-967
The presynaptically active snake venom neurotoxin beta-bungarotoxin (beta-Butx) is known to affect neurotransmitter release by binding to a subtype of voltage-activated K+ channels. Here we show that mast cell degranulating (MCD) peptide from bee venom inhibits the binding of 125I-labeled beta-Butx to chick and rat brain membranes with apparent Ki values of 180 nM and 1100 nM, respectively. The mechanism of inhibition by MCD peptide is noncompetitive, as is inhibition of 125I-beta-Butx binding by the protease inhibitor homologue from mamba venom, toxin I. Beta-Butx and its binding antagonists thus bind to different sites of the same membrane protein. Removal of Ca2+ by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid inhibits the binding of 125I-beta-Butx by lowering its affinity to brain membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Pepsin inhibition by 3-alkoxy-4-arylpiperidine (substituted piperidine; (3R,4R)-3-(4-bromobenzyloxy)-4-[4-(2-naphthalen-1-yl-2-oxo-ethoxy)phenyl]piperidine) has been studied using steady-state kinetic and pre-equilibrium binding methods. Data were compared with pepstatin A, a well known competitive inhibitor of pepsin. Steady-state analysis reveals that the substituted piperidine likewise behaves as a competitive inhibitor. Pre-equilibrium binding studies indicate that the substituted piperidine can displace a fluorescently labeled statine inhibitor from the enzyme active site. Simulation of the stopped-flow fluorescence transients provided estimates of the K(d) values of 1.4 +/- 0.2 microm and 39 +/- 2 nm for the piperidine and the fluorescently labeled statine, respectively. The effects of combinations of these two inhibitors resulted in a series of parallel lines when plotted by the method of Yonetani and Theorell (Yonetani, T., and Theorell, H. (1964) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 106, 234-251), suggesting that the two inhibitors bind in a mutually exclusive fashion to pepsin. Fitting of the entire data set to the appropriate equation yielded an alpha factor of 8 +/- 1. The magnitude of this factor ( infinity > alpha > 1) can be explained by a conformational distinction between the enzyme species that bind each inhibitor. The effects of pH on the inhibition constants for pepstatin A and the substituted piperidine also suggest that the inhibitors bind to distinct conformational forms of the enzyme. No inhibition by the piperidine was observed at acidic pH, while pepstatin A inhibition is maximal at low pH values. Inhibition by the piperidine was maximal when a group with pK 4.8 +/- 0.2 was deprotonated and another group with pK 5.9 +/- 0.2 was protonated. Most likely these two groups are the catalytic aspartates with perturbed ionization properties as a result of a significant and unique conformational change. Taken together, these data suggest that the enzyme can readily interconvert between two conformers, one capable of binding substrate and pepstatin A and the other capable of binding the substituted piperidine.  相似文献   

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