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1.
Schmidt AE  Sun MF  Ogawa T  Bajaj SP  Gailani D 《Biochemistry》2008,47(5):1326-1335
In serine proteases, Gly193 (chymotrypsin numbering) is conserved with rare exception. Mutants of blood coagulation proteases have been reported with Glu, Ala, Arg or Val substitutions for Gly193. To further understand the role of Gly193 in protease activity, we replaced it with Ala or Val in coagulation factor XIa (FXIa). For comparison to the reported FXIa Glu193 mutant, we prepared FXIa with Asp (short side chain) or Lys (opposite charge) substitutions. Binding of p-aminobenzamidine (pAB) and diisopropylfluorphosphate (DFP) were impaired 1.6-36-fold and 35-478-fold, respectively, indicating distortion of, or altered accessibility to, the S1 and oxyanion-binding sites. Val or Asp substitutions caused the most impairment. Salt bridge formation between the amino terminus of the mature protease moiety at Ile16 and Asp194, essential for catalysis, was impaired 1.4-4-fold. Mutations reduced catalytic efficiency of tripeptide substrate hydrolysis 6-280-fold, with Val or Asp causing the most impairment. Further studies were directed toward macromolecular interactions with the FXIa mutants. kcat for factor IX activation was reduced 8-fold for Ala and 400-1100-fold for other mutants, while binding of the inhibitors antithrombin and amyloid beta-precursor protein Kunitz domain (APPI) was impaired 13-2300-fold and 22-27000-fold, respectively. The data indicate that beta-branching of the side chain of residue 193 is deleterious for interactions with pAB, DFP and amidolytic substrates, situations where no S2'-P2' interactions are involved. When an S2'-P2' interaction is involved (factor IX, antithrombin, APPI), beta-branching and increased side chain length are detrimental. Molecular models indicate that the mutants have impaired S2' binding sites and that beta-branching causes steric conflicts with the FXIa 140-loop, which could perturb the local tertiary structure of the protease domain. In conclusion, enzyme activity is impaired in FXIa when Gly193 is replaced by a non-Gly residue, and residues with side chains that branch at the beta-carbon have the greatest effect on catalysis and binding of substrates.  相似文献   

2.
To select residues in coagulation factor XIa (FXIa) potentially important for substrate and inhibitor interactions, we examined the crystal structure of the complex between the catalytic domain of FXIa and the Kunitz protease inhibitor (KPI) domain of a physiologically relevant FXIa inhibitor, protease nexin 2 (PN2). Six FXIa catalytic domain residues (Glu(98), Tyr(143), Ile(151), Arg(3704), Lys(192), and Tyr(5901)) were subjected to mutational analysis to investigate the molecular interactions between FXIa and the small synthetic substrate (S-2366), the macromolecular substrate (factor IX (FIX)) and inhibitor PN2KPI. Analysis of all six Ala mutants demonstrated normal K(m) values for S-2366 hydrolysis, indicating normal substrate binding compared with plasma FXIa; however, all except E98A and K192A had impaired values of k(cat) for S-2366 hydrolysis. All six Ala mutants displayed deficient k(cat) values for FIX hydrolysis, and all were inhibited by PN2KPI with normal values of K(i) except for K192A, and Y5901A, which displayed increased values of K(i). The integrity of the S1 binding site residue, Asp(189), utilizing p-aminobenzamidine, was intact for all FXIa mutants. Thus, whereas all six residues are essential for catalysis of the macromolecular substrate (FIX), only four (Tyr(143), Ile(151), Arg(3704), and Tyr(5901)) are important for S-2366 hydrolysis; Glu(98) and Lys(192) are essential for FIX but not S-2366 hydrolysis; and Lys(192) and Tyr(5901) are required for both inhibitor and macromolecular substrate interactions.  相似文献   

3.
Binding of factor IX (FIX) to an exosite on the heavy chain of factor XIa (FXIa) is essential for the optimal activation of FIX (Sinha, D., Seaman, F. S., and Walsh, P. N. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 3768-3775). To gain further insight into the mechanisms of activation of FIX by FXIa, we have investigated the kinetic properties of FXIa-light chain (FXIa-LC) with its active site occupied by either a reversible inhibitor of serine proteases (p-aminobenzamidine, PAB) or a small peptidyl substrate (S-2366) and have examined FIX cleavage products resulting from activation by FXIa or FXIa-LC. PAB inhibited the hydrolysis of S-2366 by FXIa-LC in a classically competitive fashion. In contrast, PAB was found to be a noncompetitive inhibitor of the activation of the macromolecular substrate FIX. Occupancy of the active site of the FXIa-LC by S-2366 also resulted in noncompetitive inhibition of FIX activation. These results demonstrate the presence of an exosite for FIX binding on the FXIa-LC remote from its active site. Furthermore, examination of the cleavage products of FIX indicated that in the absence of either Ca2+ or the heavy chain of FXIa there was substantial accumulation of the inactive intermediate FIXalpha, indicating a slower rate of cleavage of the scissile bond Arg180-Val181. We conclude that binding to two substrate-binding exosites one on the heavy chain and the other on the light chain of FXIa is required to mediate the formation of the Michaelis complex and efficient cleavages of the two spatially separated scissile bonds of FIX.  相似文献   

4.
The oxyanion hole of serine proteases is formed by the backbone N atoms of the catalytic Ser-195 and Gly-193 and engages the backbone O atom of the P1 residue of substrate in an important H-bonding interaction. The energetic contribution of this interaction in the ground and transition states is presently unknown. Measurements of the individual rate constants defining the catalytic mechanism of substrate hydrolysis for wild-type thrombin and trypsin and their G193A and G193P mutants reveal that Gly-193 is required for optimal substrate binding and acylation. Crystal structures of the G193A and G193P mutants of thrombin bound to the active site inhibitor H-d-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl document the extent of perturbation induced by the replacement of Gly-193. The Ala mutant weakens the H-bonding interaction of the N atom of residue 193, whereas the Pro substitution abrogates it altogether with additional small shifts of the protein backbone. From the kinetic and structural data, we estimate that the H-bonding interaction in the oxyanion hole contributes a stabilization of the ground and transition states of > 1.5 kcal/mol but < 3.0 kcal/mol. These results shed light on a basic aspect of the enzyme-substrate interaction in the entire family of trypsin-like serine proteases.  相似文献   

5.
Coagulation factor XI (FXI) is a covalent homodimer consisting of two identical subunits of 80 kDa linked by a disulfide bond formed by Cys-321 within the Apple 4 domain of each subunit. Because FXI(C321S) is a noncovalent dimer, residues within the interface between the two subunits must mediate its homodimeric structure. The crystal structure of FXI demonstrates formation of salt bridges between Lys-331 of one subunit and Glu-287 of the other subunit and hydrophobic interactions at the interface of the Apple 4 domains involving Ile-290, Leu-284, and Tyr-329. FXI(C321S), FXI(C321S,K331A), FXI(C321S,E287A), FXI(C321S,I290A), FXI(C321S,Y329A), FXI(C321S,L284A), FXI(C321S,K331R), and FXI(C321S,H343A) were expressed in HEK293 cells and characterized using size exclusion chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation, electron microscopy, and functional assays. Whereas FXI(C321S) and FXI(C321S,H343A) existed in monomer/dimer equilibrium (K(d) approximately 40 nm), all other mutants were predominantly monomers with impaired dimer formation by analytical ultracentrifugation (K(d)=3-38 microm). When converted to the active enzyme, FXIa, all the monomeric mutants activated FIX similarly to wild-type dimeric FXIa. In contrast, these monomeric mutants could not be activated efficiently by FXIIa, thrombin, or autoactivation in the presence of dextran sulfate. We conclude that salt bridges formed between Lys-331 of one subunit and Glu-287 of the other together with hydrophobic interactions at the interface, involving residues Ile-290, Leu-284, and Tyr-329, are essential for homodimer formation. The dimeric structure of FXI is essential for normal proteolytic activation of FXI by FXIIa, thrombin, or FXIa either in solution or on an anionic surface but not for FIX activation by FXIa in solution.  相似文献   

6.
Viral-encoded proteases cleave precursor polyprotein(s) leading to maturation of infectious virions. Strikingly, human rhinovirus 3C protease shows the trypsin(ogen)-like serine protease fold based on two topologically equivalent six-stranded β-barrels, but displays residue Cys147 as the active site nucleophile. By contrast, papain, which is representative of most cysteine proteases, does not display the trypsin(ogen)-like fold. Remarkably, in human rhinovirus 3C cysteine protease, the catalytic residues Cys147, His40 and Glu71 are positioned as Ser195, His57 and Asp102, respectively, building up the catalytic triad of serine proteases in the chymotrypsin–trypsin–elastase family. However, as compared to trypsin-like serine proteases and their zymogens, residue His40 and the oxyanion hole of human rhinovirus 3C cysteine protease, both key structural components of the active site, are located closer to the protein core. Human rhinovirus 3C cysteine protease cleaves preferentially GlnGly peptide bonds or, less commonly, the GlnSer, GlnAla, GluSer or GluGly pairs. Finally, human rhinovirus 3C cysteine protease and the 3CD cysteine protease–polymerase covalent complex bind the 5′ non-coding region of rhinovirus genomic RNA, an essential function for replication of the viral genome.  相似文献   

7.
Factor IX is the zymogen of the serine protease factor IXa involved in blood coagulation. In addition to a catalytic domain homologous to the chymotrypsin family, it has Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa binding regions needed for full biologic activity. We isolated a nonfunctional factor IX protein designated factor IXEagle Rock (IXER) from a patient with hemophilia B. The variant protein is indistinguishable from normal factor IX (IXN) in its migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, isoelectric point in urea, carbohydrate content and distribution, number of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues, and beta-OH aspartic acid content, and in its binding to an anti-IXN monoclonal antibody which has been shown previously to inhibit the interaction of factor VIIIa with factor IXaN. Further, IXER is cleaved to yield a factor IXa-like molecule by factor XIa/Ca2+ at a rate similar to that observed for IXN. However, in contrast to IXaN, IXaER does not bind to antithrombin-III (specific inhibitor of IXaN) and does not catalyze the activation of factor X (substrate) to factor Xa. To identify the mutation in IXER, all eight exons of IXN and IXER gene were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction technique and cloned. A single point mutation (G----T) which results in the replacement of Val for Gly363 in the catalytic domain of IXER was identified. Gly363 in factor IXa corresponds to the universally conserved Gly193 in the active site sequence of the chymotrypsin serine protease family. X-ray crystallographic data in the literature demonstrate a critical role of this Gly in stabilizing the active conformation of chymotrypsin/trypsin in two major ways: 1) in the formation of the substrate binding site; and 2) in the development of the oxyanion hole. Our computer structural data support a concept that the Gly363----Val change prevents the development of the active site conformation in factor IXa such that the substrate binding site and the oxyanion hole are not formed in the mutated enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR; also pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, psRII) is a receptor of the negative phototaxis of Natronobacterium pharaonis. By spectroscopic titration of D193N and D193E mutants, the pK(a) of the Schiff base was evaluated. Asp193 corresponds to Glu204 of bacteriorhodopsin (bR). The pK(a) of the Schiff base (SBH(+)) of D193N was approximately 10.1-10.0 (at XH(+)) and approximately 11.4-11.6 (at X) depending on the protonation state of a certain residue (designated by X) and independent of Cl(-), whereas those of the wild type and D193E were >12. The pK(a) values of XH(+) were approximately 11.8-11.2 at the state of SB, 10.5 at SBH(+) state in the presence of Cl(-), and 9.6 at SBH(+) without Cl(-). These imply the presence of a long-range interaction in the extracellular channel. Asp193 was suggested to be deprotonated in the present dodecyl-maltoside (DDM) solubilized wild-type ppR, which is contrary to Glu204 of bR. In the absence of salts, the irreversible denaturation of D193N (but not the wild type and D193E) occurred via a metastable state, into which the addition of Cl(-) reversed the intact pigment. This suggests that the negative charge at residue 193, which can be substituted by Cl(-), is necessary to maintain the proper conformation in the DDM-solubilized ppR.  相似文献   

9.
In the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation factor XIa (FXIa) activates factor IX (FIX) by cleaving the zymogen at Arg(145)-Ala(146) and Arg(180)-Val(181) bonds releasing an 11-kDa activation peptide. FXIa and its isolated light chain (FXIa-LC) cleave S-2366 at comparable rates, but FXIa-LC is a very poor activator of FIX, possibly because FIX undergoes allosteric modification on binding to an exosite on the heavy chain of FXIa (FXIa-HC) required for optimal cleavage rates of the two scissile bonds of FIX. However preincubation of FIX with a saturating concentration of isolated FXIa-HC did not result in any potentiation in the rate of FIX cleavage by FXIa-LC. Furthermore, if FIX binding via the heavy chain exosite of FXIa determines the affinity of the enzyme-substrate interaction, then the isolated FXIa-HC should inhibit the rate of FIX activation by depleting the substrate. However, whereas FXIa/S557A inhibited FIX activation of by FXIa, FXIa-HC did not. Therefore, we examined FIX binding to FXIa/S557A, FXIa-HC, FXIa-LC, FXIa/C362S/C482S, and FXIa/S557A/C362S/C482S. The heavy and light chains are disulfide-linked in FXIa/S557A but not in FXIa/C362S/C482S and FXIa/S557A/C362S/C482S. In an ELISA assay only FXI/S557A ligated FIX with high affinity. Partial reduction of FXIa/S557A to produce heavy and light chains resulted in decreased FIX binding, and this function was regained upon reformation of the disulfide linkage between the heavy and the light chains. We therefore conclude that substrate recognition by the FXIa exosite(s) requires disulfide-linked heavy and light chains.  相似文献   

10.
Factor VIIa (FVIIa) consists of a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain, two epidermal growth factor-like domains, and a protease domain. FVIIa binds seven Ca(2+) ions in the Gla, one in the EGF1, and one in the protease domain. However, blood contains both Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), and the Ca(2+) sites in FVIIa that could be specifically occupied by Mg(2+) are unknown. Furthermore, FVIIa contains a Na(+) and two Zn(2+) sites, but ligands for these cations are undefined. We obtained p-aminobenzamidine-VIIa/soluble tissue factor (sTF) crystals under conditions containing Ca(2+), Mg(2+), Na(+), and Zn(2+). The crystal diffracted to 1.8A resolution, and the final structure has an R-factor of 19.8%. In this structure, the Gla domain has four Ca(2+) and three bound Mg(2+). The EGF1 domain contains one Ca(2+) site, and the protease domain contains one Ca(2+), one Na(+), and two Zn(2+) sites. (45)Ca(2+) binding in the presence/absence of Mg(2+) to FVIIa, Gla-domainless FVIIa, and prothrombin fragment 1 supports the crystal data. Furthermore, unlike in other serine proteases, the amide N of Gly(193) in FVIIa points away from the oxyanion hole in this structure. Importantly, the oxyanion hole is also absent in the benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF structure at 1.87A resolution. However, soaking benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF crystals with d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl ketone results in benzamidine displacement, d-Phe-Pro-Arg incorporation, and oxyanion hole formation by a flip of the 192-193 peptide bond in FVIIa. Thus, it is the substrate and not the TF binding that induces oxyanion hole formation and functional active site geometry in FVIIa. Absence of oxyanion hole is unusual and has biologic implications for FVIIa macromolecular substrate specificity and catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), the ligand for the receptor tyrosine kinase c-Met, is composed of an alpha-chain containing four Kringle domains (K1-K4) and a serine protease domain-like beta-chain. Receptor activation by HGF is contingent upon prior proteolytic conversion of the secreted inactive single chain form (pro-HGF) into the biologically active two chain form by a single cleavage at the Arg(494)-Val(495) bond. By screening a panel of serine proteases we identified two new HGF activators, plasma kallikrein and coagulation factor XIa (FXIa). The concentrations of kallikrein and FXIa to cleave 50% (EC(50)) of (125)I-labeled pro-HGF during a 4-h period were 10 and 17 nm. Unlike other known activators, both FXIa and kallikrein processed pro-HGF by cleavage at two sites. Using N-terminal sequencing they were identified as the normal cleavage site Arg(494)-Val(495) and the novel site Arg(424)-His(425) located in the K4 domain of the alpha-chain. The identity of this unusual second cleavage site was firmly established by use of the double mutant HGF(R424A/R494E), which was completely resistant to cleavage by kallikrein and FXIa. Experiments with another mutant form, HGF(Arg(494) --> Glu), indicated that cleavage at the K4 site was independent of a prior cleavage at the primary, kinetically preferred Arg(494)-Val(495) site. The cleavage at the K4 site had no obvious consequences on HGF function, because it was fully capable of phosphorylating the c-Met receptor of A549 cells. This may be explained by the disulfide bond network in K4, which holds the cleaved alpha-chain together. In conclusion, the ability of plasma kallikrein and FXIa to activate pro-HGF in vitro raises the possibility that mediators of inflammation and blood coagulation may also regulate processes that involve the HGF/c-Met pathway, such as tissue repair and angiogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Mannan-binding lectin (MBL) initiates complement activation by binding to arrays of carbohydrates on the surfaces of pathogenic microorganisms and activating MBL-associated serine proteases (MASPs). Separate point mutations to the collagenous domain of human MBL are associated with immunodeficiency, caused by reduced complement activation by the variant MBLs as well as by lower serum MBL concentrations. In the work reported here, we have used the well characterized rat lectin pathway to analyze the molecular and functional defects associated with two of the variant proteins. Mutations Gly25 --> Asp and Gly28 --> Glu create comparable structural changes in rat MBL but the G28E variant activates complement >10-fold less efficiently than the G25D variant, which in turn has approximately 7-fold lower activity than wild-type MBL. Analysis of mutant MBL . MASP-2 complexes assembled from recombinant components shows that reduced complement activation by both mutant MBLs is caused by failure to activate MASP-2 efficiently on binding to a mannan-coated surface. Disruption of MBL-MASP-2 interactions as well as to changes in oligomeric structure and reduced binding to carbohydrate ligands compared with wild-type MBL probably account for the intermediate phenotype of the G25D variant. However, carbohydrate binding and MASP-2 activation are ostensibly completely decoupled in complexes assembled from the G28E mutant, such that the rate of MASP-2 activation is no greater than the basal rate of zymogen MASP-2 autoactivation. Analogous molecular defects in human MBL probably combine to create the mutant phenotypes of immunodeficient individuals.  相似文献   

13.
Steady-state and rapid kinetic studies were conducted to functionally characterize the overall and partial reactions of the Ca2+ transport cycle mediated by the human sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2 (SERCA2) isoforms, SERCA2a and SERCA2b, and 10 Darier disease (DD) mutants upon heterologous expression in HEK-293 cells. SERCA2b displayed a 10-fold decrease in the rate of Ca2+ dissociation from E1Ca2 relative to SERCA2a (i.e. SERCA2b enzyme manifests true high affinity at cytosolic Ca2+ sites) and a lower rate of dephosphorylation. These fundamental kinetic differences explain the increased apparent affinity for activation by cytosolic Ca2+ and the reduced catalytic turnover rate in SERCA2b. Relative to SERCA1a, both SERCA2 isoforms displayed a 2-fold decrease of the rate of E2 to E1Ca2 transition. Furthermore, seven DD mutants were expressed at similar levels as wild type. The expression level was 2-fold reduced for Gly23 --> Glu and Ser920 --> Tyr and 10-fold reduced for Gly749 --> Arg. Uncoupling between Ca2+ translocation and ATP hydrolysis and/or changes in the rates of partial reactions account for lack of function for 7 of 10 mutants: Gly23 --> Glu (uncoupling), Ser186 --> Phe, Pro602 --> Leu, and Asp702 --> Asn (block of E1 approximately P(Ca2) to E2-P transition), Cys318 --> Arg (uncoupling and 3-fold reduction of E2-P to E2 transition rate), and Thr357 --> Lys and Gly769 --> Arg (lack of phosphorylation). A 2-fold decrease in the E1 approximately P(Ca2) to E2-P transition rate is responsible for the 2-fold decrease in activity for Pro895 --> Leu. Ser920 --> Tyr is a unique DD mutant showing an enhanced molecular Ca2+ transport activity relative to wild-type SERCA2b. In this case, the disease may be a consequence of the low expression level and/or reduction of Ca2+ affinity and sensitivity to inhibition by lumenal Ca2+.  相似文献   

14.
The serine protease factor VIIa (FVIIa) in complex with its cellular cofactor tissue factor (TF) initiates the blood coagulation reactions. TF.FVIIa is also implicated in thrombosis-related disorders and constitutes an appealing therapeutic target for treatment of cardiovascular diseases. To this end, we generated the FVIIa active site inhibitor G17905, which displayed great potency toward TF.FVIIa (Ki = 0.35 +/- 0.11 nM). G17905 did not appreciably inhibit 12 of the 14 examined trypsin-like serine proteases, consistent with its TF.FVIIa-specific activity in clotting assays. The crystal structure of the FVIIa.G17905 complex provides insight into the molecular basis of the high selectivity. It shows that, compared with other serine proteases, FVIIa is uniquely equipped to accommodate conformational disturbances in the Gln217-Gly219 region caused by the ortho-hydroxy group of the inhibitor's aminobenzamidine moiety located in the S1 recognition pocket. Moreover, the structure revealed a novel, nonstandard conformation of FVIIa active site in the region of the oxyanion hole, a "flipped" Lys192-Gly193 peptide bond. Macromolecular substrate activation assays demonstrated that G17905 is a noncompetitive, slow-binding inhibitor. Nevertheless, G17905 effectively inhibited thrombus formation in a baboon arterio-venous shunt model, reducing platelet and fibrin deposition by approximately 70% at 0.4 mg/kg + 0.1 mg/kg/min infusion. Therefore, the in vitro potency of G17905, characterized by slow binding kinetics, correlated with efficacious antithrombotic activity in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
During blood coagulation, factor IXa (FIXa) activates factor X (FX) requiring Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa (FVIIIa). The serine protease domain of FIXa contains a Ca2+ site and is predicted to contain a Na+ site. Comparative homology analysis revealed that Na+ in FIXa coordinates to the carbonyl groups of residues 184A, 185, 221A, and 224 (chymotrypsin numbering). Kinetic data obtained at several concentrations of Na+ and Ca2+ with increasing concentrations of a synthetic substrate (CH3-SO2-d-Leu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide) were fit globally, assuming rapid equilibrium conditions. Occupancy by Na+ increased the affinity of FIXa for the synthetic substrate, whereas occupancy by Ca2+ decreased this affinity but increased k(cat) dramatically. Thus, Na+-FIXa-Ca2+ is catalytically more active than free FIXa. FIXa(Y225P), a Na+ site mutant, was severely impaired in Na+ potentiation of its catalytic activity and in binding to p-aminobenzamidine (S1 site probe) validating that substrate binding in FIXa is linked positively to Na+ binding. Moreover, the rate of carbamylation of NH2 of Val16, which forms a salt-bridge with Asp194 in serine proteases, was faster for FIXa(Y225P) and addition of Ca2+ overcame this impairment only partially. Further studies were aimed at delineating the role of the FIXa Na+ site in macromolecular catalysis. In the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid, with or without saturating FVIIIa, FIXa(Y225P) activated FX with similar K(m) but threefold reduced k(cat). Further, interaction of FVIIIa:FIXa(Y225P) was impaired fourfold. Our previous data revealed that Ca2+ binding to the protease domain increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa approximately 15-fold. The present data indicate that occupancy of the Na+ site further increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa fourfold and k(cat) threefold. Thus, in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipid, and FVIIIa, binding of Na+ to FIXa increases its biologic activity by approximately 12-fold, implicating its role in physiologic coagulation.  相似文献   

16.
The collagenases are members of the matrix metalloproteinase family (MMP) that degrade native triple-helical type I collagen. To understand the mechanism by which these enzymes recognize and cleave this substrate, we studied the substrate specificity of a modified form of MMP-1 (FC) in which its active site region (amino acids 212-254) had been replaced with that of MMP-9 (amino acids 395-437). Although this substitution increased the activity of the enzyme toward gelatin and the peptide substrate Mca-PLGL(Dpa)AR-NH2 by approximately 3- and approximately 11-fold, respectively, it decreased the type I collagenolytic activity of the enzyme to 0.13%. The replacement of Gly233, the only amino acid in this region of FC that is conserved in all collagenase family members, with the corresponding Glu residue in MMP-9 resulted in a substantial decrease in the type I collagenolytic activity of the enzyme without affecting its general proteolytic activities. The kinetic parameters of the FC/G233E mutant for the collagen substrate were similar to those of the chimeric enzyme. In addition, substituting Gly233 for Glu in the chimera increased the collagenolytic activity of the enzyme by 12-fold. Interestingly, replacing Glu415 in MMP-9 with Gly, its corresponding residue in FC, endowed the enzyme with type I collagenolytic activity. The catalytic activity of the MMP-9 mutant toward triple-helical type I collagen was 2-fold higher than that of the collagenase chimera. These data in conjunction with the X-ray crystal structure of FC indicate that Gly233 provides the flexibility necessary for the enzyme active site to change conformation upon substrate binding. The flexibility provided by the Gly residue is essential for type I collagenolytic activity.  相似文献   

17.
Factors VII, IX, and X play key roles in blood coagulation. Each protein contains an N-terminal gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain, followed by EGF1 and EGF2 domains, and the C-terminal serine protease domain. Protein C has similar domain structure and functions as an anticoagulant. During physiologic clotting, the factor VIIa-tissue factor (FVIIa*TF) complex activates both factor IX (FIX) and factor X (FX). FVIIa represents the enzyme, and TF represents the membrane-bound cofactor for this reaction. The substrates FIX and FX may utilize multiple domains in binding to the FVIIa*TF complex. To investigate the role of the EGF1 domain in this context, we expressed wild type FIX (FIX(WT)), FIX(Q50P), FIX(PCEGF1) (EGF1 domain replaced with that of protein C), FIX(DeltaEGF1) (EGF1 domain deleted), FX(WT), and FX(PCEGF1). Complexes of FVIIa with TF as well as with soluble TF (sTF) lacking the transmembrane region were prepared, and activations of WT and mutant proteins were monitored by SDS-PAGE and by enzyme assays. FVIIa*TF or FVIIa*sTF activated each mutant significantly more slowly than the FIX(WT) or FX(WT). Importantly, in ligand blot assays, FIX(WT) and FX(WT) bound to sTF, whereas mutants did not; however, all mutants and WT proteins bound to FVIIa. Further experiments revealed that the affinity of the mutants for sTF was reduced 3-10-fold and that the synthetic EGF1 domain (of FIX) inhibited FIX binding to sTF with K(i) of approximately 60 microm. Notably, each FIXa or FXa mutant activated FVII and bound to antithrombin, normally indicating correct folding of each protein. In additional experiments, FIXa with or without FVIIIa activated FX(WT) and FX(PCEGF1) normally, which is interpreted to mean that the EGF1 domain of FX does not play a significant role in its interaction with FVIIIa. Cumulatively, our data reveal that substrates FIX and FX in addition to interacting with FVIIa (enzyme) interact with TF (cofactor) using, in part, the EGF1 domain.  相似文献   

18.
It is widely accepted that the catalytic activity of serine proteases depends primarily on the Asp-His-Ser catalytic triad and other residues within the vicinity of this motif. Some of these residues form the oxyanion binding site that stabilizes the tetrahedral intermediate by hydrogen bonding to the negatively charged oxyanion. In acylaminoacyl peptidase from the thermophile Aeropyrum pernix, the main chain NH group of Gly369 is one of the hydrogen bond donors forming the oxyanion binding site. The side chain of His367, a conserved residue in acylaminoacyl peptidases across all species, fastens the loop holding Gly369. Determination of the crystal structure of the H367A mutant revealed that this loop, including Gly369, moves away considerably, accounting for the observed three orders of magnitude decrease in the specificity rate constant. For the wild-type enzyme ln(k(cat)/K(m)) vs. 1/T deviates from linearity indicating greater rate enhancement with increasing temperature for the dissociation of the enzyme-substrate complex compared with its decomposition to product. In contrast, the H367A variant provided a linear Arrhenius plot, and its reaction was associated with unfavourable entropy of activation. These results show that a residue relatively distant from the active site can significantly affect the catalytic activity of acylaminoacyl peptidase without changing the overall structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Factor XIa (FXIa) is a serine protease important for initiating the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation. Protease nexin 2 (PN2) is a Kunitz-type protease inhibitor secreted by activated platelets and a physiologically important inhibitor of FXIa. Inhibition of FXIa by PN2 requires interactions between the two proteins that are confined to the catalytic domain of the enzyme and the Kunitz protease inhibitor (KPI) domain of PN2. Recombinant PN2KPI and a mutant form of the FXI catalytic domain (FXIac) were expressed in yeast, purified to homogeneity, co-crystallized, and the structure of the complex was solved at 2.6 angstroms (Protein Data Bank code 1ZJD). In this complex, PN2KPI has a characteristic, disulfide-stabilized double loop structure that fits into the FXIac active site. To determine the contributions of residues within PN2KPI to its inhibitory activity, selected point mutations in PN2KPI loop 1 11TGPCRAMISR20 and loop 2 34FYGGC38 were tested for their ability to inhibit FXIa. The P1 site mutation R15A completely abolished its ability to inhibit FXIa. IC50 values for the wild type protein and the remaining mutants were as follows: PN2KPI WT, 1.28 nM; P13A, 5.92 nM; M17A, 1.62 nM; S19A, 1.86 nM; R20A, 5.67 nM; F34A, 9.85 nM. The IC50 values for the M17A and S19A mutants were not significantly different from those obtained with wild type PN2KPI. These functional studies and activated partial thromboplastin time analysis validate predictions made from the PN2KPI-FXIac co-crystal structure and implicate PN2KPI residues, in descending order of importance, Arg15, Phe34, Pro13, and Arg20 in FXIa inhibition by PN2KPI.  相似文献   

20.
Functional interaction among catalytic residues in subtilisin BPN'   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
P Carter  J A Wells 《Proteins》1990,7(4):335-342
Variants of the serine protease, subtilisin BPN', in which the catalytic triad residues (Ser-221, His-64, and Asp-32) are replaced singly or in combination by alanine retain activities with the substrate N-succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Pro-L-Phe-p-nitroanilide (sAAPF-pna) that are at least 10(3) to 10(4) above the non-enzymatic rate [Carter, P., Wells, J.A. Nature (London) 322:564-568, 1988]. A possible source of the residual activity was the hydrogen bond with the N delta 2 of Asn-155 that helps to stabilize the oxyanion generated in the tetrahedral transition state during amide bond hydrolysis by the wild-type enzyme. Replacing Asn-155 by Gly (N155G) lowers the turnover number (kcat) for sAAPF-pna by 150-fold with virtually no change in the Michaelis constant (KM). However, upon combining the N155G and S221A mutations to give N155G:S221A, kcat is actually 5-fold greater than for the S221A enzyme. Thus, the catalytic role of Asn-155 is dependent upon the presence of Ser-221. The residual activity of the N155G:S221A enzyme (approximately 10(4)-fold above the uncatalyzed rate) is not an artifact because it can be completely inhibited by the third domain of the turkey ovomucoid inhibitor (OMTKY3), which forms a strong 1:1 complex with the active site. The mutations N155G and S221A individually weaken the interaction between subtilisin and OMTKY3 by 1.8 and 2.0 kcal/mol, respectively, and in combination by 2.1 kcal/mol. This is consistent with disruption of stabilizing interactions around the reactive site carbonyl of the OMTKY3 inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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