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1.
Just one amino acid substitution (Trp86 replaced by His), which is more than 30 A away from the reactive site, changed the inhibitor, Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI), into a temporary inhibitor without a change in the inhibition constant. When the inhibitor was in excess of subtilisin BPN', the wild-type SSI was stable under protease attack, while the mutant inhibitor was hydrolyzed to peptide fragments in an all-or-none manner. The mechanism of this temporary inhibition induced by the amino acid substitution was studied on the basis of structural, thermodynamic, and kinetic data obtained by a combined use of NMR, hydrogen-deuterium exchange, differential scanning calorimetry, and gel filtration HPLC. The mutation did not induce major structural changes, and in particular, the structure of the enzyme-binding region was virtually unaffected. The denaturation temperature of SSI, however, was decreased by 10 deg upon mutation, although it still remained a thermostable protein with a denaturation temperature of 73 degrees C. Furthermore, the activation enthalpy for denaturation was reduced dramatically, to half that of the wild type. When the mutated SSI is present in excess of the enzyme, the proteolysis followed first-order reaction kinetics with respect to the total concentration of the mutated SSI molecules present. From these combined results, we conclude that the proteolysis proceeds not through the native form of the inhibitor in the inhibitor-enzyme complex but through the denatured (unfolded) form of the inhibitor whose fraction is increased by the mutation. This conclusion states that the necessary condition for being a serine protease inhibitor lies not only in the design of the reactive site structure that is highly resistant to protease attack but also in the suppression of such structural fluctuation that brings about cooperative denaturation. In contrast, when the protease existed in excess of the mutated inhibitor, the proteolysis reaction was accelerated by more than 2 orders of magnitude. Furthermore, the reaction occurred even in the wild-type SSI at a comparable rate as in the mutated protein. This indicates that in the enzyme excess case another, more efficient digestion mechanism involving fluctuation within the native manifold of the inhibitor dominates.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of subtilisin BPN' complexed with a proteinaceous inhibitor SSI (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) was refined at 1.8 A resolution to an R-factor of 0.177 with a root-mean-square deviation from ideal bond lengths of 0.014 A. The work finally established that the SSI-subtilisin complex is a Michaelis complex with a distance between the O gamma of active Ser221 and the carbonyl carbon of the scissile peptide bond being an intermediate value between a covalent bond and a van der Waals' contact, 2.7 A. This feature, as well as the geometry of the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole, is coincident with that found in other highly refined crystal structures of the complex of subtilisin Novo, subtilisin Carlsberg, bovine trypsin or Streptomyces griseus protease B with their proteinaceous inhibitors. The enzyme-inhibitor beta-sheet interaction is composed of two separate parts: that between the P1-P3 residues of SSI and the 125-127 chain segment (the "S1-3 site") of subtilisin and that between the P4-P6 residues of SSI and th 102-104 chain segment (the "S4-6 site") of subtilisin. The latter beta-interaction is unique to subtilisin. In contrast, the beta-sheet interaction previously found in the complex of subtilisin Novo and chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 or in the complex of subtilisin Carlsberg and Eglin C is distinct from the present complex in that the two types of beta-interactions are not separate. As for the flexibility of the molecules comprising the present complex, the following observations were made by comparing the B-factors for free and complexed SSI and comparing those for free and complexed subtilisin BPN'. The rigidification of the component molecules upon complex formation occurs in a very localized region: in SSI, the "primary" and "secondary" contact regions and the flanking region; in subtilisin BPN', the S1-3 and S4-6 sites and the flanking region.  相似文献   

3.
The crystal structure of the complex of a bacterial alkaline serine proteinase, subtilisin BPN', with its proteinaceous inhibitor SSI (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) was solved at 2.6 A resolution. Compared with other similar complexes involving serine proteinases of the trypsin family, the present structure is unique in several respects. (1) In addition to the usual antiparallel beta-sheet involving the P1, P2 and P3 residues of the inhibitor, the P4, P5 and P6 residues form an antiparallel beta-sheet with a previously unnoticed chain segment (residues 102 through 104, which was named the S4-6 site) of subtilisin BPN'. (2) The S4-6 site does not exist in serine proteinases of the trypsin family, whether of mammalian or microbial origin. (3) Global induced-fit movement seems to occur on SSI: a channel-like structure in SSI where hydrophobic side-chains are sandwiched between two lobes becomes about 2 A wider upon complexing with subtilisin. (4) The complex is most probably a Michaelis complex, as in most of the other complexes. (5) The main role of the "secondary contact region" of SSI seems to be to support the reactive site loop ("primary contact region"). Steric homology of the two contact regions between the inhibitors of the SSI family and the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor-ovomucoid inhibitor family is so high that it seems to indicate divergent evolutionary processes and to support the general notion as to the relationship of prokaryotic and eukaryotic genes put forward by Doolittle (1978).  相似文献   

4.
Subtilisin (Sbt) andStreptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) were analyzed either alone or together using sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). With all ratios of Sbt to SSI tested, the proteins formed a stoichiometric complex, and migrated abnormally at the top of the gel. Electroblotting and amino acid sequence analysis of the complex band showed both Sbt and SSI present at approximately equal molar ratios. When excess Sbt was present, it migrated as a free but still folded form slightly above the band corresponding to the complex. When excess SSI was present, it migrated as several species with molecular weights smaller than the intact form; in fact, the sequences of some of these species indicated that they lacked different amounts of N-terminal and possibly C-terminal residues.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structure of the molecular complex of eglin, a serine proteinase inhibitor from leeches, with subtilisin Carlsberg has been determined at 2.0 A resolution by the molecular replacement method. The complex has been refined by restrained-parameter least-squares. The present crystallographic R factor (Formula: see text) is 0.183. Eglin is a member of the potato inhibitor 1 family, a group of serine proteinase inhibitors lacking disulfide bonds. Eglin shows strong structural homology to CI-2, a related inhibitor from barley seeds. The structure of subtilisin Carlsberg in this complex is very similar to the known structure from barley seeds. The structure of subtilisin Carlsberg in this complex is very similar to the known structure of subtilisin novo, despite changes of 84 out of 274 amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
It has been shown that the P1 site (the center of the reactive site) of protease inhibitors corresponds to the specificity of the cognate protease, and consequently specificity of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) can be altered by substitution of a single amino acid at the P1 site. In this paper, to investigate whether similar correlation between inhibitory activity of mutated SSI and substrate preference of protease is observed for subtilisin BPN', which has broad substrate specificity, a complete set of mutants of SSI at the reaction site P1 (position 73) was constructed by cassette and site-directed mutagenesis and their inhibitory activities toward subtilisin BPN' were measured. Mutated SSIs which have a polar (Ser, Thr, Gln, Asn), basic (Lys, Arg), or aromatic amino acid (Tyr, Phe, Trp, His), or Ala or Leu, at the P1 site showed almost the same strong inhibitory activity toward subtilisin as the wild type (Met) SSI. However, the inhibitory activity of SSI variants with an acidic (Glu, Asp), or a beta-branched aliphatic amino acid (Val, Ile), or Gly or Pro, at P1 was decreased. The values of the inhibitor constant (Ki) of mutated SSIs toward subtilisin BPN' were consistent with the substrate preference of subtilisin BPN'. A linear correlation was observed between log(1/Ki) of mutated SSIs and log(1/Km) of synthetic substrates. These results demonstrate that the inhibitory activities of P1 site mutants of SSI are linearly related to the substrate preference of subtilisin BPN', and indicate that the binding mode of the inhibitors with the protease may be similar to that of substrates, as in the case of trypsin and chymotrypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Summary Four enhanced carbonyl carbon resonances were observed whenStreptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) was labeled by incorporating specifically labeled [1-13C]Cys. The13C signals were assigned by the15N,13C double-labeling method along with site-specific mutagenesis. Changes in the spectrum of the labeled protein ([C]SSI) were induced by reducing the disulfide bonds with various amounts of dithiothreitol (DTT). The results indicate that, in the absence of denaturant, the Cys71-Cys101 disulfide bond of each SSI subunit can be reduced selectively. This disulfide bond, which is in the vicinity of the reactive site scissile bond Met73-Val74, is more accessible to solvent than the other disulfide bond. Cys35-Cys50, which is embedded in the interior of SSI. This half-reduced SSI had 65% of the inhibitory activity of native SSI and maintained a conformation similar to that of the fully oxidized SSI. Reoxidation of the half reduced-folded SSI by air regenerates fully active SSI which is indistinguishable with intact SSI by NMR. In the presence of 3 M guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl), however, both disulfide bonds of each SSI subunit were readily reduced by DTT. The fully reduced-unfolded SSI spontaneously refolded into a native-like structure (fully reduced-folded state), as evidenced by the Cys carbonyl carbon chemical shifts, upon removing GuHCl and DTT from the reaction mixture. The time course of disulfide bond regeneration from this state by air oxidation was monitored by following the NMR spectral changes and the results indicated that the disulfide bond between Cys71 and Cys101 regenerates at a much faster rate than that between Cys35 and Cys50.Nomenclature of the various states of SSI that are observed in the present study Fully oxidized-folded native or intact (without GuHCl or DTT) - half reduced-folded (Cys71-Cys101 reduced; DTT without GuHCl) - inversely half reduced-folded (Cys35-Cys50 reduced; a reoxidation intermediate from fully reduced-folded state) - fully reduced-unfolded (reduced by DTT in the presence of GuHCl) - fully reduced-folded (an intermediate state obtained by removing DTT and GuHCl from the fully reduced-unfolded SSI reaction mixture)  相似文献   

8.
An ultraviolet absorption difference spectrum that is typical of a change in ionization state (pKa 9.7 leads to greater than 11.5) of a tyrosyl residue has been observed on the binding between Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) and subtilisin BPN' [EC 3.4.21.14] at alkaline pH, ionic strength 0.1 M, at 25 degrees C (Inouye, K., Tonomura, B., and Hiromi, K., submitted). When the complex of SSI and subtilisin BPN' is formed at an ionic strength of 0.6 M and pH 9.70, the characteristic features of the protonation of a tyrosyl residue in the difference spectrum are diminished. These results suggest that the pKa-shift of a tyrosyl residue observed at alkaline pH and lower ionic strength results from an electrostatic interaction. Nitration of tyrosyl residues of SSI and of subtilisin BPN' was performed with tetranitromethane (TNM). By measurements of the difference spectra observed on the binding of the tyrosyl-residue-nitrated SSI and the native subtilisin BPN', and on the binding of the native SSI and the tyrosyl-residue-nitrated subtilisin BPN' and alkaline pH, the tyrosyl residue in question was shown to be one out of the five tyrosyl residues of pKa 9.7 of the enzyme. This tyrosyl residue was probably either Tyr 217 or Tyr 104 on the basis of the reactivities of tyrosyl residues of the enzyme with TNM and their locations on the enzyme molecule. Carboxyl groups of SSI were modified by covalently binding glycine methyl ester with the aid of water-soluble carbodiimide, in order to neutralize the negative charges on SSI. In the difference spectrum which was observed on the binding of subtilisin BPN' and the 5.3-carboxyl-group-modified SSI at alkaline pH, the characteristic features of the protonation of a tyrosyl residue were essentially lost, and the difference spectrum is rather similar to that observed on the binding of the native SSI and the enzyme at neutral pH. This phenomenon indicates that the pKa of a tyrosyl residue of the enzyme is shifted upwards by interaction with carboxyl group(s) of SSI on the formation of the enzyme-inhibitor complex.  相似文献   

9.
Subtilisin BPN' was chemically converted to thiolsubtilisin and the interaction of this modified enzyme with Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) was examined. SSI competitively inhibited the esterolytic activity of thiolsubtilisin toward p-nitrophenyl acetate with a K1 value of 1.3 X 10(-5) M at pH 7.5 Spectrophotometric analysis of the interaction between SSI and the modified enzyme yielded a Kd value of 4 X 10(-5) M at pH 9.7. These values are about 10(5)-fold greater than the Kd value (less than 10(-9) M at pH 7.5) for the native enzyme. This indicates that the small change in the active site structure of subtilisin (Ser221 to Cys221) leads to a considerable decrease in the binding affinity (by about 6-7 kcal/mol) to SSI.  相似文献   

10.
Deuterium NMR spectroscopy was used to study internal motions of a deuterium-labeled single tryptophan (Trp) residue (per subunit) of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) in solution. The free inhibitor with the five ring protons of the Trp replaced with deuterons showed a narrow resonance component (56 Hz) of about one-quarter of the total intensity, in addition to the broad resonance component (about 600 Hz) at 25 degrees C, showing that it exits in an equilibrium mixture of two conformers, in one of which the tryptophan side chain is highly mobile. In analogy to the two structures of SSI found in the crystal, these two conformers were attributed to the one in which the contact between the alpha-lobe and the beta-lobe of the subunit is tight and the other in which the same contact is loose. When SSI forms a complex with subtilisin BPN', the broad component becomes invisibly broad, but the narrow component increases with even further narrowing, suggesting that the binding to the enzyme favors the "loose" conformer over the "tight" conformer.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Thermal denaturation of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor was studied by means of circular dichroism (CD) measurements in the far-UV and near-UV regions. The denaturation was found to be largely reversible; the partial irreversibility was associated with a slight loss of the inhibitory activity. Difference CD spectra in the far-UV region clarified the existence of two distinct steps in the thermal transition of the secondary structure. The first step below 80 degrees C is attributable to a partial conformational change in the alpha-helix portion, whereas the second step between 80 degrees C and 94 degrees C is attributable to a major conformational change involving the beta-sheet portion. On the assumption that the major denaturation involves dissociation of the SSI into its subunits, the enthalpy and entropy changes were determined to be 216 kcal X mol-1 and to be 603 cal X deg-1 X mol-1, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
A proteinaceous protease inhibitor was isolated from the culture broth of Streptomyces lividans 66 by a series of purification steps (salting out by ammonium sulfate, ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, hydrophobic chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose, and gel-filtration on Sephacryl S-200), and was named S. lividans protease inhibitor (SLPI). The purified SLPI existed in a dimeric form consisting of two identical subunits, each of which was composed of 107 amino acids. SLPI exhibited strong inhibitory activity toward subtilisin BPN'. These features were similar to those of protein protease inhibitors produced by other Streptomyces (SSI family inhibitor). In addition, SLPI was capable of inhibiting trypsin with an inhibitor constant (Ki) of about 10(-9) M. The primary structure of SLPI and location of two disulfide bridges were homologous to those of the other serine protease inhibitors of Streptomyces. The reactive site of SLPI was found to be Arg67-Glu68 from the sequence analysis of cleaved SLPI which was produced by acidification of subtilisin-SLPI complex. An Arg residue at the P1 site was consistent with the trypsin-inhibitory property of SLPI. Sequence comparison with other members of the SSI family revealed that amino acid replacements in SLPI were mainly localized on the surface of the SLPI molecule, and many of the amino acid residues in beta-sheets and hydrophobic core were well conserved.  相似文献   

14.
Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI), a dimeric protein that strongly inhibits subtilisins, was shown to form tight inhibitory complexes with Streptomyces griseus proteases A and B (SGPA and SGPB). The apparent dissociation constants of the SGPA-SSI and SGPB-SSI complexes were found to be orders of magnitude less than those of subtilisin-SSI complexes. Using the known atomic coordinates for SGPA and SSI, the highly complementary nature of the surface geometries of the two proteins was confirmed by a computer graphics study, which led to a proposed structure for the SGPA-SSI complex. Kinetic studies further suggested that the SSI dimer can bind two molecules of either SGPA or SGPB, and the 2:1-complexes (consisting of one inhibitor dimer and one enzyme molecule) apparently possess lower intrinsic dissociation constants than the 2:2-complexes. It was also shown that both of SGPA and SGPB are inhibited by both soybean trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz) and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz), but far less strongly than by SSI.  相似文献   

15.
A secretory expression system for Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) was established in a heterologous host, Streptomyces lividans 66, by introducing the 1.8-kbp BglII/SalI fragment containing SSI gene into the Streptomyces multicopy vector, pIJ 702. The expression of SSI did not depend on the orientation of the 1.8-kbp BglII/SalI fragment or on the promoter for tyrosinase gene (mel) in pIJ 702, which suggested that this fragment also carries the SSI promoter. The expressed SSI in S.lividans 66 was secreted into the culture medium in a large amount, as observed with the original strain, S. albogriseolus S-3253. Amino acid sequence analysis showed that the SSI secreted from S. lividans 66 contained three additional amino acid residues in the NH2-terminal region. The inhibitory activity toward subtilisin BPN' and the antigenic activity of the SSI secreted from S. lividans 66 were found to be identical with those of authentic SSI.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Protein engineering of disulfide bonds in subtilisin BPN'   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
C Mitchinson  J A Wells 《Biochemistry》1989,28(11):4807-4815
Five single-disulfide mutants were studied in subtilisin BPN', a cysteine-free, secreted serine protease from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens. The disulfides were engineered between residues 26-232, 29-119, 36-210, 41-80, and 148-243. These bonds connected a variety of secondary structural elements, located in buried or exposed positions at least 10 A from the catalytic Ser-221, and linked residues that were separated by 39 up to 206 amino acids. All disulfide bonds formed in the enzyme when the expressed protein was secreted from Bacillus subtilis, and the disulfides had only minor effects on the enzyme kinetics. Although these disulfide bonds varied by over 50-fold in their equilibrium constants for reduction with dithiothreitol, there was no correlation between the strength of the disulfide bond and the stability it imparted to the enzyme to irreversible inactivation. In some cases, the disulfide-bonded protein was stabilized greatly relative to its reduced counterpart. However, no disulfide mutant was substantially more stable than wild-type subtilisin BPN'. Some of these results can be rationalized by destabilizing effects of the cysteine mutations that disrupt interactions present in the folded enzyme structure. It is also possible that the rate of irreversible inactivation depends upon the kinetics and not the thermodynamics of unfolding and so the entropically stabilizing effect expected from a disulfide bond may not apply.  相似文献   

18.
Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) has been shown to exist as a dimer of molecular weight of 23,000 in 25 mm phosphate buffer, at pH 7.0 (the ionic strength 0.1 m with NaCl), 25.0 °C in the concentration range of 0.01–10 mg/ml. In the present paper, the effects of an anionic detergent, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), on the structure and function of SSI has been examined, [a]The molecular weight of SSI was measured in the SDS solution with the sedimentation equilibrium method of the multicomponent-polydisperse system under the conditions described above, and thereby it has been shown that SSI dissociates into monomers with SDS of 0.03–0.12% (wv) when the concentration of SSI is 1.00 mg/ml (87.0 μm as monomer), [b]As SSI dissociates into monomers, there were observed blue-shift troughs at 293 nm and 300 nm due to a tryptophyl residue and a red-shift of phenylalanyl residues in the absorption difference spectrum induced by the binding of SSI and SDS. [c] The inhibitory activity of SSI against subtilisin BPN′-catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate was measured under the conditions that SSI is in monomer in the SDS solution. Unexpectedly half of the inhibitory activity of SSI against subtilisin BPN′ is lost in the SDS solution.  相似文献   

19.
The binding of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) to alpha-chymotrypsin (CT) (EC 3.4.21.1) was studied by isothermal and differential scanning calorimetry at pH 7.0. Thermodynamic quantities for the binding of SSI to the enzyme were derived as functions of temperature from binding constants (S. Matsumori, B. Tonomura, and K. Hiromi, private communication) and isothermal calorimetric experiments at 5-30 degrees C. At 25 degrees C, the values are delta G degrees b = -29.9 kJ mol-1, delta Hb = +18.7 (+/- 1.3) kJ mol-1, delta S degrees b = +0.16 kJ K-1 mol-1, and delta C p,b = -1.08 (+/- 0.11) kJ mol-1. The binding of SSI to CT is weak compared with its binding to subtilisin [Uehara, Y., Tonomura, B., & Hiromi, K. (1978) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 84, 1195-1202; Takahashi, K., & Fukada, H. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 297-300]. This difference is due primarily to a less favorable enthalpy change in the formation of the complex with CT. The hydrophobic effect is presumably the major source of the entropy and heat capacity changes which accompany the binding process. The unfolding temperature of the complex is about 7 degrees C higher than that of the free enzyme. The enthalpy and the heat capacity changes for the unfolding of CT were found to be 814 kJ mol-1 and 17.3 kJ K-1 mol-1 at 49 degrees C. The same quantities for the unfolding of the SSI-CT complex are 1183 kJ mol-1 and 39.2 kJ K-1 mol-1 at 57 degrees C.  相似文献   

20.
The crystal structure of the complex of subtilisin BPN′ (EC 3.4.21.14) with its protein inhibitor (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) was solved at 4.3 Å resolution, thus establishing the following. (1) Two subtilisin BPN′ molecules (2E) associate with one dimeric inhibitor molecule (I2) to form the complex molecule E2I2. (2) The conformation of neither the inhibitor nor subtilisin BPN′ undergoes any detectable change at this resolution upon complex formation. (3) The inhibitor binds to subtilisin to form an antiparallel β-sheet, as in the case of trypsin/ trypsin inhibitor complexes. (4) The scissible bond of the inhibitor is between Met73′ and Val74′, as proposed earlier (Ikenaka et al., 1974). (5) The protein inhibitor and the substrates bind to subtilisin BPN′ in essentially the same way.  相似文献   

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