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Substrate Recognition of Anthrax Lethal Factor Examined by Combinatorial and Pre-steady-state Kinetic Approaches
Authors:Maria Yu. Zakharova   Nikita A. Kuznetsov   Svetlana A. Dubiley   Arina V. Kozyr   Olga S. Fedorova   Dmitry M. Chudakov   Dmitry G. Knorre   Igor G. Shemyakin   Alexander G. Gabibov     Alexander V. Kolesnikov
Affiliation:From the M. M. Shemyakin & Yu. A. Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117997, ;the §Institute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk 630090, and ;the State Research Center for Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Obolensk, Moscow Region 142279, Russia
Abstract:Lethal factor (LF), a zinc-dependent protease of high specificity produced by Bacillus anthracis, is the effector component of the binary toxin that causes death in anthrax. New therapeutics targeting the toxin are required to reduce systemic anthrax-related fatalities. In particular, new insights into the LF catalytic mechanism will be useful for the development of LF inhibitors. We evaluated the minimal length required for formation of bona fide LF substrates using substrate phage display. Phage-based selection yielded a substrate that is cleaved seven times more efficiently by LF than the peptide targeted in the protein kinase MKK6. Site-directed mutagenesis within the metal-binding site in the LF active center and within phage-selected substrates revealed a complex pattern of LF-substrate interactions. The elementary steps of LF-mediated proteolysis were resolved by the stopped-flow technique. Pre-steady-state kinetics of LF proteolysis followed a four-step mechanism as follows: initial substrate binding, rearrangement of the enzyme-substrate complex, a rate-limiting cleavage step, and product release. Examination of LF interactions with metal ions revealed an unexpected activation of the protease by Ca2+ and Mn2+. Based on the available structural and kinetic data, we propose a model for LF-substrate interaction. Resolution of the kinetic and structural parameters governing LF activity may be exploited to design new LF inhibitors.Anthrax is an infectious disease caused by the encapsulated, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Systemic forms of the disease, such as inhalational anthrax, are characterized by nonspecific early symptoms, rapid progression, and lethality approaching 100% (1). The lethality of inhalational anthrax is high even with antibiotic treatment and is caused by accumulation of secreted anthrax toxin (2), which consists of three proteins as follows: protective antigen (PA),2 lethal factor (LF), and edema factor. PA binds to membrane receptors, forms pore complexes, and translocates LF and edema factor into the host cell (3, 4). The PA·LF complex is known as the lethal toxin, a virulence factor with pleiotropic action that facilitates establishment of the B. anthracis infection. LF is a Zn2+-dependent metalloprotease related to the thermolysin family that cleaves mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases (5).Although the complete mechanism by which LF causes fatal intoxication is still unclear, inhibition of LF proteolytic activity may be an efficient means of preventing anthrax lethality. A better understanding of the LF catalytic mechanism will facilitate rational design and optimization of LF inhibitors with potential clinical applicability. Recent structural (6, 7), mechanistic (8), and in vivo studies (9, 10) of LF point to a sophisticated catalytic mechanism involving accurate recognition of multiple target substrates.Here we use substrate phage display and stopped-flow fluorimetry kinetics to examine both the substrate specificity and elementary steps of substrate processing by LF. Our data allow us to construct a working model of LF-substrate binding and cleavage.
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