Local Conformation and Dynamics of Isoleucine in the Collagenase Cleavage Site Provide a Recognition Signal for Matrix Metalloproteinases |
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Authors: | Jianxi Xiao Rayna M. Addabbo Janelle L. Lauer Gregg B. Fields Jean Baum |
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Affiliation: | From the ‡Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, BIOMAPS Institute, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854 and ;the §Department of Biochemistry, The University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas 78229 |
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Abstract: | The mechanism by which enzymes recognize the “uniform” collagen triple helix is not well understood. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) cleave collagen after the Gly residue of the triplet sequence Gly∼[Ile/Leu]-[Ala/Leu] at a single, unique, position along the peptide chain. Sequence analysis of types I-III collagen has revealed a 5-triplet sequence pattern in which the natural cleavage triplets are always flanked by a specific distribution of imino acids. NMR and MMP kinetic studies of a series of homotrimer peptides that model type III collagen have been performed to correlate conformation and dynamics at, and near, the cleavage site to collagenolytic activity. A peptide that models the natural cleavage site is significantly more active than a peptide that models a potential but non-cleavable site just 2-triplets away and NMR studies show clearly that the Ile in the leading chain of the cleavage peptide is more exposed to solvent and less locally stable than the Ile in the middle and lagging chains. We propose that the unique local instability of Ile at the cleavage site in part arises from the placement of the conserved Pro at the P3 subsite. NMR studies of peptides with Pro substitutions indicate that the local dynamics of the three chains are directly modulated by their proximity to Pro. Correlation of peptide activity to NMR data shows that a single locally unstable chain at the cleavage site, rather than two or three labile chains, is more favorable for cleavage by MMP-1 and may be the determining factor for collagen recognition. |
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Keywords: | Collagen Kinetics Matrix Metalloproteinase NMR Peptides |
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