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1.
The sequence specificities of human 72-kDa fibroblast gelatinase (type IV collagenase), human 92-kDa neutrophil gelatinase (type IV collagenase), and putative metalloproteinase (PUMP or matrilysin) have been examined by measuring the rate of hydrolysis of over 50 synthetic oligopeptides covering the P4 through P4' subsites of the substrate. The peptides investigated in this paper were those employed in our previous study which systematically examined the sequence specificity of human fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases [Netzel-Arnett et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 6747]. The initial rate of hydrolysis of the P1-P1' bond of each peptide has been measured under first-order conditions ([S0] < KM), and kcat/KM values have been calculated from the initial rates. The specificities of these five metalloproteinases are similar, but distinct, with the largest differences occurring at subsites P1, P1', and P3'. The specificities of the two gelatinases are the most similar to each other. They tolerate only small amino acids such as Gly and Ala in subsite P1. In contrast, larger residues such as Met, Pro, Gln, and Glu are also accommodated well by PUMP. All five enzymes prefer hydrophobic, aliphatic residues in subsite P1'. PUMP exhibits a stronger preference for Leu in this subsite than is shown by the other enzymes. The P3' subsite specificities of the gelatinases and collagenases are very similar but different from those of PUMP which particularly prefers Met in this position. The specificity data from this study allow the design of optimized substrates and selective inhibitors for these metalloproteinases.  相似文献   

2.
Neprilysin is a neutral peptidase that cleaves small peptide substrates on the amino-side of hydrophobic amino acid residues. In the present study, we have used inhibition of non-mutated and mutated enzymes with dipeptide inhibitors and hydrolysis of the substrate [Leu5, Arg6]enkephalin in order to evaluate the contribution of the S2' subsite to substrate and inhibitor binding. Our results suggest that (1) Arg-102 and Asn-542 provide major contributions to the interaction of the enzyme with the P2' residue of the substrate, (2) the S2' subsite is vast and can accommodate bulky side chains, and (3) Arg-102 restricts access to the S2' subsite to some side chains such as arginine.  相似文献   

3.
A vector projection method is proposed to predict the cleavability of oligopeptides by extended-specificity site proteases. For an enzyme with eight specificity subsites the substrate octapeptide can be uniquely expressed as a vector in an 8-dimensional space, whose eight bases correspond to the amino acids at the eight subsites, P4, P3, P2, P1, P1', P2', P3', and P4', respectively. The component of such a characteristic vector on each of the eight bases is defined as the frequency of an amino acid occurring at a given site. These frequencies were derived from a set of octapeptides known to be cleaved by HIV protease. The cleavability of an octapeptide can then be estimated from the projection of its characteristic vector on an idealized, optimally cleavable vector. The high ratio of correct prediction vs. total prediction for the data in both the training and the testing sets indicates that the new method is self-consistent and efficient. It provides a rapid and accurate algorithm for analyzing the specificity of any multi-subsite enzyme for which there is no coupling between subsites. In particular, it is useful for predicting the cleavability of an oligopeptide by either HIV-1 or HIV-2 protease, and hence offers a supplementary means for finding effective inhibitors of HIV protease as potential drugs against AIDS.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: The serine protease prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a useful clinical marker for prostatic malignancy. PSA is a member of the kallikrein subgroup of the (chymo)trypsin serine protease family, but differs from the prototypical member of this subgroup, tissue kallikrein, in possessing a specificity more similar to that of chymotrypsin than trypsin. We report the use of two strategies, substrate phage display and iterative optimization of natural cleavage sites, to identify labile sequences for PSA cleavage. RESULTS: Iterative optimization and substrate phage display converged on the amino-acid sequence SS(Y/F)Y decreases S(G/S) as preferred subsite occupancy for PSA. These sequences were cleaved by PSA with catalytic efficiencies as high as 2200-3100 M-1 s-1, compared with values of 2-46 M-1 s-1 for peptides containing likely physiological target sequences of PSA from the protein semenogelin. Substrate residues that bind to secondary (non-S1) subsites have a critical role in defining labile substrates and can even cause otherwise disfavored amino acids to bind in the primary specificity (S1) pocket. CONCLUSION: The importance of secondary subsites in defining both the specificity and efficiency of cleavage suggests that substrate recognition by PSA is mediated by an extended binding site. Elucidation of preferred subsite occupancy allowed refinement of the structural model of PSA and should facilitate the development of more sensitive activity-based assays and the design of potent inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
The interactions between bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) and its RNA substrate extend beyond the scissile P-O5' bond. Enzymic subsites interact with the bases and phosphoryl groups of the bound substrate. Those residues interacting with the phosphoryl group comprise the P0, P1, and P2 subsites, with the scissile bond residing in the P1 subsite. Here, the function of the P0 and P2 subsites of RNase A is characterized in detail. Lys66 (P0 subsite) and Lys7 and Arg10 (P2 subsite) were replaced with alanine residues. Wild-type RNase A and the K66A, K7A/R10A, and K7A/R10A/K66A variants were evaluated as catalysts for the cleavage of poly(cytidylic acid) [poly(C)] and for their abilities to bind to single-stranded DNA, a substrate analogue. The values of kcat and Km for poly(C) cleavage were affected by altering the P0 and P2 subsites. The kcat/Km values for poly(C) cleavage by the K66A, K7A/R10A, and K7A/R10A/K66A variants were 3-fold, 60-fold, and 300-fold lower, respectively, than that of wild-type RNase A. These values indicate that the P0 and P2 subsites contribute 0.70 and 2.46 kcal/mol, respectively, to transition-state binding. Binding experiments indicate that the P0 and P2 subsites contribute 0.92 and 1.21 kcal/mol, respectively, to ground-state binding. Thus, the P0 subsite makes a uniform contribution toward binding the ground state and the transition state, whereas the P2 subsite differentiates, binding more tightly to the transition state than to the ground state. In addition, nucleic acid binding to wild-type RNase A is strongly dependent on NaCl concentration, but this dependence is diminished upon alteration of the P0 or P2 subsite. The logarithm of Kd is a linear function of the logarithm of [Na+] over the range 0.018 M 相似文献   

6.
The Rous sarcoma virus protease displays a high degree of specificity and catalyzes the cleavage of only a limited number of amino acid sequences. This specificity is governed by interactions between side chains of eight substrate amino acids and eight corresponding subsite pockets within the homodimeric enzyme. We have examined these complex interactions in order to learn how to introduce changes into the retroviral protease (PR) that direct it to cleave substrates. Mutant enzymes with altered substrate specificity and wild-type or greater catalytic rates have been constructed previously by substituting single key amino acids in each of the eight enzyme subsites with those residues found in structurally related positions of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 PR. These individual amino acid substitutions have now been combined into one enzyme, resulting in a highly active mutant Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) protease that displays many characteristics associated with the HIV-1 enzyme. The hybrid protease is capable of catalyzing the cleavage of a set of HIV-1 viral polyprotein substrates that are not recognized by the wild-type RSV enzyme. Additionally, the modified PR is inhibited completely by the HIV-1 PR-specific inhibitor KNI-272 at concentrations where wild-type RSV PR is unaffected. These results indicate that the major determinants that dictate RSV and HIV-1 PR substrate specificity have been identified. Since the viral protease is a homodimer, the rational design of enzymes with altered specificity also requires a thorough understanding of the importance of enzyme symmetry in substrate selection. We demonstrate here that the enzyme homodimer acts symmetrically in substrate selection with each enzyme subunit being capable of recognizing both halves of a peptide substrate equally.  相似文献   

7.
The active-site cleft of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) is lined with cationic residues that interact with a bound nucleic acid. Those residues interacting with the phosphoryl groups comprise the P0, P1, and P2 subsites, with the scissile P-O5' bond residing in the P1 subsite. Coulombic interactions between the P0 and P2 subsites and phosphoryl groups of the substrate were characterized previously [Fisher, B. M., Ha, J.-H., and Raines, R. T. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 12121-12132]. Here, the interactions between these subsites and the active-site residues His12 and His119 are described in detail. A protein variant in which the cationic residues in these subsites (Lys66 in the P0 subsite and Lys7 and Arg10 in the P2 subsite) were replaced with alanine was crystallized, both free and with bound 3'-uridine monophosphate (3'-UMP). Structures of K7A/R10A/K66A RNase A and the K7A/R10A/K66A RNase A.3'-UMP complex were determined by X-ray diffraction analysis to resolutions of 2.0 and 2.1 A, respectively. There is little observable change between these structures and that of wild-type RNase A, either free or with bound 3'-cytidine monophosphate. K7A/R10A/K66A RNase A was evaluated for its ability to cleave UpA, a dinucleotide substrate that does not span the P0 or the P2 subsites. In comparison to the wild-type enzyme, the value of kcat was decreased by 5-fold and that of kcat/Km was decreased 10-fold, suggesting that these remote subsites interact with the active site. These interactions were characterized by determining the pKa values of His12 and His119 at 0.018 and 0.142 M Na+, both in wild-type RNase A and the K7A/R10A/K66A variant. The side chains of Lys7, Arg10, and Lys66 depress the pKa values of these histidine residues, and this depression is sensitive to the salt concentration. In addition, the P0 and P2 subsites influence the interaction of His12 and His119 with each other, as demonstrated by changes in the cooperativity that gives rise to microscopic pKa values. Finally, the affinity of 3'-UMP for wild-type RNase A and the K7A/R10A/K66A variant at 0.018 and 0.142 M Na+ was determined by isothermal titration calorimetry. 3'-UMP binds to the variant protein with 5-fold weaker affinity at 0.018 M Na+ and 3-fold weaker affinity at 0.142 M Na+ than it binds to wild-type RNase A. Together these data demonstrate that long-range Coulombic interactions are an important feature in catalysis by RNase A.  相似文献   

8.
The enzymatic catalysis of polymeric substrates such as proteins, polysaccharides or nucleic acids requires precise alignment between the enzyme and the substrate regions flanking the region occupying the active site. In the case of ribonucleases, enzyme-substrate binding may be directed by electrostatic interactions between the phosphate groups of the RNA molecule and basic amino acid residues on the enzyme. Specific interactions between the nitrogenated bases and particular amino acids in the active site or adjacent positions may also take place. The substrate-binding subsites of ribonuclease A have been characterized by structural and kinetic studies. In addition to the active site (p1), the role of other noncatalytic phosphate-binding subsites in the correct alignment of the polymeric substrate has been proposed. p2 and p0 have been described as phosphate-binding subsites that bind the phosphate group adjacent to the 3' side and 5' side, respectively, of the phosphate in the active site. In both cases, basic amino acids (Lys-7 and Arg-10 in p2, and Lys-66 in p0) are involved in binding. However, these binding sites play different roles in the catalytic process of ribonuclease A. The electrostatic interactions in p2 are important both in catalysis and in the endonuclease activity of the enzyme, whilst the p0 electrostatic interaction contributes only to binding of the RNA.  相似文献   

9.
Yapsin 1, a novel aspartic protease with unique specificity for basic residues, was shown to cleave CCK13-33 at Lys23. Molecular modeling of yapsin 1 identified the active-site cleft to have negative residues close to or within the S6, S3, S2, S1, S1', S2', and S3' pockets and is more electronegative than rhizopuspepsin or endothiapepsin. In particular, the S2' subsite has three negative charges in and close to this pocket that can provide strong electrostatic interactions with a basic residue. The model, therefore, predicts that substrates with a basic residue in the P1 position would be favored with additional basic residues binding to the other electronegative pockets. A deletion of six residues close to the S1 pocket in yapsin 1, relative to rhizopuspepsin and other aspartic proteases of known 3D structure, is likely to affect its specificity. The model was tested using CCK13-33 analogues. We report that yapsin 1 preferentially cleaves a CCK13-33 substrate with a basic residue in the P1 position since the substrates with Ala in P1 were not cleaved. Furthermore, the cleavage efficiency of yapsin 1 was enhanced for CCK13-33 analogues with arginine residues flanking the P1 position. An alanine residue, substituting for the arginine residue in the P6 position in CCK13-33, resulted in a 50% reduction in the cleavage efficiency. Substitution with arginine residues downstream of the cleavage site at the P2', P3', or P6' position increased the cleavage efficiency by 21-, 3- and 7-fold, respectively. Substitution of Lys23 in CCK13-33 with arginine resulted not only in cleavage after the substituted arginine residue, but also forced a cleavage after Met25, suggesting that an arginine residue in the S2' pocket is so favorable that it can affect the primary specificity of yapsin 1. These results are consistent with the predictions from the molecular model of yapsin 1.  相似文献   

10.
The substrate specificity of honeydew melon (Cucumis melo var. inodorus Naud) protease D was studied by the use of synthetic substrates and oligopeptides derived from a protein hydrolyzate. The hydrolysis rates of succinyl-(L-Ala)1-3-p-nitroanilide (Suc-(Ala)1-3-pNA) the hydrolysis rate progressively rose in proportion to the increased chain length. Benzyloxycarbonyl-L-tyrosine p-nitrophenyl ester (Z-Tyr-ONp) and benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester (Bz-Tyr-OEt) were cleaved by honeydew melon protease D, but benzoyl-L-arginine p-nitroanilide (Bz-Arg-pNA), benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysine p-nitrophenyl ester (Z-Lys-ONp) and tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester (Tos-Arg-OMe) were not hydrolyzed. Contrary to the results obtained by using synthetic substrates, the carboxyl sides of charged amino acid residues were preferentially cleaved by the enzyme in the oligopeptide substrates. The substrates that had charged or polar amino acids at P2 positions were not cleaved. On the other hand, the non-polar amino acid or proline at P2 were favored for hydrolysis. The information concerning the subsite of protease D was obtained and is useful for synthesis of a good substrate. As it is distinct from molecular mass, the substrate specificity of honeydew melon protease D is most analogous to cucumisin [EC 3.4.21.25] among serine proteases from cucurbitaceous plants.  相似文献   

11.
Human cathepsin A ("lysosomal protective protein"; E.C.3.4.16.5) is a multifunctional lysosomal protein which forms a high-molecular-weight complex with beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase, protecting them against intralysosomal proteolysis. In addition to this protective function, cathepsin A is a serine carboxypeptidase and the understanding of its catalytic function requires a definition of its substrate specificity. For this purpose, we used a combined experimental [Pshezhetsky, A. V., Vinogradova, M. V., Elsliger, M.-A., El-Zein, F., Svedas, V.K., & Potier, M. (1995) Anal. Biochem. 230, 303-307] and theoretical approach comparing cathepsin A to two different homologous carboxypeptidases of the same family: yeast carboxypeptidase Y and wheat carboxypeptidase II. We computed the energies involved in substrate binding to the S1' subsite (C-terminal) of cathepsin A using a structural model based on the X-ray structure of the homologous wheat carboxypeptidase II. The binding energies of N-blocked Phe-Xaa dipeptide substrates to the active sites of cathepsin A, wheat carboxypeptidase II, and yeast carboxypeptidase Y were estimated using a molecular mechanics force field supplemented with a solvation energy term. This theoretical analysis showed a good correlation with the experimentally determined free energies of substrate binding. This result validates the use of this approach to analyze the energetics of substrate binding to the S1' subsite and provides a rational interpretation of serine carboxypeptidase-substrate interactions in molecular terms. We conclude that the three serine carboxypeptidases have similar affinities for substrates with hydrophobic P1' amino acid residues but that the wheat enzyme has an additional capacity for binding positively charged P1' residues. Finally, the substrate specificity of human cathepsin A is very similar to that of carboxypeptidase Y, with a high binding affinity for substrates with hydrophobic P1' residues, but the affinity of cathepsin A for P1; Phe residue is higher than for the Leu residue.  相似文献   

12.
We previously identified distal and proximal arginine residues in the N-terminal portion and an aromatic amino acid at position 1 (P1' site3) relative to the cleavage site as important recognition signals in substrates of mitochondrial processing peptidase [Niidome, T., Kitada, S., Shimokata, K., Ogishima, T., and Ito, A. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 24714-24722; Ogishima, T., Niidome, T., Shimokata, K., Kitada, S., and Ito, A. (1995) ibid. 270, 30322-30326]. To further elucidate the elements required for the specific recognition and cleavage by the enzyme, we synthesized synthetic peptides that possessed only the distal and proximal arginine residues and phenylalanine at the P1' site in a poly alanine sequence, and analyzed the processing reaction toward them. They were not cleaved by the peptidase although they inhibited the peptidase activity. However, when serine was introduced into the C-terminal portions of the sequence, processing was observed. The efficiency of the resultant peptides improved as the number of serine residues was increased. A peptide with serine or histidine at P2' and threonine at P3' was processed most efficiently. These results indicate that the processing reaction catalyzed by the peptidase depends not only on the N-terminal portion but also on the C-terminal portion from the cleavage site in the substrates.  相似文献   

13.
The characterization of the specificity of alkaline protease from Pseudomonas aeruginosa has not yet been clearly defined. Some previous results suggested that its specificity was influenced more by amino acids far from the hydrolyzed peptide bond, than by amino acids in P1 or P'1 position. From other data, it was a C-(COOH)-type endoprotease where the preferential amino acid in P1 position was an arginine residue. We have studied the hydrolysis of several biologically active peptides. Many various sites of cleavage have been characterized but no arginine in P1 position was found, despite the presence of arginine in the peptide sequence. In fact P1 and P'1 position could be occupied by various amino acids. It seems unlikely that Pseudomonas alkaline protease may only be considered as a protease specific to arginine in P1 position. On the other hand, we have observed that increase of the peptide chain length led to an important increase of the hydrolysis rate, suggesting an extended number of subsites.  相似文献   

14.
The serine protease trypsin was converted into a site-specific protease which hydrolyzes peptides between dibasic residues. Trypsin exhibits a high S1 specificity for Arg and Lys residues. However, the S1' specificity of trypsin is very broad, with only a slight preference for hydrophobic residues in P1'. We replaced Lys60 with Glu and Asp to introduce a high specificity for basic residues into the S1' site of trypsin. Both mutations cause a dramatic increase in the S1' specificity for Arg and Lys as measured by acyl transfer reactions. In K60E, the preference for Arg increases 70-fold while the preference for P1'-Lys increases 12-fold. In contrast, the preferences for other P1' residues either decrease slightly or remain the same. Thus, K60E prefers P1'-Arg over most other P1' residues by 2 orders of magnitude. Similar results are obtained when P1' specificity is measured in peptide cleavage assays. K60D exhibits an S1' specificity profile very similar to that of K60E, although the P1'-Arg preference is reduced by a factor of 2.5. Molecular modeling studies suggest that the high S1' specificity for Arg in K60E may be due to the formation of a salt bridge between Glu60 and the P1'-Arg of the substrate.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic and product analyses of the reactions of dialkylglycine decarboxylase with several alternative substrates are presented. Rate constants for the reactions of amino and keto acids of several substrates decrease logarithmically with increasing side-chain size. Conversely, kcat for L-amino acid decarboxylation increases with side-chain size. These and other data confirm a proposed model for three binding subsites in the active site. In this model, bond making and breaking in both the decarboxylation and transamination half-reactions occurs at the "A" subsite, which maintains the scissile bond aligned with the p orbitals of the conjugated aldimine and thus maximizes stereoelectronic effects. This strongly supports the proposal by Dunathan (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 55, 712-716) that PLP-dependent enzymes can largely control reaction specificity by specific orientation about C alpha in the external aldimine intermediate. The "B" subsite can accept either an alkyl or a carboxylate group, while the "C" subsite accepts only small alkyl groups. This model predicts the existence of nonproductive binding modes for amino acids, which is proposed to be the ultimate origin of the kcat increase with side-chain size for L-amino acid decarboxylation. The specificity of the 2-aminoisobutyrate decarboxylation half-reaction toward oxidative decarboxylation is very high (< 1 in 10(5) turnovers yields nonoxidative decarboxylation). The origin of this specificity is explored with the reactions of amino- and methylaminomalonate. These substrates exhibit high yields of nonoxidative decarboxylation, providing support for a model in which the interaction between a carboxylate group in the B subsite and Arg406 is a prerequisite to proton donation to and removal from C alpha.  相似文献   

16.
Human P450 2C19 is selective for 4'-hydroxylation of S-mephenytoin and 5-hydroxylation of omeprazole, while the structurally homologous P450 2C9 has low activity toward these substrates. To identify the critical amino acids that determine the specificity of human amino acids that determine the specificity of human P450 2C19, we constructed chimeras of p450 2C9 replacing various proposed substrate binding sites (SRS) with those of P450 2C19 and then replaced individual residues of P450 2C19 and then replaced individual residues of P450 2C9 by site-directed mutagenesis. The 339 NH2-terminal amino acid residues (SRS-1-SRS-4) and amino acids 160-383 (SRS-2-SRS-5) of P450 2C19 conferred omeprazole 5-hydroxylase activity to P450 2C9. In contract, the COOH terminus of P450 2C19 (residues 340-490 including SRS-5 and SRS-6), residues 228-339 (SRS-3 and SRS-4) and residues 292-383 (part of SRS-4 and SRS-5) conferred only modest increases in activity. A single mutation Ile99 --> His increased omeprazole 5-hydroxylase to approximately 51% of that of P450 2C19. A chimera spanning residues 160-227 of P450 2C19 also exhibited omeprazole 5-hydroxylase activity which was dramatically enhanced by the mutation Ile99 --> His. A combination of two mutations, Ile99 --> His and Ser200 --> Pro, converted P450 2C9 to an enzyme with a turnover number of omeprazole 5-hyrdroxylation, which resembled that of P450 /c19. Mutation of Pro221 --> Thr enhanced this activity. Residue 99 is within SRS-1, but amino acids 220 and 221 are in the F-G loop and outside any known SRS. Mutation of these three amino acids did not confer significant S-mephenytoin 4'-hydroxylase activity to P450 2C9, although chimeras containing SRS-1-SRS-4 and SRS-2-SRS-5 of P450 2C19 exhibited activity toward this substrate. Our results thus indicate that amino acids 99, 220, and 221 are key residues that determine the specificity of P450 2C19 for omeprazole.  相似文献   

17.
The Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) protease S9 variant has been engineered to exhibit high affinity for HIV-1 protease substrates and inhibitors in order to verify the residues deduced to be critical for the specificity differences. The variant has 9 substitutions (S38T, I42D, I44V, M73V, A100L, V104T, R105P, G106V, and S107N) of structurally equivalent residues from HIV-1 protease. Unlike the wild-type enzyme, RSV S9 protease hydrolyzes peptides representing the HIV-1 protease polyprotein cleavage sites. The crystal structure of RSV S9 protease with the inhibitor, Arg-Val-Leu-r-Phe-Glu-Ala-Nle-NH2, a reduced peptide analogue of the HIV-1 CA-p2 cleavage site, has been refined to an R factor of 0.175 at 2.4-A resolution. The structure shows flap residues that were not visible in the previous crystal structure of unliganded wild-type enzyme. Flap residues 64-76 are structurally similar to residues 47-59 of HIV-1 protease. However, residues 61-63 form unique loops at the base of the flaps. Mutational analysis indicates that these loop residues are essential for catalytic activity. Side chains of flap residues His 65 and Gln 63' make hydrogen bond interactions with the inhibitor P3 amide and P4' carbonyl oxygen, respectively. Other interactions of RSV S9 protease with the CA-p2 analogue are very similar to those observed in the crystal structure of HIV-1 protease with the same inhibitor. This is the first crystal structure of an avian retroviral protease in complex with an inhibitor, and it verifies our knowledge of the molecular basis for specificity differences between RSV and HIV-1 proteases.  相似文献   

18.
Variants of human pancreatic carboxypeptidase B (HCPB), with specificity for hydrolysis of C-terminal glutamic acid and aspartic acid, were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis of the human gene and expressed in the periplasm of Escherichia coli. By changing residues in the lining of the S1' pocket of the enzyme, it was possible to reverse the substrate specificity to give variants able to hydrolyse prior to C-terminal acidic amino acid residues instead of the normal C-terminal basic residues. This was achieved by mutating Asp253 at the base of the S1' specificity pocket, which normally interacts with the basic side-chain of the substrate, to either Lys or Arg. The resulting enzymes had the desired reversed polarity and enzyme activity was improved significantly with further mutations at residue 251. The [G251T,D253K]HCPB double mutant was 100 times more active against hippuryl-L-glutamic acid (hipp-Glu) as substrate than was the single mutant, [D253K]HCPB. Triple mutants, containing additional changes at Ala248, had improved activity against hipp-Glu substrate when position 251 was Asn. These reversed-polarity mutants of a human enzyme have the potential to be used in antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy of cancer.  相似文献   

19.
The membrane-type 1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP) has been reported to mediate the activation of pro-gelatinase A (proMMP-2), which is associated with tumor proliferation and metastasis. MT1-MMP can also digest extracellular matrix (ECM) such as interstitial collagens, gelatin, and proteoglycan and thus may play an important role in pathophysiological digestion of ECM. We studied the inhibitory effect of various hydroxamate MMP inhibitors, including known inhibitors such as BB-94, BB-2516, GM6001, and Ro31-9790, on a deletion mutant of MT1-MMP lacking the transmembrane domain (DeltaMT1) to further characterize the enzyme and develop a selective inhibitor for MT1-MMP. The evaluation of the inhibitory activities of various hydroxamates reveals general structural profiles affecting selectivities toward MMPs. In particular, a longer side chain at the P1' position is preferable for the binding to MMP-2, -3, and -9 and MT1-MMP. For the P2' position, an alpha-branched alkyl group is critical for the binding toward DeltaMT1, while the introduction of a bulky group at the alpha-position of hydroxamic acid seems to diminish the activity against DeltaMT1. Summation of the data on the sensitivity of DeltaMT1 to various hydroxamate inhibitors indicates that (1) the volume of the S1' subsite of DeltaMT1 is similar to that of MMP-2, -3, and -9, which is bigger than that of MMP-1, and (2) the S1 and S2' subsites are narrower than those in other MMPs. On the basis of these results, the hydroxamates with a P1' phenylpropyl and P2' alpha-branched alkyl group were synthesized and evaluated for inhibitory activity. These inhibitors (1h,i) showed strong activity against DeltaMT1 over MMP-1, but no selectivity between DeltaMT1 and MMP-9. These results are explained using molecular modeling studies conducted on MT1-MMP.  相似文献   

20.
A method is described for assessing the substrate specificity of proteases by screening for proteolytic activity against large numbers of peptides. All 400 possible peptides derived from the 20 common amino acids were synthesized on small membrane disks in the arrangement FTC-spacer-amino acid P1-amino acid P'1-spacer-membrane, where FTC is a chromophoric group. The disks are incubated simultaneously with the protease, resulting in cleavage of the peptide between the P1 and P'1 amino acids, and the absorbance of the released chromophore is measured as a function of time. As demonstrated for chymotrypsin and papain, plots of the resulting data present a perspective view of the amino acid preferences on both sides of the scissile bond. This technique is fast, requires relatively little enzyme, and can be extended to the systematic screening of longer peptides, including analogs with unnatural amino acids. It has potential use for characterizing the specificity of proteases, assessing the results of site-specific mutagenesis, and searching for optimal substrates and inhibitors.  相似文献   

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