Literature DB >> 21476511

Initial stage of cheese production: a molecular modeling study of bovine and camel chymosin complexed with peptides from the chymosin-sensitive region of κ-casein.

Jesper Sørensen1, David S Palmer, Karsten Bruun Qvist, Birgit Schiøtt.   

Abstract

Bovine chymosin has long been the preferred enzyme used to coagulate cow's milk, in the initial stage of cheese production, during which it cleaves a specific bond in the milk protein κ-casein. Recently, camel chymosin has been shown to have a 70% higher clotting activity toward cow's milk and, moreover, to cleave κ-casein more selectively. Bovine chymosin, on the other hand, is a poor clotting agent toward camel's milk. This paper reports a molecular modeling study aimed at understanding this disparity, based on homology modeling and molecular dynamics simulations using peptide fragments of κ-casein from cow and camel in both bovine and camel chymosin. The results show that the complex between bovine chymosin and the fragment of camel κ-casein is indeed less stable in the binding pocket. The results also indicate that this in part may be due to charge repulsion between a lysine residue in bovine chymosin and an arginine residue in the P4 position of camel κ-casein.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21476511     DOI: 10.1021/jf104898w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Agric Food Chem        ISSN: 0021-8561            Impact factor:   5.279


  1 in total

1.  Camel and bovine chymosin: the relationship between their structures and cheese-making properties.

Authors:  Jesper Langholm Jensen; Anne Mølgaard; Jens Christian Navarro Poulsen; Marianne Kirsten Harboe; Jens Bæk Simonsen; Andrea Maria Lorentzen; Karin Hjernø; Johannes M van den Brink; Karsten Bruun Qvist; Sine Larsen
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr       Date:  2013-04-19
  1 in total

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