Literature DB >> 2186807

Substrate specificity of recombinant human renal renin: effect of histidine in the P2 subsite on pH dependence.

D W Green1, S Aykent, J K Gierse, M E Zupec.   

Abstract

Steady-state kinetic analysis of human renin demonstrates the histidine proximal to the substrate scissile peptide bond contributes to the unique specificity and pH dependence of this aspartyl protease. Recombinant human renal renin purified from mammalian cell culture appears to be indistinguishable from renin isolated from human kidney with respect to specific activity (1000 Goldblatt units/mg). Recombinant renin contains carbohydrate covalently attached to asparagines at positions 5 and 75 (renin numbering) and disulfide linkages at Cys-51/Cys-58, Cys-217/Cys-221, and Cys-259/Cys-296. Renin pH dependence was evaluated between pH 4.0 and 8.0 by using a synthetic substrate identical with the amino terminus of porcine angiotensinogen (Asp-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-Leu*Leu-Val-Tyr-Ser, where the asterisk indicates the scissile peptide bond and the proximal histidine is in italics) and an analogous tetradecapeptide where the proximal histidine was substituted with glutamine. Comparison of the pH profiles shows the catalytic efficiency (V/Km) and maximal velocity (V) of renin are greater above pH 6.5 with the substrate containing histidine proximal to the scissile peptide bond, but below pH 5.0 these parameters are greater with the glutamine substrate analogue. Solvent isotope effects show that proton transfer contributes to the rate-limiting step in catalysis with both substrates and that the proximal histidine does not serve as a base in the catalytic mechanism. Molecular modeling indicates the substrate histidine could hydrogen bond to Asp-226 of the enzyme (renin numbering), thus perturbing the ionization of the catalytic aspartyl groups (Asp-38 and Asp-226).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2186807     DOI: 10.1021/bi00464a032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  8 in total

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2.  Characterization of recombinant human renin: kinetics, pH-stability, and peptidomimetic inhibitor binding.

Authors:  T F Holzman; C C Chung; R Edalji; D A Egan; M Martin; E J Gubbins; G A Krafft; G T Wang; A M Thomas; S H Rosenberg
Journal:  J Protein Chem       Date:  1991-10

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4.  Exploring the pH-Dependent Structure-Dynamics-Function Relationship of Human Renin.

Authors:  Shuhua Ma; Jack A Henderson; Jana Shen
Journal:  J Chem Inf Model       Date:  2020-12-23       Impact factor: 4.956

5.  Exploration of subsite binding specificity of human cathepsin D through kinetics and rule-based molecular modeling.

Authors:  P E Scarborough; K Guruprasad; C Topham; G R Richo; G E Conner; T L Blundell; B M Dunn
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  1993-02       Impact factor: 6.725

6.  Highly sensitive intramolecularly quenched fluorogenic substrates for renin based on the combination of L-2-amino-3-(7-methoxy-4-coumaryl)propionic acid with 2,4-dinitrophenyl groups at various positions.

Authors:  Katherine Paschalidou; Ulf Neumann; Bernd Gerhartz; Chryssa Tzougraki
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Review 7.  Lutein, zeaxanthin, and meso-zeaxanthin: The basic and clinical science underlying carotenoid-based nutritional interventions against ocular disease.

Authors:  Paul S Bernstein; Binxing Li; Preejith P Vachali; Aruna Gorusupudi; Rajalekshmy Shyam; Bradley S Henriksen; John M Nolan
Journal:  Prog Retin Eye Res       Date:  2015-11-02       Impact factor: 21.198

8.  Recombinant human prorenin from CHO cells: expression and purification.

Authors:  T F Holzman; C C Chung; R Edalji; D A Egan; E J Gubbins; A Rueter; G Howard; L K Yang; T M Pederson; G A Krafft
Journal:  J Protein Chem       Date:  1990-12
  8 in total

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