Literature DB >> 3134655

Electrostatic complementarity within the substrate-binding pocket of trypsin.

L Gráf1, A Jancsó, L Szilágyi, G Hegyi, K Pintér, G Náray-Szabó, J Hepp, K Medzihradszky, W J Rutter.   

Abstract

The aspartic residue (Asp-189) at the base of the substrate-binding pocket of trypsin was replaced by serine (present in a similar position in chymotrypsin) through site-directed mutagenesis. The wild-type (with Asp-189 in the mature trypsin sequence) and mutant (Ser-189) trypsinogens were expressed in Escherichia coli, purified to homogeneity, activated by enterokinase, and tested with a series of fluorogenic tetrapeptide substrates with the general formula succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Xaa-AMC, where AMC is 7-amino-4-methyl-coumarin and Xaa is Lys, Arg, Tyr, Phe, Leu, or Trp. As compared to [Asp189]trypsin, the activity of [Ser189]trypsin on lysyl and arginyl substrates decreased by about 5 orders of magnitude while its Km values increased only 2- to 6-fold. In contrast, [Ser189]trypsin was 10-50 times more active on the less preferred, chymotrypsin-type substrates (tyrosyl, phenylalanyl, leucyl, and tryptophanyl). The activity of [Ser189]trypsin on lysyl substrate was about 100-fold greater at pH 10.5 than at pH 7.0, indicating that the unprotonated lysine is preferred. Assuming the reaction mechanisms of the wild-type and mutant enzymes to be the same, we calculated the changes in the transition-state energies for various enzyme-substrate pairs to reflect electrostatic and hydrogen-bond interactions. The relative binding energies (E) in the transition state are as follows: EII greater than EPP greater than EPA greater than EIP approximately equal to EIA, where I = ionic, P = nonionic but polar, and A = apolar residues in the binding pocket. These side-chain interactions become prominent during the transition of the Michaelis complex to the tetrahedral transition-state complex.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3134655      PMCID: PMC281667          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.85.14.4961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  20 in total

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Review 2.  Serine proteases: structure and mechanism of catalysis.

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Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1974-10-15       Impact factor: 5.469

4.  Structure of the complex formed by bovine trypsin and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Crystal structure determination and stereochemistry of the contact region.

Authors:  A Rühlmann; D Kukla; P Schwager; K Bartels; R Huber
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1973-07-05       Impact factor: 5.469

5.  Designing substrate specificity by protein engineering of electrostatic interactions.

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6.  Structure of two related rat pancreatic trypsin genes.

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7.  Cloning and restriction mapping of the alkaline phosphatase structural gene (phoA) of Escherichia coli and generation of deletion mutants in vitro.

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8.  Specificity of trypsin and alpha-chymotrypsin towards neutral substrates.

Authors:  T Vajda; T Szabó
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9.  Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis: a simple method using two oligonucleotide primers and a single-stranded DNA template.

Authors:  M J Zoller; M Smith
Journal:  DNA       Date:  1984-12

10.  Hydrogen bonding and biological specificity analysed by protein engineering.

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  30 in total

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4.  The crystal structure of a trypsin-like mutant chymotrypsin: the role of position 226 in the activity and specificity of S189D chymotrypsin.

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Review 5.  Expression of virus-encoded proteinases: functional and structural similarities with cellular enzymes.

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8.  Evolution of a mass spectrometry-grade protease with PTM-directed specificity.

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9.  VASP: a volumetric analysis of surface properties yields insights into protein-ligand binding specificity.

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10.  Effects of the residue adjacent to the reactive serine on the substrate interactions of Drosophila esterase 6.

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