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Structural basis for elastolytic substrate specificity in rodent alpha-chymases.
Kervinen, Jukka; Abad, Marta; Crysler, Carl; Kolpak, Michael; Mahan, Andrew D; Masucci, John A; Bayoumy, Shariff; Cummings, Maxwell D; Yao, Xiang; Olson, Matthew; de Garavilla, Lawrence; Kuo, Lawrence; Deckman, Ingrid; Spurlino, John.
Afiliación
  • Kervinen J; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341. Electronic address: jkervine@prdus.jnj.com.
  • Abad M; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Crysler C; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Kolpak M; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Mahan AD; Research and Early Development, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477.
  • Masucci JA; Research and Early Development, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477.
  • Bayoumy S; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Cummings MD; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Yao X; Bioinformatics, West Coast Research & Early Development, San Diego, California 92121.
  • Olson M; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • de Garavilla L; Research and Early Development, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477.
  • Kuo L; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Deckman I; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341.
  • Spurlino J; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Structural Biology, Exton, Pennsylvania 19341. Electronic address: jspurli1@prdus.jnj.com.
J Biol Chem ; 283(1): 427-436, 2008 Jan 04.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17981788
ABSTRACT
Divergence of substrate specificity within the context of a common structural framework represents an important mechanism by which new enzyme activity naturally evolves. We present enzymological and x-ray structural data for hamster chymase-2 (HAM2) that provides a detailed explanation for the unusual hydrolytic specificity of this rodent alpha-chymase. In enzymatic characterization, hamster chymase-1 (HAM1) showed typical chymase proteolytic activity. In contrast, HAM2 exhibited atypical substrate specificity, cleaving on the carboxyl side of the P1 substrate residues Ala and Val, characteristic of elastolytic rather than chymotryptic specificity. The 2.5-A resolution crystal structure of HAM2 complexed to the peptidyl inhibitor MeOSuc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Ala-chloromethylketone revealed a narrow and shallow S1 substrate binding pocket that accommodated only a small hydrophobic residue (e.g. Ala or Val). The different substrate specificities of HAM2 and HAM1 are explained by changes in four S1 substrate site residues (positions 189, 190, 216, and 226). Of these, Asn(189), Val(190), and Val(216) form an easily identifiable triplet in all known rodent alpha-chymases that can be used to predict elastolytic specificity for novel chymase-like sequences. Phylogenetic comparison defines guinea pig and rabbit chymases as the closest orthologs to rodent alpha-chymases.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Quimasas Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Límite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: J Biol Chem Año: 2008 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Quimasas Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Límite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: J Biol Chem Año: 2008 Tipo del documento: Article