Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
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Hirudin, a thrombin-specific inhibitor, comprises a compact amino-terminal core domain (residues 1-52) and a disordered acidic carboxyl-terminal tail (residues 53-65). An array of core fragments were prepared from intact recombinant hirudin by deletion of various lengths of its carboxyl-terminal tail on selective enzymatic cleavage. Hir1-56 and Hir1-53 were produced by pepsin digestion at Phe56-Glu57 and Asp53-Gly54. Hir1-52 was generated by Asp-N cleavage at Asn52-Asp53. Hir1-49 was prepared by cleavage of Gln49-Ser50 by chymotrypsin, elastase, and thermolysin. In addition, Hir1-62 (containing part of the carboxyl-terminal tail) was derived from Hir1-65 by selective removal of the three carboxyl-terminal amino acids using carboxypeptidase A. Hirudin amino-terminal core fragments were stable at extreme pH (1.47 and 12.6), high temperature (95 degrees C), and resistant to attack by various proteinases. For instance, following 24-h incubation with an equal weight of pepsin, the covalent structure of Hir1-52 remained intact and its anticoagulant activity unaffected. Unlike intact hirudin (Hir1-65) the inhibitory potency of which is a consequence of concerted binding of its amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal domains to the active site and the fibrinogen recognition site of thrombin, the core fragments block only the active site of thrombin with binding constants of 19 nM (Hir1-56), 35 nM (Hir1-52), and 72 nM (Hir1-49). As an anticoagulant Hir1-56 is about 2-, 4-, and 30-fold more potent (on a molar basis) than Hir1-52, Hir1-49, and Hir1-43, respectively. Hir1-56 was also about 15-fold more effective than the most potent carboxyl-terminal fragment of hirudin, sulfated-Hir54-65, although they bind to independent sites on thrombin. The potential advantages of hirudin core fragments as antithrombotic agents are discussed in this report.
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PMID:Production, properties, and thrombin inhibitory mechanism of hirudin amino-terminal core fragments. 226 19

O-[[(1R)-[[N-(Phenylmethoxycarbonyl)-L-alanyl]amino]ethyl] hydroxyphosphinyl]-L-3-phenyllacetate [ZAAP(O)F], an analogue of (benzyloxycarbonyl)-Ala-Ala-Phe or (benzyloxycarbonyl)-Ala-Ala-phenyllactate, binds to carboxypeptidase A with great affinity (Ki = 3 pM). Similar phosphonates have been shown to be transition-state analogues of the CPA-catalyzed hydrolysis [Hanson, J. E., Kaplan, A. P., & Bartlett, P. A. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6294-6305]. In the present study, the structure of the complex of this phosphonate with carboxypeptidase A has been determined by X-ray crystallography to a resolution of 2.0 A. The complex crystallizes in the space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with cell dimensions a = 61.9 A, b = 67.2 A, and c = 76.2 A. The structure of the complex was solved by molecular replacement. Refinement of the structure against 20,776 unique reflections between 10.0 and 2.0 A yields a crystallographic residual of 0.193, including 140 water molecules. The two phosphinyl oxygens of the inhibitor bind to the active-site zinc at 2.2 A on the electrophilic (Arg-127) side and 3.1 A on the nucleophilic (Glu-270) side. Various features of the binding mode of this phosphonate inhibitor are consistent with the hypothesis that carboxypeptidase A catalyzed hydrolysis proceeds through a general-base mechanism in which the carbonyl carbon of the substrate is attacked by Zn-hydroxyl (or Zn-water). An unexpected feature of the bound inhibitor, the cis carbamoyl ester bond at the benzyloxycarbonyl linkage to alanine, allows the benzyloxycarbonyl phenyl ring of the inhibitor to interact favorably with Tyr-198. This complex structure is compared with previous structures of carboxypeptidase A, including the complexes with the potato inhibitor, a hydrated keto methylene substrate analogue, and a phosphonamidate inhibitor. Comparisons are also made with the complexes of thermolysin with some phosphonamidate inhibitors.
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PMID:Crystal structure of the complex of carboxypeptidase A with a strongly bound phosphonate in a new crystalline form: comparison with structures of other complexes. 238 84

In mammals, dihydroorotase is part of a trifunctional protein, dihydroorotate synthetase, which catalyzes the first three reactions of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. Dihydroorotase catalyzes the formation of a peptide-like bond between the terminal ureido nitrogen and the beta-carboxyl group of N-carbamyl-L-aspartate to yield heterocyclic L-dihydroorotate. A variety of evidence suggests that dihydroorotase may have a catalytic mechanism similar to that of a zinc protease [Christopherson, R. I., & Jones, M. E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 3358-3370]. Tight-binding inhibitors of the zinc proteases, carboxypeptidase A, thermolysin, and angiotensin-converting enzyme have been synthesized that combine structural features of the substrates with a thiol or carboxyl group in an appropriate position to coordinate a zinc atom bound at the catalytic site. We have synthesized (4R)-2-oxo-6-thioxohexahydropyrimidine-4-carboxylate (L-6-thiodihydroorotate) and have found that this analogue is a potent competitive inhibitor of dihydroorotase with a dissociation constant (Ki) in the presence of excess Zn2+ ion of 0.17 +/- 0.02 microM at pH 7.4. The potency of inhibition by L-6-thiodihydroorotate in the presence of divalent metal ions decreases in the order Zn2+ greater than Ca2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mn2+ greater than Ni2+; L-6-thiodihydroorotate alone is less inhibitory and has a Ki of 0.85 +/- 0.14 microM. 6-Thioorotate has a Ki of 82 +/- 8 microM which decreases to 3.8 +/- 1.4 microM in the presence of Zn2+. Zn2+ alone is a moderate inhibitor of dihydroorotase and does not enhance the potency of other inhibitors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mercaptan and dicarboxylate inhibitors of hamster dihydroorotase. 256 32

Electronic absorption, circular dichroic (CD), and magnetic circular dichroic (MCD) spectra have been determined for complexes of cobalt(II)-substituted carboxypeptidase A and five reversible inhibitors. Three of the inhibitors, N-(1-carboxy-5-butyloxycarbonylaminopentyl)-L-phenylalanine, (I); (R,S)-2-benzyl-4-oxobutanoic acid, (III); and 2-benzyl-4-oxo-5,5,5-trifluoropentanoic acid, (IV) are mechanism-based inhibitors. Another, N-(1-carboxy-5-carbobenzoxyaminopentyl)-glycyl-L-phenylalanine, (II), is a tight binding, slowly hydrolyzed substrate. The fifth, phosphoramidon, (V), is a mechanism-based inhibitor of thermolysin, and may also bind to carboxypeptidase in a mechanism-based mode. The absorption and CD spectra of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes all differ from the spectrum of the free enzyme and from each other. The MCD spectra indicate that the tetrahedral coordination geometry of cobalt, which is distorted in the free enzyme, is also distorted in the inhibitor complexes, although to various degrees. The complexes of I and III are spectrally similar despite being structurally dissimilar, and that of IV, whose structure resembles III, is spectrally distinct, indicating that I and III, but not IV, may perturb the metal in nearly the same way. The absorption spectrum of IV is identical to that, at high pH, of Co(II)carboxypeptidase in which Glu-270 has been modified by a carbodiimide reagent, possibly pointing to a common perturbation of this residue. The absorption and CD spectra of II are similar to those of the catalytic intermediate that precedes the rate-limiting step in peptide hydrolysis [D. S. Auld, A. Galdes, K. F. Geoghegan, B. Holmquist, R. Martinelli, and B. L. Vallee, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 4675-4681 (1984)]. Since II is a substrate, the steady-state bound species that it generates may therefore be a true productive intermediate rather than a nonproductive mimic of an intermediate. The spectra of the complexes with II and V differ considerably despite structural similarities. The negative CD ellipticity of the free enzyme is reversed in sign in the presence of V, a phenomenon previously observed with complexes of Co(II)carboxypeptidase and dipeptides. This resemblance may result from a similar interaction of cobalt with the phosphoramidate group of phosphoramidon and the N-terminal amine of dipeptides. The spectra of reversible, mechanism-based inhibitors permit general structural predictions about true intermediates but require caution when used for assigning precise conformation and ligands of bound catalytic species.
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PMID:Effects of mechanism-based reversible inhibitors on the metal environment of cobalt(II)carboxypeptidase A: an electronic spectral study. 274 19

Analogues of tri- and tetrapeptide substrates of carboxypeptidase A in which the scissile peptide linkage is replaced with a phosphonate moiety (-PO2--O-) were synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors of the enzyme. The inhibitors terminated with either L-lactate or L-phenyllactate [designated (O) Ala and (O) Phe, respectively] in the P1' position. Transition-state analogy was shown for a series of 14 tri- and tetrapeptide derivatives containing the structure RCO-AlaP-(O)Ala [RCO-AP(O)A, AP indicates the phosphonic acid analogue of alanine] by the correlation of the Ki values for the inhibitors and the Km/kcat values for the corresponding amide substrates. This correlation supports a transition state for the enzymatic reaction that resembles the tetrahedral intermediate formed upon addition of water to the scissile carbonyl group. The inhibitors containing (O) Phe at the P1' position proved to be the most potent reversible inhibitors of carboxypeptidase A reported to date: the dissociation constants of ZAFP(O)F, ZAAP(O)F, and ZFAP(O)F are 4, 3, and 1 pM, respectively. Because of the high affinity of these inhibitors, their dissociation constants could not be determined by steady-state methods. Instead, the course of the association and dissociation processes was monitored for each inhibitor as its equilibrium with the enzyme was established in both the forward and reverse directions. A phosphonamidate analogue, ZAAPF, in which the peptide linkage is replaced with a -PO2-NH- moiety, was prepared and shown to hydrolyze rapidly at neutral pH (t1/2 = 20 min at pH 7.5). This inhibitor is bound an order of magnitude less tightly than the corresponding phosphonate, ZAAP(O)F, a result that contrasts with the 840-fold higher affinity of phosphonamidates for thermolysin [Bartlett, P. A., & Marlowe, C. K. (1987) Science 235, 569-571], a zinc peptidase with a similar arrangement of active-site catalytic residues.
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PMID:Phosphonate analogues of carboxypeptidase A substrates are potent transition-state analogue inhibitors. 279

A glutamic acid residue at the active site of bovine lung angiotensin I-converting enzyme, a zinc-metallo peptidyl dipeptidase, was esterified with p-[N,N-bis(chloroethyl)amino]phenylbutyryl-L-[U-14C]proline (chlorambucyl-L-[U-14C]-L-proline), an affinity label for this enzyme (Harris, R.B., and Wilson, I.B. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 1357-1362). The radiolabeled enzyme was digested with BrCN and only 1 of the 30 cleavage peptides resolved by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) contained the bound radiolabel. This active-site peptide (Mr = 16,000) was digested with trypsin and the labeled peptide formed (T-2) was further degraded with thermolysin. The thermolytic peptides were resolved by reverse-phase HPLC. Only 1 of the 5 peptides obtained (Th-1, Mr = 1290) contained the bound radiolabel. Th-1 (12 residues) was subjected to manual Edman degradation and the following partial sequence was determined: H2N-Phe-Thr-Glu-Leu-Ala-Asp-Ser-Glu... The radiolabel was released at cycle 3 and the amount recovered was equivalent to the amount of phenylthiohydantoin-Glu detected on HPLC. Thus, glutamic acid is esterified with chlorambucyl-L-[U-14C]proline in confirmation of our earlier findings. The sequence determined is homologous in 5 residues with the corresponding sequences of bovine carboxypeptidase A and B, two other mammalian zinc proteases. There is little sequence homology with thermolysin, a bacterial zinc protease that also contains an essential active-site glutamic acid residue.
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PMID:Sequencing of an active-site peptide of angiotensin I-converting enzyme containing an essential glutamic acid residue. 285 12

A glutamic acid residue at the active-site of bovine lung angiotensin I-converting enzyme was esterified with p-[N,N-bis-(chloroethyl)amino]phenylbutyryl-L-[U-14]-Proline (chlorambucyl-L-[U-14C]-L-Proline), an affinity label for this enzyme. The radiolabeled enzyme was digested with BrCN and only 1 of the 30 cleavage peptides resolved by reverse-phase HPLC contained the bound radiolabel. This active-site peptide (Mr approximately 16,000) was digested with trypsin, and the labeled peptide (T-2) was further degraded with thermolysin. The enzyme digest peptides were also resolved by reverse-phase HPLC. Only 1 of the 5 peptides obtained after thermolysin digestion (Th-1, Mr 1290) contained the bound radiolabel. Th-1 (12 residues) was subjected to manual Edman degradation and the following partial sequence was determined: H2N-Phe-Thr-Glu-Leu-Ala-Asp-Ser-Glu. The radiolabel was released at cycle 3 and the amount recovered was equivalent to the amount of PTH-Glu detected on HPLC. Thus, glutamic acid is esterified with chlorambucyl-L-[U-14C]-Proline which confirms our earlier findings. The sequence that we determined is homologous in five residues with the corresponding sequences of carboxypeptidase A and B, two other mammalian zinc-proteases. There is little sequence homology with thermolysin, a bacterial zinc-protease that also contains an essential active-site glutamic acid residue.
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PMID:Isolation and sequencing of an active-site peptide from angiotensin I-converting enzyme. 302 71

Crystallographic analysis of the binding of mercaptoacetyl-L-valyl-L-tryptophan to thermolysin suggests that this inhibitor is hydrolyzed by the crystalline enzyme. The apparent product of hydrolysis, L-valyl-L-tryptophan (Val-Trp), occupies the S1'-S2' subsites of the active site, not the S1-S1' subsites as observed previously for the dipeptide L-alanyl-L-phenylalanine (Ala-Phe). The difference in binding of Val-Trp and Ala-Phe is consistent with the specificity requirements and preferences of thermolysin. The binding of Val-Trp illustrates the mode of interaction of one of the products of peptide hydrolysis. High resolution crystallographic refinement indicates that the valyl amino group makes three hydrogen bonds to the enzyme and to solvent and, in addition, is 2.8 A from the carboxylate of Glu-143. This is the first instance in which a direct interaction has been observed between Glu-143 and the scissile nitrogen. As such, the study directly supports the mechanism of action for thermolysin proposed by Hangauer et al. (Hangauer, D. G., Monzingo, A. F., and Matthews, B. W. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5730-5741) and, by analogy, indirectly supports the similar mechanism proposed for carboxypeptidase A (Monzingo, A. F., and Matthews, B. W. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5724-5729).
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PMID:The binding of L-valyl-L-tryptophan to crystalline thermolysin illustrates the mode of interaction of a product of peptide hydrolysis. 334 46

Halorhodopsin (HR), the light-driven chloride pump in halobacteria, was digested with various proteolytic enzymes. As expected, carboxypeptidase A removed 14 amino acids from the C-terminal tail of detergent-solubilized HR, producing a fragment of 25.2 kd in size. Membrane-associated HR could be digested as well, but not in right-side-out sealed cell envelope vesicles. We conclude, therefore, that the orientation of HR in the cytoplasmic membrane is such that the C-terminal tail faces the cytoplasmic side. Tryptic digestion of detergent-solubilized HR resulted in the removal of the same C-terminal segment, but also in the production of two more cleavage products (molecular masses of 20.9 and 16.8 kd respectively). These cleavage sites were determined by amino acid sequencing of the newly produced N termini, and they turned out to be within interhelical loops in an earlier proposed structural model for HR. Incubation with chymotrypsin and thermolysin yielded different sites of cleavage, but also in regions which were proposed to be accessible on the surface of the protein. Since the results show that three of six proposed interhelical loop segments contain proteolytic digestion sites, they support the proposed structural model for HR.
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PMID:Structure and orientation of halorhodopsin in the membrane: a proteolytic fragmentation study. 340 38

From the amino acid sequence of the Escherichia coli lactose/H+ transporter, 7 hydrophilic segments were selected, 8-13 amino acids in length, and chemically synthesized, and anti-peptide antibodies were raised in rabbits. Apart from the antiserum to the synthetic COOH terminus (P408-417), which reacted strongly with the lactose/H+ transporter and has previously been used to localize the COOH terminus on the cytoplasmic face of the membrane, only those antibodies directed against the peptide corresponding to amino acid residues 125-135 (P125-135) exhibited a marked reaction with the transporter, while antibodies to the five other peptides reacted very weakly or not at all, suggesting that most of the hydrophilic segments are conformationally restricted or buried in the interior of the protein. Thermolysin treatment destroys the epitope on the transporter which is recognized by anti-P125-135 antibodies. Comparison of the kinetics and the extent of proteolysis of the transporter in right-side-out or inside-out cytoplasmic membrane vesicles or in reconstituted proteoliposomes suggests that the hydrophilic sequence from amino acid 125 to amino acid 135 is accessible to thermolysin only from one side, corresponding to the cytoplasmic face of the membrane. Furthermore, the experiments demonstrate that the transporter is inserted bimodally in a nonpreferential fashion into the proteoliposomes, confirming earlier results using antibodies to the synthetic COOH terminus of the transporter in conjunction with carboxypeptidase A treatment.
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PMID:Anti-peptide antibodies and proteases as structural probes for the lactose/H+ transporter of Escherichia coli: a loop around amino acid residue 130 faces the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. 352 31


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