Engineering of papain: selective alteration of substrate specificity by site-directed mutagenesis

The S2 subsite specificity of the plant protease papain has been altered to resemble that of mammalian cathepsin B by site-directed mutagenesis. On the basis of amino acid sequence alignments for papain and cathepsin B, a double mutant (Val133Ala/Ser205Glu) was produced where Val133 and Ser205 are r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry (Easton) 1991-09, Vol.30 (37), p.8929-8936
Hauptverfasser: Khouri, Henry E, Vernet, Thierry, Menard, Robert, Parlati, Francesco, Laflamme, Pierre, Tessier, Daniel C, Gour-Salin, Barbara, Thomas, David Y, Storer, Andrew C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The S2 subsite specificity of the plant protease papain has been altered to resemble that of mammalian cathepsin B by site-directed mutagenesis. On the basis of amino acid sequence alignments for papain and cathepsin B, a double mutant (Val133Ala/Ser205Glu) was produced where Val133 and Ser205 are replaced by Ala and Glu, respectively, as well as a triple mutant (Val133Ala/Val157Gly/Ser205Glu), where Val157 is also replaced by Gly. Three synthetic substrates were used for the kinetic characterization of the mutants, as well as wild-type papain and cathepsin B: CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA, CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA, and CBZ-Cit-Arg-MCA. The ratio of K(cat/K(M) obtained by using CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA as substrate over that obtained with CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA is 8.0 for the VAl133Ala/Ser205Glu variant, while the equivalent values for wild-type papain and cathepsin B are 904 and 3.6, respectively. This change in specificity has been achieved by replacing only two amino acids out of a total of 212 in papain and with little loss in overall enzyme activity. However, further replacement of Val157 by Gly as in Val133Ala/Val157Gly/Ser205Glu causes an important decrease in activity, although the enzyme still displays a cathepsin B like substrate specificity. In addition, the pH dependence of activity for the Val133Ala/Ser205Glu variant compares well with that of cathepsin B. In particular, the activity toward CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA is modulated by a group with a pKa of 5.51, a behavior that is also encountered in the case of cathepsin B but is absent with papain. Results of this study suggest that sequence alignment of cysteine proteases coupled with the structural information that is available for papain can be used to achieve a better understanding of the molecular mechanism and specificity of structurally and functionally related cysteine proteases
ISSN:0006-2960
1520-4995
DOI:10.1021/bi00101a003