Synergistic binding of hydrophobic probes and zinc ligands to thermolysin

The strong synergism previously observed in the binding of inhibitors to two Zn‐proteases, has also been found for thermolysin. As in earlier cases, the effects are produced by a small Zn‐ligand (e.g. a hydroxamate) in the presence of another compound which contains the key structural features of sp...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of biochemistry 1993-12, Vol.218 (2), p.523-528
Hauptverfasser: PFUETZNER, Richard A., CHAN, William W.‐C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The strong synergism previously observed in the binding of inhibitors to two Zn‐proteases, has also been found for thermolysin. As in earlier cases, the effects are produced by a small Zn‐ligand (e.g. a hydroxamate) in the presence of another compound which contains the key structural features of specific substrates (a specificity probe). For thermolysin, the most effective specificity probes are hydrophobic derivatives of amines and amino acids (e.g. carbobenzyloxy‐L‐alaninol). Even the simple combination of benzyl alcohol and formohydroxamate displays considerable synergism. The above effects are temperature dependent and correlate well with a thermally induced conformational isomerization reported recently for this enzyme. Our results seem to be related to previous observations of substrate synergism in the reverse reaction and to superactivation by chemical modification of this enzyme. All these effects are consistent with a change in the environment of the catalytically important zinc atom upon binding of the hydrophobic side chain of the substrate. With the inclusion of thermolysin, binding synergism is now known to occur in an endopeptidase as well as in exopeptidases of diverse specificity. The general occurrence of this phenomenon in zinc proteases and its possible significance are discussed in an accompanying study.
ISSN:0014-2956
1432-1033
DOI:10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb18405.x