Arazoformyl Dipeptide Substrates for Thermolysin. Confirmation of a Reverse Protonation Catalytic Mechanism

Cleavage by thermolysin of N-(4-methoxyphenylazoformyl)-l-leucyl-l-leucine plus some congeneric peptides provides a highly sensitive new kinetic assay for proteolytic activity. The pH dependence of Michaelis−Menten parameters k cat and K m establishes kinetically a reverse protonation catalytic mech...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry (Easton) 1996-06, Vol.35 (23), p.7369-7377
Hauptverfasser: Mock, William L, Stanford, Daniel J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cleavage by thermolysin of N-(4-methoxyphenylazoformyl)-l-leucyl-l-leucine plus some congeneric peptides provides a highly sensitive new kinetic assay for proteolytic activity. The pH dependence of Michaelis−Menten parameters k cat and K m establishes kinetically a reverse protonation catalytic mechanism for this metalloprotease [Mock, W. L., & Aksamawati, M. (1994) Biochem. J. 302, 57−68]. An acidified water molecule (pK a of 5, seen in K m) becomes displaced by substrate carboxamide from the hypercationic Zn2+ of the enzyme, yielding potent Lewis acid activation of the peptide linkage for subsequent hydrolysis. Conversion to product is induced by the side chain of enzymic residue His 231 (pK a of 8, seen in k cat), which provides general base catalysis for addition of H2O to the zinc-activated scissile carboxamide of the bound substrate. A previously described “superactivation” through chemical modification of the enzyme with acetylphenylalanyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide is nonexistent in the case of the new substrates, which indicates that their binding to thermolysin is largely productive, unlike normal peptides. Correct assignment of kinetically observed pK a values to active site residues, along with recognition of a predominantly nonproductive binding mode for ordinary substrates and thermolysin, forces reinterpretation of previous mechanistic formulations for the enzyme.
ISSN:0006-2960
1520-4995
DOI:10.1021/bi952827p