2001-2002
2002-2003
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Kent Brown
A neutron Laue diffraction study of endothiapepsin:
implications for the aspartic proteinase mechanism.
Coates L, Erskine PT, Wood SP, Myles DA, Cooper JB.
Biochemistry 2001, 40(44): 13149-57.
Current proposals for the catalytic mechanism of
aspartic proteinases are largely based on X-ray
structures of bound oligopeptide inhibitors possessing
nonhydrolyzable analogues of the scissile peptide bond.
However, the positions of protons on the catalytic
aspartates and the ligand in these complexes have not
been determined with certainty. Thus, our objective was
to locate crucial protons at the active site of an
inhibitor complex since this will have major
implications for a detailed understanding of the
mechanism of action. We have demonstrated that
high-resolution neutron diffraction data can be
collected from crystals of the fungal aspartic
proteinase endothiapepsin bound to a transition state
analogue (H261). The neutron structure of the complex
has been refined at a resolution of 2.1 A to an R-factor
of 23.5% and an R(free) of 27.4%. This work represents
the largest protein structure studied to date by neutron
crystallography at high resolution. The neutron data
demonstrate that 49% of the main chain nitrogens have
exchanged their hydrogen atoms with D2O in the mother
liquor. The majority of residues resisting exchange are
buried within core beta-sheet regions of the molecule.
The neutron maps confirm that the protein has a number
of buried ionized carboxylate groups which are likely to
give the molecule a net negative charge even at very low
pH, thereby accounting for its low pI. The functional
groups at the catalytic center have clearly undergone
H-D exchange despite being buried by the inhibitor
occupying the active site cleft. Most importantly, the
data provide convincing evidence that Asp 215 is
protonated and that Asp 32 is the negatively charged
residue in the transition state complex. This has an
important bearing on mechanistic proposals for this
class of proteinase.
Date: December 8th
Time: Noon to 1
Place: BSBE 4-101
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