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Kinetic Dissection of α1-Antitrypsin Inhibition Mechanism
- Source :
- Journal of Biological Chemistry. 277:11629-11635
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2002.
-
Abstract
- Serpins (serine protease inhibitors) inhibit target proteases by forming a stable covalent complex in which the cleaved reactive site loop of the serpin is inserted into beta-sheet A of the serpin with concomitant translocation of the protease to the opposite of the initial binding site. Despite recent determination of the crystal structures of a Michaelis protease-serpin complex as well as a stable covalent complex, details on the kinetic mechanism remain unsolved mainly due to difficulties in measuring kinetic parameters of acylation, protease translocation, and deacylation steps. To address the problem, we applied a mathematical model developed on the basis of a suicide inhibition mechanism to the stopped-flow kinetics of fluorescence resonance energy transfer during complex formation between alpha(1)-antitrypsin, a prototype serpin, and proteases. Compared with the hydrolysis of a peptide substrate, acylation of the protease by alpha(1)-antitrypsin is facilitated, whereas deacylation of the acyl intermediate is strongly suppressed during the protease translocation. The results from nucleophile susceptibility of the acyl intermediate suggest strongly that the active site of the protease is already perturbed during translocation.
- Subjects :
- Proteases
Swine
Stereochemistry
medicine.medical_treatment
Serpin
Biochemistry
Acylation
medicine
Animals
Binding site
Molecular Biology
Serpins
Binding Sites
Protease
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
biology
Chemistry
Hydrolysis
Active site
Cell Biology
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Models, Theoretical
Kinetics
Protein Transport
Spectrometry, Fluorescence
Förster resonance energy transfer
Models, Chemical
Suicide inhibition
alpha 1-Antitrypsin
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
biology.protein
Cattle
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00219258
- Volume :
- 277
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4c9cd199e271edb124d0b902b5c345dc