Enzymatic Characterization of the Streptococcal Endopeptidase, IdeS, Reveals That It Is a Cysteine Protease with Strict Specificity for IgG Cleavage Due to Exosite Binding
Autor: | Ulrich von Pawel-Rammingen, Bjarne Vincents, Lars Björck, Magnus Abrahamson |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Proteases
Streptococcus pyogenes medicine.medical_treatment Molecular Sequence Data Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors Biochemistry Substrate Specificity Enzyme activator chemistry.chemical_compound Bacterial Proteins Sequence Analysis Protein medicine Humans Amino Acid Sequence Binding site Chromatography High Pressure Liquid Binding Sites Protease Hydrolysis Temperature Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Molecular biology Cysteine protease Endopeptidase Enzyme Activation Cysteine Endopeptidases Kinetics chemistry Immunoglobulin G Iodoacetamide Cysteine |
Zdroj: | Biochemistry. 43:15540-15549 |
ISSN: | 1520-4995 0006-2960 |
DOI: | 10.1021/bi048284d |
Popis: | Streptococcus pyogenes, an important pathogen in humans, secretes an IgG specific endopeptidase named IdeS. To elucidate the mechanism that is responsible for this specificity, we have here characterized the activity of IdeS in detail. Both gamma chains of human IgG or its Fc fragment were cleaved in the hinge region after Gly236 by IdeS, but other proteins or synthetic peptides containing sequences such as the P(4)-P(1) segment in the IgG cleavage site, or long peptides resembling the IgG hinge, were not hydrolyzed at all. This is likely due to a second binding site interacting with the Fc part of IgG. The lack of IdeS activity on peptide substrates necessitated the development of an assay with IgG as the substrate for kinetic studies. IdeS showed a sigmoidal velocity curve at physiological IgG concentrations, and a declining enzyme rate at higher IgG concentrations. This atypical velocity curve suggests product inhibition and/or allosteric control, which again indicates the presence of an exosite involved in substrate binding. The pseudoequilibrium constant for IdeS hydrolysis of IgG was 90 microM. The enzyme exhibited activity in the pH range of 5.1-7.6, with an optimum at pH 6.6. IdeS was stable above pH 10 but not at acidic pH. It exhibited an activity maximum around 37 degrees C and a decreased thermal stability at 42 degrees C. Iodoacetate and iodoacetamide inhibited IdeS, as expected for a cysteine protease, and biochemical evidence verified this classification. E-64 and chicken cystatin, specific inhibitors of family C1 and C13 cysteine proteases, were without effect on enzyme activity, as were class specific serine, aspartic, and metallo protease inhibitors. No significant similarities were found in protein sequence comparisons with known enzyme families, suggesting that IdeS represents a novel family of cysteine proteases. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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