A comparative study of secondary specificities of enteropeptidase and trypsin was performed using peptide substrates with general formula A-(Asp/Glu)n-Lys(Arg)-(downward arrow)-B, where n = 1-4. This was the first study to demonstrate that, similar to other serine proteases, enteropeptidase has an extended secondary binding site interacting with 6-7 amino acid residues surrounding the peptide bond to be hydrolyzed. However, in the case of typical enteropeptidase substrates containing four negatively charged Asp/Glu residues at positions P2-P5, electrostatic interaction between these residues and the secondary site Lys99 of the enteropeptidase light chain is the main factor that determines hydrolysis efficiency. The secondary specificity of enteropeptidase differs from the secondary specificity of trypsin. The chromophoric synthetic enteropeptidase substrate G5DK-F(NO2)G (kcat/Km = 2380 mM(-1) x min(-1)) is more efficient than the fusion protein PrAD4K-P26 (kcat/Km = 1260 mM(-1) x min(-1)).
The effects of calcium ions on hydrolysis of low molecular weight substrates catalyzed by different forms of enteropeptidase were studied. A method for determining activity of truncated enteropeptidase preparations lacking a secondary trypsinogen binding site and displaying low activity towards trypsinogen was developed using N-alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysine thiobenzyl ester (Z-Lys-S-Bzl). The kinetic constants for hydrolysis of this substrate at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C were determined for natural enteropeptidase (K(m) 59.6 microM, k(cat) 6660 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 111 microM(-1) x min(-1)), as well as for enteropeptidase preparation with deleted 118-783 fragment of the heavy chain (K(m) 176.9 microM, k(cat) 6694 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 37.84 microM(-1) x min(-1)) and trypsin (K(m) 56.0 microM, k(cat) 8280 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 147.86 microM(-1) x min(-1)). It was shown that the enzymes with trypsin-like primary active site display similar hydrolysis efficiency towards Z-Lys-S-Bzl. Calcium ions cause 3-fold activation of hydrolysis of the substrates of general type GD(4)K-X by the natural full-length enteropeptidase. In contrast, the hydrolysis of substrates with one or two Asp/Glu residues at P2-P3 positions is slightly inhibited by Ca2+. In the case of enteropeptidase light chain as well as the enzyme containing the truncated heavy chain (466-800 fragment), the activating effect of calcium ions was not detected for all the studied substrates. The results of hydrolysis experiments with synthetic enteropeptidase substrates GD(4)K-F(NO(2))G, G(5)DK-F(NO(2))G (where F(NO(2)) is p-nitrophenyl-L-phenylalanine residue), and GD(4)K-Nfa (where Nfa is beta-naphthylamide) demonstrate the possibility of regulation of undesired side hydrolysis using natural full-length enteropeptidase for processing chimeric proteins by means of calcium ions.
Comparative substrate analysis of full-length bovine enteropeptidase and trypsin, bovine and human enteropeptidase light chains was performed using model N-terminal dodecapeptides corresponding to wild-type human trypsinogen and pancreatitis-associated mutant trypsinogens K23R and D22G. The substitution of Lys residue by Arg at P1 leads to 2-fold increase in the efficiency of enteropeptidase hydrolysis; the absence of the negatively charged residue at P2 reduces the efficiency of such hydrolysis by two orders of magnitude. The difference in efficiency of peptide chain hydrolysis after Lys/Arg residues by enteropeptidase compared to trypsin is equal to the difference in hydrolysis by serine proteases of different primary specificity of their specific substrates.
It has been shown for the first time that deacylation is the rate-limiting stage in the enteropeptidase-catalyzed hydrolysis of highly efficient oligopeptide substrates containing four Asp residues in positions P2-P5. On the other hand, the rate-limiting stage in the hydrolysis of low-efficiency peptide substrates containing less than four Asp or Glu residues in positions P2-P5 is acylation, as has previously been suggested for all amide and peptide substrates of serine proteases on the basis of the classic studies by Bender et al. The method of introduction of an additional nucleophile or another effector that selectively affects the deacylation stage was used to determine the rate-limiting stage in the enteropeptidase hydrolysis of Nalpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysine thiobenzyl ester, the highly efficient amide substrate GlyAsp4-Lys beta-naphthyl amide, and the low-efficiency peptide substrate VLSAADK-GNVKAAWG (where a hyphen denotes the hydrolysis site). The English version of the paper: Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry, 2008, vol. 34, no. 2; see also http://www.maik.ru.
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