Abstract

Proteases play a major role in many vital physiological processes. Trypsin-like serine proteases (TLPs), in particular, are paramount in proteolytic cascade systems such as blood coagulation and complement activation. The structural topology of TLPs is highly conserved, with the trypsin fold comprising two β-barrels connected by a number of variable surface-exposed loops that provide a surprising capacity for functional diversity and substrate specificity. To expand our understanding of the roles these loops play in substrate and co-factor interactions, we employ a systematic methodology akin to the natural truncations and insertions observed through evolution of TLPs. The approach explores a larger deletion space than classical random or directed mutagenesis. Using FVIIa as a model system, deletions of 1–7 amino acids through the surface exposed 170 loop, a vital allosteric regulator, was introduced. All variants were extensively evaluated by established functional assays and computational loop modelling with Rosetta. The approach revealed detailed structural and functional insights recapitulation and expanding on the main findings in relation to 170 loop functions elucidated over several decades using more cumbersome crystallization and single deletion/mutation methodologies. The larger deletion space was key in capturing the most active variant, which unexpectedly had a six-amino acid truncation. This variant would have remained undiscovered if only 2–3 deletions were considered, supporting the usefulness of the methodology in general protease engineering approaches. Our findings shed further light on the complex role that surface-exposed loops play in TLP function and supports the important role of loop length in the regulation and fine-tunning of enzymatic function throughout evolution.

Highlights

  • Proteases play a major role in many vital physiological processes

  • The structural models generated using the Next-generation Kinematic Closure (NGK) approach with FVIIa as a template suggested a structural stabilization for these variants similar to that reported to be induced by TF b­ inding[67], and favouring loops that had distances between R315{c170C} and G372{c223} that could accommodate favourable electrostatic interactions (Fig. 5B)

  • A FVIIa variant with 170 loop from trypsin (FVIIa-YT) with a narrower TF α-helix angle was used as a template, the productive electrostatic interaction between R315{c170C} and G372{c223} was not favoured

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Summary

Introduction

Proteases play a major role in many vital physiological processes. Trypsin-like serine proteases (TLPs), in particular, are paramount in proteolytic cascade systems such as blood coagulation and complement activation. Loops with 4–5 residue truncation showed poor amidolytic activity, even if the deletion did not include the two regions mentioned above, with the main effect observed on kcat for these variants

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