Abstract

The crystal structure of the microbial transglutaminase (MTGase) zymogen from Streptomyces mobaraense has been determined at 1.9-Å resolution using the molecular replacement method based on the crystal structure of the mature MTGase. The overall structure of this zymogen is similar to that of the mature form, consisting of a single disk-like domain with a deep active cleft at the edge of the molecule. A major portion of the prosequence (45 additional amino acid residues at the N terminus of the mature transglutaminase) folds into an L-shaped structure, consisting of an extended N-terminal segment linked with a one-turn short helix and a long α-helix. Two key residues in the short helix of the prosequence, Tyr-12 and Tyr-16, are located on top of the catalytic triad (Cys-110, Asp-301, and His-320) to block access of the substrate acyl donors and acceptors. Biochemical characterization of the mature MTGase, using N-α-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-glutaminylglycine as a substrate, revealed apparent K(m) and k(cat)/K(m) values of 52.66 mM and 40.42 mM(-1) min(-1), respectively. Inhibition studies using the partial prosequence SYAETYR and homologous sequence SQAETYR showed a noncompetitive inhibition mechanism with IC(50) values of 0.75 and 0.65 mM, respectively, but no cross-linking product formation. Nevertheless, the prosequence homologous oligopeptide SQAETQR, with Tyr-12 and Tyr-16 each replaced with Gln, exhibited inhibitory activity with the formation of the SQAETQR-monodansylcadaverine fluorophore cross-linking product (SQAETQR-C-DNS). MALDI-TOF tandem MS analysis of SQAETQR-C-DNS revealed molecular masses corresponding to those of (N)SQAETQ(C)-C-DNS and C-DNS-(N)QR(C) sequences, suggesting the incorporation of C-DNS onto the C-terminal Gln residue of the prosequence homologous oligopeptide. These results support the putative functional roles of both Tyr residues in substrate binding and inhibition.

Highlights

  • Transglutaminase (TGase3; EC 2.3.2.13) catalyzes the formation of a cross-link between the ␥-carboxamide group of a peptide-bound glutaminyl residue and a variety of primary amines, including the amino group of lysine, through an acyl transfer reaction

  • The biochemical functions of microbial TGase (MTGase) from Streptomyces mobaraense (BCRC 12165, ATCC 29032; Streptoverticillium mobaraense, Streptomyces ladakanum, and Streptoverticillium ladakanum) have been studied extensively [5,6,7]. This Ca2ϩ-independent enzyme is secreted as a zymogen with an additional prosequence that consists of 45 amino acid residues (DNGAGEETKSYAETYRLTADDVANINALNESAPAASSAGPSFRAP) at the N terminus

  • The crystal structure of the mature form of MTGase, as determined by Kashiwagi et al [9], reveals that the protein is folded into a disk-like shape that has a deep active cleft at the edge

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Transglutaminase (TGase3; EC 2.3.2.13) catalyzes the formation of a cross-link between the ␥-carboxamide group of a peptide-bound glutaminyl residue (an acyl donor) and a variety of primary amines (acyl acceptors), including the amino group of lysine, through an acyl transfer reaction. The overall structure of this zymogen is similar to that of the mature form, consisting of a single disk-like domain with a deep active cleft at the edge of the molecule. Two key residues in the short helix of the prosequence, Tyr-12 and Tyr-16, are located on top of the catalytic triad (Cys-110, Asp-301, and His-320) to block access of the substrate acyl donors and acceptors.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call