Abstract

Affinity-based purification and characterization of the collagenolytic serine protease 1 from Uca pugilator (fiddler crab) hepatopancreas shows that the enzyme cleaves the native bovine alpha 1(I) collagen chain carboxyl-terminal to Gln and Arg residues adjacent to the metallocollagenase site. Cleavage carboxyl-terminal to Leu residues is observed in the alpha 2(I) chain and at a secondary site in alpha 1(I). These sites correlate with the preferences observed toward p-nitroanilide substrates varying at the P1 position, for which the specificity (kcat/Km) is Arg > Leu, Phe, Lys > Gln > Ala. Furthermore, collagen cleavage after Gln was found exclusively between two Gln-Arg bonds. The P'1-P'3 specificity of collagenase, as determined by nucleophile acyl transfer, indicated a strong preference for Arg in the P'1 position. Crab collagenase cleaves peptide bonds adjacent to Leu and Gln at the P1 position more efficiently than trypsin, chymotrypsin, or elastase. Moreover, the efficiency of collagenase toward P1-Arg substrates is equivalent to that of trypsin. Crystals of crab collagenase have been grown complexed with the protein inhibitor ecotin. These crystals diffract to better than 2.8 A resolution and belong to the space group P3(2)21 with unit cell dimensions of a = b = 89.0 A, c = 291.7 A.

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