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Protein unfolding is essential for cleavage within the α-helix of a model protein substrate by the serine protease, thrombin

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 08:27 authored by Amy Robertson, Stephen HeadeyStephen Headey, Natasha Ng, L Wijeyewickrema, Martin Scanlon, Robert Pike, Stephen Bottomley
Proteolysis has a critical role in transmitting information within a biological system and therefore an important element of biology is to determine the subset of proteins amenable to proteolysis. Until recently, it has been thought that proteases cleave native protein substrates only within solvent exposed loops, but recent evidence indicates that cleavage sites located within α-helices can also be cleaved by proteases, despite the conformation of this secondary structure being generally incompatible with binding into an active site of a protease. In this study, we address the mechanism by which a serine endopeptidase, thrombin, recognizes and cleaves a target sequence located within an α-helix. Thrombin was able to cleave a model substrate, protein G, within its α-helix when a suitable cleavage sequence for the enzyme was introduced into this region. However, structural data for the complex revealed that thrombin was not perturbing the structure of the α-helix, thus it was not destabilizing the helix in order to allow it to fit within its active site. This indicated that thrombin was only cleaving within the α-helix when it was in an unfolded state. In support of this, the introduction of destabilizing mutations within the protein increased the efficiency of cleavage by the enzyme. Our data suggest that a folded α-helix cannot be proteolytically cleaved by thrombin, but the species targeted are the unfolded conformations of the native state ensemble.

History

Journal

Biochimie

Volume

122

Start page

227

End page

234

Total pages

8

Publisher

Elsevier Masson

Place published

France

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Elsevier B.V. and Société Française de Biochimie et Biologie Moléculaire (SFBBM). All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006094786

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-12-02

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