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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Função de subsítios de uma catepsina digestiva de Tenebrio molitor / Subsites role of a Tenebrio molitor digestive cathepsin

Damasceno, Ticiane Fraga 27 May 2014 (has links)
A catepsina L, uma cisteína proteinase da família da papaína, é a principal proteinase digestiva do besouro Tenebrio molitor. Estudos anteriores do nosso grupo mostraram que existem três catepsinas L no intestino médio do T. molitor, uma delas é lisossômica (CAL 1) e as outras duas são digestivas (CAL 2 e CAL 3). As estruturas 3D das enzimas digestivas foram recentemente elucidadas. Com o objetivo de estudar em detalhes as propriedades das enzimas digestivas, CAL 3 foi expressa como um zimógeno em E. coli, purificada por cromatografia de afinidade e autoativada em meio ácido. Foram realizados ensaios de atividade com 63 peptídeos FRET derivados da sequência Abz-KLRSSKQ-EDDnp em um espectrofluorímetro termostatizado a 30 ºC, monitorando-se continuamente a variação de fluorescência em 320 nm (λex) e 420 nm (λem). Os parâmetros kcat e KM obtidos foram utilizados na determinação da hidrofobicidade dos subsítios (H) e da função de cada subsítio através da razão das energias livres de ativação do complexo enzima-substrato (ΔG‡T) e de ligação da enzima com o substrato (ΔGs). Os resultados mostram que o subsítio S2 está envolvido prioritariamente em catálise e é bastante seletivo para substratos com resíduos hidrofóbicos em P2. Esse subsítio é o mais hidrofóbico dentre os analisados, encontrando-se num bolsão localizado no interior da enzima. O subsítio S\'2, por outro lado, é o que apresentou a menor especificidade dentre os analisados. Este subsítio está envolvido prioritariamente na ligação com o substrato e se localiza na superfície da enzima, o que pode facilitar a acomodação de diferentes cadeias laterais em P\'2 do substrato, não oferecendo muitas restrições espaciais. O subsítio S1, hidrofílico, não é muito seletivo, o que pode ser consequência de sua localização na superfície da enzima. Esse subsítio está prioritariamente envolvido na ligação com o substrato. O subsítio S\'1, assim como S1, está localizado na superfície da enzima, é hidrofílico e não muito seletivo. No entanto, esse subsítio tem papel na catálise além de atuar na ligação do substrato. Numa análise inicial da estrutura 3D deste subsítio, sua função catalítica foi atribuída à presença de parte da cavidade oxiânica. Uma enzima com mutação no resíduo W187, pertencente à cavidade oxiânica e a S\'1, foi produzida e purificada, no entanto essa enzima não apresentou atividade. Uma análise mais aprofundada mostrou que a falta de atividade pode ser atribuída ao fato do resíduo de aminoácido mutado fazer parte de um cluster aromático essencial à estabilização da tríade catalítica. Os dados obtidos na caracterização de S\'1 e S\'2 permitem inferir que a acilação é o passo limitante da reação da CAL 3. Além disso, os resultados deste trabalho mostram que o conceito de hidrofobicidade de subsítios proposto anteriormente pelo grupo parece ser aplicável a subsítios que apresentem especificidades mais restritas. / Cathepsin L, a cysteine proteinase of the papain family, is the major digestive proteinase in the beetle Tenebrio molitor. Previous studies of our group showed that there are three cathepsins L in T. molitor midgut, one is lysosomal (CAL1) and two are digestive (CAL2 and CAL3). The 3D structures of the digestive enzymes were recently elucidated. With the aim to study in details the digestive enzymes specificities, CAL3 was expressed in E. coli as a zymogen, purified by affinity chromatography and autoactivated in acid conditions. Activity assays were performed in a thermostated spectrofluorometer at 30 ºC with 63 FRET peptides derived from the lead sequence Abz-KLRSSKQ-EDDnp, continuously monitoring the fluorescence changes at 320 nm (λex) and 420 nm (λem). The parameters kcat and KM were used in the determination of subsite hydrophobicity (H) and subsite role based on the ratio of complex enzyme-substrate activation energy (ΔG‡T) and free energy of substrate binding (ΔGs). The data obtained suggest that the S2 is mainly involved in catalysis and is very selective to substrates with hydrophobic residues in P2. This subsite is the most hydrophobic among the analyzed and is located in a pocket in the enzyme interior. S\'2, on the other hand, is the less selective subsite and is mainly involved in substrate binding and is located on the enzyme surface, what can ease the accommodation of different side chains located in P\'2 by not imposing many spatial restrictions. S1, is hydrophilic and not very selective, what may be a consequence of its location on the enzyme surface. This subsite is mainly involved in substrate binding. S\'1, just like S1, is located on the enzyme surface, is hydrophilic and not very selective. However this subsite has a role in catalysis besides the role in substrate binding. In an initial 3D structure analysis its catalytic function was attributed to the presence of a part of the oxyanion hole. An enzyme with mutation in the residue W187, which apparently belonged both to the oxyanion hole and S\'1, was produced and purified, but this enzyme was inactive. A better analysis showed that the lack of activity can be attributed to the fact that the mutated residue belongs to an aromatic cluster that is essential to the catalytic triad stabilization. The data obtained in S\'1 and S\'2 characterization suggest that acylation is the limiting step in CAL 3 reaction. The results presented in this work support the concept of subsite hydrophobicity previously proposed by our group, which seems to be true to subsites with more restrict specificities
52

Structure-Function Analysis of Grapefruit Glucosyltransferase Protein – Identification of Key Amino Acid Residues for its Rigid Substrate Specificity

Sathanantham, Preethi, Devaiah, Shiva K., McIntosh, Cecelia A. 09 April 2015 (has links)
Flavonoids are an important class of secondary metabolites widely distributed in plants. The majority of naturally occurring flavonoids are found in glucosylated form. Glucosyltransferases are enzymes that enable transfer of glucose from an activated donor (UDP-glucose) to the acceptor flavonoid substrates. A flavonol specific glucosyltransferase cloned from Citrus paradisi (Cp3OGT) has strict substrate and regiospecificity. In this study, amino acid residues that could potentially alter the rigidity observed in this enzyme were mutated to position equivalent residues of a putative anthocyanin specific glucosyltransferase from Clitorea ternatea and a GT from Vitis vinifera that can glucosylate both flavonols and anthocyanidins. Using homology modeling followed by site directed mutagenesis to identify candidate regions, three double mutations were made. To test the basis of substrate specificity, biochemical analysis of the three recombinant mutant proteins was carried out. Recombinant protein with mutation S20G+T21S revealed that the enzyme retained activity similar to the wildtype (Cp3OGT) (WT- Km app-104.8 µM; Vmax = 24.6 pmol/min/µg, Mutant- Km app-136.42 µM; Vmax -25pmol/min/µg) but the mutant was more thermostable compared to the WT. The (S290C+S319A) mutant protein retained 40% activity relative to wildtype and has an optimum pH shifted towards the acidic side (pH 6) (Km app-8.27 µM; Vmax-90.9 pmol/min/µg). Mutation of Glutamine87 and Histine154 (H154Y+Q87I) have rendered this recombinant protein inactive with every class of flavonoid tested. Interestingly, the single point mutations H154Y and Q871I had significant activity, slightly greater than that of wildtype enzyme. The two active recombinant proteins will further be analyzed to determine whether the mutations have altered regiospecificity of the original enzyme. Product identification is being conducted using HPLC.
53

Substrate Specificity and Kinetic Properties of Flavonol-3-O-Glucosyltransferase From Citrus Paradisi

Devaiah, Shivakumar P., McIntosh, Cecelia A. 04 August 2013 (has links)
Glucosyltransferases (GTs) are enzymes that expedite the incorporation of UDP-activated glucose to a corresponding acceptor molecule. This enzymatic reaction stabilizes structures and affects solubility, transport, and bioavailability of flavonoids for other metabolic processes. Flavonoid glycosides affect taste characteristics in citrus making the associated glucosyltransferases particularly interesting targets for biotechnology applications. Custom design of enzymes requires understanding of structure/function of the protein. The present study focuses on creating mutant flavonol-3-O-glucosyltransferase (F-3-O-GT) proteins using site directed mutagenesis and testing the effect of each mutation on substrate specificity, regiospecificity and kinetic properties of the enzyme. Mutations were selected on the basis of sequence similarity between grapefruit F-3- O-GT, an uncharacterized GT gene in blood orange (98%), and grape F3GT (82%). Grapefruit F-3-O-GT prefers flavonol as a substrate whereas the blood orange sequence is annotated to be a flavonoid 3GT and the grape GTs could glucosylate both flavonols and anthocyanidins. Mutants of F-3-O-GT were generated by substituting N242K, E296K and N242K+E296K and proteins were expressed in Pichia pastoris using the pPICZA vector. Analysis of these mF-3-O-GTs showed that all of them preferred flavonols over flavanone, flavone, isoflavones, or anthocyanidin substrates and showed decrease in enzyme activity of 16 to 51% relative to the wild type F-3- O-GT.
54

Determination of the Substrate Specificity of the Mutant D344P of Citrus paradisi Flavonol-Specific 3-O-Glucosyltransferase

Spaulding, Nathan, Devaiah, Shivakumar, McIntosh, Cecelia A. 12 April 2017 (has links)
Plants produce a vast array of secondary metabolites. The phenolic compounds flavonoids are metabolites ubiquitous among plants and are known to aid in processes such as plant reproduction, UV defense, pigmentation and development. In relation to human health, flavonoids have also been found to possess anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, and anti-oxidant properties. Flavonoids ability to participate in so many interactions is due in part to their subclass variation and further chemical modification. One such modification is glucosylation, where a glucose molecule is added to the flavonoid substrate. The enzymes that catalyze these reactions are known as glucosyltransferases. Citrus paradisi contains a glucosyltransferase that is specific to the 3-O position of flavonols. To further understand the reactions it catalyzes, Cp3-O-GT structure was modeled against an anthocyanidin/flavonol 3 GT found in Vitis vinifera to identify candidate amino acids for mutations. Mutants were then created using site-directed mutagenesis, and one mutant, D344P, was constructed by an aspartate being replaced with a proline based off of the sequence comparison of the original enzymes. Biochemically characterizing the mutant D344P protein will determine whether the mutation has an effect on the substrate specificity of Cp3-O-GT. An initial quickscreening assay using radioactive UDP-glucose as a sugar donor suggested there may have been expansion of substrate acceptance. Confirming time course assays did not support this. Additionally, results of these assays show that D344P protein has decreased activity with flavonols as compared to wild type Cp3-O-GT. with no expansion of substrate specificity. Models suggest that a change in protein conformation has resulted in decreased activity.
55

Affect of Mutation D344P on the Regio- and/or Substrate Specificity of CP3-OGT

Spaulding, Nathan, Shivakumar, Devaiah P., McIntosh, Cecelia A. 07 April 2016 (has links)
Plants produce a vast array of secondary metabolites. The phenolic compounds flavonoids are metabolites ubiquitous among plants and are known to aid in processes such as plant reproduction, UV defense, pigmentation and development. In relation to human health, flavonoids have also been found to possess anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, and anti-oxidant properties. Flavonoids ability to participate in so many interactions is due in part to their subclass variation and further chemical modification. One such modification is glucosylation, where a glucose molecule is added to the flavonoid substrate. The enzymes that catalyze these reactions are known as glucosyltransferases. Citrus paradisi contains a glucosyltransferase that is specific to the 3-O position of flavonols. To further understand the reactions it catalyzes, Cp3-O-GT structure was modeled against a anthocyanidin/flavonol 3 GT found in Vitis vinifera to identify candidate amino acids for mutations. Mutants were then created using site-directed mutagenesis, and one mutant, D344P, was constructed by an aspartate being replaced with a proline based off of the sequence comparison of the original enzymes. Biochemically characterizing the mutant D344P protein will determine whether the mutation has an effect on the regio and/or steriospecificity of Cp3-OGT. An initial screening assay has been performed using radioactive UDP- glucose as a sugar donor. Early results indicated that the mutant D344P has particular affinity for flavonols and for diosometin, a flavone. Kinetic assays are being performed to confirm these results. Studies of time course, enzyme concentration, HPLC product analysis, pH optimum and reaction kinetics will be performed to further complete D344P protein characterization.
56

Mutagenesis of the sugar donor site of the Arabidopsis thaliana glycosyltransferase UGT72B1

Palmqvist, Emma January 2010 (has links)
The Arabidopsis thaliana glycosyltransferase UGT72B1 is one of many enzymes which catalyze the reaction oflinking a glucose moiety from UDP-glucose to an acceptor molecule, in this case a chloroaniline or a chlorophenol. This is part of a detoxification system of the plant cell, similar to that in humans where a glucuronosyltransferases are enabling drug metabolism. It would be of interest to investigate the activity of the human enzyme towards different pharmaceuticals and determine the effect the linkage of glucose has to properties of the compounds. However, the human enzymes are membrane proteins and thus difficult to purify and crystallize. Here, an attempt was made to instead change the substrate specificity of UGT72B1 from UDPglucose to UDP-glucuronic acid. Combination of the four point mutations G18S, P139R, W367S and AG387ED were introduced in UGT72B1. However, no UDP-glucuronic acid activity was obtained. Single mutants W367S and AG387ED retained similar activity as of the wildtype while P139R had highly reduced activity and G18S was not expressed at all. All other combinations of mutations resulted in even less activity. Four chimeric proteins were also constructed. They were combinations of the UGT72B1 and the human enzyme UGT2B4. These were all soluble proteins but no activity could be determined. / Glykosyltransferaset UGT72B1 från Arabidopsis thaliana är ett av många enzymer som katalyserar reaktionen där en glukosenhet från UDP-glukos länkas till en acceptormolekyl, i det här fallet en kloranilin eller en klorfenol. Det är en del av ett detoxifieringssytem i växtcellen, som liknar det i människan, där ett glukuronosyltransferas möjliggör nedbrytning av bl.a. läkemedel. Det vore intressant att kunna undersöka de humana enzymernas aktivitet mot olika läkemedel och även fastställa effekten glukoslänkningen har på dessa substansers egenskaper. De humana enzymerna är dock membranprotein och är därför svåra att rena fram och att kristallisera. Här har istället ett försök gjorts för att ändra substratspecificiteten hos UGT72B1 från UDP-glukos till UDP-glukuronsyra. Kombinationer av de fyra punktmutationerna G18S, P139R, W367S och AG387ED introducerades i UGT72B1. Ingen aktivitet med UDP-glukuronsyra erhölls dock. Enkelmutanterna W367S och AG387ED bibehöll liknande aktivitet som vildtypen, medan P139R hade starkt reducerad aktivitet och G18S uttrycktes inte alls. Alla andra kombinationer av mutationer resulterade i ännu lägre aktivitet. Fyra chimeriska proteiner konstruerades också. De skapades genom kombination av UGT72B1 och det humana enzymet UGT2B4. Dessa var alla lösliga proteiner men ingen av dem uppvisade någon aktivitet.
57

Optimization of Recombination Methods and Expanding the Utility of Penicillin G Acylase

Loo, Bernard Liat Wen 02 November 2007 (has links)
Protein engineering can be performed by combinatorial techniques (directed evolution) and data-driven methods using machine-learning algorithms. The main characteristic of directed evolution (DE) is the application of an effective and efficient screen or selection on a diverse mutant library. As it is important to have a diverse mutant library for the success of DE, we compared the performance of DNA-shuffling and recombination PCR on fluorescent proteins using sequence information as well as statistical methods. We found that the diversity of the libraries DNA-shuffling and recombination PCR generates were dependent on type of skew primers used and sensitive to nucleotide identity levels between genes. DNA-shuffling and recombination PCR produced libraries with different crossover tendencies, suggesting that the two protocols could be used in combination to produce better libraries. Data-driven protein engineering uses sequence, structure and function data along with analyzed empirical activity information to guide library design. Boolean Learning Support Vector Machines (BLSVM) to identify interacting residues in fluorescent proteins and the gene templates were modified to preserve interactions post recombination. By site-directed mutagenesis, recombination and expression experiments, we validated that BLSVM can be used to identify interacting residues and increase the fraction of active proteins in the library. As an extension to the above experiments, DE was applied on monomeric Red Fluorescent Proteins to improve its spectral characteristics and structure-guided protein engineering was performed on penicillin G acylase (PGA), an industrially relevant catalyst, to change its substrate specificity.
58

Purification and characterisation of Tex31, a conotoxin precursor processing protease, isolated from the venom duct of Conus textile

Milne, Trudy Jane January 2008 (has links)
The venom of cone snails (predatory marine molluscs of the genus Conus) has yielded a rich source of novel neuroactive peptides or “conotoxins”. Conotoxins are bioactive peptides found in the venom duct of Conus spp. Like other neuropeptides, conotoxins are expressed as propeptides that undergo posttranslational proteolytic processing. Peptides derived from propeptides are typically cleaved at a pair of dibasic residues (Lys-Arg, Arg-Arg, Lys-Lys or Arg-Lys) by proteases found in secretory vesicles. However, many precursor peptides contain multiple sets of basic residues, suggesting that highly substrate specific or differentially expressed proteases can determine processing outcomes. As many of the substrate-specific proteases remain unidentified, predicting new bioactive peptides from cDNA sequences is presently difficult, if not impossible. In order to understand more about the substrate specificity of conotoxin substrate-specific proteases a characterisation study of one such endoprotease isolated from the venom duct of Conus textile was undertaken. The C. textile mollusc was chosen as a good source from which to isolate the endoprotease for two reasons; firstly, these cone shells are found in great abundance on the Great Barrier Reef (Queensland, Australia) and are readily obtainable and secondly, a number of conotoxin precursors and their cleavage products have been previously identified in the venom duct. In order to purify the endoprotease an activity-guided fractionation protocol that included a para-nitroanilide (p-NA) substrate assay was developed. The p-NA substrate mimicked the cleavage site of the conotoxin TxVIA, a member of the C. textile O-superfamily of toxins. The protocol included a number of chromatographic techniques including ion exchange, size-exclusion and reverse-phased HPLC and resulted in isolation of an active protease, termed Tex31, to >95% purity. The purification of microgram quantities of Tex31 made it possible to characterise the proteolytic nature of Tex31 and to further characterise the O-superfamily conopeptide propeptide cleavage site specificity. Specificity experiments showed Tex31 requires a minimum of four residues including a leucine in the P4 position (LNKR↓) for efficient substrate processing. The complete sequence of Tex31 was determined from cDNA. A BLAST search revealed Tex31 to have high amino acid sequence similarity to the CAP (abbreviated from CRISP (Cysteine-rich secretory protein), Antigen 5 and PR-1 (pathogenesis-related protein)) superfamily and most closely related to the CRISP family of mammalian and venom proteins that, like Tex31, have a cysteine-rich C-terminal domain. The CAP superfamily is widely distributed in the animal, plant and fungal kingdoms, and is implicated in processes as diverse as human brain tumour growth and plant pathogenesis. This is the first report of a biological role for the N-terminal domain of CAP proteins. A homology model of Tex31 constructed from two PR-1 proteins, Antigen 5 and P14a, revealed the highly conserved and likely catalytic residues, His78, Ser99 and Glu115. These three amino acids fall within a structurally conserved N-terminal domain found in all CAP proteins. It is possible that other CAP proteins are also substrate-specific proteases. With no homology to any known proteases, Tex31 may belong to a new class of protease. The sequence alignment of five Tex31-like proteins cloned from C. marmoreus, C. litteratus, C. arentus, C. planboris, and C. omaria show very high sequence similarity to Tex31 (~80%), but only one weakly conserved serine residue was identified when the conserved residues of the new Tex31-like protein sequences were aligned with members of the CAP superfamily. Future work to identify members of catalytic diad or triad, e.g. by site-directed mutagenesis, will rely on the expression of active recombinant Tex31. In this study neither Escherichia coli nor Pichia pastoris expression systems yielded active recombinant Tex31 protein, possibly due to the number of cysteine residues hindering the expression of correctly folded active Tex31. This study has shown Tex31 to be highly sequence specific in its cleavage site and it is likely that this high substrate specificity has confounded previous attempts to identify the proteolytic nature of other CAP proteins. With the proteolytic nature of one member of the CAP protein family confirmed, it is hoped this important discovery may lead the way to discovering the role of other CAP family members.
59

Função de subsítios de uma catepsina digestiva de Tenebrio molitor / Subsites role of a Tenebrio molitor digestive cathepsin

Ticiane Fraga Damasceno 27 May 2014 (has links)
A catepsina L, uma cisteína proteinase da família da papaína, é a principal proteinase digestiva do besouro Tenebrio molitor. Estudos anteriores do nosso grupo mostraram que existem três catepsinas L no intestino médio do T. molitor, uma delas é lisossômica (CAL 1) e as outras duas são digestivas (CAL 2 e CAL 3). As estruturas 3D das enzimas digestivas foram recentemente elucidadas. Com o objetivo de estudar em detalhes as propriedades das enzimas digestivas, CAL 3 foi expressa como um zimógeno em E. coli, purificada por cromatografia de afinidade e autoativada em meio ácido. Foram realizados ensaios de atividade com 63 peptídeos FRET derivados da sequência Abz-KLRSSKQ-EDDnp em um espectrofluorímetro termostatizado a 30 ºC, monitorando-se continuamente a variação de fluorescência em 320 nm (λex) e 420 nm (λem). Os parâmetros kcat e KM obtidos foram utilizados na determinação da hidrofobicidade dos subsítios (H) e da função de cada subsítio através da razão das energias livres de ativação do complexo enzima-substrato (ΔG‡T) e de ligação da enzima com o substrato (ΔGs). Os resultados mostram que o subsítio S2 está envolvido prioritariamente em catálise e é bastante seletivo para substratos com resíduos hidrofóbicos em P2. Esse subsítio é o mais hidrofóbico dentre os analisados, encontrando-se num bolsão localizado no interior da enzima. O subsítio S\'2, por outro lado, é o que apresentou a menor especificidade dentre os analisados. Este subsítio está envolvido prioritariamente na ligação com o substrato e se localiza na superfície da enzima, o que pode facilitar a acomodação de diferentes cadeias laterais em P\'2 do substrato, não oferecendo muitas restrições espaciais. O subsítio S1, hidrofílico, não é muito seletivo, o que pode ser consequência de sua localização na superfície da enzima. Esse subsítio está prioritariamente envolvido na ligação com o substrato. O subsítio S\'1, assim como S1, está localizado na superfície da enzima, é hidrofílico e não muito seletivo. No entanto, esse subsítio tem papel na catálise além de atuar na ligação do substrato. Numa análise inicial da estrutura 3D deste subsítio, sua função catalítica foi atribuída à presença de parte da cavidade oxiânica. Uma enzima com mutação no resíduo W187, pertencente à cavidade oxiânica e a S\'1, foi produzida e purificada, no entanto essa enzima não apresentou atividade. Uma análise mais aprofundada mostrou que a falta de atividade pode ser atribuída ao fato do resíduo de aminoácido mutado fazer parte de um cluster aromático essencial à estabilização da tríade catalítica. Os dados obtidos na caracterização de S\'1 e S\'2 permitem inferir que a acilação é o passo limitante da reação da CAL 3. Além disso, os resultados deste trabalho mostram que o conceito de hidrofobicidade de subsítios proposto anteriormente pelo grupo parece ser aplicável a subsítios que apresentem especificidades mais restritas. / Cathepsin L, a cysteine proteinase of the papain family, is the major digestive proteinase in the beetle Tenebrio molitor. Previous studies of our group showed that there are three cathepsins L in T. molitor midgut, one is lysosomal (CAL1) and two are digestive (CAL2 and CAL3). The 3D structures of the digestive enzymes were recently elucidated. With the aim to study in details the digestive enzymes specificities, CAL3 was expressed in E. coli as a zymogen, purified by affinity chromatography and autoactivated in acid conditions. Activity assays were performed in a thermostated spectrofluorometer at 30 ºC with 63 FRET peptides derived from the lead sequence Abz-KLRSSKQ-EDDnp, continuously monitoring the fluorescence changes at 320 nm (λex) and 420 nm (λem). The parameters kcat and KM were used in the determination of subsite hydrophobicity (H) and subsite role based on the ratio of complex enzyme-substrate activation energy (ΔG‡T) and free energy of substrate binding (ΔGs). The data obtained suggest that the S2 is mainly involved in catalysis and is very selective to substrates with hydrophobic residues in P2. This subsite is the most hydrophobic among the analyzed and is located in a pocket in the enzyme interior. S\'2, on the other hand, is the less selective subsite and is mainly involved in substrate binding and is located on the enzyme surface, what can ease the accommodation of different side chains located in P\'2 by not imposing many spatial restrictions. S1, is hydrophilic and not very selective, what may be a consequence of its location on the enzyme surface. This subsite is mainly involved in substrate binding. S\'1, just like S1, is located on the enzyme surface, is hydrophilic and not very selective. However this subsite has a role in catalysis besides the role in substrate binding. In an initial 3D structure analysis its catalytic function was attributed to the presence of a part of the oxyanion hole. An enzyme with mutation in the residue W187, which apparently belonged both to the oxyanion hole and S\'1, was produced and purified, but this enzyme was inactive. A better analysis showed that the lack of activity can be attributed to the fact that the mutated residue belongs to an aromatic cluster that is essential to the catalytic triad stabilization. The data obtained in S\'1 and S\'2 characterization suggest that acylation is the limiting step in CAL 3 reaction. The results presented in this work support the concept of subsite hydrophobicity previously proposed by our group, which seems to be true to subsites with more restrict specificities
60

Charakterizace rekombinantních cathepsinů B ptačí schistosomy Trichobilharzia regenti / Characterisation of recombinant cathepsins B of the bird schistosome Trichobilharzia regenti

Dvořáková, Hana January 2011 (has links)
This study focuses on the recombinant cysteine peptidases - cathepsin B originating in the bird schistosome Trichobilharzia regenti that is unique across the whole family for its ability to migrate through the nerve tissue to the final localization. For invasion, migration, degradation of nutritional proteins and/or evasion of host immune responses, schistosome employs peptidases. This study follows the research done by researchers of Department of parasitology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Charles University. The main goal of this study was to deepen the characteristics of recombinant cathepsins B originating in T. regenti. In T. regenti, two cysteine peptidases - cathepsins B1 (TrCB1) and B2 (TrCB2) - have been previously characterized. TrCB1 is located in the gut of schistosomula and involved in digestion. TrCB2 occurs in post-acetabular penetration glands of cercariae and probably facilitates penetration. The recombinant pro-cathepsin B (isoforms TrCB1.1, TrCB1.4 and also TrCB2) were expressed in Pichia pastoris yeast system. An attempt was made to produce in P. pastoris the recombinant isoform TrCB1.6, in which the active site cysteine is substituted by glycine. While TrCB2 underwent self-processing in the expression medium, TrCB1.1 and TrC1.4 zymogens were effectively activated only after the...

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