4.6 Article

Cavities of α1-antitrypsin that play structural and functional roles

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 1446-1453

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS
DOI: 10.1110/ps.840101

Keywords

alpha(1)-antitrypsin; cavity-filling mutations; conformational stability; native strain; molecular packing

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The native form of inhibitory serine protease inhibitors (serpins) is strained, which is critical for their inhibitory activity. Previous studies on stabilizing mutations of alpha (1)-antitrypsin, a prototype of serpins, indicated that cavities provide a structural basis for the native strain of the molecule. We have systematically mapped the cavities of alpha (1)-antitrypsin that play such structural and functional roles by designing cavity-filling mutations at residues that line the walls of the cavities, Results show that energetically unfavorable cavities are distributed throughout the alpha (1)-antitrypsin molecule, and the cavity-filling mutations stabilized the native conformation at 8 out of 10 target sites. The stabilization effect of the individual cavity-filling mutations of alpha (1)-antitrypsin varied (0.2-1.9 kcal/mol for each additional methylene group) and appeared to depend largely on the structural flexibility of the cavity environment. Cavity-filling mutations that decreased inhibitory activity of alpha (1)-antitrypsin were localized in the loop regions that interact with beta -sheet A distal from the reactive center loop. The results are consistent with the notion that beta -sheet A and the structure around it mobilize when alpha (1)-antitrypsin forms a complex with a target protease.

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