4.5 Article

A novel domain in adenovirus L4-100K is required for stable binding and efficient inhibition of human granzyme B: Possible interaction with a species-specific exosite

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 17, Pages 6315-6326

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.23.17.6315-6326.2003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [AR-44684, R01 AR044684] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDCR NIH HHS [R37 DE012354, DE-12354, R01 DE012354] Funding Source: Medline

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Lymphocyte granule serine proteases (granzymes) play a critical role in protecting higher organisms against intracellular infections and cellular transformation. The proteases have also been implicated in the generation of tissue damage in a variety of chronic human conditions, including autoimmunity and transplant rejection. Granzyme B (GrB), one cytotoxic member of this family, achieves its effect through cleavage and activation of caspases as well as through caspase-independent proteolysis of cellular substrates. The 100,000-molecularweight (100K) assembly protein of human adenovirus type 5 (Ad5-100K) was previously defined as a potent and specific inhibitor of human GrB. We now show that although human, mouse, and rat GrB proteases are well conserved in terms of structure, substrate specificity, and function, Ad5-100K inhibitory activity is directed exclusively against the human protease. Biochemical analysis demonstrates that the specificity of the 100K protein for human GrB resides in two distinct interactions with the protease: (i) a unique sequence within the reactive site loop (P-1)Asp(48)-(P-1')Pro(49) in Ad5-100K which interacts with the active site and (ii) the presence of an additional inhibitor-enzyme interaction likely outside the enzyme catalytic site (i.e., an exosite). We have located this extended macromolecular interaction site in Ad5-100K within amino acids 688 to 781, and we have demonstrated that this region is essential for stable inhibitor-enzyme complex formation as well as efficient inhibition of human GrB. This novel component of the inhibitory mechanism of the 100K protein identifies a distinct target for selective inhibitor design, a finding which may be of benefit for diseases in which GrB plays a pathogenic role.

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