4.6 Article

Sequence conservation in the chagasin family suggests a common trend in cysteine proteinase binding by unrelated protein inhibitors

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages 1971-1977

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1110/ps.0207202

Keywords

protease inhibitor; thiol protease; conserved domain; binding mechanism; convergent evolution

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The recently described inhibitor of cysteine proteinases from Trypanosoma cruzi, chagasin, was found to have close homologs in several eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea, the first protein inhibitors of cysteine proteases in prokaryotes. These previously uncharacterized 110-130 residue-long proteins share a well-conserved sequence motif that corresponds to two adjacent beta-strands and the short loop connecting them. Chagasin-like proteins also have other conserved, mostly aromatic, residues, and share the same predicted secondary structure. These proteins adopt an all-beta fold with eight predicted beta-strands of the immunoglobulin type. The phylogenetic distribution of the chagasins generally correlates with the presence of papain-like cysteine proteases. Previous studies have uncovered similar trends in cysteine proteinase binding by two unrelated inhibitors, stefin and p41, that belong to the cystatin and thyroglobulin families, respectively. A hypothetical model of chagasin-cruzipain interaction suggests that chagasin may dock to the cruzipain active site in a similar manner with the conserved NPTTG motif of chagasin forming a loop that is similar to the wedge structures formed at the active sites of papain and cathepsin L by stefin and p41.

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