4.6 Article

The potency and specificity of the interaction between the IA3 inhibitor and its target aspartic proteinase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 3, Pages 2023-2030

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M008520200

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The yeast IA, polypeptide consists of only 68 residues, and the free inhibitor has little intrinsic secondary structure. IA, showed subnanomolar potency toward its target, proteinase A from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and did not inhibit any of a large number of aspartic proteinases with similar sequences/structures from a wide variety of other species. Systematic truncation and mutagenesis of the IA, polypeptide revealed that the inhibitory activity is located in the N-terminal half of the sequence. Crystal structures of different forms of Lc, complexed with proteinase A showed that residues in the N-terminal half of the IA, sequence became ordered and formed an almost perfect cr-helix in the active site of the enzyme. This potent, specific interaction was directed primarily by hydrophobic interactions made by three key features in the inhibitory sequence. Whereas IA,was cut as a substrate by the nontarget aspartic proteinases, it mas not cleaved by proteinase A. The random coil IA, polypeptide escapes cleavage by being stabilized in a helical conformation upon interaction with the active site of proteinase A. This results, paradoxically, in potent selective inhibition of the target enzyme.

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