4.6 Article

Active site specificity profiling of the matrix metalloproteinase family: Proteomic identification of 4300 cleavage sites by nine MMPs explored with structural and synthetic peptide cleavage analyses

期刊

MATRIX BIOLOGY
卷 49, 期 -, 页码 37-60

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2015.09.003

关键词

MMPs; Specificity profiling; Proteomics; Quenched-fluorescent peptides; PICS; Peptide docking

资金

  1. Canada Research Chair in Metalloproteinase Proteomics and Systems Biology
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [MOP-11433, MOP-37937, MOP-111055]
  3. Michael Smith Research Foundation for Health Research (MSFHR)
  4. Canada Foundations for Innovation (CFI)
  5. MSFHR
  6. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation
  8. Novartis Jubilee Foundation
  9. Feodor Lynen Research Fellowship of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  10. UBC Centre for Blood Research Strategic Training Program in Transfusion Science
  11. CBR Internal Collaborative Training Award
  12. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Graduate Scholarships
  13. CIHR Strategic Training Fellowships

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Secreted and membrane tethered matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are key homeostatic proteases regulating the extracellular signaling and structural matrix environment of cells and tissues. For drug targeting of proteases, selectivity for individual molecules is highly desired and can be met by high yield active site specificity profiling. Using the high throughput Proteomic Identification of protease Cleavage Sites (PICS) method to simultaneously profile both the prime and non-prime sides of the cleavage sites of nine human MMPs, we identified more than 4300 cleavages from P6 to P6' in biologically diverse human peptide libraries. MMP specificity and kinetic efficiency were mainly guided by aliphatic and aromatic residues in P1' (with a similar to 32-93% preference for leucine depending on, the MMP), and basic and small residues in P2' and P3', respectively. A wide differential preference for the hallmark P3 proline was found between MMPs ranging from 15 to 46%, yet when combined in the same peptide with the universally preferred P1' leucine, an unexpected negative cooperativity emerged. This was not observed in previous studies, probably due to the paucity of approaches that profile both the prime and non-prime sides together, and the masking of subsite cooperativity effects by global heat maps and iceLogos. These caveats make it critical to check for these biologically highly important effects by fixing all 20 amino acids one-by-one in the respective subsites and thorough assessing of the inferred specificity logo changes. Indeed an analysis of bona fide MEROPS physiological substrate cleavage data revealed that of the 37 natural substrates with either a P3-Pro or a P1'-Leu only 5 shared both features, confirming the PICS data. Upon probing with several new quenched-fluorescent peptides, rationally designed on our specificity data, the negative cooperativity was explained by reduced non-prime side flexibility constraining accommodation of the rigidifying P3 proline with leucine locked in S1'. Similar negative cooperativity between P3 proline and the novel preference for asparagine in P1 cements our conclusion that non-prime side flexibility greatly impacts MMP binding affinity and cleavage efficiency. Thus, unexpected sequence cooperativity consequences were revealed by PICS that uniquely encompasses both the non-prime and prime sides flanking the proteomic-pinpointed scissile bond. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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