1. Academic Validation
  2. Sequence and conformational specificity in substrate recognition: several human Kunitz protease inhibitor domains are specific substrates of mesotrypsin

Sequence and conformational specificity in substrate recognition: several human Kunitz protease inhibitor domains are specific substrates of mesotrypsin

  • J Biol Chem. 2014 Nov 21;289(47):32783-97. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M114.609560.
Devon Pendlebury 1 Ruiying Wang 1 Rachel D Henin 1 Alexandra Hockla 1 Alexei S Soares 2 Benjamin J Madden 3 Marat D Kazanov 4 Evette S Radisky 5
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the Department of Cancer Biology, Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, Jacksonville, Florida 32224.
  • 2 the Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973.
  • 3 the Medical Genome Facility Proteomics Core, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, and.
  • 4 the A. A. Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 127994, Russia.
  • 5 From the Department of Cancer Biology, Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, Jacksonville, Florida 32224, radisky.evette@mayo.edu.
Abstract

Mesotrypsin is an isoform of trypsin that is uniquely resistant to polypeptide trypsin inhibitors and can cleave some inhibitors rapidly. Previous studies have shown that the amyloid precursor protein Kunitz protease inhibitor domain (APPI) is a specific substrate of mesotrypsin and that stabilization of the APPI cleavage site in a canonical conformation contributes to recognition by mesotrypsin. We hypothesized that Other proteins possessing potential cleavage sites stabilized in a similar conformation might also be mesotrypsin substrates. Here we evaluated a series of candidate substrates, including human Kunitz protease inhibitor domains from amyloid precursor-like protein 2 (APLP2), bikunin, hepatocyte growth factor activator inhibitor type 2 (HAI2), tissue factor pathway inhibitor-1 (TFPI1), and tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI2), as well as E-Selectin, an unrelated protein possessing a potential cleavage site displaying canonical conformation. We find that Kunitz domains within APLP2, bikunin, and HAI2 are cleaved by mesotrypsin with kinetic profiles of specific substrates. TFPI1 and TFPI2 Kunitz domains are cleaved less efficiently by mesotrypsin, and E-Selectin is not cleaved at the anticipated site. Cocrystal structures of mesotrypsin with HAI2 and bikunin Kunitz domains reveal the mode of mesotrypsin interaction with its canonical substrates. Our data suggest that major determinants of mesotrypsin substrate specificity include sequence preferences at the P1 and P'2 positions along with conformational stabilization of the cleavage site in the canonical conformation. Mesotrypsin up-regulation has been implicated previously in Cancer progression, and proteolytic clearance of Kunitz Protease Inhibitors offers potential mechanisms by which mesotrypsin may mediate pathological effects in Cancer.

Keywords

Crystal Structure; Enzyme Kinetics; Protease Inhibitor; Protein Degradation; Protein Structure; Protein-Protein Interaction; Proteolysis; Serine Protease; Substrate Specificity; Trypsin.

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