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Proteins. 58(4), 802-814 (2005).[DOI Link] 1.70 A X-ray structure of human apo kallikrein 1: Structural changes upon peptide inhibitor/substrate bindingLaxmikanthan G, Blaber SI, Bernett MJ, Scarisbrick IA, Juliano MA, Blaber MInstitute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-4380, USA
Human kallikreins are serine proteases that comprise a recently identified large
and closely related 15-member family. The kallikreins include both regulatory-
and degradative-type proteases, impacting a variety of physiological processes
including regulation of blood pressure, neuronal health, and the inflammatory
response. While the function of the majority of the kallikreins remains to be
elucidated, two members are useful biomarkers for prostate cancer and several
others are potentially useful biomarkers for breast cancer, Alzheimer's, and
Parkinson's disease. Human tissue kallikrein (human K1) is the best functionally
characterized member of this family, and is known to play an important role in
blood pressure regulation. As part of this function, human K1 exhibits unique
dual-substrate specificity in hydrolyzing low molecular weight kininogen between
both Arg-Ser and Met-Lys sequences. We report the X-ray crystal structure of
mature, active recombinant human apo K1 at 1.70 A resolution. The active site
exhibits structural features intermediate between that of apo and pro forms of
known kallikrein structures. The S2 to S2' pockets demonstrate a variety of
conformational changes in comparison to the porcine homolog of K1 in complex
with peptide inhibitors, including the displacement of an extensive solvent
network. These results indicate that the binding of a peptide substrate
contributes to a structural rearrangement of the active-site Ser 195 resulting
in a catalytically competent juxtaposition with the active-site His 57. The
solvent networks within the S1 and S1' pockets suggest how the Arg-Ser and
Met-Lys dual substrate specificity of human K1 is accommodated. Proteins 2005.
(c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
PMID: 15651049 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] This publication is one of the several that describes a structure solved either at the Kasha Laboratory, Institute of Molecular Biophysics or in collaboration with the Institute Faculty. The data used for this structure determination came in full or part from the Macromolecular X-Ray Crystallography Facility. |
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www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/05laxmikanthan.html
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