Structure and Mechanism of Metallocarboxypeptidases

Author: Gomis-Ruth, F. Xavier

Source: Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Volume 43, Number 5, 2008 , pp. 319-345(27)

Publisher: Informa Healthcare

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Abstract:

Metallocarboxpeptidases cleave C-terminal residues from peptide substrates and participate in a wide range of physiological processes, but they also contribute to human pathology. On the basis of structural information, we can distinguish between two groups of such metallopeptidases: cowrins and funnelins. Cowrins comprise protozoan, prokaryotic, and mammalian enzymes related to both neurolysin and angiotensin-converting enzyme and their catalytic domains contain 500-700 residues. They are ellipsoidal and traversed horizontally by a long, deep, narrow active-site cleft, in which the C-terminal residues are cut from oligopeptides and unstructured protein tails. The consensus cowrin structure contains a common core of 17 helices and a three-stranded β-sheet, which participates in substrate binding. This protease family is characterized by a set of spatially conserved amino acids involved in catalysis, HEXXH+EXXS/G+H+Y/R+Y. Funnelins comprise structural relatives of the archetypal bovine carboxypeptidase A1 and feature mammalian, insect and bacterial proteins with strict carboxypeptidase activity. Their ∼ 300-residue catalytic domains evince a consensus central eight-stranded β-sheet flanked on either side by a total of eight helices. They also contain a characteristic set of conserved residues, HXXE+R+NR+H+Y+E, and their active-site clefts are rather shallow and lie at the bottom of a funnel-like cavity. Therefore, these enzymes act on a large variety of well-folded proteins. In both cowrins and funnelins, substrate hydrolysis follows a common general base/acid mechanism. A metal-bound solvent molecule ultimately performs the attack on the scissile peptide bond with the assistance of a strictly conserved glutamate residue.

Keywords: peptide bond hydrolysis; three-dimensional X-ray crystal structure; zinc enzyme; catalysis

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10409230802376375

Affiliations: 1: Molecular Biology Institute of Barcelona, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain

Publication date: 2008-01-01

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