Chymotrypsin

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== Function ==
== Function ==
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[[Chymotrypsin]] (Chy or α-Chy) is a digestive enzyme containing an active serine residue, which helps to digest proteins in our food. Other related proteases are crucial for blood clotting ([http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=stryer&part=A1378&rendertype=figure&id=A1401 thrombin and other proteases]), for the AIDS virus metabolism ([http://www.proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/Hiv_protease HIV protease]) and for many other processes relevant to human health and agriculture. Chymotrypsin cleaves peptide bonds of proteins where the amide side of the bond is an aromatic amino acid like tyrosine, phenylalanine or tryptophan. Bovine Chy is found in 2 forms: A and B. The 2 forms have different proteolytic characteristics. '''γ-Chy''' is a covalent acyl adduct of α-Chy.The image at the left is the crystal structure of chymotrypsin from ''Cellulomonas Bogoriensis'' ([[2ea3]]) with sulfate ions.<ref>PMID:3555886</ref><br /> Some additional details in<br />
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[[Chymotrypsin]] (Chy or α-Chy) is a digestive enzyme containing an active serine residue, which helps to digest proteins in our food. Other related proteases are crucial for blood clotting ([http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=stryer&part=A1378&rendertype=figure&id=A1401 thrombin and other proteases]), for the AIDS virus metabolism ([http://www.proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/Hiv_protease HIV protease]) and for many other processes relevant to human health and agriculture. Chymotrypsin cleaves peptide bonds of proteins where the amide side of the bond is an aromatic amino acid like tyrosine, phenylalanine or tryptophan. Bovine Chy is found in 2 forms: A and B. The 2 forms have different proteolytic characteristics. The image at the left is the crystal structure of chymotrypsin from ''Cellulomonas Bogoriensis'' ([[2ea3]]) with sulfate ions.<ref>PMID:3555886</ref><br />
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*'''γ-Chy''' is a covalent acyl adduct of α-Chy.
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*'''Chymotrypsinogen''' is nonactive precursor of α-Chy. It is converted to the active form, i.e., chymotrypsin by trypsin.
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Some additional details in<br />
*[[Molecular Playground/Chymotrypsin]]<br />
*[[Molecular Playground/Chymotrypsin]]<br />
*[[Protease]]<br />
*[[Protease]]<br />
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This view shows the <scene name='38/387136/Bovine_chymotrypsin_active_sit/3'>carbonyl group of the inhibitor</scene> in CPK colors. The triflouromethyl group is bound to the carbonyl carbon via the yellow bond. In a peptide substrate, the triflouromethyl group would be replaced by the first amino acid residue of the rest of the peptide chain, and the yellow bond would be the bond that is cleaved. The carbonyl carbon of the inhibitor is 1.52 Å away from the side chain oxygen of serine 195, and this indicates they are covalently bound (bond indicated by dotted line). Thus, this structure is similar to the '''tetrahedral intermediate''' that is formed during the cleavage reaction. The negative charge that develops on the carbonyl oxygen of the substrate is stabilized by hydrogen bonds to the backbone nitrogens of Ser 195 and Gly 193, shown in blue spacefill. The hydrogen atoms involved in these hydrogen bonds are not shown.
This view shows the <scene name='38/387136/Bovine_chymotrypsin_active_sit/3'>carbonyl group of the inhibitor</scene> in CPK colors. The triflouromethyl group is bound to the carbonyl carbon via the yellow bond. In a peptide substrate, the triflouromethyl group would be replaced by the first amino acid residue of the rest of the peptide chain, and the yellow bond would be the bond that is cleaved. The carbonyl carbon of the inhibitor is 1.52 Å away from the side chain oxygen of serine 195, and this indicates they are covalently bound (bond indicated by dotted line). Thus, this structure is similar to the '''tetrahedral intermediate''' that is formed during the cleavage reaction. The negative charge that develops on the carbonyl oxygen of the substrate is stabilized by hydrogen bonds to the backbone nitrogens of Ser 195 and Gly 193, shown in blue spacefill. The hydrogen atoms involved in these hydrogen bonds are not shown.
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== 3D Structures of Chymotrypsin ==
 
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[[Chymotrypsin 3D structures]]
 
</StructureSection>
</StructureSection>
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== 3D Structures of Chymotrypsin ==
 
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Updated on {{REVISIONDAY2}}-{{MONTHNAME|{{REVISIONMONTH}}}}-{{REVISIONYEAR}}
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== Mechanism ==
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The hydrolysis occurs in two steps. First, the peptide bond with the C-terminal part of the substrate is replaced by an ester bond to the active site serine. Second, the covalent intermediate is hydrolyzed by water, releasing the N-terminal part of the substrate as carboxylic acid. Both steps occur via a tetrahedral intermediate containing an oxyanion that is stabilized by hydrogen bond donors lining the so-called oxyanion hole. Throughout the reaction, active site residue histidine 57 acts as base or acid to deprotonate nucleophiles or protonate leaving groups, respectively. The following 5-minute video shows the mechanism step by step.
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The Chy precursor is the inactive '''chymotrypsinogen''' (Chygen) which gets cleaved 3 times by trypsin and chymotrypsin losing a 4 amino acid long peptide to become the active Chy. '''γ-Chy''' is a covalent acyl adduct of '''α-Chy'''. '''δ-Chy''' results when Chygen is cleaved only twice.
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<center><html5media height=“720” width=“1280” frameborder="0" allowfullscreen>https://www.youtube.com/embed/JWtjYYl5Ylw</html5media></center>
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{{#tree:id=OrganizedByTopic|openlevels=0|
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<center>Mechanism of chymotrypsin ([http://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/Image:Chymotrypsin_mechanism.gz image source])</center>
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* Native α-chymotrypsin
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== 3D Structures of Chymotrypsin ==
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[[Chymotrypsin 3D structures]]
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**[[1yph]], [[4cha]], [[5cha]] – bChy chain A - bovine<br />
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**[[6di8]] – bChy chain A+B+C<br />
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**[[1kdq]] – rChy chain B (mutant) - rat<br />
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**[[2ea3]] – Chy – ''Cellulomonas bogoriensis''<br />
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* α-chymotrypsin + polypeptide inhibitors
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**[[4h4f]] – hChyC +Elgin C - human<br />
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**[[1cbw]], [[1mtn]] - bChy+BPTI <br />
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**[[1t7c]], [[1t8l]], [[1t8m]], [[1t8n]], [[1t8o]] – bChyA+P1 BPTI variants<br />
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**[[1oxg]] – bChyA+autolysis peptide<br />
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**[[4q2k]] - bChyA+ cyclic peptide<br />
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**[[1p2m]], [[1p2n]], [[1p2o]], [[1p2q]] – bChyA+ 4 amino acids in S1 pocket<br />
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**[[1n8o]] – bChyA+ecotin<br />
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**[[1ca0]] – bChy+APPI <br />
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**[[1gl1]] – bChy + PMP-C<br />
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**[[1ab9]], [[8gch]], [[1gct]], [[2gct]], [[3gct]], [[2gch]] - bChyA + peptide<br />
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**[[1acb]] – bChy+Elgin C <br />
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**[[1cho]], [[1hja]] – bChyA+turkey ovomucoid third domain <br />
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* α-chymotrypsin + inhibitors
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**[[3bg4]] – ChyA chain A+guamerin <br />
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**[[2p8o]] - bChyA chain A+benzohydroxamic acid/vanadate <br />
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**[[1eq9]] – Chy+PMSF – fire ant <br />
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**[[2cha]] – bChyA+p-sulfinotoluene<br />
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**[[6cha]] – bChyA+phenylethane boronic acid <br />
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* γ-Chymotrypsin + inhibitors
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**[[1gg6]] – γ-bChy+N-acetyl-phenylalanine trifluoromethyl ketone <br />
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**[[1ggd]] – γ-bChy+N-acetyl-phenylalanine trifluoromethyl aldehyde <br />
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**[[1afq]] - γ-bChy+synthetic inhibitor<br />
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**[[3gch]], [[4gch]], [[5gch]] - γ-bChyA+cinnamate <br />
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**[[6gch]], [[7gch]] - γ-bChyA+trifluoromethy ketone <br />
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**[[1gmc]], [[1gmd]] – γ-bChyA+ peptide<br />
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**[[2gmt]] - γ-bChy+N-acetyl-alanyl-phenylalanyl-chloroethyl ketone<br />
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**[[1gmh]], [[1gcd]] - γ-bChyA+organophosphoryl <br />
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**[[1gha]], [[1ghb]] - γ-bChyA+ N-acetyl-tryptophan<br />
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**[[1vgc]], [[2vgc]], [[3vgc]], [[4vgc]] – γ-bChy + boronic acid inhibitor<br />
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* Native Chymotrypsinogen
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**[[2cga]], [[1chg]], [[1ex3]] – bChygenA<br />
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**[[2jet]] – rChygenB chain A,B <br />
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* Chymotrypsinogen + inhibitors
 
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**[[1gl0]], [[1gli]] – ChygenA+PMP_D2v – ''Locusta migratoria''<br />
 
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**[[1k2i]] - bChygenA+7-hydroxycoumarin<br />
 
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**[[2y6t]] – bChygenA + ecotin<br />
 
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**[[3t62]] - bChygenA + Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitor SHPI-1<br />
 
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**[[1cgi]], [[1cgj]] - bChygenA + Kazal-type inhibitor<br />
 
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**[[3ru4]] - bChygenA + trypsin + Bowman-Birk inhibitor<br />
 
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**[[1pyt]] – bChygenC + procarboxipeptidase + proproteinase<br />
 
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}}
 
== References ==
== References ==
<references/>
<references/>

Current revision

Bovine γ-chymotrypsin A (residues 1-13 in pink, 16-146 in cyan, 149-245 in gold) complex with inhibitor (PDB code 7gch)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Contents

Mechanism

The hydrolysis occurs in two steps. First, the peptide bond with the C-terminal part of the substrate is replaced by an ester bond to the active site serine. Second, the covalent intermediate is hydrolyzed by water, releasing the N-terminal part of the substrate as carboxylic acid. Both steps occur via a tetrahedral intermediate containing an oxyanion that is stabilized by hydrogen bond donors lining the so-called oxyanion hole. Throughout the reaction, active site residue histidine 57 acts as base or acid to deprotonate nucleophiles or protonate leaving groups, respectively. The following 5-minute video shows the mechanism step by step.

Mechanism of chymotrypsin (image source)

3D Structures of Chymotrypsin

Chymotrypsin 3D structures


References

  1. Appel W. Chymotrypsin: molecular and catalytic properties. Clin Biochem. 1986 Dec;19(6):317-22. PMID:3555886

Further reading

You can learn more about chymotrypsin structure, function and regulation in this publicly available chapter of the Biochemistry textbook by Berg, Tymoczka and Stryer.

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Michal Harel, Karsten Theis, Alice Harmon, Alexander Berchansky

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