Papain

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==Inhibitors==
==Inhibitors==
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<StructureSection load='1pop' size='400' side='left'>
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<StructureSection load='9pap' size='400' side='left' caption='Click on the links to the right to view different scenes of the inhibition of Papain.' scene='Papain/9pap_bindingpocket_wrtdomains/4' >
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==='''Leupeptin(PDB ID #: 1pop)'''===
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==='''Leupeptin'''===
<scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin/1'>Leupeptin</scene> is a commonly studied inhibitor of proteases (seen in the Jmol as ball and stick model). It inhibits by binding and interacting with the active site which allows it to block the enzyme's desired protein substrate. There are many <scene name='Sandbox_31/1popligand_contacts/1'>Residues</scene> that interact with Leupeptin in the active site. The predominant interaction is from hydrophobic interactions between Leupeptin and <scene name='Sandbox_31/1pophydrointeract/1'>active site residues</scene>. In addition to hydrophobic interactions, there are also some hydrogen bonding interactions to hold Leupeptin in the active site of papain. Leupeptin works well at blocking papain from its enzymatic duties. A recent study has shown that Leupeptin actually forms a covalent bond between its <scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin_active/1'>Carbonyl Carbon</scene> and CYS 25. In addition, the residues Gln 19 and CYS 25 form <scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin_active/2'>hydrogen bonds</scene> with the Leupeptin molecule
<scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin/1'>Leupeptin</scene> is a commonly studied inhibitor of proteases (seen in the Jmol as ball and stick model). It inhibits by binding and interacting with the active site which allows it to block the enzyme's desired protein substrate. There are many <scene name='Sandbox_31/1popligand_contacts/1'>Residues</scene> that interact with Leupeptin in the active site. The predominant interaction is from hydrophobic interactions between Leupeptin and <scene name='Sandbox_31/1pophydrointeract/1'>active site residues</scene>. In addition to hydrophobic interactions, there are also some hydrogen bonding interactions to hold Leupeptin in the active site of papain. Leupeptin works well at blocking papain from its enzymatic duties. A recent study has shown that Leupeptin actually forms a covalent bond between its <scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin_active/1'>Carbonyl Carbon</scene> and CYS 25. In addition, the residues Gln 19 and CYS 25 form <scene name='Sandbox_31/Leupeptin_active/2'>hydrogen bonds</scene> with the Leupeptin molecule

Revision as of 00:59, 5 April 2012

Papaya
Papaya[1]

Papain belongs to an extended family of aminopeptidases, dipeptidyl peptidases, endopeptidases, and other enzymes having both exo- and endo-peptidase activity. The inactivated zymogen with N-terminal propeptide regions - providing stability in alkaline environments and enabling proper folding - is activated through removal of the propeptide regions. [2] The protein is primarily secreted with its pro-region enabling transport from zymogen to lysosome through membrane association and mediation. [3]

Papain. Meat tenderizer. Old time home remedy for insect, jellyfish, and stingray stings[4]. Who would have thought that a sulfhydryl protease from the latex of the papaya fruit, Carica papaya and Vasconcellea cundinamarcensis would have such a practical application beyond proteopedia?

Papain made its first appearance in the Calcutta Medical Journal entitled “The Solvent Action of Papaya Juice on Nitrogenous Articles of Food” when G.C Roy was investigating the enzyme in 1873. In the late 19th century, Wurtz and Bouchut dubbed the partially purified enzyme "papain." [5] At the time, it was viewed as a proteolytically active constituent in the latex of tropical papaya fruit. [6] As separation and purification techniques improved, pure papain was able to be isolated. In becoming the second enzyme to attain an X-ray crystallized structure and the first cysteine protease to behold an identifiable structure, papain fueled greater advances in enzymatic studies. [7]

Papain is a 23.4 kDa, 212 residue cysteine protease, also known as papaya proteinase I, from the peptidase C1 family (E.C. 3.4.22.2).[8][9] It is the natural product of the Papaya(Carica papaya)[10], and may be extracted from the plant's latex, leaves and roots. [11]. Papain displays a broad range of functions, acting as an endopeptidase, amidase, and esterase,[11] with its optimal activity values for pH lying between 6.0 and 7.0, and its optimal temperature for activity is 65 °C. Its pI values are 8.75 and 9.55, and it is best visualized at a wavelength of 278 nm. [10]

Papain's enzymatic use was first discovered in 1873 by G.C. Roy who published his results in the Calcutta Medical Journal in the article, "The Solvent Action of Papaya Juice on Nitrogenous Articles of Food." In 1879, papain was named officially by Wurtz and Bouchut, who managed to partially purify the product from the sap of papaya. It wasn't until the mid-twentieth century that the complete purification and isolation of papain was achieved. In 1968, Drenth et al. determined the structure of papain by x-ray crystallography, making it the second enzyme whose structure was successfully determined by x-ray crystallography. Additionally, papain was the first cysteine protease to have its structure identified.[11] In 1984, Kamphuis et al. determined the geometry of the active site, and the three-dimensional structure was visualized to a 1.65 Angstrom solution.[12] Today, studies continue on the stability of papain, involving changes in environmental conditions as well as testing of inhibitors such as phenylmethanesulfonylfluoride (PMSF), TLCK, TPCK, aplh2-macroglobulin, heavy metals, AEBSF, antipain, cystatin, E-64, leupeptin, sulfhydryl binding agents, carbonyl reagents, and alkylating agents.[11]

Contents

Structure

Click on the links to the left to view different structural aspects. The PDB code for this 1.65 Å resolution structure is 9PAP.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Inhibitors

Click on the links to the right to view different scenes of the inhibition of Papain.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Common Uses

Medicinal

Papain has been used for a plethora of medicinal purposes including treating inflammation, shingles, diarrhea, psoriasis, parasites, and many others.[25] One major use is the treatment of cutaneous ulcers including diabetic ulcers and pressure ulcers.[26] Pressures ulcers plague many bed bound individuals and are a major source of pain and discomfort. Two papain based topical drugs are Accuzyme and Panafil, which can be used to treat wounds like cutaneous ulcers.[27]

A recent New York Times article featured papain and other digestive enzymes.[28] With the number of individuals suffering from irritable bowel syndrome and other gastrointestinal issues, many people are turning toward natural digestive aid supplements like papain. The author even talks about the use of papain along with a pineapple enzyme, bromelain, in cosmetic facial masks. Dr. Adam R. Kolker (a plastic surgeon) is quoted in the article saying that "For skin that is sensitive, enzymes are wonderful." He bases these claims off the idea that proteases like papain help to break peptide bonds holding dead skin cells to the live skin cells.[29]

Commercial and Biomedical

Papain digests most proteins, often more extensively than pancreatic proteases. It has a very broad specificity and is known to cleave peptide bonds of basic amino acids and leucine and glycine residues, but prefers amino acids with large hydrophobic side chains. This non-specific nature of papain's hydrolase activity has led to its use in many and varied commercial products. It is often used as a meat tenderizer because it can hydrolyze the peptide bonds of collagen, elastin, and actomyosin. It is also used in contact lens solution to remove protein deposits on the lenses and marketed as a digestive supplement. [30] Finally, papain has several common uses in general biomedical research, including a gentle cell isolation agent, production of glycopeptides from purified proteoglycans, and solubilization of integral membrane proteins. It is also notable for its ability to specifically cleave IgG and IgM antibodies above and below the disulfide bonds that join the heavy chains and that is found between the light chain and heavy chain. This generates two monovalent Fab segments, that each have a single antibody binding sites, and an intact Fc fragment.[11]

Fun Trivia

Remember the 2002 SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) epidemic that placed global health, particularly in Southeast Asia, in a precarious state? On-going research is happening to further understand the mechanisms of this coronavirus, so that future steps can be taken for prevention. Its been found that the replication of RNA for this virus is mediated by two viral proteases that have many papain-like characteristics. [31]


Despite a low percentage of sequence identities, inhibition and sequence analyses have increasingly been drawing parallels between L proteinases, that involve the foot-and-mouth disease virus and equine rhinovirus 1, and papain. With a similar overall fold to papain and identifiable regions that resemble the five alpha-helices and seven beta-sheets of papain, L proteinases of foot-and-mouth disease virus and of equine rhinovirus 1 reveal a mode of operation that is very papain like. [32]

References

  1. [1] Papaya's Nutrition Facts
  2. Rawlings ND, Barrett AJ. Families of cysteine peptidases. Methods Enzymol. 1994;244:461-86. PMID:7845226
  3. Yamamoto Y, Kurata M, Watabe S, Murakami R, Takahashi SY. Novel cysteine proteinase inhibitors homologous to the proregions of cysteine proteinases. Curr Protein Pept Sci. 2002 Apr;3(2):231-8. PMID:12188906
  4. [2] Ameridan International
  5. Menard and Storer 1998
  6. Wurtz and Bouchut 1879
  7. Drenth J, Jansonius JN, Koekoek R, Swen HM, Wolthers BG. Structure of papain. Nature. 1968 Jun 8;218(5145):929-32. PMID:5681232
  8. [3] Uniprot
  9. 9.0 9.1 [4] 9PAP PDB
  10. 10.0 10.1 [5] Sigma Aldrich
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 [6] Worthington
  12. 12.0 12.1 Kamphuis IG, Kalk KH, Swarte MB, Drenth J. Structure of papain refined at 1.65 A resolution. J Mol Biol. 1984 Oct 25;179(2):233-56. PMID:6502713
  13. [7] Jane S. Richardson
  14. [8] The Structure of Papain
  15. http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=fk1hbZdPTEgC&oi=fnd&pg=PA79&dq=aromatic+residues+in+papain&ots=L8SvlkQaZU&sig=xZ2l8kj52PD7DzuiAQ1zah0CU2M#v=onepage&q=aromatic%20residues%20in%20papain&f=false
  16. http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore/explore.do?structureId=9PAP
  17. http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/life-science/metabolomics/enzyme-explorer/analytical-enzymes/papain.html
  18. [9] University of Maine
  19. [10]Harrison, M.J., N.A. Burton, and I.H. Hillier. 1997. Catalytic Mechanism of the Enzyme Papain: Predictions with a Hybrid Quantum Mechanical/Molecular Mechanical Potential. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 119: 12285-12291
  20. [11] Schröder, E., C. Phillips, E. Garman, K. Harlos, C. Crawford. 1997. X-ray crystallographic structure of a papain-leupeptin complex. FEBS Letters 315: 38-42
  21. http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ci800085c
  22. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2923042/?tool=pubmed
  23. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6807/10/30
  24. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC551902/pdf/emboj00233-0254.pdf
  25. http://www.webmd.com/vitamins-supplements/ingredientmono-69-PAPAIN.aspx?activeIngredientId=69&activeIngredientName=PAPAIN
  26. http://www.pbm.va.gov/Clinical%20Guidance/Drug%20Monographs/Papain%20Urea.pdf
  27. http://www.pbm.va.gov/Clinical%20Guidance/Drug%20Monographs/Papain%20Urea.pdf
  28. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/23/fashion/enzymes-once-sidelined-try-to-grab-the-spotlight.html
  29. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/23/fashion/enzymes-once-sidelined-try-to-grab-the-spotlight.html
  30. http://www.webmd.com/vitamins-supplements/ingredientmono-69-PAPAIN.aspx?activeIngredientId=69&activeIngredientName=PAPAIN
  31. Barretto N, Jukneliene D, Ratia K, Chen Z, Mesecar AD, Baker SC. The papain-like protease of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus has deubiquitinating activity. J Virol. 2005 Dec;79(24):15189-98. PMID:16306590 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.24.15189-15198.2005
  32. Skern T, Fita I, Guarne A. A structural model of picornavirus leader proteinases based on papain and bleomycin hydrolase. J Gen Virol. 1998 Feb;79 ( Pt 2):301-7. PMID:9472614


Reference

  • Wang J, Xiang YF, Lim C. The double catalytic triad, Cys25-His159-Asp158 and Cys25-His159-Asn175, in papain catalysis: role of Asp158 and Asn175. Protein Eng. 1994 Jan;7(1):75-82. PMID:8140097
  • Kamphuis IG, Kalk KH, Swarte MB, Drenth J. Structure of papain refined at 1.65 A resolution. J Mol Biol. 1984 Oct 25;179(2):233-56. PMID:6502713

3D Structures of Papain

3LFY, 1KHP, 1KHQ, 1CVZ, 1BQI, 1BP4, 1PPN, 1PPP, 1PIP, 1POP, 1PE6, 9PAP, 1PPD, 1PAD, 2PAD, 4PAD, 5PAD, 6PAD- Carica papaya

3IMA - Colocasia esculenta

1STF - Homo sapiens

2CIO - Trypanosoma brucei

3E1Z - Trypanosoma cruzi




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