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==The Mechanism of Trypsin== | ==The Mechanism of Trypsin== | ||
<StructureSection load='2agg' size='340' side='right' caption='Intermediate of Trypsin catalyzed hydrolysis' scene=''> | <StructureSection load='2agg' size='340' side='right' caption='Intermediate of Trypsin catalyzed hydrolysis' scene=''> | ||
| - | Trypsin is a serine protease that works enzymatically by using a mixture of base, acid, and covalent catalysis. The protein uses serine in its active site to interact covalently with the substrate. To create a nucleophilic attack, a | + | Trypsin is a serine protease that works enzymatically by using a mixture of base, acid, and covalent catalysis. The protein uses serine in its active site to interact covalently with the substrate. To create a nucleophilic attack, a histidine group activates a serine group via base catalysis and covalent catalysis follows.To complete the formation of a nucleophile, aspartic acid pulls positive charge from histidine, completing the catalytic triad and forming an effective nucleophile. This forms a tetrahedral intermediate, in which the anionic carbonyl oxygen moves into the active site to a location known as the oxyanion hole. The tetrahedral intermediate is followed by acid catalysis from the -NH2 of the of the c-terminus, resulting in a broken peptide bond in the substrate.The transition state from the tetrahedral intermediate is stabilized by Asp 189 interacting with Gly 219 to create a stable specificity pocket. The acyl-enzyme intermediate is present, and hydrolysis occurs which ultimately releases the c-terminal chain of the substrate and forms a new bond between water and the carbonyl carbon of the enzyme-substrate complex. The covalent C-O bond of the substrate-enzyme complex is broken, and the enzyme is reformed as the product is released. |
This structure was found from | This structure was found from | ||
| - | <scene name='72/725331/Ser_195_zoom/ | + | <scene name='72/725331/Ser_195_zoom/1'>Important Serine Residue</scene> |
| - | <scene name='72/725331/His_57_residue/ | + | <scene name='72/725331/His_57_residue/1'>Important Histidine Residue</scene> |
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</StructureSection> | </StructureSection> | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
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| + | David Elkins | ||
| + | Cameron Brown | ||
Revision as of 15:20, 19 February 2016
The Mechanism of Trypsin
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References
David Elkins
Cameron Brown
