Carboxypeptidase A

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The active site of bovine pancreatic CPA is embedded within a <scene name='69/694222/3cpadeeppocket/1'>deep pocket</scene> (colored orange) whose opening is located on the surface of the protein. When no polypeptide substrate is bound in the active site, the pocket is open. However, the pocket is <scene name='69/694222/3cpadeeppocket2/1'>"capped" by a tyrosine residue (Tyr248)</scene> (shown in green) when a substrate or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_inhibitor inhibitor] molecule binds.<ref name="CPA2" /> Kinetics experiments have indicated that the binding region of the active site is actually capable of extending over five amino acids of the substrate.<ref name="CPA2" /> The active site contains two separate subsites, labeled S1' and S1, which each contain several pertinent residues that serve important roles during the catalyzed hydrolysis reaction.
The active site of bovine pancreatic CPA is embedded within a <scene name='69/694222/3cpadeeppocket/1'>deep pocket</scene> (colored orange) whose opening is located on the surface of the protein. When no polypeptide substrate is bound in the active site, the pocket is open. However, the pocket is <scene name='69/694222/3cpadeeppocket2/1'>"capped" by a tyrosine residue (Tyr248)</scene> (shown in green) when a substrate or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_inhibitor inhibitor] molecule binds.<ref name="CPA2" /> Kinetics experiments have indicated that the binding region of the active site is actually capable of extending over five amino acids of the substrate.<ref name="CPA2" /> The active site contains two separate subsites, labeled S1' and S1, which each contain several pertinent residues that serve important roles during the catalyzed hydrolysis reaction.
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=====S1' Subsite=====
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=====S1' Subsite: The Hydrophobic Binding Pocket=====
The <scene name='69/694222/3cpas1primesubsitespacefill/2'>S1' subsite</scene> (spacefill view, subsite in green) contains multiple hydrophobic residues that interact by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_der_Waals_force van der Walls forces] with C-terminal hydrophobic side chains of polypeptide substrates. For this reason, the S1' subsite is referred to as the <scene name='69/694222/3cpas1primesubsitemeshfill/1'>hydrophobic binding pocket</scene> (pseudo-mesh view, subsite in green). It should be of note that the S1' subsite, despite being named as a hydrophobic pocket, is not another pocket in addition to the deep pocket active site. Rather, it is simply a particular region of the deep pocket. Specifically, the hydrophobic pocket includes the residues <scene name='69/694222/3cpahydrophobicpocketresidues/2'>Ile243, Ile247, Ala250, Gly252, Gly253, Ser254, and Ile255</scene>. The hydrophobic nature of the S1' subsite assists in establishing some degree of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_specificity#Enzyme_specificity specificity] for CPA. Because the hydrophobic pocket anchors the polypeptide substrate in the active site, the larger and more hydrophobic the side chain of the C-terminal substrate residue, the stronger the van der Walls interactions between the subsite and the substrate. Therefore, the stability of substrate binding is increased when residues like phenylalanine are present at the C-terminus. Essentially, the S1' subsite serves as a recognition site for the C-terminal side chain of the substrate.<ref name="CPA1" />
The <scene name='69/694222/3cpas1primesubsitespacefill/2'>S1' subsite</scene> (spacefill view, subsite in green) contains multiple hydrophobic residues that interact by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_der_Waals_force van der Walls forces] with C-terminal hydrophobic side chains of polypeptide substrates. For this reason, the S1' subsite is referred to as the <scene name='69/694222/3cpas1primesubsitemeshfill/1'>hydrophobic binding pocket</scene> (pseudo-mesh view, subsite in green). It should be of note that the S1' subsite, despite being named as a hydrophobic pocket, is not another pocket in addition to the deep pocket active site. Rather, it is simply a particular region of the deep pocket. Specifically, the hydrophobic pocket includes the residues <scene name='69/694222/3cpahydrophobicpocketresidues/2'>Ile243, Ile247, Ala250, Gly252, Gly253, Ser254, and Ile255</scene>. The hydrophobic nature of the S1' subsite assists in establishing some degree of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_specificity#Enzyme_specificity specificity] for CPA. Because the hydrophobic pocket anchors the polypeptide substrate in the active site, the larger and more hydrophobic the side chain of the C-terminal substrate residue, the stronger the van der Walls interactions between the subsite and the substrate. Therefore, the stability of substrate binding is increased when residues like phenylalanine are present at the C-terminus. Essentially, the S1' subsite serves as a recognition site for the C-terminal side chain of the substrate.<ref name="CPA1" />

Revision as of 12:32, 28 March 2017

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Carboxypeptidase A in Bos taurus

Carboxypeptidase A (CPA) biological assembly (PDB: 3CPA)

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Bukrinsky JT, Bjerrum MJ, Kadziola A. 1998. Native carboxypeptidase A in a new crystal environment reveals a different conformation of the important tyrosine 248. Biochemistry. 37(47):16555-16564. DOI: 10.1021/bi981678i
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Christianson DW, Lipscomb WN. 1989. Carboxypeptidase A. Acc. Chem. Res. 22:62-69.
  3. Suh J, Cho W, Chung S. 1985. Carboxypeptidase A-catalyzed hydrolysis of α-(acylamino)cinnamoyl derivatives of L-β-phenyllactate and L-phenylalaninate: evidence for acyl-enzyme intermediates. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107:4530-4535. DOI: 10.1021/ja00301a025
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