Sandbox 39
From Proteopedia
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Papain
Introduction
Papain (9PAP), also known as papaya proteinase I, is an enzyme found in unripe papaya fruit. A cysteine protease, it has been used to break down tough muscle fibers, and hence is often found in powdered meat tenderizers. It has also been used in cell isolation procedures because it is very efficient and not very destructive. It is collected from the fruit by scoring its skin and allowing the "sap" to seem out. The sap is then dried and purified.
Function
As a cysteine protease, Papain utilizes a nucleophilic cysteine thiol as part of its catalytic triad. Papain's Cys-25 is deprotonated by its His-159. The now nucleophilic Cys-25 attacks the carbonyl carbon of the peptide backbone, forming an acyl enzyme intermediate in which the peptide's amino terminal is free. Also in this step, His-159 is returned to its deprotonated form. The intermediate is then deacylated by a water molecule, and it releases the carboxyl terminal of the peptide to produce the product and regenerate the active enzyme. This entire mechanism is shown below:
[1]]]
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.
Papain is also known to cleave 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, as shown below: Image:Http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/etc/medialib/sigma-aldrich/migratemisc4/Papain Fig2.Par.0001.Image.569.gif
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Composition of Papain
Proteins only consist of certain elements: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur. Enzymes' primary structures allow them to fold optimally and interact with their substrates maximally in order to efficiently catalyze biological reactions. The shows carbon atoms outlined in grey, oxygen atoms in red, nitrogen atoms in blue, and sulfur atoms in yellow. In addition, the entirety of the secondary structure of papain can be traced from the As shown to the left, the red end begins the protein at the N-terminus, and can be traced through the colors of the rainbow to the purple end at the C-terminus.
Secondary Structure
Papain's primary structure causes it to fold into different motifs that make up its secondary structure. These motifs include , shown in blue, and , shown in green. All other motifs are nonrandom, structural units, mostly simply turns. As shown to the left, papain has 7 alpha helices and 8 beta pleated sheets.
Polarity and Hydrophobicity
Papain contains , or "water-hating" regions, and hydrophillic, or "water-loving" regions. The hydrophobic effect, or the tendency of nonpolar substances to aggregate in aqueous solution and exclude water molecules, allows proteins to fold the way they do, exposing hydrophilic residues on their outer surface while sequestering hydrophobic residues in their center. As shown to the left, all of the are found in the center of the folded protein.
Disulfide Bonds
Papain contains three disulfide bonds. These bonds are found between Cys-22 and Cys 63, Cys-56 and Cys-95, and Cys-153 and Cys-200. These bonds can be seen to the left as yellow rods.
