Modeling and structural analysis of PA clan serine proteases

被引:21
作者
Aparna Laskar
Euan J Rodger
Aniruddha Chatterjee
Chhabinath Mandal
机构
[1] Indian Institute of Chemical Biology (CSIR Unit, Government of India), Kolkata, West Bengal
[2] Department of Pathology, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin
[3] National Research Centre for Growth and Development, Auckland
关键词
Homology; Modeling; PA clan; Serine protease; Threading;
D O I
10.1186/1756-0500-5-256
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Serine proteases account for over a third of all known proteolytic enzymes; they are involved in a variety of physiological processes and are classified into clans sharing structural homology. The PA clan of endopeptidases is the most abundant and over two thirds of this clan is comprised of the S1 family of serine proteases, which bear the archetypal trypsin fold and have a catalytic triad in the order Histidine, Aspartate, Serine. These proteases have been studied in depth and many three dimensional structures have been experimentally determined. However, these structures mostly consist of bacterial and animal proteases, with a small number of plant and fungal proteases and as yet no structures have been determined for protozoa or archaea. The core structure and active site geometry of these proteases is of interest for many applications. This study investigated the structural properties of different S1 family serine proteases from a diverse range of taxa using molecular modeling techniques. Results: Our predicted models from protozoa, archaea, fungi and plants were combined with the experimentally determined structures of 16 S1 family members and used for analysis of the catalytic core. Amino acid sequences were submitted to SWISS-MODEL for homology-based structure prediction or the LOOPP server for threading-based structure prediction. Predicted models were refined using INSIGHT II and SCRWL and validated against experimental structures. Investigation of secondary structures and electrostatic surface potential was performed using MOLMOL. The structural geometry of the catalytic core shows clear deviations between taxa, but the relative positions of the catalytic triad residues were conserved. Some highly conserved residues potentially contributing to the stability of the structural core were identified. Evolutionary divergence was also exhibited by large variation in secondary structure features outside the core, differences in overall amino acid distribution, and unique surface electrostatic potential patterns between species. Conclusions: Encompassing a wide range of taxa, our structural analysis provides an evolutionary perspective on S1 family serine proteases. Focusing on the common core containing the catalytic site of the enzyme, this analysisis beneficial for future molecular modeling strategies and structural analysis of serine protease models. © 2012 Laskar et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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