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Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water

BACKGROUND: This work represents an extensive MD simulation / water-dynamics studies on a series of complexes of inhibitors (leupeptin, E-64, E-64-C, ZPACK) and plant cysteine proteases (actinidin, caricain, chymopapain, calotropin DI) of papain family to understand the various interactions, water b...

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Autores principales: Bhattacharya, Suparna, Ghosh, Sreya, Chakraborty, Sibani, Bera, Asim K, Mukhopadhayay, Bishnu P, Dey, Indrani, Banerjee, Asok
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC57815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11602025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-1-4
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author Bhattacharya, Suparna
Ghosh, Sreya
Chakraborty, Sibani
Bera, Asim K
Mukhopadhayay, Bishnu P
Dey, Indrani
Banerjee, Asok
author_facet Bhattacharya, Suparna
Ghosh, Sreya
Chakraborty, Sibani
Bera, Asim K
Mukhopadhayay, Bishnu P
Dey, Indrani
Banerjee, Asok
author_sort Bhattacharya, Suparna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This work represents an extensive MD simulation / water-dynamics studies on a series of complexes of inhibitors (leupeptin, E-64, E-64-C, ZPACK) and plant cysteine proteases (actinidin, caricain, chymopapain, calotropin DI) of papain family to understand the various interactions, water binding mode, factors influencing it and the structural basis of differential inhibition. RESULTS: The tertiary structure of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes were built by visual interactive modeling and energy minimization followed by dynamic simulation of 120 ps in water environment. DASA study with and without the inhibitor revealed the potential subsite residues involved in inhibition. Though the interaction involving main chain atoms are similar, critical inspection of the complexes reveal significant differences in the side chain interactions in S(2)-P(2) and S(3)-P(3) pairs due to sequence differences in the equivalent positions of respective subsites leading to differential inhibition. CONCLUSION: The key finding of the study is a conserved site of a water molecule near oxyanion hole of the enzyme active site, which is found in all the modeled complexes and in most crystal structures of papain family either native or complexed. Conserved water molecules at the ligand binding sites of these homologous proteins suggest the structural importance of the water, which changes the conventional definition of chemical geometry of inhibitor binding domain, its shape and complimentarity. The water mediated recognition of inhibitor to enzyme subsites (P(n)...H(2)O....S(n)) of leupeptin acetyl oxygen to caricain, chymopapain and calotropinDI is an additional information and offer valuable insight to potent inhibitor design.
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spelling pubmed-578152001-10-15 Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water Bhattacharya, Suparna Ghosh, Sreya Chakraborty, Sibani Bera, Asim K Mukhopadhayay, Bishnu P Dey, Indrani Banerjee, Asok BMC Struct Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: This work represents an extensive MD simulation / water-dynamics studies on a series of complexes of inhibitors (leupeptin, E-64, E-64-C, ZPACK) and plant cysteine proteases (actinidin, caricain, chymopapain, calotropin DI) of papain family to understand the various interactions, water binding mode, factors influencing it and the structural basis of differential inhibition. RESULTS: The tertiary structure of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes were built by visual interactive modeling and energy minimization followed by dynamic simulation of 120 ps in water environment. DASA study with and without the inhibitor revealed the potential subsite residues involved in inhibition. Though the interaction involving main chain atoms are similar, critical inspection of the complexes reveal significant differences in the side chain interactions in S(2)-P(2) and S(3)-P(3) pairs due to sequence differences in the equivalent positions of respective subsites leading to differential inhibition. CONCLUSION: The key finding of the study is a conserved site of a water molecule near oxyanion hole of the enzyme active site, which is found in all the modeled complexes and in most crystal structures of papain family either native or complexed. Conserved water molecules at the ligand binding sites of these homologous proteins suggest the structural importance of the water, which changes the conventional definition of chemical geometry of inhibitor binding domain, its shape and complimentarity. The water mediated recognition of inhibitor to enzyme subsites (P(n)...H(2)O....S(n)) of leupeptin acetyl oxygen to caricain, chymopapain and calotropinDI is an additional information and offer valuable insight to potent inhibitor design. BioMed Central 2001-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC57815/ /pubmed/11602025 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-1-4 Text en Copyright © 2001 Bhattacharya et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bhattacharya, Suparna
Ghosh, Sreya
Chakraborty, Sibani
Bera, Asim K
Mukhopadhayay, Bishnu P
Dey, Indrani
Banerjee, Asok
Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title_full Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title_fullStr Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title_full_unstemmed Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title_short Insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : Understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
title_sort insight to structural subsite recognition in plant thiol protease-inhibitor complexes : understanding the basis of differential inhibition and the role of water
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC57815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11602025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-1-4
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