Hofmann T, Hodges R S, James M N
Biochemistry. 1984 Feb 14;23(4):635-43. doi: 10.1021/bi00299a008.
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters for penicillopepsin and Rhizopus pepsin acting on acetylalanyl-alanyllysyl-p-nitrophenylalanylalanylalanine amide has been determined. The velocity constants, Kcat, show optima between pH 4 and pH 4.5. The Michaelis-Menten constants, Km, show a strong pH dependence for both enzymes and rise from low values at pH 6.0 (0.08 mM for penicillopepsin and 0.23 mM for Rhizopus pepsin) to approximately 8 mM and 1.1 mM, respectively, at pH 2.0. This dependence strongly suggests that for this substrate, with lysine in the P1 position, binding is controlled by negatively charged carboxyl group(s) on the enzyme. These groups have been tentatively identified in penicillopepsin as aspartic acid-115(114) and glutamic acid-16(13) on the basis of model building and by comparison with the binding of a pepstatin analogue. The S1 binding site also has hydrophobic character which shows itself in the low Km (0.004 mM) for the substrate leucylseryl-p-nitrophenylalanylnorleucylalanylleucine methyl ester. Tyrosine-75(75), phenylalanine-112(111), and leucine-121(120) are the most likely residues involved in the hydrophobic binding. The binding site for P1' residues is also hydrophobic and probably involves phenylalanine-190(189), isoleucine-211(213), phenylalanine-295(299), and isoleucine-297(301). In light of the structure of penicillopepsin, now refined at 1.8-A resolution, the detailed binding mode of a pepstatin analogue also studied at 1.8-A resolution, and model-building studies, a productive binding mode for the scissile bond to aspartyl proteinases is proposed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)