Mortensen_1994_J.Biol.Chem_269_15528

Reference

Title : Recognition of C-terminal amide groups by (serine) carboxypeptidase Y investigated by site-directed mutagenesis - Mortensen_1994_J.Biol.Chem_269_15528
Author(s) : Mortensen UH , Raaschou-Nielsen M , Breddam K
Ref : Journal of Biological Chemistry , 269 :15528 , 1994
Abstract :

Serine carboxypeptidases have the ability to hydrolyze peptides as well as peptide amides. Previously, it has been demonstrated that Asn51 and Glu145 (in the protonated form) each donate a hydrogen bond to the alpha-carboxylate of peptide substrate. It is here demonstrated by characterization of carboxypeptidase Y derivatives, mutationally altered at positions 51 and 145, that the same groups are involved in the interaction with the C-terminal carboxyamide group of peptide amides. Asn51 donates a hydrogen bond to the C = O group of the substrate, and Glu145 (in the charged form) accepts one from the NH2 group of the substrate. Thus, the ionic state of Glu145 is different when peptides are hydrolyzed as compared with when peptide amides are hydrolyzed. This explains why Km for the hydrolysis of peptides increases with pH, whereas it remains constant for peptide amides. As a consequence, kcat/Km for the hydrolysis of peptide amides is higher than for the hydrolysis of peptides at pH > 8. At physiological pH, peptides and peptide amides are hydrolyzed with rates of the same order of magnitude; this is in accordance with reports describing that serine carboxypeptidases are involved in the degradation of biologically active peptide amides.

PubMedSearch : Mortensen_1994_J.Biol.Chem_269_15528
PubMedID: 8195197
Gene_locus related to this paper: yeast-cbpy1

Related information

Gene_locus yeast-cbpy1

Citations formats

Mortensen UH, Raaschou-Nielsen M, Breddam K (1994)
Recognition of C-terminal amide groups by (serine) carboxypeptidase Y investigated by site-directed mutagenesis
Journal of Biological Chemistry 269 :15528

Mortensen UH, Raaschou-Nielsen M, Breddam K (1994)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 269 :15528