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Quail cystatin: Isolation and characterisation of a new member of the cystatin family and its hypothetical interaction with cathepsin B
Author(s) -
Gerhartz Bernd,
Engh Richard A,
Mentele Reinhard,
Eckerskorn Christoph,
Torquato Richardo,
Wittmann Josef,
Kolb Helmut J,
Machleidt Werner,
Fritz Hans,
Auerswald Ennes A
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
febs letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.593
H-Index - 257
eISSN - 1873-3468
pISSN - 0014-5793
DOI - 10.1016/s0014-5793(97)00806-5
Subject(s) - quail , cystatin , papain , chemistry , cathepsin , cathepsin b , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , cystatin c , cathepsin l , cathepsin h , cysteine , enzyme , biology , endocrinology , renal function
Quail cystatin, a new cysteine proteinase inhibitor protein of the cystatin superfamily, was purified from egg albumen of Japanese quail Coturnix coturnix japonica . Amino acid sequencing and mass spectrometry revealed the complete 116 amino acid residue primary structure of a phosphorylated form (13 173 Da). The inhibitor has a 90% sequence identity with chicken cystatin. Its interaction with papain is rapid and tight ( K i =4.4 pM; k on =1.8×10 7 M −1 s −1 ; k off =0.8×10 −4 s −1 ) and very similar to that of chicken cystatin. Surprisingly, however, cathepsin B was inhibited 15‐fold more strongly by quail cystatin ( K i =47 pM; k on =19×10 7 M −1 s −1 ; k off =9×10 −4 s −1 ) than by chicken cystatin ( K i =784 pM; k on =2.9×10 7 M −1 s −1 ; k off =24×10 −4 s −1 ). Intuitive comparative conformational inspection of related inhibitors and of cognate enzymes suggest that: (i) the 3D structure of quail cystatin is nearly identical to that of chicken cystatin, (ii) quail cystatin can interact with cathepsin B analogous to the stefin B–papain interaction, if the `occluding loop' of cathepsin B possesses an `open' conformation, (iii) the greater inhibition of cathepsin B by quail cystatin compared to chicken cystatins probably arises from two additional ionic interactions between residues Arg 15 and Lys 112 of the inhibitor and Glu 194 and Asp 124 of the enzyme, respectively. The two potential salt bridges are located outside of the known contact regions between cystatins and peptidases of the papain family.