• Title of article

    Novel Enzymatic Activity Derived from the Semliki Forest Virus Capsid Protein

  • Author/Authors

    Manuel Morillas، نويسنده , , Heike Eberl، نويسنده , , FrédéricH.-T. Allain، نويسنده , , Rudi Glockshuber، نويسنده , , Eva Kuennemann، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    721
  • To page
    735
  • Abstract
    The N-terminal segment of the Semliki Forest virus polyprotein is an intramolecular serine protease that cleaves itself off after the invariant Trp267 from a viral polyprotein and generates the mature capsid protein. After this autoproteolytic cleavage, the free carboxylic group of Trp267 interacts with the catalytic triad (His145, Asp167 and Ser219) and inactivates the enzyme. We have deleted the last 1–7 C-terminal residues of the mature capsid protease to investigate whether removal of Trp267 regenerates enzymatic activity. Although the C-terminally truncated polypeptides do not adopt a defined three-dimensional structure and show biophysical properties observed in natively unfolded proteins, they efficiently catalyse the hydrolysis of aromatic amino acid esters, with higher catalytic efficiency for tryptophan compared to tyrosine esters and kcat/KM values up to 5 × 105 s−1 M−1. The enzymatic mechanism of these deletion variants is typical of serine proteases. The pH enzyme activity profile shows a pKa1 = 6.9, and the Ser219Ala substitution destroys the enzymatic activity. In addition, the fast release of the first product of the enzymatic reaction is followed by a steady-state second phase, indicative of formation and breakdown of a covalent acyl-enzyme intermediate. The rates of acylation and deacylation are k2 = 4.4±0.6 s−1 and k3 = 1.6±0.5 s−1, respectively, for a tyrosine derivative ester substrate, and the amplitude of the burst phase indicates that 95% of the enzyme molecules are active. In summary, our data provide further evidence for the potential catalytic activity of natively unfolded proteins, and provide the basis for engineering of alphavirus capsid proteins towards hydrolytic enzymes with novel specificities.
  • Keywords
    serine protease , Capsid protein , C-terminal residue , natively unfolded proteins , Michaelis–Menten enzyme
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1256302