Aprotinin interacts with substrate-binding site of human dipeptidyl peptidase III.
Dejan AgićHrvoje BrkićSaša KazazićAntonija TomićMarija AbramićPublished in: Journal of biomolecular structure & dynamics (2019)
Human dipeptidyl peptidase III (hDPP III) is a zinc-exopeptidase of the family M49 involved in final steps of intracellular protein degradation and in cytoprotective pathway Keap1-Nrf2. Biochemical and structural properties of this enzyme have been extensively investigated, but the knowledge on its contacts with other proteins is scarce. Previously, polypeptide aprotinin was shown to be a competitive inhibitor of hDPP III hydrolytic activity. In this study, aprotinin was first investigated as a potential substrate of hDPP III, but no degradation products were demonstrated by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Subsequently, molecular details of the protein-protein interaction between aprotinin and hDPP III were studied by molecular modeling. Docking and long molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have shown that aprotinin interacts by its canonical binding epitope with the substrate binding cleft of hDPP III. Thereby, free N-terminus of aprotinin is distant from the active-site zinc. Enzyme-inhibitor complex is stabilized by intermolecular hydrogen bonding network, electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions which mostly involve constituent amino acid residues of the hDPP III substrate binding subsites S1, S1', S2, S2' and S3'. This is the first study that gives insight into aprotinin binding to a metallopeptidase. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- protein protein
- mass spectrometry
- amino acid
- endothelial cells
- small molecule
- oxidative stress
- density functional theory
- multidrug resistant
- ms ms
- structural basis
- climate change
- molecular dynamics simulations
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- atomic force microscopy
- capillary electrophoresis
- high speed
- simultaneous determination
- aqueous solution