Login / Signup

GASP-1 and GASP-2, two closely structurally related proteins with a functional duality in antitrypsin inhibition specificity: a mechanistic point of view.

Alexis ParentéFlorent Di MeoEric LapeyronieMontasir Al MansiDidier DelourmePatrick PélissierLaure BrémaudPatrick TrouillasVeronique Blanquet
Published in: The FEBS journal (2019)
While GASP-1 and GASP-2 proteins are known to regulate myogenesis by inhibiting myostatin, their structural organization suggests a putative role as multivalent protease inhibitors controlling different protease activities. In this study, we show the noncompetitive and competitive antitrypsin activities of the full-length GASP-1 and GASP-2 proteins, respectively, by using a bacterial system production and in vitro enzymatic experiments. The role of the second Kunitz domain in this functional duality is described by assessing the antitrypsin activity of GASP-1/2 chimeric proteins. Molecular dynamics simulations support the experimental data to rationalize differences in binding modes between trypsin and the GASP-1 and GASP-2 second Kunitz domains. A new inhibition mechanism was evidenced for the second Kunitz domain of GASP-2, in which the conventional cationic residue of trypsin inhibitors was substituted by the strongly interacting glutamine residue.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • molecular docking
  • nitric oxide
  • machine learning
  • bone marrow
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • big data
  • deep learning