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Studies on the reactive site of the cystatin superfamily using recombinant cystatin A mutants Evidence that the QVVAG region is not essential for cysteine proteinase inhibitory activities

Authors :
Yoshimasa Ike
Takeshi Nikawa
Nobuhiko Katunuma
Takae Towatari
Source :
FEBS Letters. (2):309-314
Publisher :
Published by Elsevier B.V.

Abstract

For study of the inhibition mechanism of the cystatin superfamily, cystatin A artificial mutants were obtained in which a well-conserved QVVAG region in the cystatin superfamily was changed to KVVAG or QVTAG and these mutants were then expressed in E. coli. For this, genes with these sequences were synthesized enzymatically from 11 oligodeoxy-nucleotides and expressed under the tac promoter gene of the E. coli plasmids. The products expressed were then purified on Sephadex G-50 and HPLC DEAE-5PW columns. The substitutions in cystatin A were confirmed by the amino acid compositions, N-terminal amino acid sequences and elution positions on ion-exchange chromatography of the products. The Ki values of these products for the cysteine proteinases, papain and cathepsins B, H and L, were determined in comparison with those of wild type recombinant cystatin A. Results showed that the cystatin A mutants had similar inhibitory activities to those of wild type recombinant cystatin A. Namely replacement of amino acids in the QVVAG sequence of cystatin A did not significantly affect the inhibitory activities on these proteinases. The results suggest that the QVVAG region is less important than the N-terminal region of cystatin for inhibitory activities on cysteine proteinases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00145793
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
FEBS Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b99d4bc59c599894956c60204d63aa19
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0014-5793(89)81112-3