Roles of N-terminal pyroglutamate in maintaining structural integrity and pKa values of catalytic histidine residues in bullfrog ribonuclease 3
Lou, Y.C., Huang, Y.C., Pan, Y.R., Chen, C., Liao, Y.D.(2006) J Mol Biol 355: 409-421
- PubMed: 16309702
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2005.10.069
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:
1Z5F - PubMed Abstract:
Many proteins and bioactive peptides contain an N-terminal pyroglutamate residue (Pyr1). This residue reduces the susceptibility of the protein to aminopeptidases and often has important functional roles. The antitumor ribonuclease RC-RNase 3 (RNase 3) from oocytes of Rana catesbeiana (bullfrog) is one such protein. We have produced recombinant RNase 3 containing the N-terminal Pyr1 (pRNase 3) and found it to be indistinguishable from the native RNase 3 by mass spectrometry and a variety of other biochemical and immunological criteria. We demonstrated by NMR analysis that the Pyr1 of pRNase 3 forms hydrogen bonds with Lys9 and Ile96 and stabilizes the N-terminal alpha-helix in a rigid conformation. In contrast, the N-terminal alpha-helix becomes flexible and the pKa values of the catalytic residues His10 and His97 altered when Pyr1 formation is blocked by an extra methionine at the N terminus in the recombinant mqRNase 3. Thus, our results provide a mechanistic explanation on the essential role of Pyr1 in maintaining the structural integrity, especially at the N-terminal alpha-helix, and in providing the proper environment for the ionization of His10 and His97 residues for catalysis and cytotoxicity against HeLa cells.
Organizational Affiliation:
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan, ROC.