Loading…

Contribution of active site glutamine to rate enhancement in ubiquitin C‐terminal hydrolases

Ubiquitin C‐terminal hydrolases (UCHs) are cysteine proteases featuring a classical Cys–His–Asp catalytic triad, and also a highly conserved Gln that is thought to be a part of the oxyanion hole. However, the contribution of this side chain to catalysis by UCHs is not known. Herein, we demonstrate t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The FEBS journal 2012-03, Vol.279 (6), p.1106-1118
Main Authors: Boudreaux, David A., Chaney, Joseph, Maiti, Tushar K., Das, Chittaranjan
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Ubiquitin C‐terminal hydrolases (UCHs) are cysteine proteases featuring a classical Cys–His–Asp catalytic triad, and also a highly conserved Gln that is thought to be a part of the oxyanion hole. However, the contribution of this side chain to catalysis by UCHs is not known. Herein, we demonstrate that the Gln side chain contributes to rate enhancement in UCHL1, UCHL3, and UCHL5. Mutation of the Gln to Ala in these enzymes impairs the catalytic efficiency, mainly because of a 16‐fold to 30‐fold reduction in kcat, which is consistent with a loss of approximately 2 kcal·mol−1 in transition state stabilization. However, the contribution to transition state stabilization observed here is rather modest for the side chain’s role in oxyanion stabilization. Interestingly, we discovered that the carbonyl oxygen of this side chain is engaged in a C–H···O hydrogen‐bonding contact with the CεH group of the catalytic His. Upon further analysis, we found that this interaction is a common active site structural feature in most cysteine proteases, including papain, belonging to families with the QCH(N/D) type of active site configuration. It is possible that removal of the Gln side chain might have abolished the C–H···O interaction, which typically accounts for 2 kcal·mol−1 of stabilization, leading to the effect on catalysis observed here. Additional studies performed on UCHL3 by mutating the Gln to Glu (strong C–H···O acceptor but oxyanion destabilizer) and to Lys (strong oxyanion stabilizer but lacking C–H···O hydrogen‐bonding capability) suggest that the C–H···O hydrogen bond could contribute to catalysis. The conserved active‐site glutamine contributes to rate enhancement in ubiquitin carboxy terminal hydrolases perhaps through a C—H•••O hydrogen bonding interaction with the catalytic histidine.
ISSN:1742-464X
1742-4658
DOI:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2012.08507.x