INHIBITION OF THE PROTEOLYTIC ACTIVITY OF THE MULTICATALYTIC PROTEINASE COMPLEX (PROTEASOME) BY SUBSTRATE-RELATED PEPTIDYL ALDEHYDES

1994 
Abstract Evidence indicates that a component of the multicatalytic proteinase complex (MPC) that preferentially cleaves bonds after branched chain amino acids (BrAAP) is a major factor responsible for the protein-degrading activity of the MPC. We report here the synthesis of substrate-related peptidyl aldehydes that inhibit the activity of this component toward both synthetic peptide substrates and proteins. The most potent of the inhibitors, Cbz-Gly-Pro-Phe-leucinal (Cbz-GPFL-CHO) inhibits competitively with a Ki of 1.5 microM. The peptidyl aldehydes also inhibit the small neutral amino acid preferring and the peptidylglutamyl-peptide hydrolyzing activities of the MPC. The chymotrypsin-like activity is only weakly inhibited, and the trypsin-like activity is moderately activated. The importance of a Pro residue in the P3 position and a leucinal residue in the P1 position for inhibition of the BrAAP component is indicated by the finding that replacement of these residues by a glycine or phenylalaninal, respectively, markedly increases the Ki. Cbz-GPFL-CHO inhibited the BrAAP activity with the same Ki both before and after activation of this component by exposure of the MPC to 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin, suggesting that the peptidyl aldehyde is an effective inhibitor of both the overt and latent proteolytic activities of the MPC. Incubation of a human breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) in culture with the inhibitors of the BrAAP component led to an accumulation of ubiquitin-protein conjugates, indicating inhibition of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway.
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