Comparative Analysis of Binding Energy of Chymostatin with Human Cathepsin A and Its Homologous Proteins by Molecular Orbital Calculation

2006 
Cathepsin A is a mammalian lysosomal enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of the carboxy-terminal amino acids of polypeptides and also regulates /3-galactosidase and neuraminidase-1 activities through the formation of a multienzymic complex in lysosomes. Human cathepsin A (hCathA), yeast carboxypeptidase (CPY), and wheat carboxypeptidase II (CPW) belong to the α/β-hydrolase fold family. They have structurally similar active-site clefts, but there are small differences in the amino acid residues comprising their active sites that might determine the substrate specificity and sensitivity to microbial inhibitors including chymostatin. To examine the selectivity and binding mechanism of chymostatin as to hCathA, CPY, and CPW at the atomic level, we analyzed the interaction energy between chymostatin and each protein quantitatively by semiempirical molecular orbital calculation AMI with the continuum solvent model. We predicted the electrostatic repulsion between the P3 cyclic arginine residue of the inhibitor and the Arg344 in the S3 active substite of hCathA. Genetic conversion of Arg344 of the wild-type hCathA to Ile also caused an increase in its sensitivity to chymostatin, which was correlated with the decrease in the interaction energy calculated with the molecular orbital method. The present results suggest that such molecular calculation should be useful for evaluating the interactions between ligands, including inhibitors and homologous enzymes, in their docking models.
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