Essential Roles of Zinc Ligation and Enzyme Dimerization for Catalysis in the Aminoacylase-1/M20 Family

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Abstract

Members of the aminoacylase-1 (Acy1)/M20 family of aminoacylases and exopeptidases exist as either monomers or homodimers. They contain a zinc-binding domain and a second domain mediating dimerization in the latter case. The roles that both domains play in catalysis have been investigated for human Acy1 (hAcy1) by x-ray crystallography and by site-directed mutagenesis. Structure comparison of the dinuclear zinc center in a mutant of hAcy1 reported here with dizinc centers in related enzymes points to a difference in zinc ligation in the Acy1/M20 family. Mutational analysis supports catalytic roles of zinc ions, a vicinal glutamate, and a histidine from the dimerization domain. By complementing different active site mutants of hAcy1, we show that catalysis occurs at the dimer interface. Reinterpretation of the structure of a monomeric homolog, peptidase V, reveals that a domain insertion mimics dimerization. We conclude that monomeric and dimeric Acy1/M20 family members share a unique active site architecture involving both enzyme domains. The study may provide means to improve homologous carboxypeptidase G2 toward application in antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy.

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Lindner, H. A., Lunin, V. V., Alary, A., Hecker, R., Cygler, M., & Ménard, R. (2003). Essential Roles of Zinc Ligation and Enzyme Dimerization for Catalysis in the Aminoacylase-1/M20 Family. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(45), 44496–44504. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M304233200

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