Human tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase becomes an effective ATPase upon proteolytic activation


Autoria(s): Mitic, N.; Valizadeh, M.; Leung, E. W. W.; de Jersey, J.; Hamilton, S.; Hume, D. A.; Cassady, A. I.; Schenk, G.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Proteolytic, cleavage in an exposed loop of human tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAcP) with trypsin leads to a significant increase in activity. At each pH value between 3.25 and 8.0 the cleaved enzyme is more active. Substrate specificity is also influenced by proteolysis. Only the cleaved form is able to hydrolyze unactivated substrates efficiently, and at pH > 6 cleaved TRAcP acquires a marked preference for ATP. The cleaved enzyme also has altered sensitivity to inhibitors. Interestingly, the magnitude and mode of inhibition by fluoride depends not only on the proteolytic state but also pH. The combined kinetic data imply a role of the loop residue D158 in catalysis in the cleaved enzyme. Notably, at low pH this residue may act as a proton donor for the leaving group. In this respect the mechanism of cleaved TRAcP resembles that of sweet potato purple acid phosphatase. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. Ail rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75680

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Science Inc

Palavras-Chave #Tartrate-resistant Acid Phosphatase #Purple Acid Phosphatase #Atpase #Proteolysis #Catalytic Mechanism #Fluoride Inhibition #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Biophysics #Human Osteoclastomas #Crystal-structure #Metal Centers #Bovine Spleen #Sweet-potato #Loop Region #In-vitro #Fe-mn #Purification #Cells #C1 #250106 Mechanisms of Reactions #250102 Chemistry of Catalysis #270108 Enzymes #270804 Genetic Technologies - Transformation, Site-directed Mutagenesis, etc. #270802 Diagnostic Applications #780103 Chemical sciences #780105 Biological sciences
Tipo

Journal Article