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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 262, Issue 20, 9688-9694, 07, 1987
Identification of the probable inhibitory reactive sites of the cysteine proteinase inhibitors human cystatin C and chicken cystatin
M Abrahamson, A Ritonja, MA Brown, A Grubb, W Machleidt and AJ Barrett
When an excess of human cystatin C or chicken cystatin was mixed with
papain, an enzyme-inhibitor complex was formed immediately. The residual
free cystatin was then progressively converted to a form with different
electrophoretic mobility and chromatographic properties. The modified
cystatins were isolated and sequenced, showing that there had been cleavage
of a single peptide bond in each molecule: Gly11-Gly12 in cystatin C, and
Gly9-Ala10 in chicken cystatin. The residues Gly11 (cystatin C) and Gly9
(chicken cystatin) are among only three residues conserved in all known
sequences of inhibitory cystatins. The modified cystatins were at least
1000-fold weaker inhibitors of papain than the native cystatins. An
18-residue synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 4-21 of cystatin C
did not inhibit papain but was cleaved at the same Gly-Gly bond as cystatin
C. When iodoacetate or L-3-carboxy-
trans-2,3-epoxypropionyl-leucylamido-(4-guanidin o)butane was added to the
mixtures of either cystatin with papain, modification of the excess
cystatin was blocked. Papain-cystatin complexes were stable to prolonged
incubation, even in the presence of excess papain. We conclude that the
peptidyl bond of the conserved glycine residue in human cystatin C and
chicken cystatin probably is part of a substrate- like inhibitory reactive
site of these cysteine proteinase inhibitors of the cystatin superfamily
and that this may be true also for other inhibitors of this superfamily. We
also propose that human cystatin C and chicken cystatin, and probably other
cystatins as well, inhibit cysteine proteinases by the simultaneous
interactions with such proteinases of the inhibitory reactive sites and
other, so far not identified, areas of the cystatins. The cleavage of the
inhibitory reactive site glycyl bond in mixtures of papain with excess
quantities of cystatins is apparently due to the activity of a small
percentage of atypical cysteine proteinase molecules in the papain
preparation that form only very loose complexes with cystatins under the
conditions employed and degrade the free cystatin molecules.

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Copyright © 1987 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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