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α-Macroglobulin-like Protein 1 Can Conjugate and Inhibit Proteases Through Their Hydroxyl Groups, Because of an Enhanced Reactivity of Its Thiol Ester

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2020 Sep 26
PMID 32978260
Citations 2
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Abstract

Proteins in the α-macroglobulin (αM) superfamily use thiol esters to form covalent conjugation products upon their proteolytic activation. αM protease inhibitors use theirs to conjugate proteases and preferentially react with primary amines ( on lysine side chains), whereas those of αM complement components C3 and C4B have an increased hydroxyl reactivity that is conveyed by a conserved histidine residue and allows conjugation to cell surface glycans. Human α-macroglobulin-like protein 1 (A2ML1) is a monomeric protease inhibitor but has the hydroxyl reactivity-conveying histidine residue. Here, we have investigated the role of hydroxyl reactivity in a protease inhibitor by comparing recombinant WT A2ML1 and the A2ML1 H1084N mutant in which this histidine is removed. Both of A2ML1s' thiol esters were reactive toward the amine substrate glycine, but only WT A2ML1 reacted with the hydroxyl substrate glycerol, demonstrating that His-1084 increases the hydroxyl reactivity of A2ML1's thiol ester. Although both A2ML1s conjugated and inhibited thermolysin, His-1084 was required for the conjugation and inhibition of acetylated thermolysin, which lacks primary amines. Using MS, we identified an ester bond formed between a thermolysin serine residue and the A2ML1 thiol ester. These results demonstrate that a histidine-enhanced hydroxyl reactivity can contribute to protease inhibition by an αM protein. His-1084 did not improve A2ML1's protease inhibition at pH 5, indicating that A2ML1's hydroxyl reactivity is not an adaption to its acidic epidermal environment.

Citing Articles

Engineering New Protease Inhibitors Using α-Macroglobulin.

Harwood S, Enghild J Methods Mol Biol. 2023; 2747:279-294.

PMID: 38038947 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-3589-6_21.


Cryo-EM structures of human A2ML1 elucidate the protease-inhibitory mechanism of the A2M family.

Nielsen N, Zarantonello A, Harwood S, Jensen K, Kjoge K, Thogersen I Nat Commun. 2022; 13(1):3033.

PMID: 35641520 PMC: 9156758. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-30758-x.

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