A. Bodi et al., Structural determinants of the half-life and cleavage site preference in the autolytic inactivation of chymotrypsin, EUR J BIOCH, 268(23), 2001, pp. 6238-6246
The molecular mechanism of the autolysis of rat a-chymotrypsin B was invest
igated. In addition to the two already known autolytic sites, Tyr146 and As
n147, a new site formed by Phe114 was identified. The former two sites and
the latter one are located in the autolysis and the interdomain loops, resp
ectively. By eliminating these sites by site-directed mutagenesis, their in
volvement in the autolysis and autolytic inactivation processes was studied
. Mutants Phe114 --> Ile and Tyr146-His/Asn147 --> Ser, that had the same e
nzymatic activity and molecular stability as the wild-type enzyme, displaye
d altered routes of autolytic degradation. The Phe114 --> Ile mutant also e
xhibited a significantly slower autolytic inactivation (its half-life was 2
7-fold longer in the absence and sixfold longer in the presence of Ca2+ ion
s) that obeyed a first order kinetics instead of the second order displayed
by wild-type chymotrypsin inactivation. The comparison of autolysis and au
tolytic inactivation data showed that: (a) the preferential cleavage of sit
es followed the order of Tyr146-Asn147 --> Phe114 --> other sites; (b) the
cleavage rates at sites Phe114 and Tyr146-Asn147 were independent from each
other; and (c) the hydrolysis of the Phe114-Ser115 bond was the rate deter
mining step in autolytic inactivation. Thus, it is the cleavage of the inte
rdomain loop and not of the autolysis or other loops that determines the ha
lf-life of chymotrypsin activity.