alpha-chymotrypsin has been researched along with 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone* in 4 studies
4 other study(ies) available for alpha-chymotrypsin and 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone
Article | Year |
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X-ray diffraction analysis of the inactivation of chymotrypsin by 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone.
The inactivation of chymotrypsin by 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone has been studied. A covalent adduct is formed that deacylates slowly with a half-life of 23 h. X-ray diffraction analysis at 1.9-A resolution of the inactivator-enzyme complex shows that the gamma-oxygen of the active-site serine (serine-195) is covalently attached to C-1 of (Z)-2-benzylpentenedioic acid, the benzyl group of the inactivator is held in the hydrophobic specificity pocket of the enzyme, and the free carboxylate forms a salt bridge with the active-site histidine (histidine-57). The conformational changes that occur in the protein as a result of complexation are described. It is proposed that formation of the salt bridge prevents access of water and, therefore, hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme. Topics: Binding Sites; Chymotrypsin; Models, Molecular; Protein Conformation; Pyrans; Pyrones; Serine; X-Ray Diffraction | 1986 |
Inactivation of chymotrypsin by 5-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone: 13C NMR and X-ray diffraction analyses of the inactivator-enzyme complex.
The inactivation of chymotrypsin by 5-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone has been studied. Chloride analysis of the inactivated enzyme suggests that chlorine is no longer present in the complex. 13C NMR spectroscopy of chymotrypsin inactivated with 5-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone-2,6-13 C2 shows the presence of two new resonances from the protein-bound inactivator. The chemical shift values of these resonances are consistent with an intact pyrone ring on the enzyme as well as the replacement of the C-6 chlorine by a different heteroatom. X-ray diffraction analysis at 1.5-A resolution of the inactivator-enzyme complex demonstrates that the gamma-oxygen of the active site serine residue (serine 195) is covalently attached to C-6 of the inactivator and that the pyrone ring is intact. The 5-benzyl group of the inactivator is bound to the enzyme in the hydrophobic specificity pocket. The conformational changes that occur in the protein as a result of complexation with the inactivator are discussed. Topics: Binding Sites; Chymotrypsin; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Models, Molecular; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Pyrans; Pyrones; X-Ray Diffraction | 1985 |
Mechanism of inactivation of chymotrypsin by 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone.
The mechanism of inactivation of chymotrypsin by 3-benzyl-6-chloro-2-pyrone has been studied. Chloride analysis of the inactivated enzyme suggests that the complex does not contain intact chloropyrone or an acid chloride. 13C NMR studies of the enzyme inactivated with 13C-enriched chloropyrones show that (1) the pyrone ring is no longer intact, (2) C-6 becomes a carboxylate group and C-2 becomes esterified to the enzyme, probably to serine-195, and (3) a double bond is present adjacent to the serine ester. The inactivated enzyme slowly regains catalytic activity with the concomitant release of (E)-4-benzyl-2-pentenedioic acid. It is concluded that double bond migration occurs during reactivation since the position of the double bond in the released diacid product is different than in the inactivator-enzyme complex. When the reactivation is carried out in [18O]H2O-enriched water, a single oxygen-18 is incorporated into the released product and is further evidence that the inactivator is bound to the enzyme only through a single ester linkage. A deuterium isotope effect on reactivation is observed when a chloropyrone deuterated at C-5 is used. This result demonstrates that removal of a proton from C-5 is required for reactivation and that isomerization of the double bond and not hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme is rate determining. A variety of amines accelerate the rate of reactivation by functioning as general bases and not as nucleophiles. A reaction scheme is presented that accounts for the formation of the stable inactivator-enzyme complex as well as the production of two products derived from enzymatic hydrolysis of the chloropyrone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Chymotrypsin; Enzyme Reactivators; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Pyrans; Pyrones | 1984 |
Suicide enzyme inactivators.
Topics: Adenosylhomocysteinase; Binding Sites; Butyryl-CoA Dehydrogenase; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Chymotrypsin; Deoxyadenosines; Enzyme Inhibitors; Fatty Acid Desaturases; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hydrolases; Kinetics; Oxazines; Pancreatic Elastase; Pantetheine; Pyrones | 1983 |