Protein engineering and properties of human metalloproteinase and thrombospondin 1.
This work generated many truncated proteins and Glu(385) to Ala (E(385)/A) mutants of the human metalloproteinase and thrombospondin 1 (METH-1 or ADAMTS1) and specific antibodies. METH-1 was an active endopeptidase and both the metalloproteinase and the disintegrin/ cysteine-rich domains were required for the proteinase activity. A point mutation at the zinc-binding site (E(385)/A) abolished the catalytic activity. METH-1 protein function may be modulated through proteolytic cleavage at multiple sites. One 135 kDa species had an NH(2)-terminal sequence of L(33)GRPSEEDEE. A species at 115 kDa and some other protein bands began with F(236)VSSHRYV(243), indicating that METH-1 proenzyme might be activated by a proprotein convertase such as furin by cleaving the R(235)-F(236) peptide bond. This cleavage was not an autocatalytic process since the E(385)/A mutants were also processed. Furthermore, a 52 kDa band with an NH(2)-terminal sequence of L(800)KEPLTIQV resulted from the digestion between the first and the second thrombospondin 1-like motifs in the spacer region of the extracellular matrix-binding domains.[1]References
- Protein engineering and properties of human metalloproteinase and thrombospondin 1. Wei, P., Zhao, Y.G., Zhuang, L., Hurst, D.R., Ruben, S., Sang, Q.X. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. (2002) [Pubmed]
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