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. 1998 Sep 11;435(1):61-4.
doi: 10.1016/s0014-5793(98)01041-2.

Type A botulinum neurotoxin proteolytic activity: development of competitive inhibitors and implications for substrate specificity at the S1' binding subsite

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Type A botulinum neurotoxin proteolytic activity: development of competitive inhibitors and implications for substrate specificity at the S1' binding subsite

J J Schmidt et al. FEBS Lett. .
Free article

Abstract

Type A botulinum neurotoxin (botox A) is a zinc metalloprotease that cleaves only one peptide bond in the synaptosomal protein, SNAP-25. Single-residue changes in a 17-residue substrate peptide were used to develop the first specific, competitive inhibitors of its proteolytic activity. Substrate analog peptides with P4, P3, P2' or P3' cysteine were readily hydrolyzed by the toxin, but those with P1 or P2 cysteine were not cleaved and were inhibitors. Peptides with either D- or L-cysteine as the N-terminus, followed by the last six residues of the substrate, were the most effective inhibitors, each with a Ki value of 2 microM. Elimination of the cysteine sulfhydryl group yielded much less effective inhibitors, suggesting that inhibition was primarily due to binding of the active-site zinc by the sulfhydryl group. Botox A displayed an unusual requirement for arginine as the P1' inhibitor residue, demonstrating that the S1' binding subsite of botox A is dissimilar to those of most other zinc metalloproteases. This characteristic is an important element in shaping the substrate specificity of botox A.

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