1. Academic Validation
  2. The role of exon 5 in fibroblast collagenase (MMP-1) substrate specificity and inhibitor selectivity

The role of exon 5 in fibroblast collagenase (MMP-1) substrate specificity and inhibitor selectivity

  • Eur J Biochem. 2001 Mar;268(6):1888-96.
V Knäuper 1 M L Patterson F X Gomis-Rüth B Smith A Lyons A J Docherty G Murphy
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 University of East Anglia, School of Biological Sciences, Norwich, UK. vk8@york.ac.uk
PMID: 11248710
Abstract

Interstitial collagen is degraded by members of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family, including MMP-1. Previous work has shown that the region of MMP-1 coded for by exon 5 is implicated both in substrate specificity and inhibitor selectivity. We have constructed a chimeric Enzyme, the exon 5 chimera, consisting primarily of MMP-1, with the region coded for by exon 5 replaced with the equivalent region of MMP-3, a noncollagenolytic MMP. Unlike MMP-3, the exon 5 chimera is capable of cleaving type I collagen, but the activity is only 2.2% of trypsin-activated MMP-1. 'Superactivation' of the chimera has no discernible effect, suggesting that the salt bridge formed in 'superactive' MMP-1 is not present. The kinetics for exon 5 chimera cleavage of two synthetic substrates display an MMP-3 phenotype, however, cleavage of gelatin is slightly impaired as compared to the parent Enzymes. The K(iapp) values for the exon 5 chimera complexed with synthetic inhibitors and N-terminal TIMP-2 also show a more MMP-3-like behaviour. However, the k(on) values for N-terminal TIMP-1 and N-terminal TIMP-2 are more comparable to those for MMP-1. These data show that the region of MMP-1 coded for by exon 5 is involved in both substrate specificity and inhibitor selectivity and the structural basis for our findings is discussed.

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