spacer
spacer

PDBsum entry 1orf

Go to PDB code: 
protein ligands links
Hydrolase/hydrolase inhibitor PDB id
1orf

 

 

 

 

Loading ...

 
JSmol PyMol  
Contents
Protein chain
232 a.a. *
Ligands
0G6
SO4
Waters ×128
* Residue conservation analysis
PDB id:
1orf
Name: Hydrolase/hydrolase inhibitor
Title: The oligomeric structure of human granzyme a reveals the molecular determinants of substrate specificity
Structure: Granzyme a. Chain: a. Synonym: cytotoxic t-lymphocyte proteinase 1, hanukkah factor, h factor, hf, granzyme 1, ctl tryptase, fragmentin 1. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
Source: Homo sapiens. Human. Organism_taxid: 9606. Gene: gzma. Expressed in: pichia pastoris. Expression_system_taxid: 4922.
Biol. unit: Tetramer (from PDB file)
Resolution:
2.40Å     R-factor:   0.191     R-free:   0.232
Authors: J.K.Bell,D.H.Goetz,S.Mahrus,J.L.Harris,R.J.Fletterick,C.S.Craik
Key ref:
J.K.Bell et al. (2003). The oligomeric structure of human granzyme A is a determinant of its extended substrate specificity. Nat Struct Biol, 10, 527-534. PubMed id: 12819769 DOI: 10.1038/nsb944
Date:
12-Mar-03     Release date:   01-Jul-03    
PROCHECK
Go to PROCHECK summary
 Headers
 References

Protein chain
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P12544  (GRAA_HUMAN) -  Granzyme A from Homo sapiens
Seq:
Struc:
262 a.a.
232 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 2 residue positions (black crosses)

 Enzyme reactions 
   Enzyme class: E.C.3.4.21.78  - granzyme A.
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]
      Reaction: Hydrolysis of proteins, including fibronectin, type IV collagen and nucleolin. Preferential cleavage: Arg-|-Xaa, Lys-|-Xaa >> Phe-|-Xaa in small molecule substrates.

 

 
DOI no: 10.1038/nsb944 Nat Struct Biol 10:527-534 (2003)
PubMed id: 12819769  
 
 
The oligomeric structure of human granzyme A is a determinant of its extended substrate specificity.
J.K.Bell, D.H.Goetz, S.Mahrus, J.L.Harris, R.J.Fletterick, C.S.Craik.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
The cell death-inducing serine protease granzyme A (GzmA) has a unique disulfide-linked quaternary structure. The structure of human GzmA bound to a tripeptide CMK inhibitor, determined at a resolution of 2.4 A, reveals that the oligomeric state contributes to substrate selection by limiting access to the active site for potential macromolecular substrates and inhibitors. Unlike other serine proteases, tetrapeptide substrate preferences do not correlate well with natural substrate cleavage sequences. This suggests that the context of the cleavage sequence within a macromolecular substrate imposes another level of selection not observed with the peptide substrates. Modeling of inhibitors bound to the GzmA active site shows that the dimer also contributes to substrate specificity in a unique manner by extending the active-site cleft. The crystal structure, along with substrate library profiling and mutagenesis, has allowed us to identify and rationally manipulate key components involved in GzmA substrate specificity.
 
  Selected figure(s)  
 
Figure 1.
Figure 1. Overall structure of dimeric human granzyme A. (a) Ribbon diagram of dimeric human GzmA. The secondary structural elements are colored in a gradient from N to C terminus. The Ser195-His57-Asp102 catalytic triad and P1 coordinating Asp189 are shown in ball and stick (carbons, light green) as is the D-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethylketone (carbons, cyan). The disulfide linkage is depicted as space-filling model for residue 93 and its symmetry mate. A sulfate ion contributed from the crystallization solution is bound at the base of loop 184-B -197 by Arg186 and Arg188. (b) Surface representation mapped with potentials shows the overall positive charge of the molecule reflected by its pI > 9 and the distinct negative charge of Asp189 emanating from the S1 pocket.
Figure 3.
Figure 3. The active site of human granzyme A. (a) Ball-and-stick representation of the bound inhibitor, D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CMK (carbons, cyan) and residues that frame the substrate binding pocket depicted in the context of the molecular surface. The molecular surfaces of the proposed S1' and S2' subsites are colored in magenta; S1 subsite, orange; S2, blue; S3, red; S4, green. (b) Ligplot representation showing direct interactions between GzmA and the bound inhibitor. D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CMK bonds and carbons are cyan. Bonds between the irreversible inhibitor and GzmA are magenta. (c) Stereo view of the refined (2F[o] - F[c]) electron density for the CMK inhibitor (carbons, yellow) bound to the GzmA active site (carbons, gray).
 
  The above figures are reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nat Struct Biol (2003, 10, 527-534) copyright 2003.  
  Figures were selected by the author.  

Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference

  PubMed id Reference
  20536557 J.Lieberman (2010).
Granzyme A activates another way to die.
  Immunol Rev, 235, 93.  
20536382 P.Van Damme, S.Maurer-Stroh, H.Hao, N.Colaert, E.Timmerman, F.Eisenhaber, J.Vandekerckhove, and K.Gevaert (2010).
The substrate specificity profile of human granzyme A.
  Biol Chem, 391, 983-997.  
20536307 R.van Domselaar, S.A.de Poot, and N.Bovenschen (2010).
Proteomic profiling of proteases: tools for granzyme degradomics.
  Expert Rev Proteomics, 7, 347-359.  
19404988 J.M.Moffat, T.Gebhardt, P.C.Doherty, S.J.Turner, and J.D.Mintern (2009).
Granzyme A expression reveals distinct cytolytic CTL subsets following influenza A virus infection.
  Eur J Immunol, 39, 1203-1210.  
19059912 N.Bovenschen, R.Quadir, A.L.van den Berg, A.B.Brenkman, I.Vandenberghe, B.Devreese, J.Joore, and J.A.Kummer (2009).
Granzyme k displays highly restricted substrate specificity that only partially overlaps with granzyme a.
  J Biol Chem, 284, 3504-3512.  
19703402 N.Halabi, O.Rivoire, S.Leibler, and R.Ranganathan (2009).
Protein sectors: evolutionary units of three-dimensional structure.
  Cell, 138, 774-786.  
19506301 P.Zhu, D.Martinvalet, D.Chowdhury, D.Zhang, A.Schlesinger, and J.Lieberman (2009).
The cytotoxic T lymphocyte protease granzyme A cleaves and inactivates poly(adenosine 5'-diphosphate-ribose) polymerase-1.
  Blood, 114, 1205-1216.  
18304003 D.Chowdhury, and J.Lieberman (2008).
Death by a thousand cuts: granzyme pathways of programmed cell death.
  Annu Rev Immunol, 26, 389-420.  
18485875 D.Martinvalet, D.M.Dykxhoorn, R.Ferrini, and J.Lieberman (2008).
Granzyme A cleaves a mitochondrial complex I protein to initiate caspase-independent cell death.
  Cell, 133, 681-692.  
18192270 S.B.Smith, I.M.Verhamme, M.F.Sun, P.E.Bock, and D.Gailani (2008).
Characterization of Novel Forms of Coagulation Factor XIa: independence of factor XIa subunits in factor IX activation.
  J Biol Chem, 283, 6696-6705.  
17640001 K.Gevaert, P.Van Damme, B.Ghesquière, F.Impens, L.Martens, K.Helsens, and J.Vandekerckhove (2007).
A la carte proteomics with an emphasis on gel-free techniques.
  Proteomics, 7, 2698-2718.  
17342483 M.Gallwitz, M.Enoksson, and L.Hellman (2007).
Expression profile of novel members of the rat mast cell protease (rMCP)-2 and (rMCP)-8 families, and functional analyses of mouse mast cell protease (mMCP)-8.
  Immunogenetics, 59, 391-405.  
16415351 C.Adrain, P.J.Duriez, G.Brumatti, P.Delivani, and S.J.Martin (2006).
The cytotoxic lymphocyte protease, granzyme B, targets the cytoskeleton and perturbs microtubule polymerization dynamics.
  J Biol Chem, 281, 8118-8125.  
17116752 D.Kaiserman, C.H.Bird, J.Sun, A.Matthews, K.Ung, J.C.Whisstock, P.E.Thompson, J.A.Trapani, and P.I.Bird (2006).
The major human and mouse granzymes are structurally and functionally divergent.
  J Cell Biol, 175, 619-630.  
18516248 G.H.Caughey (2006).
A Pulmonary Perspective on GASPIDs: Granule-Associated Serine Peptidases of Immune Defense.
  Curr Respir Med Rev, 2, 263-277.  
16467988 K.Praveen, J.H.Leary, D.L.Evans, and L.Jaso-Friedmann (2006).
Molecular characterization and expression of a granzyme of an ectothermic vertebrate with chymase-like activity expressed in the cytotoxic cells of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus).
  Immunogenetics, 58, 41-55.  
16440001 P.Zhu, D.Zhang, D.Chowdhury, D.Martinvalet, D.Keefe, L.Shi, and J.Lieberman (2006).
Granzyme A, which causes single-stranded DNA damage, targets the double-strand break repair protein Ku70.
  EMBO Rep, 7, 431-437.  
16106370 K.Bratke, M.Kuepper, B.Bade, J.C.Virchow, and W.Luttmann (2005).
Differential expression of human granzymes A, B, and K in natural killer cells and during CD8+ T cell differentiation in peripheral blood.
  Eur J Immunol, 35, 2608-2616.  
15911377 S.Mahrus, and C.S.Craik (2005).
Selective chemical functional probes of granzymes A and B reveal granzyme B is a major effector of natural killer cell-mediated lysis of target cells.
  Chem Biol, 12, 567-577.  
14557261 F.Vincent, D.Yates, E.Garman, G.J.Davies, and J.A.Brannigan (2004).
The three-dimensional structure of the N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate deacetylase, NagA, from Bacillus subtilis: a member of the urease superfamily.
  J Biol Chem, 279, 2809-2816.
PDB codes: 1un7 2vhl
15494398 S.Mahrus, W.Kisiel, and C.S.Craik (2004).
Granzyme M is a regulatory protease that inactivates proteinase inhibitor 9, an endogenous inhibitor of granzyme B.
  J Biol Chem, 279, 54275-54282.  
15123647 S.W.Ruggles, R.J.Fletterick, and C.S.Craik (2004).
Characterization of structural determinants of granzyme B reveals potent mediators of extended substrate specificity.
  J Biol Chem, 279, 30751-30759.  
12819770 C.Hink-Schauer, E.Estébanez-Perpiñá, F.C.Kurschus, W.Bode, and D.E.Jenne (2003).
Crystal structure of the apoptosis-inducing human granzyme A dimer.
  Nat Struct Biol, 10, 535-540.
PDB code: 1op8
14499264 J.Lieberman, and Z.Fan (2003).
Nuclear war: the granzyme A-bomb.
  Curr Opin Immunol, 15, 553-559.  
The most recent references are shown first. Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be only a partial list as not all journals are covered by either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data so more and more references will be included with time. Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB codes are shown on the right.

 

spacer

spacer