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A serpin homologue (Tk-serpin) from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis was overproduced in E. coli, purified, and characterized. Tk-serpin irreversibly inhibits Tk-subtilisin (TKS) from the same organism with the second-order association rate constants (k(ass)) of 5.2×10³ M⁻¹ s⁻¹ at 40°C and 3.1×10⁵ M⁻¹ s⁻¹ at 80°C, indicating that Tk-serpin inhibits TKS more strongly at 80°C than at 40°C. It also irreversibly inhibits chymotrypsin, subtilisin Carlsberg, and proteinase K at 40°C with the k(ass) values comparable to that for TKS at 80°C. Casein zymography showed that Tk-serpin inhibits these proteases by forming a SDS-resistant complex, which is typical to inhibitory serpins. The ratio of moles of Tk-serpin needed to inhibit 1 mol of protease (stoichiometry of inhibition, SI) varies from 40 to 80 at 20°C, but decreases to the minimum values of 3-7 as the temperature increases. The inhibitory activities of Tk-serpin for these proteases increase as the stabilities of these proteases decrease, suggesting that a flexibility of the active-site of protease is one of the determinants for susceptibility of protease to inhibition by Tk-serpin. This report showed for the first time that Tk-serpin inhibits both chymotrypsin- and subtilisin-like serine proteases and its inhibitory activity increases as the temperature increases up to 100°C.
Research papers (academic journals)