Structure of the catalytic region of human complement protease C1s: study by chemical cross-linking and three-dimensional homology modeling.

Article Details

Citation

Rossi V, Gaboriaud C, Lacroix M, Ulrich J, Fontecilla-Camps JC, Gagnon J, Arlaud GJ

Structure of the catalytic region of human complement protease C1s: study by chemical cross-linking and three-dimensional homology modeling.

Biochemistry. 1995 Jun 6;34(22):7311-21.

PubMed ID
7779774 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

C1s is a multidomain serine protease that is responsible for the enzymatic activity of C1, the first component of the classical pathway of complement. Its catalytic region (gamma-B) comprises two contiguous complement control protein (CCP) modules, IV and V (about 60 residues each), a 15-residue intermediary segment, and the B chain (251 residues), which is the serine protease domain. With a view to identify domain-domain interactions within this region, the gamma-B fragment of C1s, obtained by limited proteolysis with plasmin, was chemically cross-linked with the water-soluble carbodiimide 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide; then cross-linked peptides were isolated after CNBr cleavage and thermolytic digestion. N-Terminal sequence and mass spectrometry analyses allowed us to identify two cross-links between Lys 405 of module V and Glu 672 of the B chain and between Glu 418 of the intermediary segment and Lys 608 of the B chain. Three-dimensional modeling of the CCP modules IV and V and of the catalytic B chain was also carried out on the basis of their respective homology with the 16th and 5th CCP modules of complement factor H and type I serine proteases. The information provided by both the chemical cross-linking studies and the homology modeling enabled us to construct a three-dimensional model for the assembly of the C-terminal part of the gamma-B region, comprising module V, the intermediary segment, and the B chain. This model shows that module V interacts with the serine protease B chain on the side opposite to both the activation site and the catalytic site. Functional implications of this interaction are discussed in terms of the possible role of module V in the specific recognition and positioning of C4, one of the two substrates of C1s.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Complement C1s subcomponentP09871Details