Third Party
Modeling the Protonation States of Catalytic Aspartates in β-Secretase
September 15, 2004
Abstract: β-Secretase (BACE) is
a critical enzyme in the production of
β-amyloid, a protein that has been implicated as
a potential cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD). There
are two aspartic acid residues (Asp 32 and Asp 228)
present in the catalytic region of BACE that can
adopt multiple protonation states. The protonation
state and precise location of the protons for these
two residues, particularly in the presence of an
inhibitor, are subjects of great interest since they
have a direct bearing on the mechanism of aspartyl
proteases and efforts to model β-secretase. We
have carried out full liner-scaling quantum
mechanical (QM) calculations that include
Poisson-Boltzmann solvation in order to identify the
preferred protonation state and proton location in
the presence and absence of an inhibitor. These
calculations favor the monoprotonated state in the
presence of ligand, and di-deprotonated state in the
absence of ligand. Further the proton in the
monoprotonated state is located on the inner oxygen
of Asp 228. These results have implications for the
catalytic mechanism of BACE and related aspartyl
proteases. They also provide a reference state for
the protein in structure-based modeling studies of
this therapeutically important target.
Authors: Ramkumar Rajamani and Charles H. Reynolds
Reference: J. Med. Chem. 2004, 47(21), 5159-5166. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Ramkumar Rajamani and Charles H. Reynolds
Reference: J. Med. Chem. 2004, 47(21), 5159-5166. (see link for full paper).