1 research outputs found
Binding of Chondroitin 4āSulfate to Cathepsin S Regulates Its Enzymatic Activity
Human cysteine cathepsin S (catS)
participates in distinct physiological
and pathophysiological cellular processes and is considered as a valuable
therapeutic target in autoimmune diseases, cancer, atherosclerosis,
and asthma. We evaluated the capacity of negatively charged glycosaminoglycans
(heparin, heparan sulfate, chondroitin 4/6-sulfates, dermatan sulfate,
and hyaluronic acid) to modulate the activity of catS. Chondroitin
4-sulfate (C4-S) impaired the collagenolytic activity (type IV collagen)
and inhibited the peptidase activity (Z-Phe-Arg-AMC) of catS at pH
5.5, obeying a mixed-type mechanism (estimated <i>K</i><sub>i</sub> = 16.5 Ā± 6 Ī¼M). Addition of NaCl restored catS
activity, supporting the idea that electrostatic interactions are
primarly involved. Furthermore, C4-S delayed in a dose-dependent manner
the maturation of procatS at pH 4.0 by interfering with the intermolecular
processing pathway. Binding of C4-S to catS was demonstrated by gel-filtration
chromatography, and its affinity was measured by surface plasmon resonance
(equilibrium dissociation constant <i>K</i><sub>d</sub> =
210 Ā± 40 nM). Moreover, C4-S induced subtle conformational changes
in mature catS as observed by intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy
analysis. Molecular docking predicted three specific binding sites
on catS for C4-S that are different from those found in the crystal
structure of the cathepsin KāC4-S complex. Overall, these results
describe a novel glycosaminoglycan-mediated mechanism of catS inhibition
and suggest that C4-S may modulate the collagenase activity of catS <i>in vivo</i>