Simulated Interactions between Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme and Substrate
Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone: Novel Insights into Domain Selectivity<sup>†</sup>
Human angiotensin-I converting enzyme (ACE) is a central component of the renin-angiotensin
system and a major target for cardiovascular therapies. The somatic form of the enzyme (sACE) comprises
two homologous metallopeptidase domains (N and C), each bearing a zinc active site with similar but
distinct substrate and inhibitor specificities. On the basis of the recently determined crystal structures of
both ACE domains, we have studied their complexes with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), which
is cleaved releasing both the protected NH2- and COOH-terminal tripeptides. This is the first molecular
modeling study of an ACE−peptide substrate complex that examines the structural basis of ACE's
endopeptidase activity and offers novel insights into subsites that are distant from the obligatory binding
site and were not identified in the crystal structures. Our data indicate that a bridging interaction between
Arg500 of the N-domain and Arg8 of GnRH that involves a buried chloride ion may account for its role
in the specificity of the N-domain for endoproteolytic cleavage of the substrate at the NH2-terminus in
vitro. In support of this, the protected NH2-terminal dipeptide of GnRH exhibits stronger interactions
than the protected COOH-terminal dipeptide with the N-domain of ACE. Further comparison of the models
of ACE−substrate complexes promotes our understanding of how the two domains differ in their function
and specificity and provides an extension of the pharmacophore model used for structure-based drug
design up to the S7 subsite of the enzyme