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Volume 331, Issue 1-2 p. 134-140
Research letters
Free Access

Astacins, serralysins, snake venom and matrix metalloproteinases exhibit identical zinc-binding environments (HEXXHXXGXXH and Met-turn) and topologies and should be grouped into a common family, the ‘metzincins’

Wolfram Bode

Wolfram Bode

Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie, Abteilung für Strukturforschung, 82152 Martinsried (bei München, Germany

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Franz-Xaver Gomis-Rüth

Franz-Xaver Gomis-Rüth

Institut de Biologia Fonamental, Universität Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain

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Walter Stöckler

Walter Stöckler

Zoologisches Institut der Universität Heidelberg, Fachrichtung Physiologie, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

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First published: September 27, 1993
Citations: 592
Corresponding author. Fax: (49) (89) 8578 3516.

Abstract

The X-ray crystal structures of two zinc endopeptidases, astacin from crayfish, and adamalysin II from snake venom, reveal a strong overall topological equivalence and virtually identical extended HEXXHXXGXXH zinc-binding segments, but in addition a methionine-containing turn of similar conformation (the ‘Met-turn’), which forms a hydrophobic basis for the zinc ion and the three liganding histidine residues. These two features are also present in a similar arrangement in the matrix metalloproteinases (matrixins) and in the large bacterial Serratia proteinase-like peptidases (serralysins). We suggest that these four proteinases represent members of distinct subfamilies which can be grouped together in a family, for which we propose the designation, metzincins.