The main player in the catalytic mechanism in the serine proteases is the catalytic triad. The triad is located in the active site of the enzyme, where catalysis occurs, and is preserved in all
superfamilies of serine protease enzymes. The triad is a coordinated structure consisting of three
amino acids:
His 57,
Ser 195 (hence the name "serine protease") and
Asp 102. These three key amino acids each play an essential role in the cleaving ability of the proteases. While the amino acid members of the triad are located far from one another on the sequence of the protein, due to folding, they will be very close to one another in the heart of the enzyme. The particular geometry of the triad members are highly characteristic to their specific function: it was shown that the position of just four points of the triad characterize the function of the containing enzyme. In the event of catalysis, an ordered mechanism occurs in which several intermediates are generated. The catalysis of the peptide cleavage can be seen as a
ping-pong catalysis, in which a
substrate binds (in this case, the polypeptide being cleaved), a product is released (the C-terminus "half" of the peptide with amino group visible), another substrate binds (in this case, water), and another product is released (the N-terminus "half" of the peptide with carboxyl group visible). Each amino acid in the triad performs a specific task in this process: • The
serine has an -OH group that is able to act as a
nucleophile, attacking the
carbonyl carbon of the
scissile peptide bond of the substrate. • A pair of electrons on the
histidine nitrogen has the ability to accept the
hydrogen from the
serine -OH group, thus coordinating the attack of the
peptide bond. • The
carboxyl group on the
aspartic acid in turn
hydrogen bonds with the
histidine, making the nitrogen atom mentioned above much more
electronegative. The whole reaction can be summarized as follows: • The
polypeptide substrate binds to the surface of the serine protease enzyme such that the scissile bond is inserted into the active site of the enzyme, with the carbonyl carbon of this bond positioned near the
nucleophilic serine. • The
serine -OH attacks the
carbonyl carbon, and the nitrogen of the
histidine accepts the hydrogen from the -OH of the [serine] and a pair of electrons from the double bond of the
carbonyl oxygen moves to the oxygen. As a result, a tetrahedral intermediate is generated. • The bond joining the nitrogen and the carbon in the peptide bond is now broken. The covalent electrons creating this bond move to attack the hydrogen of the
histidine, breaking the connection. The electrons that previously moved from the
carbonyl oxygen double bond move back from the negative oxygen to recreate the bond, generating an acyl-enzyme intermediate. • Now, water comes into the reaction. Water replaces the
N-terminus of the cleaved peptide, and attacks the
carbonyl carbon. Once again, the electrons from the double bond move to the oxygen making it negative, as the bond between the oxygen of the water and the carbon is formed. This is coordinated by the nitrogen of the
histidine, which accepts a proton from the water. Overall, this generates another tetrahedral intermediate. • In a final reaction, the bond formed in the first step between the
serine and the
carbonyl carbon moves to attack the hydrogen that the
histidine just acquired. The now electron-deficient
carbonyl carbon re-forms the double bond with the oxygen. As a result, the
C-terminus of the peptide is now ejected.
Additional stabilizing effects It was discovered that additional amino acids of the protease,
Gly 193 and
Ser 195, are involved in creating what is called an
oxyanion hole. Both
Gly 193 and
Ser 195 can donate backbone hydrogens for hydrogen bonding. When the
tetrahedral intermediate of step 1 and step 3 are generated, the negative oxygen ion, having accepted the electrons from the
carbonyl double bond, fits perfectly into the oxyanion hole. In effect, serine proteases preferentially bind the
transition state and the overall structure is favored, lowering the
activation energy of the reaction. This "preferential binding" is responsible for much of the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. ==Regulation of serine protease activity==