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. 2014 Feb 6;54(2):171–178. doi: 10.1007/s000180050139

NMR structures of the C-terminal end of human complement serine protease C1s

P Gans 1, V Rossi 2, C Gaboriaud 3, I Bally 2, J-F Hernandez 2, M J Blackledge 1, G J Arlaud 2
PMCID: PMC11147306  PMID: 9539960

Abstract

Synthetic peptides derived from the C-terminal end of the human complement serine protease C1s were analysed by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Circular dichroism indicates that peptides 656-673 and 653-673 are essentially unstructured in water and undergo a coil-to-helix transition in the presence of increasing concentrations of trifluoroethanol. Two-dimensional NMR analyses performed in water/trifluoroethanol solutions provide evidence for the occurrence of a regular α-helix extending from Trp659 to Ser668 (peptide 656-673), and from Tyr656 to Ser668 (peptide 653-673), the C-terminal segment of both peptides remaining unstructured under the conditions used. Based on these and other observations, we propose that the serine protease domain of C1s ends in a 13-residue α-helix (656Tyr-Ser668) followed by a five-residue C-terminal extension. The latter appears to be flexible and is probably locked within C1s through a salt bridge involving Glu672.

Keywords: Key words. Complement; C1s; serine proteases; peptide synthesis; NMR structure.

Footnotes

Received 19 November 1997; accepted 24 November 1997


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