Thingiverse
Savinase protease enzyme
por HybridDK
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Savinase is a serine protease, that you probably all seen in action. This is due to its wide use as an enzyme in detergents.
Proteases are amazing enzymes breaking down other proteins into smaller and smaller chunks. Savinase does this by hydrolysing the peptide bonds that bind the aminoacids of proteins together. It does this by using a catalytic triade, where three aminoacids form a charge relay to make a powerful nucleophilic attack on peptide bonds.
In savinase, aspartate32 is hydrogenbonded to histidine64 thereby increasing the pKa of the imidazole-ring considerably. This in turn makes histidine a strong enough base to deprotonate serine221, which then attacks and breaks the peptide bond of a bound substrate. Even though the asp, his and ser residues are quite far apart in the backbone of savinase, the specific 3D folding of the protein brings them close enough together to enable their catalytic function. Substrates are bound in the ridge that is easily found in the printed
Proteases are amazing enzymes breaking down other proteins into smaller and smaller chunks. Savinase does this by hydrolysing the peptide bonds that bind the aminoacids of proteins together. It does this by using a catalytic triade, where three aminoacids form a charge relay to make a powerful nucleophilic attack on peptide bonds.
In savinase, aspartate32 is hydrogenbonded to histidine64 thereby increasing the pKa of the imidazole-ring considerably. This in turn makes histidine a strong enough base to deprotonate serine221, which then attacks and breaks the peptide bond of a bound substrate. Even though the asp, his and ser residues are quite far apart in the backbone of savinase, the specific 3D folding of the protein brings them close enough together to enable their catalytic function. Substrates are bound in the ridge that is easily found in the printed
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