The proton liberation on the binding of zinc chloride and methylmercuric iodide to the (essential) thiol group of papain has been examined as a function of pH. This was carried out by (a) direct titration of the protons on the addition of the metal compound to active papain and (b) measurement of the extent of inhibition of enzyme activity by the metal compound as a function of pH.It was found that in the neutral pH range the thiol group or the neighbouring imidazole group in the free enzyme carries one proton, at low pH both groups do so, whereas at high pH neither group carries a proton. The pK values of the free enzyme that govern the proton release, 4.2 and 8.5, correspond to those that govern overall activity. Both from the experiments with methylmercuric iodide and from fluorescence measurements of methylmercuric papain, it was established that the imidazole group in the latter compound exhibits a pK of 5.4. Taking recent data into account, it was considered that the ion pair of thiolate anion and imidazolium cation, proposed by Polgar, is the best approximation to describe the charge distribution in the active centre and to explain the reaction mechanism.In the trough of the active site of papain the essential thiol group of cysteine-25 and the imidazole group of histidine-159 are located within 1 nm of each other [l].
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