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1.
Aqualysin I is an alkaline serine protease which is secreted into the culture medium by Thermus aquaticus YT-1, an extreme thermophile [Matsuzawa, H., Hamaoki, M. & Ohta, T. (1983) Agric. Biol. Chem. 47, 25-28]. The gene encoding aqualysin I was cloned into Escherichia coli using synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides as hybridization probes. The nucleotide sequence of the cloned DNA was determined. The primary structure of aqualysin I, deduced from the nucleotide sequence, agreed with the NH2-terminal sequence previously reported and the determined amino acid sequences, including the COOH-terminal sequence, of the tryptic peptides derived from aqualysin I. Aqualysin I comprised 281 amino acid residues and its molecular mass was determined to be 28,350. On alignment of the whole amino acid sequence, aqualysin I showed high sequence homology with the subtilisin-type serine proteases, and 43% identity with proteinase K, 37-39% with subtilisins and 34% with thermitase. Extremely high sequence identity was observed in the regions containing the active-site residues, corresponding to Asp32, His64 and Ser221 of subtilisin BPN'. The nucleotide sequence of the cloned DNA (1105 nucleotides) revealed that it contains the entire gene encoding aqualysin I and one open reading frame without a translational stop codon. Therefore, aqualysin I was considered to be produced as a large precursor, which contains a NH2-terminal portion, the protease and a COOH-terminal portion. The G + C content of the coding region for aqualysin I was 64.6%, which is lower than those of other Thermus genes (68-74%). The codon usage in the aqualysin I gene was rather random in comparison with that in other Thermus genes.  相似文献   

2.
I gamma CAT is a hybrid protein that inserts into the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum as a type II membrane protein. These proteins span the membrane once and expose the NH2-terminal end on the cytoplasmic side and the COOH terminus on the exoplasmic side. I gamma CAT has a single hydrophobic segment of 30 amino acid residues that functions as a signal for membrane insertion and anchoring. The signal-anchor region in I gamma CAT was analyzed by deletion mutagenesis from its COOH-terminal end (delta C mutants). The results show that the 13 amino acid residues on the amino-terminal side of the hydrophobic segment are not sufficient for membrane insertion and translocation. Mutant proteins with at least 16 of the hydrophobic residues are inserted into the membrane, glycosylated, and partially proteolytically processed by a microsomal protease (signal peptidase). The degree of processing varies between different delta C mutants. Mutant proteins retaining 20 or more of the hydrophobic amino acid residues can span the membrane like the parent I gamma CAT protein and are not proteolytically processed. Our data suggest that in the type II membrane protein I gamma CAT, the signals for membrane insertion and anchoring are overlapping and that hydrophilic amino acid residues at the COOH-terminal end of the hydrophobic segment can influence cleavage by signal peptidase. From this and previous work, we conclude that the function of the signal-anchor sequence in I gamma CAT is determined by three segments: a positively charged NH2 terminus, a hydrophobic core of at least 16 amino acid residues, and the COOH-terminal flanking hydrophilic segment.  相似文献   

3.
Aqualysin I, which is a subtilisin-type, extracellular protease secreted by Thermus aquaticus YT-1, is synthesized as a unique precursor bearing pro-domains at both N- and C-terminus of the mature protease domain as well as an N-terminal signal peptide. To investigate the function of the C-terminal pro-domain in maturation and export pathway of the precursor in E. coli cells, aqualysin I variants were constructed in which deletion mutants of the C-terminal pro-domain lacking its own signal peptide were inserted into pIN-III-ompA3. When E. coli harboring wild type and mutant plasmids were induced by 0.2 mM IPTG, active aqualysin I was produced by heat treatment at 65 °C. Aqualysin I precursors with deletions of more than 5 amino acid residues at the C-terminal end of pro-domain were much more rapidly processed than that of wild type, indicating that the C-terminal pro-domain functions as a inhibitor for processing of aqualysin I precursor. With the wild type, most of aqualysin I was present in membrane fraction (probably the outer membrane), whereas for the truncated mutants, it remained in the cytoplasm, indicating that for deletion mutants, their precursors expressed in cells were not translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane, despite the existence of an N-terminal signal peptide.  相似文献   

4.
The Serratia marcescens serine protease gene encoding a 1,045-amino-acid precursor protein of 112 kDa directs excretion of the mature protease of ca. 58 kDa through the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. A typical signal peptide of 27 amino acids and a large COOH-terminal domain of the precursor are both functionally essential for the excretion of the mature protease into the medium. Sequence analysis of the fragment peptides of the mature protease as well as site-directed mutagenesis indicated that the COOH-terminus of the mature enzyme was Asp645. By using the polyclonal antibody against the 112-kDa precursor protein, not only the intact precursor but also two proteins, C-1 (40 kDa) and C-2 (38 kDa), corresponding to the processed COOH-terminal domains were detected in the insoluble fraction of E. coli cells. Further fractionation by sucrose density gradient centrifugation showed that C-1 and C-2 were localized in the outer membrane. The NH2-terminal residues of C-1 and C-2 were determined to be Ala702 and Phe717, respectively. All these data suggest that the precursor is cleaved at three positions, between Asp645-Ser646, Glu701-Ala702, and Gly716-Phe717, probably by the self-processing activity in the normal excretion pathway through the outer membrane.  相似文献   

5.
The precursor of aqualysin I, an extracellular subtilisin-type protease produced by Thermus aquaticus, consists of four domains: an N-terminal signal peptide, an N-terminal pro-sequence, a protease domain, and a C-terminal extended sequence. In an Escherichia coli expression system for the aqualysin I gene, a 38 kDa precursor protein consisting of the protease domain and the C-terminal extended sequence is accumulated in the membrane fraction and processed to a 28 kDa mature enzyme upon heat treatment at 65°C. The 38 kDa precursor protein is separated as a soluble form from denatured E. coli proteins after heat treatment. Accordingly, purification of the 38 kDa proaqualysin I was performed using chromatography. The purified precursor protein gave a single band on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The precursor protein exhibited proteolytic activity comparable to that of the mature enzyme. The purified precursor protein was processed to the mature enzyme upon heat treatment. The processing was inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate. The processing rate increased upon either the addition of mature aqualysin I or upon an increase in the concentration of the precursor, suggesting that the cleavage of the C-terminal extended sequence occurs through an intermolecular self-processing mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
The precursor of Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase contains an NH2-terminal extension of 41 amino acid residues as the signal sequence. The E. coli beta-lactamase structural gene was fused with the DNA for the promoter and signal sequence regions. Activity of beta-lactamase was expressed and more than 95% of the activity was secreted into the culture medium. DNA fragments coding for short signal sequences 28, 31, and 33 amino acids from the initiator Met were prepared and fused with the beta-lactamase structural gene. The sequences of 31 and 33 amino acid residues with Ala COOH-terminal amino acid were able to secrete active beta-lactamase from B. subtilis cells. However beta-lactamase was not secreted into the culture medium by the shorter signal sequence of 28 amino acid residues, which was not cleaved. Molecular weight analysis of the extracellular and cell-bound beta-lactamase suggested that the signal peptide of B. subtilis alpha-amylase was the first 31 amino acids from the initiator Met. The significance of these results was discussed in relation to the predicted secondary structure of the signal sequences.  相似文献   

7.
Aqualysin I is a subtilisin-type serine protease secreted into the medium by Thermus aquaticus YT-1. Thermus thermophilus cells harboring a plasmid for the aqualysin I precursor secreted pro-aqualysin I with the C-terminal pro-sequence into the culture medium, and the precursor was then processed to the mature enzyme during the cultivation. However, the extracellular levels of aqualysin I in T. thermophilus cells harboring plasmids for deletion mutants as to the C-terminal pro-sequence were about 10–20% in comparison with the level of wild-type. Only the mature enzyme could be detected in the medium, while pro-aqualysin I with the C-terminal pro-sequence could not. These results suggest that the C-terminal pro-sequence of aqualysin I plays an important role in the extracellular secretion of aqualysin I.  相似文献   

8.
A yeast gene for a methionine aminopeptidase, one of the central enzymes in protein synthesis, was cloned and sequenced. The DNA sequence encodes a precursor protein containing 387 amino acid residues. The mature protein, whose NH2-terminal sequence was confirmed by Edman degradation, consists of 377 amino acids. The function of the 10-residue sequence at the NH2 terminus, containing 1 serine and 6 threonine residues, remains to be established. In contrast to the structure of the prokaryotic enzyme, the yeast methionine aminopeptidase consists of two functional domains: a unique NH2-terminal domain containing two motifs resembling zinc fingers, which may allow the protein to interact with ribosomes, and a catalytic COOH-terminal domain resembling other prokaryotic methionine aminopeptidases. Furthermore, unlike the case for the prokaryotic gene, the deletion of the yeast MAP1 gene is not lethal, suggesting for the first time that alternative NH2-terminal processing pathway(s) exist for cleaving methionine from nascent polypeptide chains in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

9.
The E1-glycoprotein (Mr = 26,014; 228 amino acids) of mouse hepatitis virus A59 is a class III membrane glycoprotein which has been used in this study as a model system in the study of membrane integration and protein transport. The protein lacks an NH2-terminal cleavable signal sequence and spans the viral membrane three times. Hydrophobic domains I and III could serve as signal sequences for cotranslational membrane integration. Domain I alone was sufficient to translocate the hydrophilic NH2 terminus of E1 across the membranes as evidenced by glycosylation of a newly introduced N-glycosylation site. The COOH-terminal part of E1 involving amino acids Leu124 to Thr228 was found to associate tightly with membranes at the post-translational level, although this part of the molecule lacks pronounced hydrophobic sequences. Membrane protection assays with proteinase K showed that a 2-kDa hydrophilic fragment was removed from the COOH terminus of E1 indicating that the protein is largely embedded into the membrane. Microinjection of in vitro transcribed capped and polyadenylated mRNA into CV-1 cells or into secretory AtT20 pituitary tumor cells showed that the E1-protein accumulated in the Golgi but was not detectable at the plasma membrane or in secretory granules. The 28 NH2-terminal hydrophilic amino acid residues play no role in membrane assembly or in intracellular targeting. Various NH2-terminal portions of E1 were fused to Ile145 of the cytoplasmic N-protein of mouse hepatitis virus. The resulting hybrid proteins were shown to assemble into membranes in vitro and were detected either in the rough endoplasmic reticulum or transient vesicles of microinjected cells.  相似文献   

10.
The Serratia marcescens serine protease, which is directed by the gene encoding a precursor composed of a typical NH2-terminal signal sequence, a mature enzyme domain, and a large COOH-terminal domain, was excreted through the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. The precursor, with the expected molecular size (110 kilodaltons), was detected in an insoluble form in the periplasmic space of E. coli cells after induction with isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside of the expression of the gene under the control of the tac promoter. Upon membrane fractionation of the disrupted cells by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, the precursor was recovered from a fraction slightly heavier than the outer membrane fraction but not from the inner membrane fraction. Conversion of the precursor into the mature form, which was accompanied by its excretion into the medium, was observed even in the absence of de novo protein synthesis caused by the addition of chloramphenicol. The mutated gene product lacking all of the COOH-terminal domain was localized in the periplasmic space only and was not excreted into the medium. Additional mutant genes were generated by site-directed mutagenesis to test the role of some amino acids in the excretion of this protease in E. coli. The mutant protein with no protease activity because of the change of the catalytic residue Ser-341 to Thr was still excreted into the medium but with abnormal processing. Both self-processing and host-dependent processing of the precursor seem to be involved in the excretion of the mature enzyme. Replacement of the four Cys residues, two in the mature enzyme and two in the COOH-terminal domain, with Ser in different combinations caused a distinct or complete loss of excretion, suggesting that a certain conformation possibly formed via disulfide bonding was important for the excretion of the S. marcescens protease.  相似文献   

11.
The Serratia marcescens serine protease (SSP) is one of the extracellular enzymes secreted from this Gram-negative bacterium. When the ssp gene, which encodes a SSP precursor (preproSSP) composed of a typical NH2-terminal signal peptide, a mature enzyme domain, and a large COOH-terminal pro-region, is expressed in Escherichia coli, the mature protease is excreted through the outer membrane into the medium. The COOH-terminal pro-region, which is integrated into the outer membrane, provides the essential function for the export of the mature protein across the outer membrane. This is a very simple pathway, in contrast to the general secretory pathway exemplified by the secretion of a pullulanase from Klebsiella oxytoca, in which many separately encoded accessory proteins are required for the transport through the outer membrane. Moreover, the NH2-terminal region of 71 amino acid residues of the COOH-terminal pro-sequence plays an essential role, as an “intramolecular chaperone,” in the folding of the mature enzyme in the medium. In addition to ssp, the S. marcescens strain contains two ssp homologues encoding proteins similar to SSP in amino acid sequence and size, but with no protease activity. Characterization of the homologue proteins and chimeric proteins between the homologues and SSP, all of which are produced in E. coli, has shown that they are membrane proteins that are localized in the outer membrane in the same manner as for SSP. By use of the COOH-terminal domain of SSP, pseudoazurin was exported to the cell surface of E. coli, which proves the usefulness of the SSP secretory system in the export of foreign proteins across the outer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
The linear double-stranded DNA plasmid pGKL1 in yeast encodes a killer toxin consisting of 97-kDa, 31-kDa and 28-kDa subunits. A 128-kDa protein precursor of the 97-kDa and 31-kDa subunits, was first synthesized with a 29-amino-acid extension at its NH2-terminus as a secretion signal sequence. In the present study, the property of this signal sequence was studied by the analysis of a fusion protein with mouse alpha-amylase. Using the secretion signal sequence of the killer protein, the mouse alpha-amylase was successfully secreted into the culture medium. An intracellular precursor form of alpha-amylase was identified and purified. Analysis of the NH2-terminal sequence of this precursor molecule indicated that it corresponded to the secretory intermediate (pro form) of alpha-amylase with the removal of the hydrophobic segment (Met1-Gly16) of the secretion signal. Both the secretion of alpha-amylase into the culture medium and the detection of the pro-alpha-amylase species in the cells were prohibited by a sec 11 mutation, or by the conversion of Gly to Val at the 16th position of the secretion signal. These results strongly suggest that the cleavage occurs between Gly16 and Leu17 by a signal peptidase, and that this cleavage is required for the secretion of alpha-amylase into the medium. Based on the data from the NH2-terminal amino acid sequences of secreted alpha-amylases, we conclude that the 29-amino-acid secretion signal present in the 128-kDa killer toxin precursor protein is a prepro structure.  相似文献   

13.
alpha-Lytic protease is a 19.8-kDa protein secreted from the Gram-negative bacterium Lysobacter enzymogenes. We have cloned and sequenced the gene for this serine protease. The nucleotide sequence contains an open reading frame which codes for the 198-residue mature enzyme and a potential prepro-peptide, also of 198 residues. The COOH-terminal 49 residues of the pro-peptide are significantly homologous to the propeptides of Streptomyces griseus proteases A and B. We suggest that this pro-peptide region facilitates formation of the active enzyme. A region bridging the NH2-terminal pre- and pro-peptides is homologous to a maize inhibitor of serine proteases. We speculate that this region inhibits enzymatic activity of the prepro-enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
The precursor of aqualysin I, an extracellular protease produced by Thermus aquaticus, consists of four domains: an N-terminal signal peptide, an N-terminal pro-sequence, the protease domain and a C-terminal pro-sequence. In an Escherichia coli expression system, mature and active aqualysin I is formed by treatment at 65 degrees C and the N-pro-sequence is required for its production. Complete deletion of the C-pro-sequence did not affect the production of active aqualysin I, indicating that the C-pro-sequence is not essential. A non-covalent N-pro-region was separately synthesized from the protease domain with or without the C-pro-sequence. In this system, mature and active aqualysin I was detected only when the C-pro-sequence was deleted.  相似文献   

15.
Thaumatin is a 22-kDa sweet-tasting protein containing eight disulfide bonds. When thaumatin is expressed in Pichia pastoris using the thaumatin cDNA fused with both the alpha-factor signal sequence and the Kex2 protease cleavage site from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the N-terminal sequence of the secreted thaumatin molecule is not processed correctly. To examine the role of the thaumatin cDNA-encoded N-terminal pre-sequence and C-terminal pro-sequence on the processing of thaumatin and efficiency of thaumatin production in P. pastoris, four expression plasmids with different pre-sequence and pro-sequence were constructed and transformed into P. pastoris. The transformants containing pre-thaumatin gene that has the native plant signal, secreted thaumatin molecules in the medium. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the secreted thaumatin molecule was processed correctly. The production yield of thaumatin was not affected by the C-terminal pro-sequence, and the pro-sequence was not processed in P. pastoris, indicating that pro-sequence is not necessary for thaumatin synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
The influenza A virus M2 polypeptide is a small integral membrane protein that does not contain a cleaved signal sequence, but is unusual in that it assumes the membrane orientation of a class I integral membrane protein with an NH2-terminal ectodomain and a COOH-terminal cytoplasmic tail. To determine the domains of M2 involved in specifying membrane orientation, hybrid genes were constructed and expressed in which regions of the M2 protein were linked to portions of the paramyxovirus HN and SH proteins, two class II integral membrane proteins that adopt the opposite orientation in membranes from M2. A hybrid protein (MgMH) consisting of the M2 NH2-terminal and membrane-spanning domains linked precisely to the HN COOH-terminal ectodomain was found in cells in two forms: integrated into membranes in the M2 topology or completely translocated across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane and ultimately secreted from the cell. The finding of a soluble form suggested that in this hybrid protein the anchor function of the M2 signal/anchor domain can be overridden. A second hybrid which contained the M2 NH2 terminus linked to the HN signal anchor and ectodomain (MgHH) was found in both the M2 and the HN orientation, suggesting that the M2 NH2 terminus was capable of reversing the topology of a class II membrane protein. The exchange of the M2 signal/anchor domain with that of SH resulted in a hybrid protein which assumed only the M2 topology. Thus, all these data suggest that the NH2-terminal 24 residues to M2 are important for directing the unusual membrane topology of the M2 protein. These data are discussed in relationship to the loop model for insertion of proteins into membranes and the role of charged residues as a factor in determining orientation.  相似文献   

17.
K W Jackson  J Tang 《Biochemistry》1982,21(26):6620-6625
The complete amino acid sequence of streptokinase has been determined by automated Edman degradation of its cyanogen bromide and proteolytic fragments. The protein consists of 415 amino acid residues. Sequence microheterogeneity was found at two positions. The NH2-terminal 245 residues of streptokinase are homologous to the sequences of several serine proteases including bovine trypsin and Streptomyces griseus proteases A and B. The sequence alignment suggests that the active-site histidine-57 has changed to a glycine in streptokinase. The other active-site residues, aspartyl-102 and serine-195, are, however, present at the expected positions. Streptokinase also contains internal sequence homology between the NH2-terminal 173 residues and a COOH-terminal 162-residue region between residues 254 and 415. Moderate homology in predicted secondary structures also exists between these two regions. Although streptokinase is not a protease, these observations suggest that it has evolved from a serine protease by gene duplication and fusion. A COOH-terminal region of about 80 residues is apparently deleted from the second half of the duplicated structures. These observations further suggest that the three-dimensional structure of streptokinase likely contains two independently folded domains, each homologous to serine proteases.  相似文献   

18.
Aqualysin I is an alkaline serine protease which is secreted into the culture medium by Thermus aquaticus YT-1. Aqualysin I was purified, and its apparent relative molecular mass was determined to be 28 500. The enzyme contained four Cys residues (probably as two cystines), and its amino acids composition was similar to those of cysteine-containing serine proteases (proteinase K, etc.) as well as those of subtilisins. The NH2-terminal sequence of aqualysin I showed homology with those of the microbial serine proteases. The optimum pH for the proteolytic activity of aqualysin I was around 10.0. Ca2+ stabilized the enzyme to heat treatment, and the maximum proteolytic activity was observed at 80 degrees C. Aqualysin I was stable to denaturing reagents (7 M urea, 6 M guanidine.HCl and 1% SDS) at 23 degrees C for 24 h. The enzyme hydrolyzed the ester bond of an alanine ester and succinyl-Ala-Ala-Ala p-nitroanilide, a synthetic substrate for mammalian elastase. The cleavage sites for aqualysin I in oxidized insulin B chain were not specific when it was digested completely.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the primary structure of human cystatin As from epidermis, liver, spleen, and leukocytes. These molecules were indistinguishable on PAGE in the presence and absence of SDS, by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) chromatofocusing on a Mono P column, and in amino acid composition. The NH2- and COOH-terminal amino acid sequences of human cystatin As from epidermis, liver, and spleen were identical with those of human leukocyte cystatin A previously reported except for the lack of the NH2-terminal methionine residue in human epidermal cystatin A. The peptides obtained upon digestion of four human cystatin As with Achromobacter protease I (AP) showed identical peptide maps on HPLC except for different retention times of the NH2-terminal peptides. Furthermore, the amino acid compositions of corresponding separated peptide quartets were identical. We also determined the complete amino acid sequence of human epidermal cystatin A by sequencing peptides obtained from AP digestion and cyanogen bromide (CNBr) cleavage. It consisted of 97 amino acid residues, and was identical with those of human cystatin As from liver, spleen, and leukocytes except for the lack of the NH2-terminal methionine residue.  相似文献   

20.
We previously reported purification and characterization of a 90k serine protease with pI 3.9 from Bacillus subtilis (natto) No. 16 [Kato et al. 1992 Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 56:1166]. The enzyme showed different and unique substrate specificity towards the oxidized B-chain of insulin from those of well-known bacterial serine proteases from Bacillus subtilisins. The structural gene, hspK, for the 90k serine protease was cloned and sequenced. The cloned DNA fragment contained a single open reading frame of 4302 bp coding a protein of 1433 amino acid residues. The deduced amino acid sequence of the 90k-protease indicated the presence of a typical signal sequence of the first 30 amino acids region and that there was a pro-sequence of 164 amino acid residues after the signal sequence. The mature region of the 90k-protease started from position 195 of amino acid residue, and the following peptide consisted of 1239 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 133k. It might be a precursor protein of the 90k-protease, and the C-terminal region of 43k might be degraded to a mature protein from the precursor protein. The catalytic triad was thought to consist of Asp33, His81, and Ser259 from comparison of the amino acid sequence of the 90k-protease with those of the other bacterial serine proteases. The high-molecular-weight serine protease, the 90k-protease, may be an ancient form of bacterial serine proteases.  相似文献   

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