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1.
2.
The polar, COOH-terminal c-region of signal peptides has been considered to be most important for influencing the efficiency and fidelity of signal peptidase cleavage while the hydrophobic core or h-region appears indispensable for initiating translocation. To identify structural features of residues flanking the c-region that influence the fidelity and efficiency of signal peptidase cleavage as well as co-translational translocation, we introduced six amino acid substitutions into the COOH terminus of the hydrophobic core and seven substitutions at the NH2 terminus of the mature region (the +1 position) of a model eukaryotic preprotein-human pre(delta pro)apoA-II. This preprotein contains several potential sites for signal peptidase cleavage. The functional consequences of these mutations were assayed using an in vitro co-translational translocation/processing system and by post-translational cleavage with purified, detergent-solubilized, hen oviduct signal peptidase. The efficiency of translocation could be correlated with the hydrophobic character of the residue introduced at the COOH terminus of the h-region. Some h/c boundary mutants underwent co-translational translocation across the microsomal membrane with only minimal cleavage yet they were cleaved post-translationally by hen oviduct signal peptidase more efficiently than other mutants which exhibited a high degree of coupling of co-translational translocation and cleavage. These data suggest that features at the COOH terminus of the h-domain can influence "presentation" of the cleavage site to signal peptidase. The +1 residue substitutions had minor effects on the extent of co-translational translocation and processing. However, these +1, as well as h/c boundary mutations, had dramatic effects on the site of cleavage chosen by signal peptidase, indicating that residues flanking the c-region of this prototypic eukaryotic signal peptide can affect the fidelity of its proteolytic processing. The site(s) selected by canine microsomal and purified hen oviduct signal peptidase were very similar, suggesting that "intrinsic" structural features of this prepeptide can influence the selectivity of eukaryotic signal peptidase cleavage, independent of the microsomal membrane and associated translocation apparatus.  相似文献   

3.
Human asialoglycoprotein receptor H1 is a single-spanning membrane protein with an amino-terminal domain of 40 residues exposed to the cytoplasm and the carboxyl-terminal domain translocated to the exoplasmic side of the membrane. It has been shown earlier that the transmembrane segment functions as an internal uncleaved signal sequence for insertion into the endoplasmic reticulum. In a deletion protein lacking almost the entire cytoplasmic domain, the signal sequence is cleaved at the carboxyl-terminal end of the transmembrane segment. All available criteria suggest that the protein is processed by signal peptidase. The cytoplasmic domain of the receptor does not directly inhibit signal cleavage since it does not detectably hinder cleavage of the normally amino-terminal signal sequence of influenza hemagglutinin in fusion proteins. We suggest that by its size or structure it affects the position of the receptor in the membrane and thus the accessibility of the potential cleavage site to signal peptidase.  相似文献   

4.
The 20-amino acid signal peptide of human pre (delta pro)apolipoprotein A-II contains the tripartite domain structure typical of eukaryotic prepeptides, i.e. a positively charged NH2-terminal (n) region, a hydrophobic core (h) region, and a COOH-terminal polar domain (c region). This signal sequence has multiple potential sites for cotranslational processing making it an attractive model for assessing the consequences of systematic structural alterations on the site selected for signal peptidase cleavage. We previously analyzed 40 mutant derivatives of this model preprotein using an in vitro translation/canine microsome processing assay. The results showed that the position of the boundary between the h and c regions and properties of the -1 residue are critical in defining the site of cotranslational cleavage. To investigate whether structural features in the NH2-terminal region of signal peptides play a role in cleavage specificity, we have now inserted various amino acids between the positively charged n region (NH2-Met-Lys) and the h region of a "parental" pre(delta pro)apoA-II mutant that has roughly equal cleavage between Gly18 decreases and Gly20 decreases. Movement of the n/h boundary toward the NH2 terminus results in a dramatic shift in cleavage to Gly18 decreases. Replacement of the Lys2 residue with hydrophilic, negatively charged residues preserves the original sites of cleavage. Replacement with a hydrophobic residue causes cleavage to shift "upstream." Simultaneous alteration of the position of n/h and h/c boundaries has an additive effect on the site of signal peptidase cleavage. None of these mutations produced a marked decrease in the efficiency of in vitro cotranslational translocation or cleavage. However, in sequence contexts having poor signal function, introduction of hydrophobic residues between the n and h regions markedly improved the efficiency of translocation/processing. We conclude that the position of the n/h boundary as well as positioning of the h/c boundary affects the site of cleavage chosen by signal peptidase.  相似文献   

5.
The residues occupying the -3 and -1 positions relative to the cleavage site of secretory precursor proteins are usually amino acids with small, neutral side chains that are thought to constitute the recognition site for the processing enzyme, signal peptidase. No restrictions have been established for residues positioned +1 to the cleavage site, although there have been several indications that mutant precursor proteins with a proline at +1 cannot be processed by Escherichia coli signal peptidase I (also called leader peptidase). A maltose-binding protein (MBP) species with proline at +1, designated MBP27-P, was translocated efficiently but not processed when expressed in E. coli cells. Unexpectedly, induced expression of MBP27-P was found to have an adverse effect on the processing kinetics of five different nonlipoprotein precursors analyzed, but not precursor Lpp (the major outer membrane lipoprotein) processed by a different enzyme, signal peptidase II. Cell growth also was inhibited following induction of MBP27-P synthesis. Substitutions in the MBP27-P signal peptide that blocked MBP translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane and, hence, access to the processing enzyme or that altered the signal peptidase I recognition site at position -1 restored both normal growth and processing of other precursors. Since overproduction of signal peptidase I also restored normal growth and processing to cells expressing unaltered MBP27-P, it was concluded that precursor MBP27-P interferes with the activity of the processing enzyme, probably by competing as a noncleavable substrate for the enzyme's active site. Thus, although signal peptidase I, like many other proteases, is unable to cleave an X-Pro bond, a proline at +1 does not prevent the enzyme from recognizing the normal processing site. When the RBP signal peptide was substituted for the MBP signal peptide of MBP27-P, the resultant hybrid protein was processed somewhat inefficiently at an alternate cleavage site and elicited a much reduced effect on cell growth and signal peptidase I activity. Although the MBP signal peptide also has an alternate cleavage site, the different properties of the RBP and MBP signal peptides with regard to the substitution of proline at +1 may be related to their respective secondary structures in the processing site region.  相似文献   

6.
L M Shen  J I Lee  S Y Cheng  H Jutte  A Kuhn  R E Dalbey 《Biochemistry》1991,30(51):11775-11781
Leader peptidase cleaves the leader sequence from the amino terminus of newly made membrane and secreted proteins after they have translocated across the membrane. Analysis of a large number of leader sequences has shown that there is a characteristic pattern of small apolar residues at -1 and -3 (with respect to the cleavage site) and a helix-breaking residue adjacent to the central apolar core in the region -4 to -6. The conserved sequence pattern of small amino acids at -1 and -3 around the cleavage site most likely represents the substrate specificity of leader peptidase. We have tested this by generating 60 different mutations in the +1 to -6 domain of the M13 procoat protein. These mutants were analyzed for in vivo and in vitro processing, as well as for protein insertion into the cytoplasmic membrane. We find that in vivo leader peptidase was able to process procoat with an alanine, a serine, a glycine, or a proline residue at -1 and with a serine, a glycine, a threonine, a valine, or a leucine residue at -3. All other alterations at these sites were not processed, in accordance with predictions based on the conserved features of leader peptides. Except for proline and threonine at +1, all other residues at this position were processed by leader peptidase. None of the mutations at -2, -4, or -5 of procoat (apart from proline at -4) completely abolished leader peptidase cleavage in vivo although there were large effects on the kinetics of processing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
P Novak  I K Dev 《Journal of bacteriology》1988,170(11):5067-5075
The degradation of the prolipoprotein signal peptide in vitro by membranes, cytoplasmic fraction, and two purified major signal peptide peptidases from Escherichia coli was followed by reverse-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC). The cytoplasmic fraction hydrolyzed the signal peptide completely into amino acids. In contrast, many peptide fragments accumulated as final products during the cleavage by a membrane fraction. Most of the peptides were similar to the peptides formed during the cleavage of the signal peptide by the purified membrane-bound signal peptide peptidase, protease IV. Peptide fragments generated during the cleavage of the signal peptide by protease IV and a cytoplasmic enzyme, oligopeptidase A, were identified from their amino acid compositions, their retention times during RPLC, and knowledge of the amino acid sequence of the signal peptide. Both enzymes were endopeptidases, as neither dipeptides nor free amino acids were formed during the cleavage reactions. Protease IV cleaved the signal peptide predominantly in the hydrophobic segment (residues 7 to 14). Protease IV required substrates with hydrophobic amino acids at the primary and the adjacent substrate-binding sites, with a minimum of three amino acids on either side of the scissile bond. Oligopeptidase A cleaved peptides (minimally five residues) that had either alanine or glycine at the P'1 (primary binding site) or at the P1 (preceding P'1) site of the substrate. These results support the hypothesis that protease IV is the major signal peptide peptidase in membranes that initiates the degradation of the signal peptide by making endoproteolytic cuts; oligopeptidase A and other cytoplasmic enzymes further degrade the partially degraded portions of the signal peptide that may be diffused or transported back into the cytoplasm from the membranes.  相似文献   

8.
The ZP3 gene encodes for a zona glycoprotein that serves as both a cell-specific binding site for capacitated spermatozoa and an inducer of acrosomal exocytosis during fertilisation. In this study we have determined the nucleotide sequence of rat ZP3 (accession no. Y10823), predicted primary amino acid structure and determined the cellular origin of this molecule within the ovary. Rat ZP3 was found to have an open reading frame of 1272 nucleotides encoding a polypeptide chain of 424 amino acids that was expressed exclusively by the actively growing oocyte population. Rat ZP3 exhibited 91%, 78% and 66% identity with the mouse, hamster and human homologues, respectively. Key features of mouse ZP3, including the number and location of cysteine and proline residues and N-linked glycosylation sites, were also conserved in the rat homologue. The putative O-linked glycosylation sites, a series of serine residues at ZP3(329-334), were also conserved in rat and mouse ZP3, although immediately downstream of this site the amino acid sequences deviated over a short stretch of amino acids. The hydropathicity profile revealed two hydrophobic domains. The first was associated with a putative N-terminal signal sequence which is unusual in the rat in possessing a proline residue at the -1 position relative to the signal cleavage site, a feature it shares with human and marmoset ZP3 but not mouse. The second hydrophobic domain was observed at the C-terminus downstream of a TGF-beta type III receptor domain that appears to be common to all ZP3 sequences examined to date.  相似文献   

9.
Secreted proteins are processed from a nascent form that contains an NH2-terminal signal peptide. During processing, the latter is cleaved by a specific NH2-terminal signal peptidase. The nascent form of phosphatidylinositol glycan (PI-G) tailed proteins contain both an NH2- and a COOH-terminal signal peptide. The two signal peptides have much in common, such as size and hydrophobicity. The COOH-terminal peptide is also cleaved during processing. We propose that the amino acid in a nascent protein that ultimately combines with the PI-G moiety be designated the omega site. Amino acids adjacent and COOH-terminal to the omega site would then be omega + 1, omega + 2, etc. In previous studies, we showed that allowable substitutions at the omega site of an engineered form of placental alkaline phosphatase (miniPLAP) are limited to 6 small amino acids. In the present study, mutations were made at the omega + 1 and omega + 2 sites. At the omega + 1 site, processing to varying degrees was observed with 8 of the 9 amino acids substituted for alanine, the normal constituent. Only the proline mutant showed no processing. By contrast, the only substituents permitted at the omega + 2 site were glycine and alanine, with only trace activity observed with serine and cysteine. Thus, just as there is a -1, -3 rule for predicting cleavage by NH2-terminal signal peptidase, there appears to be a comparable omega, omega + 2 rule for predicting cleavage/PI-G addition by COOH-terminal signal transamidase.  相似文献   

10.
Presecretory signal peptides of 39 proteins from diverse prokaryotic and eukaryotic sources have been compared. Although varying in length and amino acid composition, the labile peptides share a hydrophobic core of approximately 12 amino acids. A positively charged residue (Lys or Arg) usually precedes the hydrophobic core. Core termination is defined by the occurrence of a charged residue, a sequence of residues which may induce a beta-turn in a polypeptide, or an interruption in potential alpha-helix or beta-extended strand structure. The hydrophobic cores contain, by weight average, 37% Leu: 15% Ala: 10% Val: 10% Phe: 7% Ile plus 21% other hydrophobic amino acids arranged in a non-random sequence. Following the hydrophobic cores (aligned by their last residue) a highly non-random and localized distribution of Ala is apparent within the initial eight positions following the core: (formula; see text) Coincident with this observation, Ala-X-Ala is the most frequent sequence preceding signal peptidase cleavage. We propose the existence of a signal peptidase recognition sequence A-X-B with the preferred cleavage site located after the sixth amino acid following the core sequence. Twenty-two of the above 27 underlined Ala residues would participate as A or B in peptidase cleavage. Position A includes the larger aliphatic amino acids, Leu, Val and Ile, as well as the residues already found at B (principally Ala, Gly and Ser). Since a preferred cleavage site can be discerned from carboxyl and not amino terminal alignment of the hydrophobic cores it is proposed that the carboxyl ends are oriented inward toward the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum where cleavage is thought to occur. This orientation coupled with the predicted beta-turn typically found between the core and the cleavage site implies reverse hairpin insertion of the signal sequence. The structural features which we describe should help identify signal peptides and cleavage sites in presumptive amino acid sequences derived from DNA sequences.  相似文献   

11.
A synthetic peptide analog of the precursor region of preproparathyroid hormone has been shown to be a specific substrate for hen oviduct signal peptidase. The sequence of the 31-residue peptide is Ser-Ala-Lys-Asp-norleucine (Nle)-Val-Lys-Val-Nle-Ile-Val-Nle-Leu-Ala-Ile-Ala-Phe-Leu-Ala-Arg-Ser-As p-Gly-Lys-Ser-Val-Lys-Lys-Arg-D-Tyr-amide (Caulfield, M. P., Duong, L. T., O'Brien, R., Majzoub, J. A., and Rosenblatt, M. (1988) Mol. Endocrinol. 2, 452-458). This sulfur-free signal peptide analog can be labeled with 125I on the C-terminal D-tyrosine and is cleaved by purified hen oviduct signal peptidase between Gly and Lys, the correct site of cleavage of preproparathyroid hormone in vivo. Amino acid sequence analysis of the cleavage product released 125I at the seventh cycle of Edman degradation, confirming that enzymatic cleavage occurs at the physiological site. Synthetic peptide analogs of the substrate with Lys, Pro, or Asp substituted for Nle-18 were poor substrates for the enzyme and were also poor competitive inhibitors of catalysis, suggesting that modifications at position -18, 12 amino acids from the site of cleavage, directly influence binding by the enzyme. Analysis of the reactivity of signal peptidase with these synthetic peptides provides insight into the cleavage specificity requirements of this eukaryotic signal peptidase.  相似文献   

12.
Signal peptidase can cleave inside a polytopic membrane protein   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The signal peptides of most proteins targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum are specifically cleaved by signal peptidase. Although potential cleavage sites occur frequently in polytopic proteins after membrane-spanning segments, processing is restricted to the first hydrophobic domain, suggesting that signal peptidase might not have access to subsequently translocated, internal domains. To test this hypothesis, we replaced the third transmembrane segment of an artificial threefold membrane-spanning protein by a sequence which is normally an amino-terminal signal. Upon in vitro translation and insertion into microsomes, efficient cleavage at this sequence was observed, thus demonstrating the ability of signal peptidase to cleave within polytopic membrane proteins.  相似文献   

13.
The export of proteins to the periplasmic compartment of bacterial cells is mediated by an amino-terminal signal peptide. After transport, the signal peptide is cleaved by a processing enzyme, signal peptidase I. A comparison of the cleavage sites of many exported proteins has identified a conserved feature of small, uncharged amino acids at positions -1 and -3 relative to the cleavage site. To determine experimentally the sequences required for efficient signal peptide cleavage, we simultaneously randomized the amino acid residues from positions -4 to +2 of the TEM-1 beta-lactamase enzyme to form a library of random sequences. Mutants that provide wild-type levels of ampicillin resistance were then selected from the random-sequence library. The sequences of 15 mutants indicated a bias towards small amino acids. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the mature enzyme was determined for nine of the mutants to assign the new -1 and -3 residues. Alanine was present in the -1 position for all nine of these mutants, strongly supporting the importance of alanine at the -1 position. The amino acids at the -3 position were much less conserved but were consistent with the -3 rules derived from sequence comparisons. Compared with the wild type, two of the nine mutants have an altered cleavage position, suggesting that sequence is more important than position for processing of the signal peptide.  相似文献   

14.
Type I signal peptidase (SPase I) catalyzes the cleavage of the amino-terminal signal sequences from preproteins destined for cell export. Preproteins contain a signal sequence with a positively charged n-region, a hydrophobic h-region, and a neutral but polar c-region. Despite having no distinct consensus sequence other than a commonly found c-region "Ala-X-Ala" motif preceding the cleavage site, signal sequences are recognized by SPase I with high fidelity. Remarkably, other potential Ala-X-Ala sites are not cleaved within the preprotein. One hypothesis is that the source of this fidelity is due to the anchoring of both the SPase I enzyme (by way of its transmembrane segment) and the preprotein substrate (by the h-region in the signal sequence) in the membrane. This limits the enzyme-substrate interactions such that cleavage occurs at only one site. In this work we have, for the first time, successfully isolated Bacillus subtilis type I signal peptidase (SipS) and a truncated version lacking the transmembrane domain (SipS-P2). With purified full-length as well as truncated constructs of both B. subtilis and Escherichia coli (Lep) SPase I, in vitro specificity studies indicate that the transmembrane domains of either enzyme are not important determinants of in vitro cleavage fidelity, since enzyme constructs lacking them reveal no alternate site processing of pro-OmpA nuclease A substrate. In addition, experiments with mutant pro-OmpA nuclease A substrate constructs indicate that the h-region of the signal peptide is also not critical for substrate specificity. In contrast, certain mutants in the c-region of the signal peptide result in alternate site cleavage by both Lep and SipS enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies showed that when the signal sequence plus 9 amino acid residues from the amino terminus of the major lipoprotein of Escherichia coli was fused to beta-lactamase, the resulting hybrid protein was modified, proteolytically processed, and assembled into the outer membrane as was the wild-type lipoprotein (Ghrayeb, J., and Inouye, M. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 463-467). We have constructed several hybrid proteins with mutations at the cleavage site of the prolipoprotein signal peptide. These mutations are known to block the lipid modification of the lipoprotein at the cysteine residue, resulting in the accumulation of unprocessed, unmodified prolipoprotein in the outer membrane. The mutations blocked the lipid modification of the hybrid protein. However, in contrast to the mutant lipoproteins, the cleavage of the signal peptides for the mutant hybrid proteins did occur, although less efficiently than the unaltered prolipo-beta-lactamase. The mutant prolipo-beta-lactamase proteins were cleaved at a site 5 amino acid residues downstream of the prolipoprotein signal peptide cleavage site. This new cleavage between alanine and lysine residues was resistant to globomycin, a specific inhibitor for signal peptidase II. This indicates that signal peptidase II, the signal peptidase which cleaves the unaltered prolipo-beta-lactamase, is not responsible for the new cleavage. The results demonstrate that the cleavage of the signal peptide is a flexible process that can occur by an alternative pathway when the normal processing pathway is blocked.  相似文献   

16.
Many secreted and membrane proteins have amino-terminal leader peptides which are essential for their insertion across the membrane bilayer. These precursor proteins, whether from prokaryotic or eukaryotic sources, can be processed to their mature forms in vitro by bacterial leader peptidase. While different leader peptides have shared features, they do not share a unique sequence at the cleavage site. To examine the requirements for substrate recognition by leader peptidase, we have truncated M13 procoat, a membrane protein precursor, from both the amino- and carboxy-terminal ends with specific proteases or chemical cleavage agents. The fragments isolated from these reactions were assayed as substrates for leader peptidase. A 16 amino acid residue peptide which spans the leader peptidase cleavage site is accurately cleaved. Neither the basic amino-terminal region nor most of the hydrophobic central region of the leader peptide are essential for accurate cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
Pestiviruses, a group of enveloped positive strand RNA viruses belonging to the family Flaviviridae, express their genes via a polyprotein that is subsequently processed by proteases. The structural protein region contains typical signal peptidase cleavage sites. Only the site at the C terminus of the glycoprotein Erns is different because it does not contain a hydrophobic transmembrane region but an amphipathic helix functioning as the Erns membrane anchor. Despite the absence of a hydrophobic region, the site between the C terminus of Erns and E1, the protein located downstream in the polyprotein, is cleaved by signal peptidase, as demonstrated by mutagenesis and inhibitor studies. Thus, ErnsE1 is processed at a novel type of signal peptidase cleavage site showing a different membrane topology. Prevention of glycosylation or introduction of mutations into the C-terminal region of Erns severely impairs processing, presumably by preventing proper membrane interaction or disturbing a conformation critical for the protein to be accepted as a substrate by signal peptidase.  相似文献   

18.
Novel statistical methods have been developed and used to quantitate and annotate the sequence diversity within combinatorial peptide libraries on the basis of small numbers (1-200) of sequences selected at random from commercially available M13 p3-based phage display libraries. These libraries behave statistically as though they correspond to populations containing roughly 4.0+/-1.6% of the random dodecapeptides and 7.9+/-2.6% of the random constrained heptapeptides that are theoretically possible within the phage populations. Analysis of amino acid residue occurrence patterns shows no demonstrable influence on sequence censorship by Escherichia coli tRNA isoacceptor profiles or either overall codon or Class II codon usage patterns, suggesting no metabolic constraints on recombinant p3 synthesis. There is an overall depression in the occurrence of cysteine, arginine and glycine residues and an overabundance of proline, threonine and histidine residues. The majority of position-dependent amino acid sequence bias is clustered at three positions within the inserted peptides of the dodecapeptide library, +1, +3 and +12 downstream from the signal peptidase cleavage site. Conformational tendency measures of the peptides indicate a significant preference for inserts favoring a beta-turn conformation. The observed protein sequence limitations can primarily be attributed to genetic codon degeneracy and signal peptidase cleavage preferences. These data suggest that for applications in which maximal sequence diversity is essential, such as epitope mapping or novel receptor identification, combinatorial peptide libraries should be constructed using codon-corrected trinucleotide cassettes within vector-host systems designed to minimize morphogenesis-related censorship.  相似文献   

19.
Leader peptidase of Escherichia coli, a protein of 323 residues, has three hydrophobic domains. The first, residues 1-22, is the most apolar and is followed by a polar region (23-61) which faces the cytoplasm. The second hydrophobic domain (residues 62-76) spans the membrane. The third hydrophobic domain, which has a minimal apolar character, and the polar, carboxyl-terminal two-thirds of the protein are exposed to the periplasm. Deletion of either the amino terminus (residues 4-50) or the third hydrophobic region (residues 83-98) has almost no effect on the rate of leader peptidase membrane assembly, while the second hydrophobic domain is essential for insertion (Dalbey, R., and Wickner, W. (1987) Science 235, 783-787). To further define the roles of these domains, we have replaced the normal, cleaved leader sequence of pro-OmpA and M13 procoat with regions containing either the first or second apolar domain of leader peptidase. The second apolar domain supports the translocation of OmpA or coat protein across the plasma membrane, establishing its identity as an internal, uncleaved signal sequence. In addition to this sequence, we now find that leader peptidase needs either the amino-terminal domain or the third hydrophobic domain to permit its rapid membrane assembly. These results show that, although a signal sequence is necessary for rapid membrane assembly of leader peptidase, it is not sufficient.  相似文献   

20.
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