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Signal peptidases and signal peptide hydrolases
Authors:Inderjit K Dev  Paul H Ray
Institution:(1) Division of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Burroughs Wellcome Co., 27709 Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
Abstract:Signal peptidases, the endoproteases that remove the amino-terminal signal sequence from many secretory proteins, have been isolated from various sources. Seven signal peptidases have been purified, two fromE. coli, two from mammalian sources, and three from mitochondrial matrix. The mitochondrial enzymes are soluble and function as a heterogeneous dimer. The mammalian enzymes are isolated as a complex and share a common glycosylated subunit. The bacterial enzymes are isolated as monomers and show no sequence homology with each other or the mammalian enzymes. The membrane-bound enzymes seem to require a substrate containing a consensus sequence following the –3, –1 rule of von Heijne at the cleavage site; however, processing of the substrate is strongly influenced by the hydrophobic region of the signal peptide. The enzymes appear to recognize an unknown three-dimensional motif rather than a specific amino acid sequence around the cleavage site. The matrix mitochondrial enzymes are metallo-endopeptidases; however, the other signal peptidases may belong to a unique class of proteases as they are resistant to chelators and most protease inhibitors. There are no data concerning the substrate binding site of these enzymes. In vivo, the signal peptide is rapidly degraded. Three different enzymes inEscherichia coli that can degrade a signal peptidein vitro have been identified. The intact signal peptide is not accumulated in mutants lacking these enzymes, which suggests that these peptidases individually are not responsible for the degredation of an intact signal peptidein vivo. It is speculated that signal peptidases and signal peptide hydrolases are integral components of the secretory pathway and that inhibition of the terminal steps can block translocation.
Keywords:Canine signal peptidase (SPC)  Hen oviduct signal peptidase (HOSP)  leader peptidase (SPase I)  prolipoprotein signal peptidase (SPase II)  secretory proteins  hydrophobic core  cleavage site  translocation
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