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1.
The overall study of post-translational modifications (PTMs) of proteins is gaining strong interest. Beside phosphorylation and glycosylation, truncations of the nascent polypeptide chain at the amino or carboxy terminus are by far the most common types of PTMs in proteins. In contrast to the analysis of phosphorylation and glycosylation sites, relatively little attention has been paid to the development of approaches for the systematic analysis of proteolytic processing events. Here we present a new mass spectrometry (MS)-based strategy that allows the identification of the C-terminal sequence of proteins. The method can be directly applied to proteins cleaved with cyanogen bromide (CNBr) and purified either by SDS-PAGE, by two-dimensional (2D) PAGE or in solution, and it therefore eliminates the need for specific isolation of the C-terminal peptide. Using Shewanella oneidensis as a model system, we have demonstrated that this approach can be used for C-terminal sequence analysis at a proteomic scale. We also applied the method to study the C-terminal proteolytic processing of procardosin A.  相似文献   

2.
This study focused on three vaccinia virus-encoded proteins that participate in early steps of virion morphogenesis: the A17L and A14L membrane proteins and the F10L protein kinase. We found that (i) the A17L protein was cleaved at or near an AGX consensus motif at amino acid 185, thereby removing its acidic C terminus; (ii) the nontruncated form was associated with immature virions, but only the C-terminal truncated protein was present in mature virions; (iii) the nontruncated form of the A17L protein was phosphorylated on serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues, whereas the truncated form was unphosphorylated; (iv) nontruncated and truncated forms of the A17L protein existed in a complex with the A14L membrane protein; (v) C-terminal cleavage of the A17L protein and phosphorylation of the A17L and A14L proteins failed to occur in cells infected with a F10L kinase mutant at the nonpermissive temperature; and (vi) the F10L kinase was the only viral late protein that was necessary for phosphorylation of the A17L protein, whereas additional proteins were needed for C-terminal cleavage. We suggest that phosphorylation of the A17L and A14L proteins is mediated by the F10L kinase and is required to form the membranes associated with immature virions. Removal of phosphates and the A17L acidic C-terminal peptide occur during the transition to mature virions.  相似文献   

3.
We present a novel approach to perform C-terminal sequence analysis by discriminating the C-terminal peptide in a mass spectral analysis of a CNBr digest. During CNBr cleavage, all Met-Xxx peptide bonds are cleaved and the generated internal peptides all end with a homoserine lactone (hsl)-derivative. The partial opening of the hsl-derivatives, by using a slightly basic buffer solution, results in the formation of m/z doublets (Δm = 18 Da) for all internal peptides and allows to identify the C-terminal peptide which appears as a singlet in the mass spectra. Using two model proteins we demonstrate that this approach can be applied to study proteins purified in gel or in solution. The chemical opening of the hsl-derivative does not require any sample clean-up and therefore, the sensitivity of the C-terminal sequencing approach is increased significantly. Finally, the new protocol was applied to characterize the C-terminal sequence of two recombinant proteins. Tandem mass spectrometry by MALDI-TOF/TOF allowed to identify the sequence of the C-terminal peptides. This novel approach will allow to perform a proteome-wide study of C-terminal proteolytic processing events in a high-throughput fashion.  相似文献   

4.
Three peptides corresponding to selected regions of the env gene products of human T cell leukemia virus type I were synthesized by solid-phase Merrifield techniques. The sequence of peptide designated SP-65 was identical to the predicted C-terminal 12 residues of the transmembrane protein p21env, and peptide SP-74 was inferred from a region shown to be highly conserved among mammalian retroviruses. The third peptide, SP-70, was derived from a C-terminal region of the surface glycoprotein gp46. Antibodies to each peptide were raised in rabbits and were used to identify and further characterize the proteins coded by the env gene. Despite being present at very low levels in purified viral preparations, these proteins were chromatographed by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography and were located by Western blot analysis of the column fractions. Anti-SP-70 recognized the surface glycoprotein (gp46) and also its C-terminal cleavage fragment (gp16). Anti-SP-65 and anti-SP-74 both reacted with the hydrophobic transmembrane protein (p21) and provided evidence that this protein does not undergo apparent C-terminal processing during viral maturation, unlike the trans-membrane protein of murine leukemia virus. As expected, anti-SP-74 also reacted with homologous proteins from other Type C and Type D viruses, confirming that peptide SP-74 corresponds to a broadly conserved region of retroviral transmembrane proteins. SP-70, which is predicted to be quite near the C terminus of the major surface glycoprotein, was also reactive with sera of HTLV-I-positive patients, indicating that this peptide corresponds to, or is part of, a native epitope recognized by the natural host.  相似文献   

5.
The peptide sequence (N)DKTH(C) was investigated as a site for efficient, specific cleavage of a fusion protein by cupric ions using a humanised gamma1 Fab' as a model protein. The native upper hinge (N)DKTH(C) sequence was mutated to create a site resistant to cleavage by cupric ions and a (N)DKTH(C) sequence introduced between the hinge and a C-terminal FLAG peptide. Incubation of Fab' with Cu2+ at 62 degrees C at alkaline pHs resulted in removal of the FLAG peptide with efficiencies of up to 86%. Cleavage conditions did not detrimentally affect the Fab' protein. Use of the (N)DKTH(C) sequence along with cupric ions may provide a cost-effective method for large scale proteolytic cleavage of fusion proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) encodes a Rev-like protein, Rem, which is involved in the nuclear export and expression of viral RNA. Previous data have shown that all Rev-like functions are localized to the 98-amino-acid signal peptide (SP) at the N terminus of MMTV Rem or envelope proteins. MMTV-SP uses endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) for protein trafficking. Rem cleavage by signal peptidase in the ER is necessary for MMTV-SP function in a reporter assay, but many requirements for trafficking are not known. To allow detection and localization of both MMTV-SP and the C-terminal cleavage product, we prepared plasmids expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) tags. N-terminal Rem tagging led to protein accumulation relative to untagged Rem and allowed signal peptidase cleavage but reduced its specific activity. C-terminal tagging also led to Rem accumulation yet dramatically reduced cleavage, GFP fluorescence, and activity relative to N-terminally tagged Rem (GFPRem). Substitutions of an invariant leucine at position 71 between the known RNA-binding and nuclear export sequences interfered with GFPRem accumulation and activity but not cleavage. Similarly, deletion of 100 or 150 C-terminal amino acids from GFPRem dramatically reduced both Rem and MMTV-SP levels and function. Removal of the entire C terminus (203 amino acids) restored both protein levels and activity of MMTV-SP. Only C-terminal GFP tagging, and not other modifications, appeared to trap Rem in the ER membrane. Thus, Rem conformation in both the ER lumen and cytoplasm determines cleavage, retrotranslocation, and MMTV-SP function. These mutants further characterize intermediates in Rem trafficking and have implications for all proteins affected by ERAD.  相似文献   

7.
Identification of post-translational modifications (PTMs) is important to understanding the biological functions of proteins. MS/MS is a useful tool to identify PTMs. Most existing search tools are restricted to take only a few types of PTMs as input. Here we describe a new algorithm, called MOD(i) (pronounced "mod eye"), that rapidly searches for all known types of PTMs at once without limiting a multitude of modified sites in a peptide. MOD(i) introduces the notion of a tag chain, a combination structure made from multiple sequence tags, that effectively localizes modified regions within a spectrum and overcomes de novo sequencing errors common in tag-based approaches. MOD(i) showed its performance competence by identifying various types of PTMs in analysis of PTM-rich proteins such as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and lens protein. We demonstrated that MOD(i) innovatively manages the computational complexity of identifying multiple PTMs in a peptide, which may exist in a greater variety than usually expected. In addition, it is suggested that MOD(i) has great potential to discover novel modifications.  相似文献   

8.
SIRT1 (silent mating type information regulation 2 homolog 1), a class III histone deacetylase, is known to participate in multiple steps of the DNA damage response (DDR) by deacetylating several key DDR proteins. At present, the mechanisms regulating SIRT1 protein stability upon DNA damage have yet to be fully elucidated. In this study, we reveal that, under severe DNA damage, SIRT1 undergoes two forms of post-translational modifications (PTMs): (i) increased polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation mediated by TRIM28 (tripartite motif-containing protein 28), a RING-domain E3 ligase; and (ii) cleavage at C-terminal mediated by caspases. Importantly, there is reciprocal effects between these forms of PTMs: while suppression of proteasome reduces caspases-mediated cleavage, the cleaved SIRT1 has enhanced interaction with TRIM28, thus facilitating the ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of SIRT1. Functionally, SIRT1 works as an anti-apoptotic protein in DDR, and the above-mentioned PTMs of SIRT1 subsequently enhances cell death induced by DNA damage agents. Thus, our study has uncovered a pivotal role of SIRT1 post-translational regulation in determining cell fate in DDR.  相似文献   

9.
Proteomic applications have been increasingly used to study posttranslational modifications of proteins (PTMs). For the purpose of identifying and localizing specific but unknown PTMs on huge proteins, improving their sequence coverage is fundamental. Using liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS), peptide mapping of the native apolipoprotein-B-100 was performed to further document the effects of oxidation. Apolipoprotein-B-100 is the main protein of low-density lipoprotein particles and its oxidation could play a role in atherogenesis. Because it is one of the largest human proteins, the sequence recovery rate of apolipoprotein-B-100 only reached 1% when conventional analysis parameters were used. The different steps of the peptide mapping process—from protein treatment to data analysis—were therefore reappraised and optimized. These optimizations allowed a protein sequence recovery rate of 79%, a rate which has never been achieved previously for such a large human protein. The key points for improving peptide mapping were optimization of the data analysis software; peptide separation by LC; sample preparation; and MS acquisition. The new protocol has allowed us to increase by a factor of 4 the detection of modified peptides in apolipoprotein-B-100. This approach could easily be transferred to any study of PTMs using LC–MS/MS.  相似文献   

10.
Evans TC  Xu MQ 《Biopolymers》1999,51(5):333-342
Inteins are naturally occurring proteins that are involved in the precise cleavage and formation of peptide bonds in a process known as protein splicing. Genetic engineering has allowed the controllable cleavage of peptide bonds at either the N- or C-terminus of the intein. Inteins displaying controllable cleavage have been used in the isolation of bacterially expressed proteins possessing either a C-terminal thioester or an N-terminal cysteine. The specific placement of these reactive groups has allowed either protein-protein or protein-peptide condensation through a native peptide bond. This review describes the methods used to specifically generate these reactive groups on bacterially expressed proteins and some applications of this technique, known as intein-mediated protein ligation. Furthermore, a versatile two intein (TWIN) system will be described which enables the circularization and polymerization of bacterially expressed proteins or peptides.  相似文献   

11.
Proteolytic processing is a primary means of biological control. Exopeptidases use terminal anchoring interactions to restrict cleavage at peptide substrate N or C termini. In contrast, internal peptide bond targeting by endopeptidases is through context-driven recognition. Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE), a zinc metalloproteinase, has tandem duplicate catalytic domains, N- and C-terminal, each of which is a dual specificity enzyme with exo- and endocarboxypeptidase activities. The mechanisms by which ACE evolved from its endopeptidase ancestors as a dual specificity enzyme have not been defined. Based on kinetic studies of wild-type and mutant forms of the C-terminal catalytic domain of human ACE and of the ACE substrates angiotensin I, substance P, and bradykinin, as well as considerations of the ACE x-ray structure, we provide evidence that the acquisition of its exopeptidase activity is due to novel evolutionary specializations. These involve not only interactions between the S(2)' subsite cognate for the C-terminal substrate P(2)' side chain, acting in concert with carboxylate-docking interactions with Lys(1087) and Tyr(1096), but also electrostatic selection against a cationic C-terminal substrate carboxylate. With a blocked C terminus, substrate side chain interactions are dominant in cleavage site selection. In the evolution of obligate exopeptidases from endopeptidase ancestors, mutations that destroy context-driven peptide bond targeting are likely to have followed the acquisition of terminal docking interactions. Evolutionary intermediates between endopeptidases and obligate exopeptidases could therefore have been dual specificity proteinases like ACE.  相似文献   

12.
Mathys S  Evans TC  Chute IC  Wu H  Chong S  Benner J  Liu XQ  Xu MQ 《Gene》1999,231(1-2):1-13
The determinants governing the self-catalyzed splicing and cleavage events by a mini-intein of 154 amino acids, derived from the dnaB gene of Synechocystis sp. were investigated. The residues at the splice junctions have a profound effect on splicing and peptide bond cleavage at either the N- or C-terminus of the intein. Mutation of the native Gly residue preceding the intein blocked splicing and cleavage at the N-terminal splice junction, while substitution of the intein C-terminal Asn154 resulted in the modulation of N-terminal cleavage activity. Controlled cleavage at the C-terminal splice junction involving cyclization of Asn154 was achieved by substitution of the intein N-terminal cysteine residue with alanine and mutation of the native C-extein residues. The C-terminal cleavage reaction was found to be pH-dependent, with an optimum between pH6.0 and 7.5. These findings allowed the development of single junction cleavage vectors for the facile production of proteins as well as protein building blocks with complementary reactive groups. A protein sequence was fused to either the N-terminus or C-terminus of the intein, which was fused to a chitin binding domain. The N-terminal cleavage reaction was induced by 2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid and released the 43kDa maltose binding protein with an active C-terminal thioester. The 58kDa T4 DNA ligase possessing an N-terminal cysteine was generated by a C-terminal cleavage reaction induced by pH and temperature shifts. The intein-generated proteins were joined together through a native peptide bond. This intein-mediated protein ligation approach opens up novel routes in protein engineering.  相似文献   

13.
The modifications that occur on proteins in natural environments over time are not well studied, yet characterizing them is vital to correctly interpret sequence data recovered from fossils. The recently extinct moa (Dinornithidae) is an excellent candidate for investigating the preservation of proteins, their post-translational modifications (PTMs) and diagenetic alterations during degradation. Moa protein extracts were analysed using mass spectrometry, and peptides from collagen I, collagen II and collagen V were identified. We also identified biologically derived PTMs (i.e. methylation, di-methylation, alkylation, hydroxylation, fucosylation) on amino acids at locations consistent with extant proteins. In addition to these in vivo modifications, we detected novel modifications that are probably diagenetically derived. These include loss of hydroxylation/glutamic semialdehyde, carboxymethyllysine and peptide backbone cleavage, as well as previously noted deamidation. Moa collagen sequences and modifications provide a baseline by which to evaluate proteomic studies of other fossils, and a framework for defining the molecular relationship of moa to other closely related taxa.  相似文献   

14.
To further characterize the function of the Borrelia burgdorferi C-terminal protease CtpA, we used site-directed mutagenesis to alter the putative CtpA cleavage site of one of its known substrates, the outer membrane (OM) porin P13. These mutations resulted in only partial blockage of P13 processing. Ectopic expression of a C-terminally truncated P13 in B. burgdorferi indicated that the C-terminal peptide functions as a safeguard against misfolding or mislocalization prior to its proteolytic removal by CtpA. In a parallel study of Borrelia burgdorferi lipoprotein sorting mechanisms, we observed a lower-molecular-weight variant of surface lipoprotein OspC that was particularly prominent with OspC mutants that mislocalized to the periplasm or contained C-terminal epitope tags. Further investigation revealed that the variant resulted from C-terminal proteolysis by CtpA. Together, these findings indicate that CtpA rather promiscuously targets polypeptides that lack structurally constrained C termini, as proteolysis appears to occur independently of a specific peptide recognition sequence. Low-level processing of surface lipoproteins such as OspC suggests the presence of a CtpA-dependent quality control mechanism that may sense proper translocation of integral outer membrane proteins and surface lipoproteins by detecting the release of C-terminal peptides.  相似文献   

15.
Previous work has shown that the degradation of 20% of total protein which occurs early in germination of Bacillus megaterium spores is initiated by an endoprotease. This enzyme is found only in the spore and is active only on the spore proteins degraded during germination. Action of the spore protease in vitro on the three major proteins (Proteins A, B, and C) which are degraded in vivo during germination results in cleavage of one (A and C protein) or two (B protein) peptide bonds. The sequences surrounding the cleavage sites are -Tyr-Glu- Ile-Ala-Ser-Glu-Phe- in the A protein, -Phe-Glu- Ile-Ala-Ser-Glu-Phe- in the C protein, and -Thr-Glu- Phe-Gly-Ser-Glu-Thr-, and -Thr-Glu- Phe-Ala-Ser-Glu-Thr- in the B protein, with cleavage taking place at the glutamyl bond noted by the arrow. The similarity of these four sequences suggests the possibility that the specificity of the spore protease may be due to its requirement for a specific pentapeptide sequence of the type -R-Glu-(Phe or Ile)-(Gly or Ala)-Ser-Glu-R- for recognition and cleavage. However, it is also possible that it is the conformation of the A, B, and C proteins which determines their site of cleavage by the spore protease.  相似文献   

16.
The bacterial flagellum is a predominantly cell-external super-macromolecular construction whose structural components are exported by a flagellum-specific export apparatus. One of the export apparatus proteins, FlhB, regulates the substrate specificity of the entire apparatus; i.e. it has a role in the ordered export of the two main groups of flagellar structural proteins such that the cell-proximal components (rod-/hook-type proteins) are exported before the cell-distal components (filament-type proteins). The controlled switch between these two export states is believed to be mediated by conformational changes in the structure of the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of FlhB (FlhB(C)), which is consistently and specifically cleaved into two subdomains (FlhB(CN) and FlhB(CC)) that remain tightly associated with each other. The cleavage event has been shown to be physiologically significant for the switch. In this study, the mechanism of FlhB cleavage has been more directly analyzed. We demonstrate that cleavage occurs in a heterologous host, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, deficient in vacuolar proteinases A and B. In addition, we find that cleavage of a slow-cleaving variant, FlhB(C)(P270A), is stimulated in vitro at alkaline pH. We also show by analytical gel-filtration chromatography and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments that both FlhB(C) and FlhB(C)(P270A) are monomeric in solution, and therefore self-proteolysis is unlikely. Finally, we provide evidence via peptide analysis and FlhB cleavage variants that the tertiary structure of FlhB plays a significant role in cleavage. Based on these results, we propose that FlhB cleavage is an autocatalytic process.  相似文献   

17.
Trypsin cleaves exclusively C-terminal to arginine and lysine residues   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Almost all large-scale projects in mass spectrometry-based proteomics use trypsin to convert protein mixtures into more readily analyzable peptide populations. When searching peptide fragmentation spectra against sequence databases, potentially matching peptide sequences can be required to conform to tryptic specificity, namely, cleavage exclusively C-terminal to arginine or lysine. In many published reports, however, significant numbers of proteins are identified by non-tryptic peptides. Here we use the sub-parts per million mass accuracy of a new ion trap Fourier transform mass spectrometer to achieve more than a 100-fold increased confidence in peptide identification compared with typical ion trap experiments and show that trypsin cleaves solely C-terminal to arginine and lysine. We find that non-tryptic peptides occur only as the C-terminal peptides of proteins and as breakup products of fully tryptic peptides N-terminal to an internal proline. Simulating lower mass accuracy led to a large number of proteins erroneously identified with non-tryptic peptide hits. Our results indicate that such peptide hits in previous studies should be re-examined and that peptide identification should be based on strict trypsin specificity.  相似文献   

18.
Protein splicing involves the excision of an intervening polypeptide sequence, the intein, from a precursor protein and the concomitant ligation of the flanking polypeptides, the exteins, by a peptide bond. Most reported inteins have a C-terminal asparagine residue, and it has been shown that cyclization of this residue is coupled to peptide bond cleavage between the intein and C-extein. We show that the intein interrupting the DNA polymerase II DP2 subunit in Pyrococcus abyssi, which has a C-terminal glutamine, is capable of facilitating protein splicing. Substitution of an asparagine for the C-terminal glutamine moderately improves the rate and extent of protein splicing. However, substitution of an alanine for the penultimate histidine residue, with either asparagine or glutamine in the C-terminal position, prevents protein splicing and facilitates cleavage at the intein N terminus. The intein facilitates in vitro protein splicing only at temperatures above 30 degrees C and can be purified as a nonspliced precursor. This temperature dependence has enabled us to characterize the optimal in vitro splicing conditions and determine the rate constants for splicing as a function of temperature.  相似文献   

19.
We have identified several protein biomarkers of three Campylobacter jejuni strains (RM1221, RM1859, and RM3782) by proteomic techniques. The protein biomarkers identified are prominently observed in the time-of-flight mass spectra (TOF MS) of bacterial cell lysate supernatants ionized by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI). The protein biomarkers identified were: DNA-binding protein HU, translation initiation factor IF-1, cytochrome c553, a transthyretin-like periplasmic protein, chaperonin GroES, thioredoxin Trx, and ribosomal proteins: L7/L12 (50S), L24 (50S), S16 (30S), L29 (50S), and S15 (30S), and conserved proteins similar to strain NCTC 11168 proteins Cj1164 and Cj1225. The protein biomarkers identified appear to represent high copy, intact proteins. The significant findings are as follows: (1) Biomarker mass shifts between these strains were due to amino acid substitutions of the primary polypeptide sequence and not due to changes in post-translational modifications (PTMs). (2) If present, a PTM of a protein biomarker appeared consistently for all three strains, which supported that the biomarker mass shifts observed between strains were not due to PTM variability. (3) The PTMs observed included N-terminal methionine (N-Met) cleavage as well as a number of other PTMs. (4) It was discovered that protein biomarkers of C. jejuni (as well as other thermophilic Campylobacters) appear to violate the N-Met cleavage rule of bacterial proteins, which predicts N-Met cleavage if the penultimate residue is threonine. Two protein biomarkers (HU and 30S ribosomal protein S16) that have a penultimate threonine residue do not show N-Met cleavage. In all other cases, the rule correctly predicted N-Met cleavage among the biomarkers analyzed. This exception to the N-Met cleavage rule has implications for the development of bioinformatics algorithms for protein/pathogen identification. (5) There were fewer biomarker mass shifts between strains RM1221 and RM1859 compared to strain RM3782. As the mass shifts were due to the frequency of amino acid substitutions (and thus underlying genetic variations), this suggested that strains RM1221 and RM1859 were phylogenetically closer to one another than to strain RM3782 (in addition, a protein biomarker prominent in the spectra of RM1221 and RM1859 was absent from the RM3782 spectrum due to a nonsense mutation in the gene of the biomarker). These observations were confirmed by a nitrate reduction test, which showed that RM1221 and RM1859 were C. jejuni subsp. jejuni whereas RM3782 was C. jejuni subsp. doylei. This result suggests that detection/identification of protein biomarkers by pattern recognition and/or bioinformatics algorithms may easily subspeciate bacterial microorganisms. (6) Finally, the number and variation of PTMs detected in this relatively small number of protein biomarkers suggest that bioinformatics algorithms for pathogen identification may need to incorporate many more possible PTMs than suggested previously in the literature.  相似文献   

20.
Certain C-terminal sequences of nascent peptide cause an efficient protein tagging by tmRNA system at stop codons in Escherichia coli. Here, we demonstrate that both mRNA cleavage and tmRNA tagging occur at UAG stop codon recognized specifically by polypeptide release factor 1 (RF-1) when the activity of RF-1 is reduced by a mutation in the prfA gene without requirement of particular C-terminal sequences of nascent peptide. The tmRNA tagging and mRNA cleavage in the prfA mutant were eliminated when the wild-type RF-1 but not RF-2 was supplied from plasmid. In addition, depletion of either RF-1 or RF-2 induces endonucleolytic cleavage and tmRNA tagging at UAG or UGA stop codons respectively. We conclude that ribosome stalling at the cognate stop codon caused by reduced activity or expression of RF-1 or RF-2 is responsible for mRNA cleavage. The present data along with our previous studies strongly suggest that ribosome stalling leads to endonucleolytic cleavage of mRNA in general resulting in non-stop mRNA and that the 3' end of non-stop mRNA is probably only target for the tmRNA system.  相似文献   

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