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1.
Leader peptidase is an enzyme of the Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane which removes amino-terminal leader sequences from many secreted and membrane proteins. Three potential membrane-spanning segments exist in the first 98 amino acids of leader peptidase. We have characterized the topology of leader peptidase based on its sensitivity to protease digestion. Proteinase K and trypsin treatment of right-side-out inner membrane vesicles and spheroplasts yields protected fragments of approximately 80 and 105 amino acid residues, respectively. We have shown that both fragments are derived from the amino terminus of the protein and that the smaller protected peptide can be derived from the larger. Removal of the third potential membrane-spanning segment (residues 82-98) does not affect the size of the proteinase K-protected fragment but does reduce the size of the trypsin-protected peptide. Because the proteinase K-protected fragment is about 9000 daltons, is derived from the amino terminus of leader peptidase, and its size is not affected when amino acids 82-98 are removed from the protein, it must extend from the amino terminus to approximately residue 80. Likewise, the trypsin-protected fragment must extend from the amino terminus to about residue 105. These data suggest a model for the orientation of leader peptidase in which the second hydrophobic stretch (residues 62-76) spans the cytoplasmic membrane and the third hydrophobic stretch resides in the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

2.
Leader peptidase, typical of inner membrane proteins of Escherichia coli, does not have an amino-terminal leader sequence. This protein contains an internal signal peptide, residues 51-83, which is essential for assembly and remains as a membrane anchor domain. We have employed site-directed mutagenesis techniques to either delete residues within this domain or substitute a charged amino acid for one of these residues to determine the important properties of the internal signal. The deletion analysis showed that a very small apolar domain, residues 70-76, is essential for assembly, whereas residues that flank it are dispensable for its function. However, point mutations with charged amino acid residues within the polar sequence (residues 77-82) slow or abolish leader peptidase membrane assembly. Thus, a polar region, Arg-Ser-Phe-Ile-Tyr-Glu, is important for the signal peptide function of leader peptidase, unlike other signals identified thus far.  相似文献   

3.
Leader peptidase   总被引:10,自引:1,他引:9  
The Escherichia coli leader peptidase has been vital for unravelling problems in membrane assembly and protein export. The role of this essential peptidase is to remove amino-terminal leader peptides from exported proteins after they have crossed the plasma membrane. Strikingly, almost all periplasmic proteins, many outer membrane proteins, and a few inner membrane proteins are made with cleavable leader peptides that are removed by this peptidase. This enzyme of 323 amino acid residues spans the membrane twice, with its large carboxyl-terminal domain protruding into the periplasm. Recent discoveries show that its membrane orientation is controlled by positively charged residues that border (on the cytosolic side) the transmembrane segments. Cleavable pre-proteins must have small residues at -1 and a small or aliphatic residue at -3 (with respect to the cleavage site). Leader peptidase does not require a histidine or cysteine amino acid for catalysis. Interestingly, serine 90 and aspartic acid 153 are essential for catalysis and are also conserved in a mitochondrial leader peptidase, which is 30.7% homologous with the bacterial enzyme over a 101-residue stretch.  相似文献   

4.
Leader peptidase of Escherichia coli cleaves the leader sequence from the amino terminus of membrane and secreted proteins after these proteins insert across the membrane. Despite considerable research, the mechanism of catalysis of leader peptidase remains unknown. This peptidase cannot be classified using protease inhibitors to the serine, cysteine, aspartic acid, or metallo- classes of proteases (Zwizinski, C., Date, T., and Wickner, W. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 3593-3597). Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have attempted to place leader peptidase in one of these groups. We found that leader peptidase, lacking all of the cysteine residues, can cleave the leader peptide from procoat, the precursor to bacteriophage M13 coat protein. Replacement of each histidine residue with an alanyl residue was without effect on catalysis. Among all the serine and aspartic acid residues, serine 90 and serine 185 as well as aspartic acid 99, 153, 273, and 276 are necessary to cleave procoat in a detergent extract. However, only serine 90 and aspartic acid 153 were required for processing using a highly sensitive in vivo assay. In addition to the residues directly affecting catalysis, aspartic acid 99 plays a role in maintaining the structure of leader peptidase. Replacement of this residue with alanine results in a very unstable leader peptidase protein. This study thus defines two critical residues, serine 90 and aspartic acid 153, that may be directly involved in catalysis and provides evidence that leader peptidase belongs to a novel class of serine proteases.  相似文献   

5.
Leader peptidase, an integral membrane protein of Escherichia coli, is made without a cleavable leader sequence. It has 323 amino acid residues and spans the plasma membrane with a small amino-terminal domain exposed to the cytoplasm and a large, carboxyl-terminal domain exposed to the periplasm. We have investigated which regions of leader peptidase are necessary for its assembly across the membrane. Deletions were made in the carboxyl-terminal domain of leader peptidase, removing residues 141-222, 142-323, or 222-323. Protease accessibility was used to determine whether the polar, carboxyl-terminal domains of these truncated leader peptidases were translocated across the membrane. The removal of either residues 222-323 (the extreme carboxyl terminus) or residues 141-222 does not prevent leader peptidase membrane assembly. However, leader peptidase lacking both regions, i.e. amino acid residues 142-323, cannot translocate the remaining portion of its carboxyl terminus across the membrane. Our data suggest that the polar, periplasmic domain of leader peptidase contains information which is needed for membrane assembly.  相似文献   

6.
Leader peptidase, an integral transmembrane protein of Escherichia coli, is synthesized without a cleavable amino-terminal leader peptide. Of the five domains that participate in the membrane assembly of this protein, one is an internal "signal" region. We have used oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to examine the properties of the internal signal that are crucial for leader peptidase assembly. For this purpose, the net charge at the amino terminus of the internal signal was changed from +2 to +1 and -1 and, at the carboxyl terminus of the signal, from 0 to -1 or +1. These mutations had no effect on the membrane assembly of leader peptidase, suggesting that the charges have little role in the signal function. The apolar core of this signal was disrupted by substitution of basic amino acids for apolar residues. Substitution of an arginyl residue at position 70, or two arginyl residues at position 67 and 69, prevented membrane assembly. However, substitution of an arginyl residue at position 66 or either arginyl or lysyl residue at position 68 was without effect. Thus, while the apolar character of the internal signal is important, the precise position of a charged residue determines its effect on assembly.  相似文献   

7.
8.
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   

9.
Paul B. Wolfe  William Wickner 《Cell》1984,36(4):1067-1072
Leader peptidase typifies a group of proteins of the plasma membrane of E. coli which span the membrane and are synthesized without a cleaved amino-terminal leader (signal) sequence. The membrane assembly properties of these proteins have not been previously reported. We find that the membrane electrochemical potential is necessary for the insertion of a large domain of leader peptidase across the membrane. In the absence of potential, the peptidase accumulates inside the cell in tight association with the. plasma membrane. Upon restoration of the potential, accumulated peptidase inserts across the membrane, indicating that this insertion is not mechanistically coupled to polypeptide chain growth. The normal, trans-bilayer peptidase and that which accumulates in the absence of potential have different conformations, as shown by the relative resistance of the trans-bilayer enzyme to digestion by trypsin or chymotrypsin in cell lysates. Membrane insertion is accompanied by this conformational change. This assembly reaction has several features predicted by the hypothesis of membrane-triggered folding.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Type IV pre-pilin leader peptidase was demonstrated to be required for protein secretion, in addition to its involvement in biogenesis of type IV pili. The type IV pre-pilin leader peptidase gene of Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris was located on a 3 kb Acc l fragment on account of its hybridization with the DNA fragment containing the type IV pre-pilin leader-peptidase gene pilD/xcpA of Pseudomonas aeruginosa . Sequencing of the cloned fragment revealed an open reading frame (ORF) (designated xpsO ) of 287 amino acid residues. A protein with an apparent molecular mass of approximately 32.5 kDa was synthesized in vitro from a DNA fragment containing the xpsO gene. The amino acid sequence shares 50% identity with that of PilD throughout the entire sequence. Among other type IV pre-pilin leader peptidases, XpsO is unique in not having the two conserved -CXXC- motifs in a cytoplasmic domain. Instead, new motifs were noted when the protein was compared with XpsE, which is another member of the extracellular protein-secretion machinery. When the xpsO gene was introduced into the pilD mutant of P. aeruginosa , both the sensitivity against infection with the pilus-specific phage PO4 and the ability to secrete extracellular protein were recovered. Furthermore, immunoblot analysis indicated that the P. aeruginosa pilin was apparently processed in vivo by the xpsO gene product.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Proteins which are transported across the bacterial plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum and thylakoid membrane are usually synthesized as larger precursors containing amino-terminal targeting signals. Removal of the signals is carried out by specific, membrane-bound processing peptidases. In this report we show that the reaction specificities of these three peptidases are essentially identical. Precursors of two higher plant thylakoid lumen proteins are efficiently processed by purified Escherichia coli leader peptidase. Processing of one precursor, that of the 23 kd photosystem II protein, by both the thylakoidal and E. coli enzymes generates the correct mature amino terminus. Similarly, leader (signal) peptides of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic origin are cleaved by partially purified thylakoidal processing peptidase. No evidence of incorrect processing was obtained. Both leader peptidase and thylakoidal peptidase are inhibited by a synthetic leader peptide.  相似文献   

14.
Leader peptidase is an integral protein of the Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane whose topology is known. We have taken advantage of this knowledge and available mutants of this enzyme to develop a genetic test for a cell-free protein translocation reaction. We report that leader peptidase inserted into inverted plasma membrane vesicles in its correct transmembrane orientation. We have examined the in vitro membrane assembly characteristics of a variety of leader peptidase mutants and found that domains required for insertion in vivo are also necessary for insertion in vitro. These data demonstrate the physiological validity of the in vitro insertion reaction and strengthen the use of this in vitro protein translocation reaction for the dissection of this complex sorting pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Leader peptidase, an integral transmembrane protein of Escherichia coli, requires two apolar topogenic elements for its membrane assembly: a 'hydrophobic helper' and an internal signal. The highly basic cytoplasmic region between these domains is a translocation poison sequence, which we have shown blocks the function of a preceding signal sequence. We have used oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to remove positively charged residues within this polar domain to determine if it is the basic character in this region that has the negative effect on translocation. Our results show that mutations that remove two or more of the positively charged residues within the polar region no longer block membrane assembly of leader peptidase. In addition, when the translocation poison domain (residues 30-52) is replaced with six lysine residues, the preceding apolar domain cannot function as an export signal, whereas it can with six glutamic acids. Thus, positively charged residues within membrane proteins may have a major role in determining the function of hydrophobic domains in membrane assembly.  相似文献   

16.
DNA sequence of the F traALE region that includes the gene for F pilin   总被引:8,自引:24,他引:8  
The complete sequence of a 1.4-kilobase PstI fragment containing the F transfer genes traA, -L, and -E is presented. The traA reading frame has been located both genetically and by comparing the primary structure of F pilin (the traA product) predicted by the DNA sequence to the amino acid composition and sequence of N- and C-terminal peptides isolated from purified F pilin. Taken together, these data show that there is a leader peptide of 51 amino acids and that F pilin contains 70 amino acids, giving molecular weights of 13,200 for F propilin and 7,200 for mature F pilin. Secondary structure predictions for F pilin revealed a reverse turn that precedes the sequence Ala-Met-Ala51, a classic signal peptidase cleavage site. The N-terminal alanine residue is blocked by an acetyl group as determined by 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The traL and traE genes encode proteins of molecular weights 10,350 and 21,200, respectively. According to DNA sequence predictions, these proteins do not contain signal peptide leader sequences. Secondary structure predictions for these proteins are in accord with traLp and traEp being membrane proteins in which hydrophobic regions capable of spanning the membrane are linked by sequences that form turns and carry positively charged residues capable of interacting with the membrane surface.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Gene 8 of bacteriophage M13 codes for procoat, the precursor of its major coat protein. Gene 8 has been cloned into a plasmid and mutagenized. We have isolated mutants of this gene in which procoat is synthesized but is not processed to coat protein. We now describe mutants in the leader region of procoat, at positions -6, -3, and -1 with respect to the leader peptidase cleavage site. These positions are quite conserved among the leader peptides of various pre-proteins. Each of these mutant procoats is synthesized at a normal rate and inserts correctly into the plasma membrane, as judged by its accessibility to protease in intact spheroplasts. Procoat accumulates, largely in its transmembrane form, and is not cleaved to coat. In detergent extracts, the mutant procoats are very poor substrates for added leader peptidase. We conclude that these 3 residues are not conserved for insertion across the membrane but are part of an essential recognition site for the leader peptidase.  相似文献   

19.
Purification and cDNA cloning of rat 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
6-Pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase, which catalyzes the second step in the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin, was purified approximately 18,000-fold to apparent homogeneity from rat liver. The molecular mass of the native enzyme was estimated to be 83 kDa by gel filtration. The enzyme showed a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis corresponding to a molecular mass of 17 kDa. Up to 24 residues of the NH2-terminal sequence were determined by Edman degradation, which released a single amino acid at each step. These results indicate that the enzyme consists of identical subunits. The purified enzyme was digested with lysyl endopeptidase or V8 protease, and 11 peptide fragments were isolated. On the basis of the sequences of these peptides, oligonucleotides were synthesized and used to screen a rat liver cDNA library, and one cDNA clone was isolated. The complete nucleotide sequence of the 1176-base pair cDNA was then determined. The deduced amino acid sequence contained 144 amino acid residues, but a NH2-terminal four-amino acid sequence was not found in the purified protein. Therefore, the mature protein consists of 140 amino acids. A single mRNA band of 1.3 kilobases was obtained by RNA blot analysis of rat liver. The predicted amino acid sequence of 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase was compared with the Protein Sequence Database of the National Biomedical Research Foundation, revealing significant local similarity to large T antigens from the polyomavirus family.  相似文献   

20.
Canine microsomal signal peptidase activity has been shown previously to co-migrate as an apparent complex of six polypeptides with molecular masses of 25, 23, 22, 21, 18, and 12 kDa. The 22- and 23-kDa species are differentially glycosylated forms of the same protein, designated SPC 22/23. The amino acid sequence of SPC 22/23 was deduced from cDNA clones. The protein is synthesized without a cleavable amino-terminal signal sequence and contains a single site for N-linked glycosylation. SPC 22/23 appears to be anchored to the rough endoplasmic reticulum membrane by a single hydrophobic segment near its amino terminus, with the remainder of the protein positioned on the lumenal side of the membrane. The amino acid sequence of SPC 22/23 shares homology with tryptic peptides derived from the hen oviduct signal peptidase glycoprotein, one of two possible proteins required for signal peptide processing in the avian system (Baker, R.K., and Lively, M.O. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 8561-8567). Therefore, the complete amino acid sequence of SPC 22/23 presented in this report corresponds to one of two possible proteins required for signal peptide processing in higher eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

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