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1.
The NH2-terminal signal region comprising of approximately 70% length of the prepro-sequence of the pGKL killer precursor protein was found to direct an efficient secretion of the mouse alpha-amylase into the culture medium of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The alpha-amylase molecule secreted into the culture medium was identified by both immuno-blotting and assay of the enzyme activity. The amount of alpha-amylase secreted via the killer toxin signal was comparable to that directed by the leader sequence of mating factor alpha. The secretion of alpha-amylase using the killer toxin signal was blocked at 37C but not at 25C in sec18-1 host, indicating that alpha-amylase is exported through the normal secretion pathway of S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

2.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae harboring linear dsDNA plasmids, pGKL1 and pGKL2, secretes a killer toxin consisting of 97, 31 and 28 kilodalton subunits (Nucleic Acids Res., 15, 1031-1046, 1987). We isolated the DNA encoding the N-terminal pre-sequence of the 28K precursor protein and constructed a new secretion vector in S. cerevisiae. Mouse alpha-amylase fused to the 28K signal sequence was secreted into the culture medium with a high efficiency similar to those fused to the mating factor alpha and 97K-31K killer signal sequences. This data clearly indicates that 28K presequence functions as a secretion signal. Glycosylated and nonglycosylated alpha-amylase molecules were detected in the culture medium. The secretion of alpha-amylase was blocked by sec18-1 mutation. The secreted alpha-amylase recovered from the medium was found to migrate faster in SDS-polyacrylamide gel than the precursor form of alpha-amylase synthesized in vitro. These lines of evidence suggest that mouse alpha-amylase fused to 28K killer signal sequence was processed, glycosylated and secreted through the normal secretion pathway of the yeast.  相似文献   

3.
By the kar1-mediated cytoduction, linear double-stranded DNA plasmids pGKL1 and pGKL2, encoding killer toxin complex, have been successfully transferred to the recipient strains with about 30% frequency. The killer toxin was found to be secreted through the normal yeast secretory pathway by introducing pGKL plasmids into the several Saccharomyces cerevisiae sec mutants and examining the secretion of killer toxin. S. cerevisiae cells, harboring newly isolated deletion plasmid pGKL1D, expressed only the 28K protein among three killer subunits, and secreted the 28K subunit at a level of zero to 20% efficiency of the cells containing intact pGKL1 plasmid. These data indicated that subunit interaction (cosecretion) of killer proteins is required for the efficient secretion of 28K subunit. The 28K precursor protein was found to translocate across the canine pancreatic endoplasmic reticulum membrane under the direction of its own signal peptide in vitro without any other subunits. From kex2 mutant cells harboring pGKL1 plasmid, the 97K subunit, and its precursor 128K protein were not secreted, however, the 28K subunit was secreted in the same amount as that secreted from KEX2 cells. These lines of evidence suggest that the final assembly of killer toxin complex after KEX2 site of Golgi apparatus is not essential for the secretion of 28K subunit, and therefore, that putative interaction between 128K protein and 28K subunit for the transport between endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus may be required for the efficient secretion of 28K subunit.  相似文献   

4.
Aqualysin I is a subtilisin-type serine protease which is secreted into the culture medium by Thermus aquaticus YT-1, an extremely thermophilic Gram-negative bacterium. The nucleotide sequence of the entire gene for aqualysin I was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence suggests that aqualysin I is produced as a large precursor, consisting of at least three portions, an NH2-terminal pre-pro-sequence (127 amino acid residues), the protease (281 residues), and a COOH-terminal pro-sequence (105 residues). When the cloned gene was expressed in Escherichia coli cells, aqualysin I was not secreted. However, a precursor of aqualysin I lacking the NH2-terminal pre-pro-sequence (38-kDa protein) accumulated in the membrane fraction. On treatment of the membrane fraction at 65 degrees C, enzymatically active aqualysin I (28-kDa protein) was produced in the soluble fraction. When the active site Ser residue was replaced with Ala, cells expressing the mutant gene accumulated a 48-kDa protein in the outer membrane fraction. The 48-kDa protein lacked the NH2-terminal 14 amino acid residues of the precursor, and heat treatment did not cause any subsequent processing of this precursor. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal signal sequence is cleaved off by a signal peptidase of E. coli, and that the NH2- and COOH-terminal pro-sequences are removed through the proteolytic activity of aqualysin I itself, in that order. These findings indicate a unique four-domain structure for the aqualysin I precursor; the signal sequence, the NH2-terminal pro-sequence, mature aqualysin I, and the COOH-terminal pro-sequence, from the NH2 to the COOH terminus.  相似文献   

5.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae and other yeast cells harboring the linear double stranded (ds) DNA plasmids pGKL1 and pGKL2 secrete a killer toxin consisting of 97K, 31K and 28K subunits into the culture medium (EMBO J. 5, 1995-2002 (1986), Nucleic Acids Res., 15, 1031-1046 (1987]. The 28K subunit of the killer toxin was successfully expressed in S. cerevisiae when it was cloned on a circular plasmid with its putative promoter region replaced with that of S. cerevisiae chromosomal genes. The expression of the 28K subunit of the killer toxin in killer-sensitive cells resulted in the death of the host cells. This killing activity by the 28K subunit was prevented by the expression of the killer immunity, indicating that the killing activity of the killer toxin complex was carried out by the 28K subunit. Although the 28K subunit was synthesized as a intact precursor protein with its own signal sequence, it was not secreted into the culture medium but remained in the host cells. This indicated that 28K subunit killed host cells from inside of the cells rather than from outside. We further suggested that 28K killer subunit without 97K and 31K subunits did not kill the killer-sensitive cells from outside.  相似文献   

6.
Zygocin, a monomeric protein toxin secreted by a virus-infected killer strain of the osmotolerant spoilage yeast Zygosaccharomyces bailii, kills a broad spectrum of human and phytopathogenic yeasts and filamentous fungi by disrupting cytoplasmic membrane function. The toxin is encoded by a double-stranded (ds)RNA killer virus (ZbV-M, for Z. bailii virus M) that stably persists within the yeast cell cytosol. In this study, the protein toxin was purified, its N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and a full-length cDNA copy of the 2.1 kb viral dsRNA genome was cloned and successfully expressed in a heterologous fungal system. Sequence analysis as well as zygocin expression in Schizosaccharomyces pombe indicated that the toxin is in vivo expressed as a 238-amino-acid preprotoxin precursor (pptox) consisting of a hydrophobic N-terminal secretion signal, followed by a potentially N-glycosylated pro-region and terminating in a classical Kex2p endopeptidase cleavage site that generates the N-terminus of the mature and biologically active protein toxin in a late Golgi compartment. Matrix-assisted laser desorption mass spectrometry further indicated that the secreted toxin is a monomeric 10.4 kDa protein lacking detectable post-translational modifications. Furthermore, we present additional evidence that in contrast with other viral antifungal toxins, zygocin immunity is not mediated by the toxin precursor itself and, therefore, heterologous pptox expression in a zygocin-sensitive host results in a suicidal phenotype. Final sequence comparisons emphasize the conserved pattern of functional elements present in dsRNA killer viruses that naturally infect phylogenetically distant hosts (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Z. bailii) and reinforce models for the sequence elements that are in vivo required for viral RNA packaging and replication.  相似文献   

7.
A biosynthetic precursor to rat bone gamma-carboxyglutamic acid protein (BGP) was isolated from warfarin-treated ROS 17/2 osteosarcoma cells by antibody affinity chromatography followed by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. Thirty-two residues of its NH2-terminal sequence were determined by gas-phase protein sequence analysis. Comparison of this sequence with the known structure of rat BGP established that the intracellular precursor is a 76-residue molecule of Mr = 9120 that differs from 6000-Da bone BGP in having an NH2-terminal extension of 26 residues. This precursor appears to be generated from the primary translation product by cleavage of a hydrophobic signal peptide and is the probable substrate for gamma-carboxylation by virtue of its accumulation in the presence of warfarin. The putative targeting region for gamma-carboxylation previously identified in the leader sequences of vitamin K-dependent proteins is found in the propeptide portion of the precursor. Since the immunoreactive component secreted by warfarin-treated cells is identical in sequence to the 6000-Da BGP from bone, propeptide cleavage from the precursor is independent of gamma-carboxylation and precedes secretion of BGP from the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Killer strains of Kluyveromyces lactis secrete a toxin which presumably is processed during secretion from a larger precursor. Analysis of the sequence of the K. lactis killer toxin gene predicts that the first 16 amino acids at the amino terminus of the protein should represent its leader peptide. We have tested the capability of this leader peptide to direct secretion of a protein fused to it by inserting a synthetic oligonucleotide identical to the sequence of the putative leader peptide into a yeast expression vector. Subsequently, the cDNA coding for the secreted active portion of the human interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) was fused to the leader peptide sequence of the killer toxin. This construction in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is capable of directing synthesis and secretion of correctly processed IL-1 beta into the culture medium.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Calcium-activated chloride channel (CLCA) proteins were first described as a family of plasma membrane Cl(-) channels that could be activated by calcium. Genetic and electrophysiological studies have supported this view. The human CLCA2 protein is expressed as a 943-amino-acid precursor whose N-terminal signal sequence is removed followed by internal cleavage near amino acid position 680. Earlier investigations of transmembrane geometry suggested five membrane passes. However, analysis by the more recently derived simple modular architecture research tool algorithm predicts that a C-terminal 22-amino-acid hydrophobic segment comprises the only transmembrane pass. To resolve this question, we raised an antibody against hCLCA2 and investigated the synthesis, localization, maturation, and topology of the protein. Cell surface biotinylation and endoglycosidase H analysis revealed a 128-kDa precursor confined to the endoplasmic reticulum and a maturely glycosylated 141-kDa precursor at the cell surface by 48 h post-transfection. By 72 h, 109-kDa N-terminal and 35-kDa C-terminal cleavage products were detected at the cell surface but not in the endoplasmic reticulum. Surprisingly, however, the 109-kDa product was spontaneously shed into the medium or removed by acid washes, whereas the precursor and 35-kDa product were retained by the membrane. Two other CLCA family members, bCLCA2 and hCLCA1, also demonstrated preferential release of the N-terminal product. Transfer of the hCLCA2 C-terminal hydrophobic segment to a secreted form of green fluorescent protein was sufficient to target that protein to the plasma membrane. Together, these data indicate that hCLCA2 is mostly extracellular with only a single transmembrane segment followed by a short cytoplasmic tail and is itself unlikely to form a channel.  相似文献   

11.
Signal peptide of Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Mature alpha-amylase of Bacillus subtilis is known to be formed from its precursor by the removal of the NH2-terminal 41 amino acid sequence (41 amino acid leader sequence). DNA fragments coding for short sequences consisting of 28 (Pro as the COOH terminus) 29 (Ala), 31 (Ala), and 33 (Ala) amino acids from the translation initiator, Met, in the leader sequence were prepared and fused in frame to the DNA encoding the mature alpha-amylase. The secretion activity of the 33 amino acid sequence was nearly twice as high as that of the parental 41 amino acid sequence, whereas the activity of the 31 amino acid sequence was 75% of that of the parent. In contrast, almost no secretion activity was observed with the 28 and 29 amino acid sequences. The signal peptide cleavage site of the precursor expressed from the plasmid encoding the 33 amino acid sequence was located between Ala and Leu at positions 33 and 34 and that from the 31 amino acid sequence between Thr and Ala at positions 33 and 34. The NH2-terminal amino acid from the latter corresponded to the 3rd amino acid of the mature enzyme. These results indicated that the functional signal peptide of the B. subtilis beta-amylase consists of the first 33 amino acids from the initiator, Met.  相似文献   

12.
Neuroserpin (NS) is a serine protease inhibitor (or serpin) that is widely expressed in the developing and adult nervous systems. It has been implicated in the regulation of proteases involved in processes such as synaptic plasticity, neuronal migration, and axogenesis. To aid in the characterization of this new serpin we have established a high-level expression system in Drosophila S2 cells and developed a purification strategy to obtain neuroserpin for functional studies. Suspension cultures of S2-NS cells secreted recombinant neuroserpin into the medium. High-level expression was maintained when the cells were switched to a nonselection serum-free medium for 3-4 days to facilitate protein purification. Recombinant neuroserpin was purified by sequential chromatography on Macroprep ceramic hydroxyapatite, Type I, POROS HQ20, Resource Q, and Superdex 75 HR 10/30 media. Two secreted forms of neuroserpin were observed with molecular weights of approximately 49 and approximately 50 kDa which may represent alternative glycosylation at three putative N-linked glycosylation sites. Amino acid sequence analysis indicated three NH(2)-terminal sequences. The major sequence was generated by cleavage at the Gly(18)-Ala(19) bond consistent with removal of an 18-amino-acid signal peptide. Two further sequences were identified each with one fewer amino acids at the NH(2)-terminus. All three NH(2)-terminal sequences were also identified by mass spectrometric analysis of neuroserpin following trypsin digestion. Mass spectrometry also confirmed the protein had an intact carboxyl terminus while complex formation assays indicated the inhibitor was functionally active. In summary, Drosophila S2 cells offered a nonlytic stable expression system for the continual production of neuroserpin in high-density suspension cultures.  相似文献   

13.
Human furin is a calcium-dependent serine endoprotease that can efficiently cleave many precursor proteins on the carboxyl side of the consensus cleavage sequence, -Arg-X-Lys/Arg-Arg-, both in vivo and in vitro. Analysis of furin proteins in extracts of cells infected with a vaccinia recombinant expressing human furin show that the enzyme is present as two prominent forms of 90 and 96 kDa. Because the structurally related bacterial subtilisins require endoproteolytic removal of the NH2-terminal pro-region by an autocatalytic intramolecular cleavage, we speculated that the size heterogeneity in the furin doublet similarly may result from a proteolytic removal of an NH2-terminal pro-region. Here we report identification of the 90-kDa furin NH2 terminus and, based on the reported sequence of the furin cDNA, demonstrate that this furin protein is derived from a larger precursor by an endoproteolytic cleavage on the COOH-terminal side of a consensus furin cleavage site, -Arg-Thr-Lys-Arg107-. Expression of mutant furin molecules containing an altered cleavage site (Arg104----Ala or Arg107----Gly) resulted in the production of only the 96-kDa furin protein. Assays of furin-dependent cleavage of a protein substrate in vitro showed that proteolytic activity was associated with the 90-kDa and not the 96-kDa furin protein, demonstrating that removal of the NH2-terminal pro-region is required for furin activity. Expression of a third furin construct containing a mutation of the active site aspartate (Asp153----Asn) similarly resulted in the expression of only the 96-kDa protein, suggesting that furin activation occurs by an autoproteolytic cleavage. Finally, the production of 90-kDa furin from either site-directed furin mutant could not be potentiated by overexpressing active furin, suggesting that the autoproteolytic activation was an intramolecular event.  相似文献   

14.
By using appropriate Corynebacterium glutamicum-Escherichia coli shuttle plasmids, the gene encoding the fibronectin-binding protein 85A (85A) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis was expressed in C. glutamicum, also an actinomycete and nonsporulating gram-positive rod bacterium, which is widely used in industrial amino acid production. The 85A gene was weakly expressed in C. glutamicum under the control of the ptac promoter from E. coli, but it was produced efficiently under the control of the promoter of the cspB gene encoding PS2, one of the two major secreted proteins from C. glutamicum. The 85A protein was produced in various forms, with or without its own signal sequence and with or without the signal sequence and the NH2-terminal (18-amino-acid) mature sequence of PS2. Western blot analysis with monoclonal antibodies raised against the M. tuberculosis antigen 85 complex showed that recombinant 85A protein was present in the corynebacterial cell wall extract and also released in extracellular culture medium. NH2-terminal microsequencing of recombinant 85A secreted by C. glutamicum showed that signal peptide was effectively cleaved off at the predicted site. The recombinant 85A protein was biologically active in vitro, inducing significant secretion of Th1 T-cell cytokines, particularly interleukin-2 and gamma interferon, in spleen cell cultures from mice vaccinated with live Mycobacterium bovis BCG. Heterologous expression of mycobacterial antigens in C. glutamicum now offers a potent tool for further immunological characterization and large scale preparation of these recombinant proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The gene encoding the secreted 53-kDa metalloprotease (protease B) and the 5' end of the gene encoding the secreted 55-kDa metalloprotease (protease C) of the Gram-negative bacterium Erwinia chrysanthemi have been sequenced. The predicted sequences of the two proteases do not have typical signal sequences at their NH2 termini. Both proteases are synthesized as inactive higher molecular weight precursors (zymogens proB and proC) which are secreted into the external medium where divalent cation-mediated activation occurs. The activation of proB occurs with a t1/2 of less than 5 min at 37 degrees C in Luria broth medium, whereas that of proC occurs with a t1/2 of about 150 min. The NH2 termini of purified proteases B, proB, and C were sequenced. ProB starts at the initiator methionine whereas B and C start, respectively, at residues +16 and +18 of the sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence. A short NH2-terminal extension is therefore removed during the activation process, most likely by an autocatalytic mechanism. Protease B shows a high degree of sequence homology with the secreted 50-kDa metalloprotease of Serratia marcescens, which also lacks a signal peptide and for which an inactive higher molecular weight form has been reported.  相似文献   

16.
Three different types of biotinylated endothelin 1 (ET-1) derivatives, [Cys1]-biotinylated ET-1, [Lys9]-biotinylated ET-1, and [Cys1][Lys9]-dibiotinylated ET-1, were obtained when the biotinylation reaction was carried out with sulfosuccinimidyl-6-(biotinamido)hexanoate in an aqueous solvent. The binding of [Lys9]-biotinylated ET-1 to the ET receptor was as efficient as that of natural ET-1, whereas the binding of either [Cys1]-biotinylated ET-1 or [Cys1][Lys9]-dibiotinylated ET-1 was significantly reduced. When ET-1 was reacted with succinimidyl-6-(biotinamido)hexanoate in an organic solvent, ET-1 was exclusively modified at lysine 9. The ET receptor was then isolated from human placenta by affinity chromatography with [Lys9]-biotinylated ET-1 and avidin-agarose. The purified ET receptor was active in ET binding and was resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis into two polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 45 and 35 kDa. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence indicated that the two polypeptides were from an identical subtype of the ET receptor (ETB, the ligand-nonselective type). A signal peptide from Met1 to Gly26 was missing from the 45-kDa ETB, whereas 64 amino acids at the NH2 terminus were missing from the 35-kDa ETB due to proteolytic cleavage which occurred between Arg64 and Ser65. Indeed, incubation of purified ETB with endopeptidase Arg-C resulted in degradation of the 45-kDa ETB, giving rise to the 35-kDa species by a specific cleavage at Arg64. The 35-kDa ETB was active in binding to ET-1, indicating that the NH2-terminal 64-amino-acid residues are not essential for ligand binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
An aspartic proteinase, Mucor pusillus rennin (MPR), of filamentous fungus Mucor pusillus, is efficiently secreted from a transformant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae containing the intact MPR gene. To test the usefulness of the MPR leader peptide in secretion of heterologous proteins from yeast cells, several plasmids encoding the fusion proteins composed of different parts of the NH2-terminal region of prepro-MPR and human growth hormone (hGH) were constructed. The parts of the leader peptide upstream of hGH were the whole prepro-peptide following the NH2-terminal region of mature MPR in JGH1, the intact pre-sequence and a part of the pro-sequence in JGH2, and the putative signal sequences of the NH2-terminal 18 and 22 amino acids in JGH3 and JGH7, respectively. When the hGH genes fused to these leader sequences were expressed in yeast cells under the control of the yeast GAL7 promoter, proteins of various sizes immunoreactive with the anti-hGH antibody were secreted into the medium. Among the plasmids mentioned above, JGH2 directed the greatest secretion of the protein of 23 kilodaltons in size, which contained the expected NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of an additional eight amino acids derived from the pro-peptide of MPR. The addition of the GAL10 terminator downstream of the hGH gene in JGH2 resulted in a greater than three- to fivefold increase in the secretion, whereas the insertion of the GAL4 gene, which is a positive regulator for the GAL system, had no significant effect. The improved yield of the total protein of hGH secreted into the medium reached approximately 10 mg/liter.  相似文献   

19.
The esterase gene from Streptomyces scabies FL1 was cloned and expressed in Streptomyces lividans on plasmids pIJ486 and pIJ702. In S. lividans, the esterase gene was expressed during later stages of growth and was regulated by zinc, as is seen with S. scabies. The 36-kDa secreted form of the esterase was purified from S. lividans. N-terminal amino acid sequencing indicated that the processing site utilized in S. lividans for the removal of the signal sequence was the same as that recognized for processing in S. scabies. Western blots (immunoblots) revealed the presence of a 40-kDa precursor form of the esterase in cytoplasmic extracts. A 23-amino-acid deletion was introduced into the putative signal sequence for the esterase. When this deleted form of the esterase was expressed in S. lividans, a cytoplasmic 38-kDa precursor protein was produced but no secreted esterase was detected, suggesting the importance of the deleted sequence for efficient processing and secretion. The esterase gene was also cloned into the pUC119 plasmid in Escherichia coli. By using the lac promoter sequence, the esterase gene was expressed, and the majority of the esterase was localized to the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

20.
NH2-terminal processing of Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Mature alpha-amylase of Bacillus subtilis is known to be formed from its precursor by removal of the NH2-terminal 41-amino acid sequence. To study the mechanism of this processing, the extracellular forms of alpha-amylase were analyzed for B. subtilis N7 alpha-amylase cloned and expressed in B. subtilis. The major form (form N34) isolated from log phase cultures in L-broth had an NH2 terminus corresponding to position 34 from the initiator Met but appeared to be microheterogeneous, as judged by native gel electrophoresis. The major forms from stationary phase cultures had NH2 termini at positions 40 (form N40) or 42 (form N42) and were homogeneous. The conversion of the larger to smaller forms could be achieved in culture supernatants or partially purified samples. The process N34----N40 was inhibited by EDTA; N40----N42 was facilitated by Ca2+. Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride inhibited the former but not the latter process. These results suggest that the signal peptidase cleavage site 30 decreases 35 is -Ala-Ala-Ala-Ser-Ala-Glu-Thr- (arrow or further upstream) and that proteolytic maturation occurs after secretion, which involves at least two different processing enzymes.  相似文献   

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