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1.
Glutamyl endopeptidases (GSEs) specifically hydrolyze peptide bonds formed by α-carboxyl groups of Glu and Asp residues. We cloned the gene for a thermophilic GSE (designated TS-GSE) from Thermoactinomyces sp. CDF. A proform of TS-GSE that contained a 61-amino acid N-terminal propeptide and a 218-amino acid mature domain was produced in Escherichia coli. We found that the proform possessed two processing sites and was capable of autocatalytic activation via multiple pathways. The N-terminal propeptide could be autoprocessed at the Glu?1-Ser1 bond to directly generate the mature enzyme. It could also be autoprocessed at the Glu?12-Lys?11 bond to yield an intermediate, which was then converted into the mature form after removal of the remaining part of the propeptide. The segment surrounding the two processing sites was flexible, which allowed the proform and the intermediate form to be trans-processed into the mature form by either active TS-GSE or heterogeneous proteases. Deletion analysis revealed that the N-terminal propeptide is important for the correct folding and maturation of TS-GSE. The propeptide, even its last 11-amino acid peptide segment, could inhibit the activity of its cognate mature domain. The mature TS-GSE displayed a temperature optimum of 85 °C and retained approximately 90 % of its original activity after incubation at 70 °C for 6 h, representing the most thermostable GSE reported to date. Mutational analysis suggested that the disulfide bonds Cys32-Cys48 and Cys180-Cys183 cumulatively contributed to the thermostability of TS-GSE.  相似文献   

2.
The gene sfp1, which encodes a predicted serine proteinase designated SFP1, was isolated by the screening of a gene library of the feather-degrading strain Streptomyces fradiae var.k11. The open reading frame of sfp1 encodes a protein of 454 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 46.19 kDa. Sequence analysis reveals that SFP1 possesses a typical pre-pro-mature organization that consists of a signal sequence, an N-terminal propeptide region, and a mature proteinase domain. The pre-enzyme of SFP1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and consequently purified. The 25.6 kDa fraction with protease activity separated by gel filtration chromatography indicated that the mature enzyme of SFP1 was formed by autolysis of the propeptide after its expression. The purified SFP1 is active under a broad range of pH and temperature. SFP1 has pH and temperature optima of pH 8.5 and 65 degrees C for its caseinolytic activity and pH 9 and 62 degrees C for its keratinolytic activity. SFP1 was sharply inhibited by the serine proteinase inhibitor phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride and exhibited a good stability to solvents, detergents, and salts. Comparison of the protease activity of SFP1 with other commercial proteases indicates that SFP1 has a considerable caseinolytic and keratinolytic activity as does proteinase K.  相似文献   

3.
Pyrolysin-like proteases from hyperthermophiles are characterized by large insertions and long C-terminal extensions (CTEs). However, little is known about the roles of these extra structural elements or the maturation of these enzymes. Here, the recombinant proform of Pyrococcus furiosus pyrolysin (Pls) and several N- and C-terminal deletion mutants were successfully expressed in Escherichia coli. Pls was converted to mature enzyme (mPls) at high temperatures via autoprocessing of both the N-terminal propeptide and the C-terminal portion of the long CTE, indicating that the long CTE actually consists of the C-terminal propeptide and the C-terminal extension (CTEm), which remains attached to the catalytic domain in the mature enzyme. Although the N-terminal propeptide deletion mutant PlsΔN displayed weak activity, this mutant was highly susceptible to autoproteolysis and/or thermogenic hydrolysis. The N-terminal propeptide acts as an intramolecular chaperone to assist the folding of pyrolysin into its thermostable conformation. In contrast, the C-terminal propeptide deletion mutant PlsΔC199 was converted to a mature form (mPlsΔC199), which is the same size as but less stable than mPls, suggesting that the C-terminal propeptide is not essential for folding but is important for pyrolysin hyperthermostability. Characterization of the full-length (mPls) and CTEm deletion (mPlsΔC740) mature forms demonstrated that CTEm not only confers additional stability to the enzyme but also improves its catalytic efficiency for both proteineous and small synthetic peptide substrates. Our results may provide important clues about the roles of propeptides and CTEs in the adaptation of hyperthermophilic proteases to hyperthermal environments.  相似文献   

4.
Cathepsin E (CE) is an endosomal aspartic proteinase of the A1 family that is highly homologous to the lysosomal aspartic proteinase cathepsin D (CD). Newly synthesized CE undergoes several proteolytic processing events to yield mature CE, from which the N-terminal propeptide usually comprising 39 amino acids is removed. To define the role of the propeptide of CE in its biosynthesis and processing, we constructed two fusion proteins using chimeric DNAs encoding the CE propeptide fused to the mature CD tagged with HA at the COOH terminus (termed ED-HA) and encoding the CD propeptide fused to the mature CE (termed DE). Pulse-chase analysis revealed that wild-type CE expressed in human embryonic kidney cells is autoproteolytically processed into mature CE within a 12-h chase, whereas the chimeric DE failed to be converted into mature CE even after a 24-h chase. The DE chimera was nevertheless capable of acid-dependent autoactivation in vitro to yield a catalytically active form, although its specificity constants (kcat/Km) were considerably high but less (35%) than those of the wild-type CE. By contrast, the chimeric ED-HA expressed in HeLa cells underwent neither processing into a catalytically active enzyme nor acid-dependent autoactivation in vitro. The ED-HA protein was less stable than wt-CD-HA, as determined on pulse-chase analysis and on trypsin digestion. These data indicate that the propeptide of CE is essential for the correct folding, maturation, and targeting of this protein to its final destination.  相似文献   

5.
A vacuolar cysteine proteinase, designated SH-EP, is synthesized in cotyledons of germinated Vigna mungo seeds and is responsible for degradation of the seed proteins accumulated in protein bodies (protein storage vacuoles). SH-EP belongs to the papain proteinase family and has a large N-terminal prosegment consisting of 104 amino acid residues and a C-terminal prosegment of 10 amino acid residues. It has been suggested that an asparaginyl endopeptidase, V. mungo processing enzyme 1 (VmPE-1), is involved in the N-terminal post-translational processing of SH-EP. The recombinant proform of SH-EP (rSH-EP) was produced in Escherichia coli cells, purified to homogeneity and refolded by stepwise dialysis. 31P-NMR analysis of intact germinated cotyledons revealed that the vacuolar pH of cotyledonary cells changes from 6.04 to 5.47 during seed germination and early seedling growth. rSH-EP was converted in vitro to the mature form through autocatalytic processing at a pH mimicking the vacuolar pH at the mid and late stages of seed germination, but not at the pH of the early stage. VmPE-1 accelerated the rate of processing of rSH-EP in vitro at the pH equivalent to the vacuolar pH at the early and mid stages of germination. In addition, the cleavage sites of the in vitro processed intermediates and the mature form of SH-EP were identical to those of SH-EP purified from germinated cotyledons of V. mungo. We propose that the asparaginyl endopeptidase (VmPE-1)-mediated processing mainly functions in the activation of proSH-EP at the early stage of seed germination, and both VmPE-1-mediated and autocatalytic processings function synergistically in the activation of proSH-EP in cotyledons at the mid and late stages.  相似文献   

6.
Subtilisin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1 is a member of the subtilisin family. T. kodakaraensis subtilisin in a proform (T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin), as well as its propeptide (T. kodakaraensis propeptide) and mature domain (T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin), were independently overproduced in E. coli, purified, and biochemically characterized. T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin was inactive in the absence of Ca2+ but was activated upon autoprocessing and degradation of propeptide in the presence of Ca2+ at 80 degrees C. This maturation process was completed within 30 min at 80 degrees C but was bound at an intermediate stage, in which the propeptide is autoprocessed from the mature domain (T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*) but forms an inactive complex with T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, at lower temperatures. At 80 degrees C, approximately 30% of T. kodakaraensis pro-subtilisin was autoprocessed into T. kodakaraensis propeptide and T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, and the other 70% was completely degraded to small fragments. Likewise, T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin was inactive in the absence of Ca2+ but was activated upon incubation with Ca2+ at 80 degrees C. The kinetic parameters and stability of the resultant activated protein were nearly identical to those of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin*, indicating that T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin does not require T. kodakaraensis propeptide for folding. However, only approximately 5% of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin was converted to an active form, and the other part was completely degraded to small fragments. T. kodakaraensis propeptide was shown to be a potent inhibitor of T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin* and noncompetitively inhibited its activity with a Ki of 25 +/- 3.0 nM at 20 degrees C. T. kodakaraensis propeptide may be required to prevent the degradation of the T. kodakaraensis mat-subtilisin molecules that are activated later by those that are activated earlier.  相似文献   

7.
Protein inhibitors capable of inhibiting BCP (Bombyx cysteine proteinase) were found in the larval-pupal hemolymph of Bombyx mori. Two forms of the inhibitors, named BCPI (BCP inhibitor) alpha and BCPI beta, were purified from the pupal hemolymph by heat treatment and column chromatographies on CM-cellulose, Toyopearl HW-50, Phenyl-Sepharose, and Mono Q. Purified BCPI beta gave a single protein band with a molecular mass of 10,500 daltons on SDS-PAGE. BCPI alpha is mostly composed of the same molecular mass protein as BCPI beta. Both forms were inhibitory towards other cysteine proteinases such as cathepsins L,B and papain but had no effects on trypsin and pepsin. Both forms inhibited the processing of the enzymatically inactive proform of BCP (pro-BCP) to the activated mature BCP. BCPI alpha and BCPI beta shared many other features such as molecular mass determined by gel filtration, antigenicity, and HPLC profiles. NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequencing of the purified inhibitors revealed that three amino acid residues were different in the BCPI alpha and BCPI beta sequences, all others being identical. The hemolymph BCP inhibitor increased activity approximately four- to fivefold at the time of spinning and maintained this level of activity during pupation.  相似文献   

8.
PA protease (pro-aminopeptidase processing protease) is an extracellular zinc metalloprotease produced by the Gram-negative bacterium Aeromonas caviae T-64. The 590-amino-acid precursor of PA protease is composed of a putative 19-amino-acid signal sequence, a 165-amino-acid N-terminal propeptide, a 33 kDa mature protease domain and an 11 kDa C-terminal propeptide. The proform of PA protease, which was produced as inclusion bodies in Escherichia coli, was subjected to in vitro refolding. It was revealed that the processing of the proform involved a stepwise autoprocessing mechanism. Firstly, the N-terminal propeptide was autocatalytically removed on completion of refolding and secondly, the C-terminal propeptide was autoprocessed after the degradation of the N-terminal propeptide. Both the N- and C-terminal propeptides existed as intact peptides after their successive removal, and they were subsequently degraded gradually. The degradation of the N-terminal propeptide appears to be the rate-limiting step in the maturation of the proform of PA protease.  相似文献   

9.
Cysteine proteinases (CPs) are synthesized as zymogens and converted to mature proteinase forms by proteolytic cleavage and release of their pro domain peptides. A cDNA encoding a papain-like CP, called hgcp-Iv, was isolated from a Heterodera glycines J2 cDNA library, expressed and utilized to assess the ability of its propeptide to inhibit proteinase in its active form. The hgcp-Iv cDNA sequence encodes a polypeptide of 374 amino acids with the same domain organization as other cathepsin L-like CPs, including a hydrophobic signal sequence and a pro domain region. HGCP-Iv, produced in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with thioredoxin, degrades the synthetic peptide benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Arg-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin and is inhibited by E-64, a substrate and inhibitor commonly used for functional characterization of CPs. Recombinant propeptides of HGCP-Iv, expressed in E. coli, presented high inhibitory activity in vitro towards its cognate enzyme and proteinase activity of Meloidogyne incognita females, suggesting its usefulness in inhibiting nematode CPs in biological systems. Cysteine proteinases from other species produced no noticeable activity.  相似文献   

10.
The thermolysin-like neutral protease from Bacillus stearothermophilus (TLP-ste) is usually produced extracellularly in Bacillus subtilis, where it is expressed as preproenzyme and subsequently processed in an autocatalytic, intramolecular process. To create the basis for the production of inactive mutants of TLP-ste, which cannot be processed in B. subtilis, we studied the expression of TLP-ste and its propeptide in cis and in trans in Escherichia coli. In contrast to thermolysin, subtilisin and alpha-lytic protease, which could be obtained only in the presence of the corresponding propeptides, TLP-ste could be produced as an active mature enzyme in E. coli in the absence of its prosequence. Surprisingly, however, a much more effective access to active mature protease was found when TLP-ste (devoid of its prosequence) was expressed as protein with an N-terminal His6 tag which accumulated in the form of inclusion bodies. Completely unexpected, the protein could be renatured from the inclusion bodies after solubilization in guanidine hydrochloride solutions in high yields. Purification to homogeneity was possible by affinity chromatography on Bacitracin silica as well as by immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography. By addition of separately expressed propeptide to the renaturation mixture yields of renaturation could not be increased significantly, confirming that the propeptide is not essential for proper folding of the enzyme or its stabilization during the folding process. Also in vivo, the expression levels of active mature TLP-ste in Escherichia coli did not significantly differ when the mature sequence was expressed alone or coexpressed with the prosequence in cis or in trans.  相似文献   

11.
Cloning and sequencing of the gene encoding WF146 protease, an extracellular subtilisin-like protease from the thermophile Bacillus sp. WF146, revealed that the WF146 protease was translated as a 416-amino acid precursor consisting of a putative 18-amino acid signal peptide, a 10-kDa N-terminal propeptide and a 32-kDa mature protease region. The mature WF146 protease shares a high degree of amino acid sequence identity with two psychrophilic subtilisins, S41 (68.2%) and S39 (65.4%), and a mesophilic subtilisin, SSII (67.1%). Significantly, these closely related proteases adapted to different temperatures all had four inserted surface loops not found in other subtilisins. However, unlike those of S41, S39 and SSII, the inserted loops of the WF146 protease possessed stabilizing features, such as the introduction of Pro residues into the loop regions. Interestingly, the WF146 protease contained five of the seven mutations previously found in a hyperstable variant of subtilisin S41 obtained by directed evolution. The proform of WF146 protease (pro-WF146 protease) was overexpressed in Escherichia coli in an inactive soluble form. After heat treatment, the 42-kDa pro-WF146 protease converted to a 32-kDa active mature form by processing the N-terminal propeptide. The purified mature WF146 protease hydrolyzed casein with an optimum temperature of 85 degrees C, and lost activity with a half-life of 30 min at 80 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM CaCl2.  相似文献   

12.
A gene encoding an extracellular protease, sptA, was cloned from the halophilic archaeon Natrinema sp. J7. It encoded a polypeptide of 565 amino acids containing a putative 49-amino acid signal peptide, a 103-amino acid propeptide, as well as a mature region and C-terminal extension, with a high proportion of acidic amino acid residues. The sptA gene was expressed in Haloferax volcanii WFD11, and the recombinant enzyme could be secreted into the medium as an active mature form. The N-terminal amino acid sequencing and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis of the purified SptA protease indicated that the 152-amino acid prepropeptide was cleaved and the C-terminal extension was not processed after secretion. The SptA protease was optimally active at 50°C in 2.5 M NaCl at pH 8.0. The NaCl removed enzyme retained 20% of its activity, and 60% of the activity could be restored by reintroducing 2.5 M NaCl into the NaCl removed enzyme. When the twin-arginine motif in the signal peptide of SptA protease was replaced with a twin-lysine motif, the enzyme was not exported from Hfx. volcanii WFD11, suggesting that the SptA protease was a Tat-dependent substrate.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorised users in the online version of this article at .  相似文献   

13.
Limited secretion capacity remains a drawback of using Escherichia coli as the host for the production of recombinant proteins. In this report, random mutagenesis was performed within the N-terminal propeptide of thermostable WF146 protease, a subtilase from thermophilic Bacillus sp. WF146, generating a variant named WBMMT with improved capacity for extracellular production when expressed in E. coli. Two mutations, L(-57)Q and E(-10)D, were identified within the N-terminal propeptide. The amount of WBMMT in the culture medium was found to be about three times higher than that of wild type. Besides, the introduction of mutations L(-57)Q/E(-10)D into the N-terminal propeptide also accelerated the maturation of the enzyme. Biochemical analysis indicated that the thermostability and the catalytic activity of mature WBMMT were similar to those of wild type. Far-UV CD spectra analysis and limited proteolysis experiments suggested that the mutations L(-57)Q/E(-10)D resulted in a structural change in the N-terminal propeptide of the proform, and the N-terminal propeptide became more flexible, which might be beneficial for the proform to keep in a translocation-competent state. Our result indicates that N-terminal propeptide engineering may be a valuable approach for improving extracellular production of recombinant subtilases expressed in E. coli.  相似文献   

14.
von Willebrand factor (vWF) is a multimeric glycoprotein that promotes platelet aggregation and stabilizes coagulation factor VIII in the plasma. vWF is also required for the stable accumulation of recombinant factor VIII secreted from cells in a heterologous expression system. In this report, we show that vWF can promote the in vitro reconstitution of factor VIII activity from dissociated heavy and light chains of factor VIII, suggesting that vWF may act to promote stable assembly of factor VIII subunits at the site of secretion. The structural requirements for vWF propeptide cleavage and for vWF multimerization in its binding and stabilization of factor VIII was examined using specifically altered recombinant vWF. The mutant vWF molecules were also assayed for their function in ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination mediated through the platelet receptor GPIb. Deletion of the vWF propeptide produced a dimeric vWF molecule that failed to mediate platelet agglutination, suggesting that multimerization is required for vWF to attain functional GPIb binding. This mature dimeric form of vWF, however, was fully capable of binding to and supporting stable secretion of factor VIII. A vWF mutant with an altered propeptide cleavage site formed large multimers of uncleaved pro-vWF that functioned in platelet agglutination. However, this noncleavage mutant neither bound to or supported stable accumulation of factor VIII. Analysis of the vWF propeptide, expressed independently, demonstrated that it could not bind factor VIII or stabilize its secretion. These results show that the dimeric mature vWF subunit is sufficient to bind and stabilize factor VIII and that the presence of uncleaved vWF propeptide inhibits both factor VIII binding and stabilization.  相似文献   

15.
The coding sequence of the mature dalcochinase, a beta-glucosidase from Dalbergia cochinchinensis Pierre, was cloned and expressed in various systems. Expression in Escherichia coli resulted in an insoluble protein, which could be made soluble by co-expression with bacterial chaperonin GroESL. However, the enzyme had no activity. Recombinant expression in Pichia pastoris and Saccharomyces cerevisiae yielded an active enzyme. Dalcochinase was expressed under methanol induction in P. pastoris, since this was much more efficient than constitutive expression in P. pastoris or in S. cerevisiae. Addition of 0.5% casamino acids to the culture medium stabilized the pH of the culture and increased the protein yield by 3- to 5-folds. Insertion of a polyhistidine-tag either after the N-terminal alpha factor signal sequence or at the C-terminus failed to assist in purification by immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) due to post-translational processing at both termini. A new construct of dalcochinase with an N-terminal truncation following the propeptide and eight histidine residues enabled its purification by IMAC, following hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The purified recombinant dalcochinase was apparently composed of differently post-translationally modified forms, but had kinetic properties and pH and temperature optima comparable to natural dalcochinase. The procedures reported here overcome the limitation in enzyme supply from natural sources, and allow further studies on structure-function relationships in this enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
The function of the long propeptides of fungal proteinases is not known. Aspergillus fumigatus produces a 33-kDa serine proteinase of the subtilisin family and a 42-kDa metalloproteinase of the thermolysin family. These extracellular enzymes are synthesized as preproenzymes containing large amino-terminal propeptides. Recombinant propeptides were produced in Escherichia coli as soluble fusion proteins with glutathione S-transferase or thioredoxin and purified by affinity chromatography. A. fumigatus serine proteinase propeptide competitively inhibited serine proteinase, with a Ki of 5.3 x 10(-6) M, whereas a homologous serine proteinase from A. flavus was less strongly inhibited and subtilisin was not inhibited. Binding of metalloproteinase propeptide from A. fumigatus to the mature metalloenzyme was demonstrated. This propeptide strongly inhibited its mature enzyme, with a Ki of 3 x 10(-9) M, whereas thermolysin and a metalloproteinase from A. flavus were not inhibited by this propeptide. Enzymatically inactive metalloproteinase propeptide complex could be completely activated by trypsin treatment. These results demonstrate that the propeptides of the fungal proteinases bind specifically and inhibit the respective mature enzymes, probably reflecting a biological role of keeping these extracellular enzymes inactive until secretion.  相似文献   

17.
SH-EP is a vacuolar cysteine proteinase from germinated seeds of Vigna mungo. The enzyme has a C-terminal propeptide of 1 kDa that contains an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention signal, KDEL. The KDEL-tail has been suggested to function to store SH-EP as a transient zymogen in the lumen of the ER, and the C-terminal propeptide was thought to be removed within the ER or immediately after exit from the ER. In the present study, a protease that may be involved in the post-translational processing of the C-terminal propeptide of SH-EP was isolated from the microsomes of cotyledons of V. muno seedlings. cDNA sequence for the protease indicated that the enzyme is a member of the papain superfamily. Immunocytochemistry and subcellular fractionation of cotyledon cells suggested that the protease was localized in both the ER and protein storage vacuoles as enzymatically active mature form. In addition, protein fractionations of the cotyledonary microsome and Sf9 cells expressing the recombinant protease indicated that the enzyme associates with the microsomal membrane on the luminal side. The protease was named membrane-associated cysteine protease, MCP. The possibility that a papain-type enzyme, MCP, exists as mature enzyme in both ER and protein storage vacuoles will be discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Papain-like proenzymes are prone to autoprocess under acidic pH conditions. Similarly, peptides derived from the proregion of cathepsin B are potent pH-dependent inhibitors of that enzyme; i.e., at pH 6.0 the inhibition of human cathepsin B by its propeptide is defined by slow binding kinetics with a Ki of 3.7 nM and at pH 4.0 by classical kinetics with a Ki of 82 nM. This pH dependency is essentially eliminated either by the removal of a portion of the enzyme's occluding loop through deletion mutagenesis or by the mutation of either residue Asp22 or His110 to alanine; e.g., the mutant enzyme His110Ala is inhibited by its propeptide with Ki's of 2.0 +/- 0.3 nM at pH 4.0 and 1.1 +/- 0.2 nM at pH 6.0. For the His110Ala mutant the inhibition also displays slow binding kinetics at both pH 4.0 and pH 6.0. As shown by the crystal structure of mature cathepsin B [Musil, D., et al. (1991) EMBO J. 10, 2321-2330] Asp22 and His110 form a salt bridge in the mature enzyme, and it has been shown that this bridge stabilizes the occluding loop in its closed position [N?gler, D. K., et al. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 12608-12615]. Thus the pH dependency of propeptide binding can be explained on the basis of a competitive binding between the occluding loop and the propeptide. At low pH, when the Asp22-His110 pair forms a salt bridge stabilizing the occluding loop in its closed conformation, the loop more effectively competes with the propeptide than at higher pH where deprotonation of His110 and the concomitant destruction of the Asp22-His110 salt bridge results in a destabilization of the closed form of the loop. The rate of autocatalytic processing of procathepsin B to cathepsin B correlates with the affinity of the enzyme for its propeptide rather than with its catalytic activity, thus suggesting a possible influence of occluding loop stability on the rate of processing.  相似文献   

19.
Bacillopeptidase F (Bpr) is a fibrinolytic serine protease produced by Bacillus subtilis. Its precursor is composed of a signal peptide, an N-terminal propeptide, a catalytic domain, and a long C-terminal extension (CTE). Several active forms of Bpr have been previously reported, but little is known about the maturation of this enzyme. Here, a gene encoding a Bpr (BprL) was cloned from B. subtilis LZW and expressed in B. subtilis WB700, and three fibrinolytic mature forms with apparent molecular masses of 45, 75, and 85 kDa were identified in the culture supernatant. After treatment with urea, the 75-kDa mature form had the same molecular mass as the 85-kDa mature form, from which we infer that they adopt different conformations. Mutational analysis revealed that while the 85-kDa mature form is generated via heterocatalytic processing of a BprL proform by an unidentified protease of B. subtilis, the production of the 75- and 45-kDa mature forms involves both hetero- and autocatalytic events. From in vitro analysis of BprL and its sequential C-terminal truncation variants, it appears that partial removal of the CTE is required for the initiation of autoprocessing of the N-terminal propeptide, which is composed of a core domain (N*) and a 15-residue linker peptide, thereby yielding the 45-kDa mature form. These data suggest that the differential processing of BprL, either heterocatalytically or autocatalytically, leads to the formation of multiple mature forms with different molecular masses or conformations.  相似文献   

20.
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