Abstract: | The anaerobic bacterium Aeromonas sobria is known to cause potentially lethal septic shock. We recently proposed that A. sobria serine protease (ASP) is a sepsis-related factor that induces vascular leakage, reductions in blood pressure via kinin release, and clotting via activation of prothrombin. ASP preferentially cleaves peptide bonds that follow dibasic amino acid residues, as do Kex2 (Saccharomyces cerevisiae serine protease) and furin, which are representative kexin family proteases. Here, we revealed the crystal structure of ASP at 1.65 Å resolution using the multiple isomorphous replacement method with anomalous scattering. Although the overall structure of ASP resembles that of Kex2, it has a unique extra occluding region close to its active site. Moreover, we found that a nicked ASP variant is cleaved within the occluding region. Nicked ASP shows a greater ability to cleave small peptide substrates than the native enzyme. On the other hand, the cleavage pattern for prekallikrein differs from that of ASP, suggesting the occluding region is important for substrate recognition. The extra occluding region of ASP is unique and could serve as a useful target to facilitate development of novel antisepsis drugs.Aeromonas species are Gram-negative facultative anaerobic bacteria found ubiquitously in a variety of aquatic environments (1). The main syndrome caused by infection with Aeromonas is gastroenteritis (2, 3), although, in severe cases, sepsis is induced as a deuteropathy (4, 5). Two species, Aeromonas hydrophila and Aeromonas sobria, are associated with human disease (6, 7). Factors thought to play important roles in the pathogenesis include fimbrial and afimbrial adherence factors; a variety of exotoxins, including hemolysin, cytotonic enterotoxin, heat-stable enterotoxin, and heat-labile enterotoxin; and several secreted proteases and lipases (8–12). Recently, we purified a 65-kDa A. sobria serine protease (ASP)2 from the culture supernatant of A. sobria and found that the enzyme induces vascular leakage, reduces blood pressure through activation of the kallikrein/kinin system (13), promotes human plasma coagulation through activation of prothrombin (14), and causes the formation of pus and edema through the action of anaphylatoxin C5a (15). From these observations, we concluded that ASP mediates the induction of disseminated intravascular coagulation through α-thrombin production, which is a common and deadly consequence of sepsis (14).ASP is a kexin-like serine protease belonging to the subtilisin family (subtilases) (16), which can be subdivided into six groups: the subtilisins, thermitases, proteinase K, lantibiotic peptidases, pyrolysins, and kexins. Among the kexins, the first identified was Kex2 (17), which is expressed by Saccharomyces cerevisiae; subsequently, the mammalian kexin-like protease furin was identified (18). Furin processes the precursors of biologically active peptides and proteins via limited proteolysis at paired basic amino acids to generate biologically active molecules (19). The domain structures of kexins and furins include a signal peptide, a partially conserved propeptide, a highly conserved subtilisin-like domain containing the characteristic Asp, His, and Ser catalytic residues, a relatively well conserved region called the P-domain, and a transmembrane domain followed by a cytoplasmic tail (20–22). Kex2 usually shows a high degree of specificity for cleavage after dibasic (P2-P1: Lys-Arg or Arg-Arg) or multiple basic residues (23). Among the kexins, which are nearly all eukaryotic and share a substantial degree of sequence homology (>40%), ASP is positioned as the most distant member of this family on the phylogenetic tree (16). The domain structure of ASP consists of the propeptide, the catalytic subtilisin-like domain, and the P-domain. For maturation of ASP, the first 24 residues of the propeptide are cleaved, and although a functional P-domain is reportedly necessary for maturation of the subtilisin domain in kexins (24, 25), the function of the P-domain in ASP remains unknown. Notably, in an earlier study of ASP expression, we found that for the maturation of the ASP subtilisin domain, another gene product, encoded by open reading frame 2, is required to serve as a chaperone in the periplasmic space (26).Here, we report the crystal structure of wild-type ASP as a sepsis-related factor at 1.65 Å resolution. We found that ASP has a unique occluding region at the active site within the subtilisin domain and that a different form of ASP that is cleaved within the occluding region shows a different pattern of proteolysis from the native enzyme. Our findings suggested that the novel occluding region plays an important role in determining substrate specificity and that because it is unique, it could facilitate development of novel antisepsis drugs that have no inhibitory effect on furin-like human proteases. |