TY - JOUR
T1 - Different mechanisms for thermal inactivation of Bacillus subtilis signal peptidase mutants
AU - Bolhuis, A
AU - Tjalsma, H
AU - Stephenson, K
AU - Harwood, C.R
AU - Venema, G
AU - Bron, S
AU - van Dijl, J.M
PY - 1999/5/28
Y1 - 1999/5/28
N2 - The type I signal peptidase SipS of Bacillus subtilis is of major importance for the processing of secretory precursor proteins. In the present studies, we have investigated possible mechanisms of thermal inactivation of five temperature-sensitive SipS mutants. The results demonstrate that two of these mutants, L74A and Y81A, are structurally stable but strongly impaired in catalytic activity at 48 degrees C, showing the (unprecedented) involvement of the conserved leucine 74 and tyrosine 81 residues in the catalytic reaction of type I signal peptidases. This conclusion is supported by the crystal structure of the homologous signal peptidase of Escherichia coli (Paetzel, M., Dalbey, R. E., and Strynadka, N, C, J, (1998) Nature 396, 188-190), In contrast, the SipS mutant proteins R84A, R84H, and D146A were inactivated by proteolytic degradation, indicating that the conserved arginine 84 and aspartic acid 146 residues are required to obtain a protease-resistant conformation. The cell wall-bound protease WprA was shown to be involved in the degradation of SipS D146A, which is in accord with the fact that SipS has a large extracytoplasmic domain. As WprA was not involved in the degradation of the SipS mutant proteins R84A and R84H, we conclude that multiple proteases are responsible for the thermal inactivation of temperature-sensitive SipS mutants.
AB - The type I signal peptidase SipS of Bacillus subtilis is of major importance for the processing of secretory precursor proteins. In the present studies, we have investigated possible mechanisms of thermal inactivation of five temperature-sensitive SipS mutants. The results demonstrate that two of these mutants, L74A and Y81A, are structurally stable but strongly impaired in catalytic activity at 48 degrees C, showing the (unprecedented) involvement of the conserved leucine 74 and tyrosine 81 residues in the catalytic reaction of type I signal peptidases. This conclusion is supported by the crystal structure of the homologous signal peptidase of Escherichia coli (Paetzel, M., Dalbey, R. E., and Strynadka, N, C, J, (1998) Nature 396, 188-190), In contrast, the SipS mutant proteins R84A, R84H, and D146A were inactivated by proteolytic degradation, indicating that the conserved arginine 84 and aspartic acid 146 residues are required to obtain a protease-resistant conformation. The cell wall-bound protease WprA was shown to be involved in the degradation of SipS D146A, which is in accord with the fact that SipS has a large extracytoplasmic domain. As WprA was not involved in the degradation of the SipS mutant proteins R84A and R84H, we conclude that multiple proteases are responsible for the thermal inactivation of temperature-sensitive SipS mutants.
KW - TEMPORALLY CONTROLLED EXPRESSION
KW - WALL-ASSOCIATED PROTEASE
KW - ESCHERICHIA-COLI
KW - MEMBRANE-PROTEIN
KW - DEGRADATION
KW - IDENTIFICATION
KW - SIPS
KW - GENE
KW - SITE
M3 - Article
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 274
SP - 15865
EP - 15868
JO - The Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - The Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 22
ER -