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Structural and kinetic determinants of protease substrates.


ABSTRACT: Two fundamental questions with regard to proteolytic networks and pathways concern the structural repertoire and kinetic threshold that distinguish legitimate signaling substrates. We used N-terminal proteomics to address these issues by identifying cleavage sites within the Escherichia coli proteome that are driven by the apoptotic signaling protease caspase-3 and the bacterial protease glutamyl endopeptidase (GluC). Defying the dogma that proteases cleave primarily in natively unstructured loops, we found that both caspase-3 and GluC cleave in alpha-helices nearly as frequently as in extended loops. Notably, biochemical and kinetic characterization revealed that E. coli caspase-3 substrates are greatly inferior to natural substrates, suggesting protease and substrate coevolution. Engineering an E. coli substrate to match natural catalytic rates defined a kinetic threshold that depicts a signaling event. This unique combination of proteomics, biochemistry, kinetics and substrate engineering reveals new insights into the structure-function relationship of protease targets and their validation from large-scale approaches.

SUBMITTER: Timmer JC 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4042863 | biostudies-literature | 2009 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Structural and kinetic determinants of protease substrates.

Timmer John C JC   Zhu Wenhong W   Pop Cristina C   Regan Tim T   Snipas Scott J SJ   Eroshkin Alexey M AM   Riedl Stefan J SJ   Salvesen Guy S GS  

Nature structural & molecular biology 20090920 10


Two fundamental questions with regard to proteolytic networks and pathways concern the structural repertoire and kinetic threshold that distinguish legitimate signaling substrates. We used N-terminal proteomics to address these issues by identifying cleavage sites within the Escherichia coli proteome that are driven by the apoptotic signaling protease caspase-3 and the bacterial protease glutamyl endopeptidase (GluC). Defying the dogma that proteases cleave primarily in natively unstructured loo  ...[more]

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