Identification and characterization of a novel spore-associated subtilase from Thermoactinomyces sp. CDF.

Microbiology (Reading)

State Key Laboratory of Virology, College of Life Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, PR China.

Published: November 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers cloned and expressed a gene for a spore-associated enzyme, protease CDF, from the Thermoactinomyces sp. CDF in E. coli, revealing a unique structure not fitting within known subtilisin subfamilies.
  • The proform of protease CDF can form inclusion bodies but can be converted to an active enzyme through specific alkaline conditions, undergoing a two-step maturation process during activation.
  • Protease CDF exhibits optimal activity at temperatures between 50-55°C and high pH levels (10.5-11.0), is stable at extreme alkaline conditions, and is located on the spore coat, extracted without damaging it.

Article Abstract

A gene encoding a spore-associated subtilase, designated protease CDF, was cloned from Thermoactinomyces sp. CDF and expressed in Escherichia coli. The enzyme gene is translated as a proform consisting of a 94 aa propeptide and a 283 aa mature protease domain. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that this enzyme belonged to the subtilisin family, but could not be grouped into any of its six known subfamilies. The mature protease CDF has an unusually high content of charged residues, which are mainly distributed on the enzyme surface. The recombinant proform of protease CDF formed inclusion bodies, but could be efficiently converted to the mature enzyme when the inclusion bodies were dissolved in alkaline buffers. The proform underwent a two-step maturation process, wherein the N-terminal part (85 residues) of the propeptide was autoprocessed intramolecularly, and the remaining 9-residue peptide was further processed intermolecularly. Protease CDF exhibited optimal proteolytic activity at 50-55 degrees C and pH 10.5-11.0. The enzyme was stable under high-pH conditions (pH 11.0-12.0), and NaCl could stabilize the enzyme at lower pH values. In addition, the enzyme was not dependent on calcium for either maturation or stability. By immunoblot analysis, protease CDF was found to be associated with spores, and could be extracted from the spores with 2 M KCl and alkaline buffers without damaging the coat layer, demonstrating that the protease CDF is located on the surface of the spore coat.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.031336-0DOI Listing

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