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Proteolysis inside the membrane is a rate-governed reaction not driven by substrate affinity. | LitMetric

Proteolysis inside the membrane is a rate-governed reaction not driven by substrate affinity.

Cell

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular Biology & Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Room 507 PCTB, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.

Published: December 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Enzymatic cleavage of transmembrane anchors regulates signaling pathways and is linked to various diseases, but the mechanics within the membrane are not fully understood.
  • Researchers established an experimental system to study rhomboid proteolysis in real time, finding that rhomboid proteases have low affinity for their substrates.
  • The study reveals that the rate-limiting step in the reaction is substrate gating rather than hydrolysis, suggesting that rhomboid proteolysis is a slow, kinetic process that differs from other proteases, with implications for understanding mechanisms and drug design.

Article Abstract

Enzymatic cleavage of transmembrane anchors to release proteins from the membrane controls diverse signaling pathways and is implicated in more than a dozen diseases. How catalysis works within the viscous, water-excluding, two-dimensional membrane is unknown. We developed an inducible reconstitution system to interrogate rhomboid proteolysis quantitatively within the membrane in real time. Remarkably, rhomboid proteases displayed no physiological affinity for substrates (K(d) ~190 μM/0.1 mol%). Instead, ~10,000-fold differences in proteolytic efficiency with substrate mutants and diverse rhomboid proteases were reflected in k(cat) values alone. Analysis of gate-open mutant and solvent isotope effects revealed that substrate gating, not hydrolysis, is rate limiting. Ultimately, a single proteolytic event within the membrane normally takes minutes. Rhomboid intramembrane proteolysis is thus a slow, kinetically controlled reaction not driven by transmembrane protein-protein affinity. These properties are unlike those of other studied proteases or membrane proteins but are strikingly reminiscent of one subset of DNA-repair enzymes, raising important mechanistic and drug-design implications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3917317PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.10.053DOI Listing

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