N-arginine dibasic convertase (NRD convertase): a newcomer to the family of processing endopeptidases. An overview.

Biochimie

Laboratoire de Biochimie des Signaux Régulateurs Cellulaires et Moléculaires, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, URA-CNRS 1682, Paris, France.

Published: February 1995

N-arginine dibasic convertase (NRD convertase) (accession number L27124) is a metalloendopeptidase from rat brain cortex and testis which cleaves peptide substrates on the N-terminus of arginine residues in basic doublets. Its predicted amino acid sequence contains the putative zinc binding motif HXXEH in a region which exhibits 35% and 48% similarity with E coli protease III (pitrilysin E.C 3.4.99.44) and rat or human insulinase (E.C 3.4.99.45) respectively. This feature clearly classifies this endopeptidase as a member of the pitrilysin family of zinc-metalloproteases. However, the NRD convertase sequence contains a distinctive additional feature consisting of a 71 acidic amino acid stretch. Its substrate selectivity and the characteristic motifs of its amino acid sequence allow us to propose this new metalloendopeptidase as the first member of a new class of processing enzymes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0300-9084(94)90151-1DOI Listing

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