1. Academic Validation
  2. Intramembrane proteolytic cleavage by human signal peptide peptidase like 3 and malaria signal peptide peptidase

Intramembrane proteolytic cleavage by human signal peptide peptidase like 3 and malaria signal peptide peptidase

  • FASEB J. 2006 Aug;20(10):1671-9. doi: 10.1096/fj.06-5762com.
Andrew C Nyborg 1 Thomas B Ladd Karen Jansen Thomas Kukar Todd E Golde
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, 4500 San Pablo Rd., Jacksonville, Florida 32224, USA.
Abstract

Signal peptide peptidase (SPP) is an intramembrane cleaving protease (I-CLiP) identified by its cleavage of several type II membrane signal Peptides. To date, only human SPP has been directly shown to have proteolytic activity. Here we demonstrate that the most closely related human homologue of SPP, signal peptide peptidase like 3 (SPPL3), cleaves a SPP substrate, but a more distantly related homologue, signal peptide peptidase like 2b (SPPL2b), does not. These data provide strong evidence that the SPP and SPPL3 have conserved active sites and suggest that the active sites SPPL2b is distinct. We have also synthesized a cDNA designed to express the single SPP gene present in Plasmodium falciparum and cloned this into a mammalian expression vector. When the malaria SPP protein is expressed in mammalian cells it cleaves a SPP substrate. Notably, several human SPP inhibitors block the proteolytic activity of malarial SPP (mSPP). Studies from several model organisms that express multiple SPP homologs demonstrate that the silencing of a single SPP homologue is lethal. Based on these data, we hypothesize that mSPP is a potential a novel therapeutic target for malaria.

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