1. Academic Validation
  2. Synthetic substrates for measuring activity of autophagy proteases: autophagins (Atg4)

Synthetic substrates for measuring activity of autophagy proteases: autophagins (Atg4)

  • Autophagy. 2010 Oct;6(7):936-47. doi: 10.4161/auto.6.7.13075.
Chih-Wen Shu 1 Marcin Drag Miklos Bekes Dayong Zhai Guy S Salvesen John C Reed
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute, Program on Apoptosis and Cell Death Research, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Abstract

Atg4 cysteine proteases (autophagins) play crucial roles in Autophagy by proteolytic activation of Atg8 paralogs for targeting to autophagic vesicles by lipid conjugation, as well as in subsequent deconjugation reactions. However, the means to measure the activity of autophagins is limited. Herein, we describe two novel substrates for autophagins suitable for a diversity of in vitro assays, including (i) fluorogenic tetrapeptide acetyl-Gly-L-Thr-L-Phe-Gly-AFC (Ac-GTFG-AFC) and (ii) a fusion protein comprised of the natural substrate LC3B appended to the N-terminus of Phospholipase A(2) (LC3B-PLA(2)), which upon cleavage releases active PLA(2) for fluorogenic assay. To generate the synthetic tetrapeptide substrate, the preferred tetrapeptide sequence recognized by autophagin-1/Atg4B was determined using a positional scanning combinatorial fluorogenic tetrapeptide library. With the LC3B-PLA(2) substrate, we show that mutation of the glycine proximal to the scissile bond in LC3B abolishes activity. Both substrates showed high specificity for recombinant purified autophagin-1/Atg4B compared to closely related proteases and the LC3B-PLA(2) substrate afforded substantially higher catalytic rates (k(cat)/K(m) 5.26 x 10(5) M(-1)/sec(-1)) than Ac-GTFG-AFC peptide (0.92 M(-1)/sec(-1)), consistent with substrate-induced activation. Studies of autophagin-1 mutants were also performed, including the protease lacking a predicted autoinhibitory domain at residues 1 to 24 and lacking a regulatory loop at residues 259 to 262. The peptide and fusion protein substrates were also employed for measuring autophagin activity in cell lysates, showing a decrease in cells treated with autophagin-1/Atg4B siRNA or transfected with a plasmid encoding Atg4B (Cys74Ala) dominantnegative. Therefore, the synthetic substrates for autophagins reported here provide new research tools for studying Autophagy.

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