1. Academic Validation
  2. A C-terminal domain conserved in precursor processing proteases is required for intramolecular N-terminal maturation of pro-Kex2 protease

A C-terminal domain conserved in precursor processing proteases is required for intramolecular N-terminal maturation of pro-Kex2 protease

  • EMBO J. 1994 May 15;13(10):2280-8. doi: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06510.x.
P Gluschankof 1 R S Fuller
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry, Beckman Center for Molecular and Genetic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA 94305-5307.
Abstract

The Kex2 protease of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the prototype of a family of eukaryotic subtilisin homologs thought to process prohormones and Other precursors in the secretory pathway. Deletion analysis of Kex2 protease shows that a sequence of 154-159 residues carboxyl to the subtilisin domain is essential for the formation of active enzyme. Disruption of this region, termed the 'P-domain', blocks the normally rapid intra-molecular cleavage of the N-terminal pro-segment of pro-Kex2 protease in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The C-terminal boundary of the P-domain coincides closely with the endpoint of similarity between Kex2 protease and its mammalian homologues. The conservation of and functional requirement for the P-domain sharpens the distinction between a 'Kex2 family' of processing Enzymes and degradative 'subtilases', and implies that the Kex2-related Enzymes have in common entirely novel structural features that are important in the maturation of precursor polypeptide substrates. Failure to cleave the N-terminal pro-domain, due either to truncation of the P-domain or to mutation of the active site histidine or serine, results in stable, intracellular retention of pro-enzyme, apparently in the ER. Thus pro-Kex2 protease appears to contain an ER retention signal which is removed or destroyed by cleavage of the pro-domain.

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