Literature DB >> 15601711

Molecular diversity of a putative virulence factor: purification and characterization of isoforms of an extracellular serine glutamyl endopeptidase of Enterococcus faecalis with different enzymatic activities.

Magdalena Kawalec1, Jan Potempa, Jonathan L Moon, James Travis, Barbara E Murray.   

Abstract

A previously identified gene sprE of Enterococcus faecalis strain OG1 was shown to encode an extracellular serine protease that appears to belong to the glutamyl endopeptidase I staphylococcal group. A single form of SprE with a molecular mass of 25 kDa and a pH optimum between 7.0 and 7.5 was isolated from culture supernatant of wild-type E. faecalis strain OG1RF (TX4002); this form was apparently generated by cleavage of the Ser-1-Leu1 and Arg230-Leu231 peptide bonds of the secreted zymogen. In contrast, the culture supernatant of the gelatinase-null mutant, TX5264, with a nonpolar deletion of gelE which encodes the E. faecalis gelatinase, was found to contain several forms of SprE proteolytically processed on both the N and C termini; in addition to a full-length zymogen and a truncated zymogen, three mature forms of the SprE proteinase, Leu1-Ala237, Ser-1-Glu227, and Leu1-Glu227, were identified. As with the V8 proteinase of Staphylococcus aureus, the closest homologue of SprE, all of the active forms cleaved specifically Glu-Xaa peptide bonds but with substantially different efficiencies, while none was able to hydrolyze peptide bonds with Asp in the P1 position. The most active of all these enzyme forms against several substrates, including human fibrinogen and beta-chain insulin, was the Ser-1-Glu227 (-1S-SprE) isolated from TX5264; -1S-SprE, in contrast to other forms of SprE, was unstable at 37 degrees C, apparently due to autodegradation. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that sprE encodes a highly specific serine-type glutamyl endopeptidase, the maturation of which is dependent on the presence of gelatinase. In the absence of gelatinase activity, the aberrant processing of pro-SprE results in the appearance of a "superactive" form of the enzyme, -1S-SprE.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15601711      PMCID: PMC538807          DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.1.266-275.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  60 in total

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