| Literature DB >> 17517891 |
Saravanakumar Narayanan1, Toru Sato, Michael S Wolfe.
Abstract
Intramembrane proteolysis is now firmly established as a prominent biological process, and structure elucidation is emerging as the new frontier in the understanding of these novel membrane-embedded enzymes. Reproducing this unusual hydrolysis within otherwise water-excluding transmembrane regions with purified proteins is a challenging prerequisite for such structural studies. Here we show the bacterial expression, purification, and reconstitution of proteolytically active signal peptide peptidase (SPP), a membrane-embedded enzyme in the presenilin family of aspartyl proteases. This finding formally proves that, unlike presenilin, SPP does not require any additional proteins for proteolysis. Surprisingly, the conserved C-terminal half of SPP is sufficient for proteolytic activity; purification and reconstitution of this engineered fragment of several SPP orthologues revealed that this region defines a functional domain for an intramembrane aspartyl protease. The discovery of minimal requirements for intramembrane proteolysis should facilitate mechanistic and structural analysis and help define general biochemical principles of hydrolysis in a hydrophobic environment.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17517891 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M701536200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157