| Literature DB >> 23585398 |
Johannes Elferich1, Danielle M Williamson, Bala Krishnamoorthy, Ujwal Shinde.
Abstract
Eukaryotic cells maintain strict control over protein secretion, in part by using the pH gradient maintained within their secretory pathway. How eukaryotic proteins evolved from prokaryotic orthologs to exploit the pH gradient for biological functions remains a fundamental question in cell biology. Our laboratory previously demonstrated that protein domains located within precursor proteins, propeptides, encode histidine-driven pH sensors to regulate organelle-specific activation of the eukaryotic proteases furin and proprotein convertase-1/3. Similar findings have been reported in other unrelated protease families. By analyzing >10,000 unique proteases within evolutionarily unrelated families, we show that eukaryotic propeptides are enriched in histidines compared with prokaryotic orthologs. On this basis, we hypothesize that eukaryotic proteins evolved to enrich histidines within their propeptides to exploit the tightly controlled pH gradient of the secretory pathway, thereby regulating activation within specific organelles. Enrichment of histidines in propeptides may therefore be used to predict the presence of pH sensors in other proteases or even protease substrates.Entities:
Keywords: cathepsins; secretory pathway
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23585398 PMCID: PMC3714588 DOI: 10.1096/fj.12-226886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191