Characterization of the C-terminal propeptide involved in bacterial wall spanning of alpha-amylase from the psychrophile Alteromonas haloplanctis.

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Citation

Feller G, D'Amico S, Benotmane AM, Joly F, Van Beeumen J, Gerday C

Characterization of the C-terminal propeptide involved in bacterial wall spanning of alpha-amylase from the psychrophile Alteromonas haloplanctis.

J Biol Chem. 1998 May 15;273(20):12109-15.

PubMed ID
9575155 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The antarctic psychrophile Alteromonas haloplanctis secretes a Ca2+- and Cl--dependent alpha-amylase. The nucleotide sequence of the amy gene and the amino acid sequences of the gene products indicate that the alpha-amylase precursor is a preproenzyme composed by the signal peptide (24 residues), the mature alpha-amylase (453 residues, 49 kDa), and a long C-terminal propeptide or secretion helper (192 residues, 21 kDa). In cultures of the wild-type strain, the 70-kDa precursor is secreted at the mid-exponential phase and is cleaved by a nonspecific protease into the mature enzyme and the propeptide. The purified C-terminal propeptide displays several features common to beta-pleated transmembrane proteins. It has no intramolecular chaperone function because active alpha-amylase is expressed by Escherichia coli in the absence of the propeptide coding region. In E. coli, the 70-kDa precursor is directed toward the supernatant. When the alpha-amylase coding region is excised from the gene, the secretion helper can still promote its own membrane spanning. It can also accept a foreign passenger, as shown by the extracellular routing of a beta-lactamase-propeptide fusion protein.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Alpha-amylaseP29957Details