Purification, characterization, and specificity determination of a new serine protease secreted by penicillium waksmanii


Autoria(s): Graminho, Eduardo Rezende; Da Silva, Ronivaldo Rodrigues; De Freitas Cabral, Tatiana Pereira; Arantes, Eliane Candiani; Da Rosa, Nathalia Gonsales; Juliano, Luiz; Okamoto, Debora Noma; De Oliveira, Lilian Caroline Gonçalves; Kondo, Marcia Yuri; Juliano, Maria Aparecida; Cabral, Hamilton
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

27/05/2014

27/05/2014

01/01/2013

Resumo

The purpose of this work was to purify a protease from Penicillium waksmanii and to determine its biochemical characteristics and specificity. The extracellular protease isolated that was produced by P. waksmanii is a serine protease that is essential for the reproduction and growth of the fungus. The protease isolated showed 32 kDa, and has optimal activity at pH 8.0 and 35 C towards the substrate Abz-KLRSSKQ-EDDnp. The protease is active in the presence of CaCl2, KCl, and BaCl, and partially inhibited by CuCl2, CoCl2 and totally inhibited by AlCl3 and LiCl. In the presence of 1 M urea, the protease remains 50 % active. The activity of the protease increases 60 % when it is exposed to 0.4 % nonionic surfactant-Triton X-100 and loses 10 % activity in the presence of 0.4 % Tween-80. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis, the protease showed the most specificity for the peptide Abz-KIRSSKQ-EDDnp with k cat/K m of 10,666 mM-1 s-1, followed by the peptide Abz-GLRSSKQ-EDDnp with a k cat/K m of 7,500 mM -1 s-1. Basic and acidic side chain-containing amino acids performed best at subsite S1. Subsites S2, S3, S′ 2, and S′ 1, S ′ 3 showed a preference for binding for amino acids with hydrophobic and basic amino acid side chain, respectively. High values of k cat/K m were observed for the subsites S2, S3, and S′ 2. The sequence of the N-terminus (ANVVQSNVPSWGLARLSSKKTGTTDYTYD) showed high similarity to the fungi Penicillium citrinum and Penicillium chrysogenum, with 89 % of identity at the amino acid level. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Formato

201-214

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12010-012-9974-3

Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology, v. 169, n. 1, p. 201-214, 2013.

0273-2289

1559-0291

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/74149

10.1007/s12010-012-9974-3

WOS:000314023100018

2-s2.0-84873091920

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Fungal enzymes #N-terminal Penicillium #Protease #Purification #Specificity #Biochemical characteristics #Extracellular protease #Fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis #N-terminals #Nonionic #Optimal activity #Penicillium chrysogenum #Penicillium citrinum #Serine protease #Side-chains #Subsites #Tween 80 #Calcium chloride #Copper compounds #Energy transfer #Enzyme activity #Nonionic surfactants #Peptides #Urea #Amino acids #aluminum chloride #barium chloride #calcium chloride #cobalt chloride #copper chloride #fungal enzyme #polysorbate 80 #potassium chloride #serine proteinase #triton x 100 #urea #amino acid sequence #amino terminal sequence #binding site #controlled study #enzyme activity #enzyme analysis #enzyme inhibition #enzyme kinetics #enzyme purification #enzyme release #enzyme specificity #enzyme substrate #enzyme synthesis #fluorescence resonance energy transfer #fungal reproduction #fungus growth #nonhuman #Penicillium #Penicillium waksmanii #pH #protein cleavage #protein function #species difference #Amino Acid Sequence #Enzyme Stability #Extracellular Space #Fungal Proteins #Kinetics #Molecular Sequence Data #Protein Transport #Serine Proteases #Substrate Specificity #Fungi
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article