Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the genes pilB, pilC, and pilD encode proteins necessary for posttranslational modification and assembly of pilin monomers into pilus organelles (D. Nunn, S. Bergman, and S. Lory, J. Bacteriol. 172:2911-2919, 1990). We show that PilD, encoding a putative pilin-specific leader peptidase, also controls export of alkaline phosphatase, phospholipase C, elastase, and exotoxin A. pilD mutants accumulate these proteins in the periplasmic space, while secretion of periplasmic and outer membrane proteins appears to be normal. The periplasmic form of exotoxin A was fully mature in size, contained all cysteines in disulfide bonds, and was toxic in a tissue culture cytotoxicity assay, suggesting that in pilD mutants, exotoxin A was folded into its native conformation. The function of the other two accessory proteins, PilB and PilC, appears to be restricted to pilus biogenesis, and strains carrying mutations in their respective genes do not show an export defect. These studies show that in addition to cleaving the leader sequence from prepilin, PilD has an additional role in secretion of proteins that are released from P. aeruginosa into the surrounding media. PilD most likely functions as a protease that is involved in processing and assembly of one or more components of the membrane machinery necessary for the later stages of protein extracellular localization.
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PMID:Multiple roles of the pilus biogenesis protein pilD: involvement of pilD in excretion of enzymes from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 167 84

Nascent precursors of phosphatidylinositol-glycan (PI-G)-linked membrane proteins contain a hydrophobic COOH-terminal sequence of 15-30 residues that is eliminated during processing to yield a newly exposed COOH terminus to which the PI-G moiety is added. There is no consensus as to the primary structure of the terminal peptide but there is a specific requirement for the amino acid destined to become the COOH terminus. In nascent human placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP), the PI-G tail is attached to Asp-484. Site-directed mutants with glycine, alanine, cysteine, serine, or asparagine (category I) at residue 484 become PI-G tailed, appear in the plasma membrane, and are enzymatically active when expressed in COS cells. Although mutants with glutamic acid, glutamine, proline, tryptophan, leucine, valine, phenylalanine, threonine, methionine, and tyrosine (category II) are expressed equally well, only small amounts appear on the plasma membrane. Furthermore, they are not PI-G tailed and have little alkaline phosphatase activity. Studies with truncated PLAP-489 rule out nonspecific conformational changes in category II mutant proteins as a reason for their failure to be processed in COS cells and point to a specific COOH-terminal processing enzyme. Direct evidence that the selectivity for category I amino acids is enzymatically determined was obtained in a cell-free translation/processing system by using rabbit reticulocyte lysate and CHO cell rough microsomal membranes. In this in vitro system, both category I and category II mutants of PLAP-513 were translated, glycosylated, and cleaved by NH2-terminal signal peptidase. However, an additional and selective cleavage at residue 484 was observed only with category I mutants.
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PMID:Selectivity at the cleavage/attachment site of phosphatidylinositol-glycan anchored membrane proteins is enzymatically determined. 170 Apr 20

Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum is a pathogenic spirochaete for which there are no systems of genetic exchange. In order to provide a system for the identification of T. pallidum surface proteins and potential virulence factors, we have developed a novel expression vector which confers the utility of TnphoA transposition. The relevant features of this plasmid vector, termed pMG, include an inducible tac promoter, a polylinker with multiple cloning sites in three reading frames, and an alkaline phosphatase (AP) gene lacking the signal sequence-encoding region. Library construction with Sau3A-digested T. pallidum genomic DNA resulted in the creation of functional T. pallidum-AP fusion proteins. Analysis of fusion proteins and their corresponding DNA and deduced amino acid sequences demonstrated that they could be grouped into three categories: (i) those with signal peptides containing leader peptidase I cleavage sites, (ii) those with signal peptides containing leader peptidase II cleavage sites, and (iii) those with non-cleavable hydrophobic membrane-spanning sequences. Triton X-114 detergent phase partitioning of individual T. pallidum-AP fusions revealed several clones whose AP activity partitioned preferentially into the hydrophobic detergent phase. Several of these fusion proteins were subsequently shown to be acylated by Escherichia coli following [3H]-palmitate labelling, indicating their lipoproteinaceous nature. DNA and amino acid sequence analysis of one acylated fusion protein, Tp75, confirmed the presence of a hydrophobic N-terminal signal sequence containing a consensus leader peptidase II recognition site. The DNA sequence of Tp75 also indicates that this is a previously unreported T. pallidum lipoprotein. T. pallidum-AP fusion proteins which partitioned into the hydrophobic detergent phase but did not incorporate palmitate were also identified. DNA and amino acid analysis of one such clone, Tp70, showed no cleavable signal but had a significant hydrophobic region of approximately 20 residues, consistent with a membrane-spanning domain. Immunoblot analysis of T. pallidum-AP fusions detected with a monoclonal antibody specific for AP identified several fusion proteins which migrated as doublets separated in apparent electrophoretic mobility by no more than 3 kDa. [35S]-methionine pulse-chase incorporation showed that the doublet AP fusions represented precursor and processed forms of the same protein. DNA and amino acid sequence analysis of clones expressing processed fusion proteins demonstrated hydrophobic N-terminal signal sequences containing consensus leader peptidase I recognition sites.
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PMID:Identification of Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum genes encoding signal peptides and membrane-spanning sequences using a novel alkaline phosphatase expression vector. 179 55

An open reading frame (ORF) of 141 bp was observed upstream from the Pseudomonas aeruginosa lysA gene. The translation product of this ORF contains a signal peptide with a lipoprotein box, Ile-Ala-Ala-Cys, at the predicted signal peptidase cleavage site. The Escherichia coli phoA gene without its signal sequence was fused in frame to this ORF in a broad host-range plasmid. The resulting construct expressed a hybrid protein exhibiting alkaline phosphatase activity in phoA mutants of both E. coli and P. aeruginosa. This indicates that the ORF encodes a peptide, part of which acts as an export signal. The hybrid peptide was identified by immunoblotting with alkaline phosphatase antiserum. The accumulation of a precursor form was observed when P. aeruginosa cells carrying this gene fusion on a plasmid were treated with globomycin. Moreover, the mature form could be labelled with 2-[3H]-glycerol, indicating that lipidic residues may be linked to the hybrid protein. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that the ORF encodes a lipopeptide. We propose that the gene is called IppL.
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PMID:A lipopeptide-encoding sequence upstream from the lysA gene of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 211 74

The alkaline phosphatase signal peptide participates in transport of the enzyme to the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli. The signal sequence, like that of other signal peptides, is composed of a polar amino-terminal segment, a central region rich in hydrophobic residues and a carboxy-terminal region recognized by signal peptidase. We have previously shown that an alkaline phosphatase signal peptide mutant containing a polyleucine core region functions efficiently in transport of the enzyme [D. A. Kendall, S. C. Bock, and E. T. Kaiser (1986) Nature 321, 706-708]. In this study, some of the amino acid changes involved in the polyleucine sequence are examined individually. A Phe to Leu substitution as the sole change results in impaired transport properties in contrast to when it is combined with three other amino acid changes in the polyleucine-containing sequence. A mutant with a Pro to Leu substitution in the hydrophobic core region is comparable to wild type while the same type of substitution (Pro to Leu) in the carboxy-terminal segment results in substantial accumulation of the mutant precursor. Finally, introduction of a basic residue into the hydrophobic segment (Leu to Arg substitution) results in a complete export block. These results exemplify the spectrum of properties produced by individual residue changes and suggest there is some interplay between hydrophobicity and conformation for signal peptide function.
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PMID:A comparative analysis of single- and multiple-residue substitutions in the alkaline phosphatase signal peptide. 218 83

SecY is an Escherichia coli integral membrane protein required for efficient translocation of other proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane; it is embedded in this membrane by the 10 transmembrane segments. Among several SecY-alkaline phosphatase (PhoA) fusion proteins that we constructed previously, SecY-PhoA fusion 3-3, in which PhoA is fused to the third periplasmic region of SecY just after the fifth transmembrane segment, was found to be subject to rapid proteolytic processing in vivo. Both the SecY and PhoA products of this cleavage have been identified immunologically. In contrast, cleavage of SecY-PhoA 3-3 was barely observed in a lep mutant with a temperature-sensitive leader peptidase. The full-length fusion protein accumulated in this mutant was cleaved in vitro by the purified leader peptidase. A sequence Ala-202-Ile-Ala located near the proposed interface between transmembrane segment 5 and periplasmic domain 3 of SecY was found to be responsible for the recognition and cleavage by the leader peptidase, since a mutated fusion protein with Phe-Ile-Phe at this position was no longer cleaved even in the wild-type cells. These results indicate that SecY contains a potential leader peptidase cleavage site that undergoes cleavage if the PhoA sequence is attached carboxy terminally. Thus, transmembrane segment 5 of SecY can fulfill both of the two important functions of the signal peptide, translocation and cleavage, although the latter function is cryptic in the normal SecY protein.
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PMID:SecY, a multispanning integral membrane protein, contains a potential leader peptidase cleavage site. 218 44

A topology of the Escherichia coli leader peptidase has been previously proposed on the basis of proteolytic studies. Here, a collection of alkaline phosphatase fusions to leader peptidase is described. Fusions to the periplasmic domain of this protein exhibit high alkaline phosphatase activity, while fusions to the cytoplasmic domain exhibit low activity. Elements within the cytoplasmic domain are necessary to stably anchor alkaline phosphatase in the cytoplasm. The amino-terminal hydrophobic segment of leader peptidase acts as a weak export signal for alkaline phosphatase. However, when this segment is preceded by four lysines, it acts as a highly efficient export signal. The coherence of in vitro studies with alkaline phosphatase fusion analysis of the topology of leader peptidase further indicates the utility of this genetic approach to membrane protein structure and insertion.
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PMID:Use of phoA fusions to study the topology of the Escherichia coli inner membrane protein leader peptidase. 255 89

The effect of the removal of signal peptides after cleavage of precursor molecules by the signal peptidase I was examined in an in vitro translocation system with Escherichia coli membrane vesicles. The translocation of periplasmic alkaline phosphatase precursors was significantly inhibited by the protease inhibitors antipain, elastatinal and leupeptin. Antipain and leupeptin enhanced the translocation of precursors of outer membrane protein OmpA, but inhibited the processing. However, antipain did not inhibit the processing of precursors mediated by signal peptidase I in the soluble form. Moreover, the inhibition by antipain was not due to the disruption of membrane integrity, but occurred during the process of protein translocation. Since these small peptide inhibitors are known to inhibit membrane protease IV, a signal peptide peptidase, these results suggest that the hydrolysis of signal peptides is an important step in the recycles of the overall translocation process, and that the prevention of degradation of signal peptides feedback inhibits the preceding steps in the translocation pathway.
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PMID:Effects of inhibitors of membrane signal peptide peptidase on protein translocation into membrane vesicles. 269 35

The Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase structural gene (amyE) lacking its own signal peptide coding sequence was joined to the end of the Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (phoA) signal peptide coding sequence by using the technique of oligonucleotide-directed site-specific deletion. On induction of the phoA promoter, the B. subtilis alpha-amylase was expressed and almost all the activity was found in the periplasmic space of E. coli. The sequence of the five amino-terminal amino acids of the secreted polypeptide was Glu-Thr-Ala-Asn-Lys-, and thus the fused protein was correctly processed by the E. coli signal peptidase at the end of the phoA signal peptide.
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PMID:Secretion of Bacillus subtilis alpha-amylase in the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli. 311 69

An alpha-neo-endorphin (alpha NE) gene, which we previously synthesized chemically and inserted into E. coli beta-galactosidase gene of pK013 plasmid, has been excised and fused to E. coli alkaline phosphatase (APase) gene. One of the transformants was named E15/pA alpha NE1. Under the APase gene regulation, APase-alpha NE chimeric protein was expressed at 1.3 X 10(6) molecules per cell, and accounted for about 60% of total cellular proteins. The HPLC pattern of CNBr treated E15/pA alpha NE1 was very simple reflecting the high content of the chimeric protein and low numbers of methionine residues in it. A series of genes encoding APase-alpha NE chimeric proteins in which 30 to 94 C-terminal amino acid residues were replaced by (met)-alpha NE, was cloned in E. coli. Transportation of the chimeric proteins to periplasmic space was studied. All chimeric proteins were apparently processed by signal peptidase but few, if any, was transported to the periplasmic space.
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PMID:Expression of chemically synthesized alpha-neo-endorphin gene fused to E. coli alkaline phosphatase. 629 40


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