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. 1993 Dec 25;268(36):27349-54.

A serine and a lysine residue implicated in the catalytic mechanism of the Escherichia coli leader peptidase

Affiliations
  • PMID: 8262975
Free article

A serine and a lysine residue implicated in the catalytic mechanism of the Escherichia coli leader peptidase

W R Tschantz et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

We report that a thiol leader peptidase, produced by replacing the critical serine at position 90 with a cysteine residue, is enzymatically active. In contrast to the wild-type leader peptidase, the thiol enzyme can be inactivated with N-ethylmaleimide, a cysteine-specific reagent. This strongly suggests that the serine 90 is involved in catalysis and is located at the active site. Of the three conserved basic residues in the signal peptidase family, only lysine 145 appears to be critical for catalysis; when lysine 145 was mutated to an alanine residue, leader peptidase K145A protein was inactive both in vitro and in vivo. A control experiment showed that the K145A mutant competes with the wild-type leader peptidase for substrate binding, confirming that the K145A mutation did not cause a global conformational change. The data provides evidence that catalysis of leader peptidase is carried out by a serine-lysine dyad.

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