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Zymogenic latency in an ∼250-million-year-old astacin metallopeptidase

The horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus is one of few extant Limulus species, which date back to ∼250 million years ago under the conservation of a common Bauplan documented by fossil records. It possesses the only proteolytic blood-coagulation and innate immunity system outside vertebrates and is a m...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Guevara, Tibisay, Rodríguez-Banqueri, Arturo, Stöcker, Walter, Becker-Pauly, Christoph, Gomis-Rüth, F. Xavier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9629494/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36322418
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2059798322009688
Descripción
Sumario:The horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus is one of few extant Limulus species, which date back to ∼250 million years ago under the conservation of a common Bauplan documented by fossil records. It possesses the only proteolytic blood-coagulation and innate immunity system outside vertebrates and is a model organism for the study of the evolution and function of peptidases. The astacins are a family of metallopeptidases that share a central ∼200-residue catalytic domain (CD), which is found in >1000 species across holozoans and, sporadically, bacteria. Here, the zymogen of an astacin from L. polyphemus was crystallized and its structure was solved. A 34-residue, mostly unstructured pro-peptide (PP) traverses, and thus blocks, the active-site cleft of the CD in the opposite direction to a substrate. A central ‘PP motif’ (F(35)-E-G-D-I(39)) adopts a loop structure which positions Asp38 to bind the catalytic metal, replacing the solvent molecule required for catalysis in the mature enzyme according to an ‘aspartate-switch’ mechanism. Maturation cleavage of the PP liberates the cleft and causes the rearrangement of an ‘activation segment’. Moreover, the mature N-terminus is repositioned to penetrate the CD moiety and is anchored to a buried ‘family-specific’ glutamate. Overall, this mechanism of latency is reminiscent of that of the other three astacins with known zymogenic and mature structures, namely crayfish astacin, human meprin β and bacterial myroilysin, but each shows specific structural characteristics. Remarkably, myroilysin lacks the PP motif and employs a cysteine instead of the aspartate to block the catalytic metal.