Abstract

A novel protease-producing Bacillus sp. CN2 isolated from chicken manure composts exhibited a relatively high proteolytic specific activity. The strain CN2 degradome consisted of at least 149 proteases and homolog candidates, which were distributed into 4 aspartic, 30 cysteine, 55 metallo, 56 serine, and 4 threonine proteases. Extracellular proteolytic activity was almost completely inhibited by PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) rather than o-P, E-64, or pepstatin A, suggesting that strain CN2 primarily secreted serine protease. More importantly, analysis of the extracellular proteome of strain CN2 revealed the presence of a highly efficient protein degradation system. Three serine proteases of the S8 family with different active site architectures firstly fragmented protein substrates which were then degraded to smaller peptides by a M4 metalloendopeptidase that prefers to degrade hydrophobic peptides and by a S13 carboxypeptidase. Those enzymes acted synergistically to degrade intact substrate proteins outside the cell. Furthermore, highly expressed sequence-specific intracellular aminopeptidases from multiple families (M20, M29, and M42) accurately degraded peptides into oligopeptides or amino acids, thus realizing the rapid acquisition and utilization of nitrogen sources. In this paper, a systematic study of the functional-degradome provided a new perspective for understanding the complexity of the protease hydrolysis system of Bacillus, and laid a solid foundation for further studying the precise degradation of proteins with the cooperative action of different family proteases. KEY POINTS: • Bacillus sp. CN2 has relatively high proteolytic specific activity. • Bacillus sp. CN2 harbors a highly efficient protein degradation system. • The site-specific endopeptidases were secreted extracellular, while the sequence-specific aminopeptidases played a role in the cell.

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