Abstract

The propeptides of subtilisin-like serine proteinases (subtilases, SBTs) serve dual functions as intramolecular chaperones that are required for enzyme folding and as inhibitors of the mature proteases. SBT propeptides are homologous to the I9 family of protease inhibitors that have only been described in fungi. Here we report the identification and characterization of subtilisin propeptide-like inhibitor 1 (SPI-1) from Arabidopsis thaliana Sequence similarity and the shared β-α-β-β-α-β core structure identified SPI-1 as a member of the I9 inhibitor family and as the first independent I9 inhibitor in higher eukaryotes. SPI-1 was characterized as a high-affinity, tight-binding inhibitor of Arabidopsis subtilase SBT4.13 with Kd and Ki values in the picomolar range. SPI-1 acted as a stable inhibitor of SBT4.13 over the physiologically relevant range of pH, and its inhibitory profile included many other SBTs from plants but not bovine chymotrypsin or bacterial subtilisin A. Upon binding to SBT4.13, the C-terminal extension of SPI-1 was proteolytically cleaved. The last four amino acids at the newly formed C terminus of SPI-1 matched both the cleavage specificity of SBT4.13 and the consensus sequence of Arabidopsis SBTs at the junction of the propeptide with the catalytic domain. The data suggest that the C terminus of SPI-1 acts as a competitive inhibitor of target proteases as it remains bound to the active site in a product-like manner. SPI-1 thus resembles SBT propeptides with respect to its mode of protease inhibition. However, in contrast to SBT propeptides, SPI-1 could not substitute as a folding assistant for SBT4.13.

Highlights

  • Considering on the one hand the early separation and independent evolution of plant subtilisin propeptide-like inhibitor 1 (SPI-1) homologs and on the other hand their conserved core structure, we investigated to what extent Arabidopsis SPI-1 shares the chaperoning and inhibitor functions that are well described for subtilase PPs and I9s in fungi

  • SPI-1 was characterized as a high-affinity, tight-binding inhibitor of Arabidopsis subtilase SBT4.13 with Kd and Ki values in the picomolar range

  • SPI-1 acted as a stable inhibitor of SBT4.13 over the physiologically relevant pH range, and its inhibitory profile included many other SBTs from plants but not bacterial subtilisin A or bovine chymotrypsin

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Summary

Results

The Arabidopsis genome comprises 56 SBT genes [36]. In contrast, there are only two genes for potential I9s, At1g71950 (SPI-1; the one characterized here) and At2g39851 (SPI-2). To address the phylogenetic relationship of SPIs, the PPs of SBTs, and I9s in fungi, we first performed database searches using the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool for proteins (blastP) to identify SPI-1 homologs in other species. For sequence comparison with SPIs, we chose the well characterized PPs of subtilisin A from Bacillus licheniformis and the PPs of all Arabidopsis SBTs in clades 1–5 in addition to the fungal I9 inhibitors PoIA1 and ScIB2. The signal peptides predicted by SignalP 3.0 for all proteins except PoIA1 and ScIB2 were omitted during sequence comparison. Because sequence identity between SPI-1 and the fungal I9s is less than 10%, PROMALS3D was used to calculate the sequence alignment taking additional information from secondary structure predictions and available 3D structures into account [33]. Phylogenetic analysis clearly separated SPI-1 homologs from SPI-2, SBT1

Subtilisin A
Fraction Bound
Discussion
Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
Primer sequence
Cloning of SBTs
FnormIϭ U
Full Text
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