Abstract

In almost all living cells, methionine aminopeptidase (MetAP) co-translationally cleaves the initiator methionine in at least 70% of the newly synthesized polypeptides. MetAPs are typically classified into Type 1 and Type 2. While prokaryotes and archaea contain only either Type 1 or Type 2 MetAPs respectively, eukaryotes contain both types of enzymes. Almost all MetAPs published till date cleave only methionine from the amino terminus of the substrate peptides. Earlier experiments on crude Type 2a MetAP isolated from Pyrococcus furiosus (PfuMetAP2a) cosmid protein library was shown to cleave leucine in addition to methionine. Authors in that study have ruled out the PfuMetAP2a activity against leucine substrates and assumed it to be a background reaction contributed by other contaminating proteases. In the current paper, using the pure recombinant enzyme, we report that indeed activity against leucine is directly carried out by the PfuMetAP2a. In addition, the natural product ovalicin which is a specific covalent inhibitor of Type 2 MetAPs does not show efficient inhibition against the PfuMetAP2a. Bioinformatic analysis suggested that a glycine in eukaryotic MetAP2s (G222 in human MetAP2b) and asparagine (N53 in PfuMetAP2a) in archaeal MetAP2s positioned at the analogous position. N53 side chain forms a hydrogen bond with a conserved histidine (H62) at the entrance of the active site and alters its orientation to accommodate the ovalicin. This slight orientational difference of the H62, reduces affinity of the ovalicin by 300,000-fold when compared with the HsMetAP2b inhibition. This difference in the activity is partly reduced in the case of N53G mutation of the PfuMetAP2a.

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