Abstract

Aggregation behavior provides bacteria protection from harsh environments and threats to survival. Two uncharacterized proteases, LapX and Lap, are important for Vibrio cholerae liquid-based aggregation. Here, we determined that LapX is a serine protease with a preference for cleavage after glutamate and glutamine residues in the P1 position, which processes a physiologically based peptide substrate with a catalytic efficiency of 180± 80M-1s-1. The activity with a LapX substrate identified by a multiplex substrate profiling by mass spectrometry screen was 590± 20M-1s-1. Lap shares high sequence identity with an aminopeptidase (termed VpAP) from Vibrio proteolyticus and contains an inhibitory bacterial prepeptidase C-terminal domain that, when eliminated, increases catalytic efficiency on leucine p-nitroanilide nearly four-fold from 5.4± 4.1×104M-1s-1 to 20.3± 4.3×104M-1s-1. We demonstrate that LapX processes Lap to its mature form and thus amplifies Lap activity. The increase is approximately eighteen-fold for full-length Lap (95.7± 5.6×104M-1s-1) and six-fold for Lap lacking the prepeptidase C-terminal domain (11.3± 1.9×105M-1s-1). In addition, substrate profiling reveals preferences for these two proteases that could inform invivo function. Furthermore, purified LapX and Lap restore the timing of the V.cholerae aggregation program to a mutant lacking the lapX and lap genes. Both proteases must be present to restore WT timing, and thus they appear to act sequentially: LapX acts on Lap, and Lap acts on the substrate involved in aggregation.

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