Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Characterization of a novel subtilisin-like protease myroicolsin from deep sea bacterium Myroides profundi D25 and molecular insight into its collagenolytic mechanism.


ABSTRACT: Collagen is an insoluble protein that widely distributes in the extracellular matrix of marine animals. Collagen degradation is an important step in the marine nitrogen cycle. However, the mechanism of marine collagen degradation is still largely unknown. Here, a novel subtilisin-like collagenolytic protease, myroicolsin, which is secreted by the deep sea bacterium Myroides profundi D25, was purified and characterized, and its collagenolytic mechanism was studied. Myroicolsin displays low identity (<30%) to previously characterized subtilisin-like proteases, and it contains a novel domain structure. Protein truncation indicated that the Pro secretion system C-terminal sorting domain in the precursor protein is involved in the cleavage of the N-propeptide, and the linker is required for protein folding during myroicolsin maturation. The C-terminal ?-jelly roll domain did not bind insoluble collagen fiber, suggesting that myroicolsin may degrade collagen without the assistance of a collagen-binding domain. Myroicolsin had broad specificity for various collagens, especially fish-insoluble collagen. The favored residue at the P1 site was basic arginine. Scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy, together with biochemical analyses, confirmed that collagen fiber degradation by myroicolsin begins with the hydrolysis of proteoglycans and telopeptides in collagen fibers and fibrils. Myroicolsin showed strikingly different cleavage patterns between native and denatured collagens. A collagen degradation model of myroicolsin was proposed based on our results. Our study provides molecular insight into the collagen degradation mechanism and structural characterization of a subtilisin-like collagenolytic protease secreted by a deep sea bacterium, shedding light on the degradation mechanism of deep sea sedimentary organic nitrogen.

SUBMITTER: Ran LY 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3937671 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Characterization of a novel subtilisin-like protease myroicolsin from deep sea bacterium Myroides profundi D25 and molecular insight into its collagenolytic mechanism.

Ran Li-Yuan LY   Su Hai-Nan HN   Zhou Ming-Yang MY   Wang Lei L   Chen Xiu-Lan XL   Xie Bin-Bin BB   Song Xiao-Yan XY   Shi Mei M   Qin Qi-Long QL   Pang Xiuhua X   Zhou Bai-Cheng BC   Zhang Yu-Zhong YZ   Zhang Xi-Ying XY  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20140115 9


Collagen is an insoluble protein that widely distributes in the extracellular matrix of marine animals. Collagen degradation is an important step in the marine nitrogen cycle. However, the mechanism of marine collagen degradation is still largely unknown. Here, a novel subtilisin-like collagenolytic protease, myroicolsin, which is secreted by the deep sea bacterium Myroides profundi D25, was purified and characterized, and its collagenolytic mechanism was studied. Myroicolsin displays low identi  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| PRJNA272640 | ENA
| S-EPMC2826318 | biostudies-literature
| PRJNA728367 | ENA
| PRJNA728368 | ENA
| PRJNA733001 | ENA
| PRJNA704257 | ENA
| PRJNA685606 | ENA