TY - JOUR
T1 - Cloning and sequencing of the gene encoding a novel lysine-specific cysteine proteinase (Lys-Gingipain) in porphyromonas gingivalis
T2 - Structural relationship with the arginine-specific cysteine proteinase (Arg-Gingipain)
AU - Okamoto, Kuniaki
AU - Kadowaki, Tomoko
AU - Nakayama, Koji
AU - Yamamoto, Kenji
PY - 1996/1/1
Y1 - 1996/1/1
N2 - Lys-gingipain (KGP), so termed due to its peptide cleavage specificity for lysine residues, is a cysteine proteinase produced by the Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis. Mixed oligonucleotide primers designed from the NH2-terminal sequence of the purified enzyme were used to clone the KGP-encoding gene (kgp) from the organism. The nucleotide sequence of kgp had a 5,169-bp open reading frame encoding 1,723 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 218 kDa. As the extracellular mature enzyme had an apparent molecular mass of 51 kDa in gels, the precursor of KGP was found to comprise at least four domains, the signal peptide, the NH2-terminal prodomain, the mature proteinase domain, and the COOH-terminal hemagglutinin domain, and to be proteolytically processed during its transport. Importantly, the COOH-terminal region contained three direct repeats of two different amino acid sequences, LKWD(or E)AP and YTYTVYRDGTKI, and the subdomains located between the two repeats exhibited strong similarity to those of Arg-gingipain (RGP), another major cysteine proteinase produced by the organism and having cleavage specificity for arginine residues, although the arrangement of the subdomains was not necessarily identical in the two enzymes. Since the I(GP activity was greatly decreased in RGP-deficient mutants and since the most probable site of the propeptide cleavage was present in the homologous sequence highly susceptible to proteolysis by RGP, the precursor of KGP is likely to be processed by RGP to form the mature enzyme.
AB - Lys-gingipain (KGP), so termed due to its peptide cleavage specificity for lysine residues, is a cysteine proteinase produced by the Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis. Mixed oligonucleotide primers designed from the NH2-terminal sequence of the purified enzyme were used to clone the KGP-encoding gene (kgp) from the organism. The nucleotide sequence of kgp had a 5,169-bp open reading frame encoding 1,723 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 218 kDa. As the extracellular mature enzyme had an apparent molecular mass of 51 kDa in gels, the precursor of KGP was found to comprise at least four domains, the signal peptide, the NH2-terminal prodomain, the mature proteinase domain, and the COOH-terminal hemagglutinin domain, and to be proteolytically processed during its transport. Importantly, the COOH-terminal region contained three direct repeats of two different amino acid sequences, LKWD(or E)AP and YTYTVYRDGTKI, and the subdomains located between the two repeats exhibited strong similarity to those of Arg-gingipain (RGP), another major cysteine proteinase produced by the organism and having cleavage specificity for arginine residues, although the arrangement of the subdomains was not necessarily identical in the two enzymes. Since the I(GP activity was greatly decreased in RGP-deficient mutants and since the most probable site of the propeptide cleavage was present in the homologous sequence highly susceptible to proteolysis by RGP, the precursor of KGP is likely to be processed by RGP to form the mature enzyme.
KW - Arg-gingipain
KW - Gingivalis
KW - Lys-gingipain
KW - Lysine-specific cysteine proteinase
KW - Porphyromonas
KW - Precursor structure
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U2 - 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a021426
DO - 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a021426
M3 - Article
C2 - 8889827
AN - SCOPUS:0029684438
SN - 0021-924X
VL - 120
SP - 398
EP - 406
JO - Journal of Biochemistry
JF - Journal of Biochemistry
IS - 2
ER -