Kinetic stability as a mechanism for protease longevity

  1. Erin L. Cunningham,
  2. Sheila S. Jaswal,
  3. Julie L. Sohl*, and
  4. David A. Agard
  1. Graduate Group in Biophysics, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0448

Abstract

The folding of the extracellular serine protease, α-lytic protease (αLP; EC 3.4.21.12) reveals a novel mechanism for stability that appears to lead to a longer functional lifetime for the protease. For αLP, stability is based not on thermodynamics, but on kinetics. Whereas this has required the coevolution of a pro region to facilitate folding, the result has been the optimization of native-state properties independent of their consequences on thermodynamic stability. Structural and mutational data lead to a model for catalysis of folding in which the pro region binds to a conserved β-hairpin in the αLP C-terminal domain, stabilizing the folding transition state and the native state. The pro region is then proteolytically degraded, leaving the active αLP trapped in a metastable conformation. This metastability appears to be a consequence of pressure to evolve properties of the native state, including a large, highly cooperative barrier to unfolding, and extreme rigidity, that reduce susceptibility to proteolytic degradation. In a test of survival under highly proteolytic conditions, homologous mammalian proteases that have not evolved kinetic stability are much more rapidly degraded than αLP. Kinetic stability as a means to longevity is likely to be a mechanism conserved among the majority of extracellular bacterial pro-proteases and may emerge as a general strategy for intracellular eukaryotic proteases subject to harsh conditions as well.

Footnotes

  • * Present address: Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: agard{at}msg.ucsf.edu.

  • This paper was presented at the National Academy of Sciences colloquium “Proteolytic Processing and Physiological Regulation,” held February 20–21, 1999, at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA.

  • ABBREVIATION:
    αLP,
    α-lytic protease
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