Many functionally important cellular peptides and proteins, including hormones, neuropeptides, and growth factors, are synthesized as inactive precursor polypeptides, which require post-translational proteolytic processing to become biologically active polypeptides. This is achieved by the action of a relatively small number of proteases that belong to a family of seven subtilisin-like proprotein convertases (PCs) including furin. In view of this, this review focuses on the importance of privileged secondary structures and of given amino acid residues around basic cleavage sites in substrate recognition by these endoproteases. In addition to their participation in normal cell functions, PCs are crucial for the initiation and progress of many important diseases. Hence, these proteases constitute potential drug targets in medicine. Accordingly, this review also discusses the approaches used to shed light on the cleavage preference and the substrate specificity of the PCs, a prerequisite to select which PCs are promising drug targets in each disease.
The amino acid sequences flanking 352 dibasic moieties contained in 83 prohormones and pro-proteins listed in a database were examined. Frequency calculations on the occurrence of given residues at positions P6 to P'4 allowed us to delineate a number of features which might be in part responsible for the in vivo discrimination between cleaved and uncleaved dibasic sites. These include the following: amino acids at these positions were characterized by a large variability in composition and properties; no major contribution of a given precursor subsite to endoprotease specificity was observed; some amino acid residues appeared to occupy preferentially certain precursor subsites (for instance, Met in P6 and P3, Asp and Ala in P'1, Pro in P6, Gly in P3 and P'2 etc.) whereas some others appeared to be excluded. Most amino acid residues occupying the P'1 position in these precursor cleavage sites were tolerated. But the beta-carbon branched side chain residues (Thr, Val, Leu, Ile) and Pro, Cys, Met and Trp were either totally excluded or poorly represented, suggesting that they might be unfavourable to cleavage. The biological relevance of these observations to the efficacy of dibasic cleavage by model propeptide convertases was in vitro tested using both pro-ocytocin convertase and Kex2 protease action on a series of pro-ocytocin related synthetic substrates reproducing the Pro7-->Leu15 sequence of the precursor in which the Ala13 residue (P'1 in the LysArg-Ala motif) was replaced by various amino acid residues. A good correlation was obtained on this model system indicating that P'1 residue of precursor dibasic processing sites is an important feature and may play the role of anchoring motif to S'1 convertase subsite. We tentatively propose that the present database, and the corresponding model, may be used for further investigation of dibasic endoproteolytic processing of propeptides and pro-proteins.
Protein misfolding and amyloid formation are an underlying pathological hallmark in a number of prevalent diseases of protein aggregation ranging from Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases to systemic lysozyme amyloidosis. In this context, we have used complementary spectroscopic methods to undertake a systematic study of the self-assembly of hen egg-white lysozyme under agitation during a prolonged heating in acidic pH. The kinetics of lysozyme aggregation, monitored by Thioflavin T fluorescence, dynamic light scattering and the quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by acrylamide, is described by a sigmoid curve typical of a nucleation-dependent polymerization process. Nevertheless, we observe significant differences between the values deduced for the kinetic parameters (lag time and aggregation rate). The fibrillation process of lysozyme, as assessed by the attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, is accompanied by an increase in the β-sheet conformation at the expense of the α-helical conformation but the time-dependent variation of the content of these secondary structures does not evolve as a gradual transition. Moreover, the tryptophan fluorescence-monitored kinetics of lysozyme aggregation is described by three phases in which the temporal decrease of the tryptophan fluorescence quantum yield is of quasilinear nature. Finally, the generated lysozyme fibrils exhibit a typical amyloid morphology with various lengths (observed by atomic force microscopy) and contain exclusively the full-length protein (analyzed by highly performance liquid chromatography). Compared to the data obtained by other groups for the formation of lysozyme fibrils in acidic pH without agitation, this work provides new insights into the structural changes (local, secondary, oligomeric/fibrillar structures) undergone by the lysozyme during the agitation-induced formation of fibrils.
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