Jones Stephen K, Clarke Starlynn C, Craik Charles S, Bennett Richard J
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
mBio. 2015 Nov 24;6(6):e01604-15. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01604-15.
Peptide-based pheromones are used throughout the fungal kingdom for coordinating sexual responses between mating partners. Here, we address the properties and function of Bar1, an aspartyl protease that acts as a "barrier" and antagonist to pheromone signaling in multiple species. Candida albicans Bar1 was purified and shown to exhibit preferential cleavage of native α pheromone over pheromones from related fungal species. This result establishes that protease substrate specificity coevolved along with changes in its pheromone target. Pheromone cleavage by Bar1 occurred between residues Thr-5 and Asn-6 in the middle of the tridecapeptide sequence. Surprisingly, proteolytic activity was independent of the amino acid residues present at the scissile bond and instead relied on residues at the C terminus of α pheromone. Unlike most aspartyl proteases, Bar1 also exhibited a near-neutral pH optimum and was resistant to the class-wide inhibitor pepstatin A. In addition, genetic analysis was performed on C. albicans BAR1 and demonstrated that the protease not only regulates endogenous pheromone signaling but also can limit interspecies pheromone signaling. We discuss these findings and propose that the unusual substrate specificity of Bar1 is a consequence of its coevolution with the α pheromone receptor Ste2 for their shared peptide target.
Pheromones are important for intraspecies communication across the tree of life. In the fungal kingdom, extracellular proteases play a key role in antagonizing pheromone signaling in multiple species. This study examines the properties and function of Candida albicans Bar1, an aspartyl protease that cleaves and thereby inactivates α pheromone. We demonstrate that Bar1 plays important roles in regulating both intra- and interspecies pheromone signaling. The fungal protease shows preferential activity on the endogenous pheromone, but, surprisingly, cleavage activity is dependent on amino acid residues distal to the scissile bond. We propose that the unusual substrate specificity of Bar1 is a direct result of coevolution with Ste2, the receptor for α pheromone, for recognition of the same peptide target. The novel specificity of Bar1 reveals the complex forces shaping the evolution of mating pathways in fungi and uncovers a protease with potentially important applications in the biotechnology industry.
基于肽的信息素在整个真菌界用于协调交配伙伴之间的性反应。在此,我们研究了天冬氨酸蛋白酶Bar1的特性和功能,它在多个物种中作为信息素信号传导的“屏障”和拮抗剂。白色念珠菌的Bar1被纯化,并显示出对天然α信息素的切割优先于来自相关真菌物种的信息素。这一结果表明蛋白酶底物特异性与其信息素靶标的变化共同进化。Bar1对信息素的切割发生在十三肽序列中间的苏氨酸-5和天冬酰胺-6残基之间。令人惊讶的是,蛋白水解活性不依赖于裂解键处的氨基酸残基,而是依赖于α信息素C末端的残基。与大多数天冬氨酸蛋白酶不同,Bar1还表现出接近中性的最适pH值,并且对全类抑制剂胃蛋白酶抑制剂A具有抗性。此外,对白色念珠菌BAR1进行了遗传分析,结果表明该蛋白酶不仅调节内源性信息素信号传导,还能限制种间信息素信号传导。我们讨论了这些发现,并提出Bar1不寻常的底物特异性是其与α信息素受体Ste2为共享肽靶标共同进化的结果。
信息素对于生命之树上的种内通讯很重要。在真菌界,细胞外蛋白酶在拮抗多个物种的信息素信号传导中起关键作用。本研究考察了白色念珠菌Bar1的特性和功能,它是一种切割并使α信息素失活的天冬氨酸蛋白酶。我们证明Bar1在调节种内和种间信息素信号传导中都起重要作用。这种真菌蛋白酶对内源性信息素表现出优先活性,但令人惊讶的是,切割活性依赖于裂解键远端的氨基酸残基。我们提出Bar1不寻常的底物特异性是与α信息素受体Ste2共同进化以识别相同肽靶标的直接结果。Bar1的新特异性揭示了塑造真菌交配途径进化的复杂力量,并发现了一种在生物技术产业中可能具有重要应用潜力的蛋白酶。