Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Georgia, 120 Green Street, Athens, Georgia 30602
2. Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive, Hattiesburg, Mississippi 39406
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The CaaX tetrapeptide motif typically directs three sequential posttranslational modifications, namely, isoprenylation, proteolysis, and carboxyl methylation. In all eukaryotic systems evaluated to date, two CaaX proteases (Rce1 and Ste24/Afc1) have been identified. Although the
Trypanosoma brucei
genome also encodes two putative CaaX proteases, the lack of detectable
T. brucei
Ste24 activity in trypanosome cell extracts has suggested that CaaX proteolytic activity within this organism is solely attributed to
T. brucei
Rce1 (J. R. Gillespie et al., Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 153:115-124. 2007). In this study, we demonstrate that both
T. brucei
Rce1 and
T. brucei
Ste24 are enzymatically active when heterologously expressed in yeast. Using
a
-factor and GTPase reporters, we demonstrate that
T. brucei
Rce1 and
T. brucei
Ste24 possess partially overlapping specificities much like, but not identical to, their fungal and human counterparts. Of interest, a CaaX motif found on a trypanosomal Hsp40 protein was not cleaved by either
T. brucei
CaaX protease when examined in the context of the yeast
a
-factor reporter but was cleaved by both in the context of the Hsp40 protein itself when evaluated using an in vitro radiolabeling assay. We further demonstrate that
T. brucei
Rce1 is sensitive to small molecules previously identified as inhibitors of the yeast and human CaaX proteases and that a subset of these compounds disrupt
T. brucei
Rce1-dependent localization of our GTPase reporter in yeast. Together, our results suggest the conserved presence of two CaaX proteases in trypanosomatids, identify an Hsp40 protein as a substrate of both
T. brucei
CaaX proteases, support the potential use of small molecule CaaX protease inhibitors as tools for cell biological studies on the trafficking of CaaX proteins, and provide evidence that protein context influences
T. brucei
CaaX protease specificity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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