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Calcium-dependent activation and autolysis of Arabidopsis metacaspase 2d.

J Biol Chem. 2011 Mar 25;286(12):10027-40. Epub 2011 Jan 05
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摘要


Metacaspases (MCPs) are members of a new family of cysteine proteases found in plants, fungi, and protozoa that are structurally related to metazoan caspases. Recent studies showed that plant MCPs are arginine/lysine-specific cysteine proteases with caspase-like processing activities in vitro and in vivo, and some of the plant type II MCPs exhibit Ca(2+) dependence for their endopeptidase activity in vitro. However, the mechanisms and biological relevance of Ca(2+) dependence and self-processing of plant MCPs remains unclear. Here we show that recombinant AtMCP2d, the most abundantly expressed member of Arabidopsis type II MCPs at the transcriptional level, exhibits a strict Ca(2+) dependence for its catalytic activation that is apparently mediated by intramolecular self-cleavage mechanism. However, rapid inactivation of AtMCP2d activity concomitant with Ca(2+)-induced self-processing at multiple internal sites was observed. Because active AtMCP2d can cleave its inactive form, intermolecular cleavage (autolysis) of AtMCP2d could also occur under our assay conditions. Ca(2+)-induced self-processing of recombinant AtMCP2d was found to correlate with the sequential appearance of at least six intermediates, including self-cleaved forms, during the proenzyme purification process. Six of these peptides were characterized, and the cleavage sites were mapped through N-terminal protein sequencing. Mutation analysis of AtMCP2d revealed that cleavage after Lys-225, which is a highly conserved residue among the six Arabidopsis type II MCPs, is critical for the catalytic activation by Ca(2+), and we demonstrate that this residue is essential for AtMCP2d activation of H(2)O(2)-induced cell death in yeast. Together, our results provide clues to understand the mode of regulation for this class of proteases.

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