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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 1999, p. 3001-3007, Vol. 65, No. 7
Department of Biochemistry, Swiss Dairy
Research Institute, 3097 Liebefeld-Bern, Switzerland
Received 20 October 1998/Accepted 9 April 1999
The general aminopeptidase PepN from Streptococcus
thermophilus A was purified to protein homogeneity by
hydroxyapatite, anion-exchange, and gel filtration chromatographies.
The PepN enzyme was estimated to be a monomer of 95 kDa, with maximal
activity on N-Lys-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin at pH 7 and
37°C. It was strongly inhibited by metal chelating agents, suggesting
that it is a metallopeptidase. The activity was greatly restored by the
bivalent cations Co2+, Zn2+, and
Mn2+. Except for proline, glycine, and acidic amino acid
residues, PepN has a broad specificity on the N-terminal
amino acid of small peptides, but no significant endopeptidase activity
has been detected. The N-terminal and short internal amino
acid sequences of purified PepN were determined. By using synthetic
primers and a battery of PCR techniques, the pepN gene was
amplified, subcloned, and further sequenced, revealing an open reading
frame of 2,541 nucleotides encoding a protein of 847 amino acids with a
molecular weight of 96,252. Amino acid sequence analysis of the
pepN gene translation product shows high homology with
other PepN enzymes from lactic acid bacteria and exhibits the signature
sequence of the zinc metallopeptidase family. The pepN gene
was cloned in a T7 promoter-based expression plasmid and the 452-fold
overproduced PepN enzyme was purified to homogeneity from the
periplasmic extract of the host Escherichia coli strain.
The overproduced enzyme showed the same catalytic characteristics as
the wild-type enzyme.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Purification, Characterization, Gene Cloning,
Sequencing, and Overexpression of Aminopeptidase N from
Streptococcus thermophilus A
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry, Swiss Dairy Research Institute, Schwarzenburgstrasse 161, 3097 Liebefeld-Bern, Switzerland. Phone: 41-31-323-81-52. Fax: 41-31-323-82-27. E-mail:
frederic.chavagnat{at}mbox.fam.admin.ch.
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