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© Structural Dynamics Of Macromolecules
The structure of a bacterial analog of the nicotinic receptor (one color per subunit) inserted into the cell membrane (grey and orange). A representation of the volume accessible to ions is shown in yellow.
Publication : PLoS One

Structure of the archaeal pab87 peptidase reveals a novel self-compartmentalizing protease family

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in PLoS One - 05 Mar 2009

Delfosse V, Girard E, Birck C, Delmarcelle M, Delarue M, Poch O, Schultz P, Mayer C

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 19266066

Link to HAL – Click here

Link to DOI – 10.1371/journal.pone.0004712

PLoS One. 2009;4(3):e4712.

Self-compartmentalizing proteases orchestrate protein turnover through an original architecture characterized by a central catalytic chamber. Here we report the first structure of an archaeal member of a new self-compartmentalizing protease family forming a cubic-shaped octamer with D(4) symmetry and referred to as CubicO. We solved the structure of the Pyrococcus abyssi Pab87 protein at 2.2 A resolution using the anomalous signal of the high-phasing-power lanthanide derivative Lu-HPDO3A. A 20 A wide channel runs through this supramolecular assembly of 0.4 MDa, giving access to a 60 A wide central chamber holding the eight active sites. Surprisingly, activity assays revealed that Pab87 degrades specifically d-amino acid containing peptides, which have never been observed in archaea. Genomic context of the Pab87 gene showed that it is surrounded by genes involved in the amino acid/peptide transport or metabolism. We propose that CubicO proteases are involved in the processing of d-peptides from environmental origins.