4 research outputs found
389. Muscular Dystrophy Genes and the Early Metazoan Transition from Dynein- to Myosin-Powered Locomotion
Proteolytic processing of certain CaaX motifs can occur in the absence of the Rce1p and Ste24p CaaX proteases
Topology of the Yeast Ras Converting Enzyme As Inferred from Cysteine Accessibility Studies
The Ras converting enzyme (Rce1p)
is an endoprotease that is involved
in the post-translational processing of the Ras GTPases and other
isoprenylated proteins. Its role in Ras biosynthesis marks Rce1p as
an anticancer target. By assessing the chemical accessibility of cysteine
residues substituted throughout the <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i> Rce1p sequence, we have determined that yeast Rce1p has eight segments
that are protected from chemical modification. Notably, the three
residues that are essential for yeast Rce1p function (E156, H194,
and H248) are all chemically inaccessible and associated with separate
protected segments. By specifically assessing the chemical reactivity
and glycosylation potential of the NH<sub>2</sub> and COOH termini
of Rce1p, we further demonstrate that Rce1p has an odd number of transmembrane
spans. Substantial evidence that the most NH<sub>2</sub>-terminal
segment functions as a transmembrane segment with the extreme NH<sub>2</sub> terminus projecting into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen
is presented. Because each of the remaining seven segments is too
short to contain two spans and is flanked by chemically reactive positions,
we infer that these segments are not transmembrane segments but rather
represent compact structural features and/or hydrophobic loops that
penetrate but do not fully span the bilayer (i.e., re-entrant helices).
We thus propose a topological model in which yeast Rce1p contains
a single transmembrane helix localized at its extreme NH<sub>2</sub> terminus and one or more re-entrant helices and/or compact structural
domains that populate the cytosolic face of the ER membrane. Lastly,
we demonstrate that the natural cysteine residues of Rce1p are chemically
inaccessible and fully dispensable for <i>in vivo</i> enzyme
activity, formally eliminating the possibility of a cysteine-based
enzymatic mechanism for this protease
