Issue 11, 2015

Applications of the class II lanthipeptide protease LicP for sequence-specific, traceless peptide bond cleavage

Abstract

The final step of lanthipeptide biosynthesis involves the removal of leader peptides by dedicated proteases. In vitro characterization of LicP, a class II LanP protease involved in the biosynthesis of the lantibiotic lichenicidin, revealed a self-cleavage step that removes 100 amino acids from the N-terminus. The 2.35 Å resolution crystal structure provides insights into the active site geometry and substrate specificity, and unveiled an unusual calcium-independent maturation mechanism of a subtilisin family member. LicP processes LicA2 peptides with or without post-translational modifications, but dehydrated and cyclized LicA2 is favored. Investigation of its substrate specificity demonstrated that LicP can serve as an efficient sequence-specific traceless protease and may have great utility in basic research and biotechnology. Encouraged by these findings for LicP, we identified 13 other class II LanPs, ten of which were previously unknown, and suggest that these proteins may serve as a pool of proteases with diverse recognition sequences for general traceless tag removal applications, expanding the current toolbox of proteases.

Graphical abstract: Applications of the class II lanthipeptide protease LicP for sequence-specific, traceless peptide bond cleavage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
27 Jun 2015
Accepted
30 Aug 2015
First published
02 Sep 2015
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2015,6, 6270-6279

Applications of the class II lanthipeptide protease LicP for sequence-specific, traceless peptide bond cleavage

W. Tang, S. Dong, L. M. Repka, C. He, S. K. Nair and W. A. van der Donk, Chem. Sci., 2015, 6, 6270 DOI: 10.1039/C5SC02329G

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