Studies on Substrate Recognition by the Budding Yeast Separase

Sister chromatid cohesion is resolved at anaphase onset when separase, a site-specific protease, cleaves the Scc1 subunit of the chromosomal cohesin complex that is responsible for holding sister chromatids together. This mechanism to initiate anaphase is conserved in eukaryotes from budding yeast t...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-01, Vol.279 (2), p.1191-1196
Hauptverfasser: Sullivan, Matt, Hornig, Nadine C.D., Porstmann, Thomas, Uhlmann, Frank
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container_issue 2
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container_title The Journal of biological chemistry
container_volume 279
creator Sullivan, Matt
Hornig, Nadine C.D.
Porstmann, Thomas
Uhlmann, Frank
description Sister chromatid cohesion is resolved at anaphase onset when separase, a site-specific protease, cleaves the Scc1 subunit of the chromosomal cohesin complex that is responsible for holding sister chromatids together. This mechanism to initiate anaphase is conserved in eukaryotes from budding yeast to man. Budding yeast separase recognizes and cleaves two conserved peptide motifs within Scc1. In addition, separase cleaves a similar motif in the kinetochore and spindle protein Slk19. Separase may cleave further substrate proteins to orchestrate multiple cellular events that take place during anaphase. To investigate substrate recognition by budding yeast separase we analyzed the sequence requirements at one of the Scc1 cleavage site motifs by systematic mutagenesis. We derived a cleavage site consensus motif (not(FKRWY))(ACFHILMPVWY)(DE)X(AGSV)R/X. This motif is found in 1,139 of 5,889 predicted yeast proteins. We analyzed 28 candidate proteins containing this motif as well as 35 proteins that contain a core (DE)XXR motif. We could so far not confirm new separase substrates, but we have uncovered other forms of mitotic regulation of some of the proteins. We studied whether determinants other than the cleavage site motif mediate separase-substrate interaction. When the separase active site was occupied with a peptide inhibitor covering the cleavage site motif, separase still efficiently interacted with its substrate Scc1. This suggests that separase recognizes both a cleavage site consensus sequence as well as features outside the cleavage site.
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subjects Amino Acid Motifs
Amino Acid Sequence
Anaphase
Binding Sites
Cell Cycle Proteins - chemistry
Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone
Endopeptidases - chemistry
Kinetochores - metabolism
Microtubule-Associated Proteins - chemistry
Mitosis
Molecular Sequence Data
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
Mutation
Nuclear Proteins
Phosphoproteins
Protein Binding
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins - chemistry
Saccharomycetales - enzymology
Scc1 protein
Separase
Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Substrate Specificity
title Studies on Substrate Recognition by the Budding Yeast Separase
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