Another family of signal aspartic endopeptidases was found in bacteria.
Bacteria produce a number of protein
precursors that undergo
post-translational methylation and
proteolysis prior to
secretion as active proteins. Type IV prepilin leader peptidases are
enzymes that mediate this type of
post-translational modification. Type IV pilin is a protein found on the surface of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
Neisseria gonorrhoeae and other Gram-negative pathogens. Pilin
subunits attach the infecting
organism to the surface of host
epithelial cells. They are synthesised as prepilin subunits, which differ from mature pilin by virtue of containing a 6-8
residue leader peptide consisting of charged
amino acids. Mature type IV pilins also contain a
methylated N-terminal
phenylalanine residue. The bifunctional enzyme prepilin peptidase (PilD) from
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a key determinant in both type-IV
pilus biogenesis and
extracellular protein secretion, in its roles as a leader peptidase and
methyl transferase (MTase). It is responsible for endopeptidic
cleavage of the unique leader
peptides that characterise type-IV pilin precursors, as well as
proteins with
homologous leader sequences that are essential components of the general secretion pathway found in a variety of Gram-negative
pathogens. Following removal of the leader peptides, the same enzyme is responsible for the second
posttranslational modification that characterises the type-IV pilins and their homologues, namely N-methylation of the newly exposed N-terminal
amino acid residue. ==See also==