Cyclic peptides arising by evolutionary parallelism via asparaginyl-endopeptidase-mediated biosynthesis

Joshua S. Mylne, Lai Yue Chan, Aurelie H. Chanson, Norelle L. Daly, Hanno Schaefer, Timothy L. Bailey, Philip Nguyencong, Laura Cascales, David J. Craik

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

122 Scopus citations

Abstract

The cyclic miniprotein Momordica cochinchinensis Trypsin Inhibitor II (MCoTI-II) (34 amino acids) is a potent trypsin inhibitor (TI) and a favored scaffold for drug design. We have cloned the corresponding genes and determined that each precursor protein contains a tandem series of cyclic TIs terminating with the more commonly known, and potentially ancestral, acyclic TI. Expression of the precursor protein in Arabidopsis thaliana showed that production of the cyclic TIs, but not the terminal acyclic TI, depends on asparaginyl endopeptidase (AEP) for maturation. The nature of their repetitive sequences and the almost identical structures of emerging TIs suggest these cyclic peptides evolved by internal gene amplification associated with recruitment of AEP for processing between domain repeats. This is the third example of similar AEP-mediated processing of a class of cyclic peptides from unrelated precursor proteins in phylogenetically distant plant families. This suggests that production of cyclic peptides in angiosperms has evolved in parallel using AEP as a constraining evolutionary channel. We believe this is evolutionary evidence that, in addition to its known roles in proteolysis, AEP is especially suited to performing protein cyclization.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2765-2778
Number of pages14
JournalPlant Cell
Volume24
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2012
Externally publishedYes

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