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Title: Secretion processing and activation of Erwinia chrysanthemi proteases. Author: Wandersman C, Delepelaire P, Letoffe S. Journal: Biochimie; 1990; 72(2-3):143-6. PubMed ID: 2116182. Abstract: E chrysanthemi, a phytopathogenic enterobacterium, secretes several enzymes into the medium such as pectinases cellulases and proteases. It also produces 3 distinct and antigenically related extracellular proteases. The proteases secretion pathway seems to be distinct from that of the other extracellular enzymes since pleiotropic mutants impaired in cellulase and pectinase secretion are unimpaired in protease secretion. E chrysanthemi proteases B and C secretion occurs without an N-terminal signal peptide and is dependent upon specific secretion functions which are encoded by genes adjacent to the protease structural genes. This secretion pathway might be analogous to the alpha-hemolysin secretion pathway in E coli. Protection against intracellular proteolytic activity is achieved by 2 distinct mechanisms: the proteases are synthesized as inactive precursors with an N-terminal extension of 15 aminoacids (protease B) and 17 aminoacids (protease C) absent in the mature active extracellular enzymes; an intracellular specific protease inhibitor is produced by some E chrysanthemi strains.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]