Protein Domain : IPR012103

Type:  Family Name:  Peptidase S8A, bacillopeptidase F
Description:  Proteolytic enzymes that exploit serine in their catalytic activity are ubiquitous, being found in viruses, bacteria and eukaryotes []. They include a wide range of peptidase activity, including exopeptidase, endopeptidase, oligopeptidase and omega-peptidase activity. Many families of serine protease have been identified, these being grouped into clans on the basis of structural similarity and other functional evidence []. Structures are known for members of the clans and the structures indicate that some appear to be totally unrelated, suggesting different evolutionary origins for the serine peptidases [].Not withstanding their different evolutionary origins, there are similarities in the reaction mechanisms of several peptidases. Chymotrypsin, subtilisin and carboxypeptidase C have a catalytic triad of serine, aspartate and histidine in common: serine acts as a nucleophile, aspartate as an electrophile, and histidine as a base []. The geometric orientations of the catalytic residues are similar between families, despite different protein folds []. The linear arrangements of the catalytic residues commonly reflect clan relationships. For example the catalytic triad in the chymotrypsin clan (PA) is ordered HDS, but is ordered DHS in the subtilisin clan (SB) and SDH in the carboxypeptidase clan (SC) [, ].Limited proteolysis of most large protein precursors is carried out in vivo by the subtilisin-like pro-protein convertases. Many important biological processes such as peptide hormone synthesis, viral protein processing and receptor maturation involve proteolytic processing by these enzymes []. The subtilisin-serine protease (SRSP) family hormone and pro-protein convertases (furin, PC1/3, PC2, PC4, PACE4, PC5/6, and PC7/7/LPC) act within the secretory pathway to cleave polypeptide precursors at specific basic sites, generating their biologically active forms. Serum proteins, pro-hormones, receptors, zymogens, viral surface glycoproteins, bacterial toxins, amongst others, are activated by this route []. The SRSPs share the same domain structure, including a signal peptide, the pro-peptide, the catalytic domain, the P/middle or homo B domain, and the C terminus.This group represents bacillopeptidase F (Bpr) an extracellular serine protease that is expressed at the beginning of the stationary phase []. Members of this family belong to MEROPS peptidase family S8, subfamily S8A (subtilisin, clan SB). Bpr is required for the processing and activation of the extracellular metalloprotease (Mpr, glutamyl endopeptidase ) in Bacillus subtilis[]. Short Name:  Pept_S8A_Bpr

0 Child Features

4 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR010259 Domain Peptidase S8 propeptide/proteinase inhibitor I9
IPR000209 Domain Peptidase S8/S53 domain
IPR014766 Domain Carboxypeptidase, regulatory domain
IPR022398 Active_site Peptidase S8, subtilisin, His-active site

1 Cross References

Identifier
PIRSF015477

0 Found In

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR015500 Family Peptidase S8, subtilisin-related

0 Proteins

6 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            8439290
            7845208
            2108961
            15375126
            10656993
            9572109