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  4. Identification of novel secreted proteases during extracellular proteolysis by dermatophytes at acidic pH

Identification of novel secreted proteases during extracellular proteolysis by dermatophytes at acidic pH

Author(s)
Sriranganadane, D.
Waridel, P.
Salamin, K.
Feuermann, M.
Mignon, B.
Staib, P.
Neuhaus, Jean-Marc  
Laboratoire de biologie moléculaire et cellulaire  
Quadroni, M.
Monod, M.
Date issued
2011
In
Proteomics
Vol
22
No
11
From page
4422
To page
33
Subjects
Arthrodermataceae/*enzymology/physiology Culture Media/chemistry/metabolism Electrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gel Extracellular Space Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Mass Spectrometry Microsporum/*enzymology/physiology Pepstatins Peptide Hydrolases/*chemistry/metabolism/secretion Peptide Mapping Proteolysis Soybean Proteins
Abstract
The dermatophytes are a group of closely related fungi which are responsible for the great majority of superficial mycoses in humans and animals. Among various potential virulence factors, their secreted proteolytic activity attracts a lot of attention. Most dermatophyte-secreted proteases which have so far been isolated in vitro are neutral or alkaline enzymes. However, inspection of the recently decoded dermatophyte genomes revealed many other hypothetical secreted proteases, in particular acidic proteases similar to those characterized in Aspergillus spp. The validation of such genome predictions instigated the present study on two dermatophyte species, Microsporum canis and Arthroderma benhamiae. Both fungi were found to grow well in a protein medium at acidic pH, accompanied by extracellular proteolysis. Shotgun MS analysis of secreted protein revealed fundamentally different protease profiles during fungal growth in acidic versus neutral pH conditions. Most notably, novel dermatophyte-secreted proteases were identified at acidic pH such as pepsins, sedolisins and acidic carboxypeptidases. Therefore, our results not only support genome predictions, but demonstrate for the first time the secretion of acidic proteases by dermatophytes. Our findings also suggest the existence of different pathways of protein degradation into amino acids and short peptides in these highly specialized pathogenic fungi.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/55173
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