Primary structure and expression of a gamete lytic enzyme in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: similarity of functional domains to matrix metalloproteases.

Abstract
A gamete lytic enzyme (GLE) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a zinc metalloprotease and mediates digestion of the cell walls of the two mating-type gametes during mating as a necessary prelude to cell fusion. The nucleotide sequence analysis of a cDNA revealed that GLE is synthesized in a preproenzyme form, a 638-amino acid polypeptide (Mr, 69,824) with a 28-amino acid signal peptide, a 155-amino acid propolypeptide, and a 455-amino acid mature polypeptide (Mr, 49,633). A potential site for autocatalytic activation was contained within the propolypeptide and a zinc binding site found within the mature polypeptide; both sites were highly homologous to those in mammalian collagenase. A putative calcium binding site was present in the near C-terminal region of the mature GLE. Both propolypeptide and mature polypeptide had potential sites for asparagine-linked glycosylation, and the Arg-(Pro)3 and Arg-(Pro)2 motifs, which are known to exist in hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins of the Chlamydomonas cell wall. Northern blot analysis revealed that steady-state levels of the 2.4-kilobase GLE mRNA increased during growth and mitotic cell division in the vegetative cell cycle and also increased markedly during gametogenesis under nitrogen-starved conditions.