Leucine aminopeptidase from Arabidopsis thaliana

Abstract
Leucine aminopeptidases are exopeptidases which are presumably involved in the processing and regular turnover of intracellular proteins; however, their precise function in cellular metabolism remains to be established. Towards this goal, a full-length complementary DNA encoding a plant leucine aminopeptidase was isolated from a cDNA library of Arabidopsis thaliana and sequenced. The nucleotide sequence showed 49.5% identity to the Escherichia coli xerB-encoded leucine aminopeptidase. Sequence analysis revealed that the cDNA encodes a polypeptide of 520 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 54506 Da. The C-terminal part (amino acids 200–520) of the deduced amino acid sequence showed 43.8% sequence identity to the xerB-encoded leucine aminopeptidase and 42.6% sequence identity to the amino acid sequence of bovine lens leucine aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.1). No sequence similarity (not even over short sequence elements) was observed with any other known peptidase or proteinase sequence. The cDNA was expressed as a fusion protein from the lacZ promoter in E. coli. Enzymatic analysis proved that the cloned cDNA encoded an active leucine aminopeptidase. The properties of this enzyme, including metal requirements, inhibitor sensitivity, pH optimum and the remarkable temperature stability, are very similar to those reported for leucine aminopeptidases from other tissues. Amino acids involved in metal and substrate binding in bovine lens aminopeptidase are completely conserved in the plant enzyme as well as in the XerB protein. Our results show that leucine aminopeptidases form a superfamily of highly conserved enzymes, spanning the evolutionary period from the bacteria to animals and higher plants. This is the first aminopeptidase cloned from a plant.