Abstract
Annual Review of Biochemistry
Vol. 69:
447-496
(Volume publication date July 2000)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.biochem.69.1.447)
PROTEIN SPLICING AND RELATED FORMS OF PROTEIN AUTOPROCESSING Henry PaulusBoston Biomedical Research Institute, 64 Grove Street, Watertown, Massachusetts 02472; Harvard Medical School; e-mail: paulus@bbri.org ▪ Abstract Protein splicing is a form of posttranslational processing that consists of the excision of an intervening polypeptide sequence, the intein, from a protein, accompanied by the concomitant joining of the flanking polypeptide sequences, the exteins, by a peptide bond. It requires neither cofactors nor auxiliary enzymes and involves a series of four intramolecular reactions, the first three of which occur at a single catalytic center of the intein. Protein splicing can be modulated by mutation and converted to highly specific self-cleavage and protein ligation reactions that are useful protein engineering tools. Some of the reactions characteristic of protein splicing also occur in other forms of protein autoprocessing, ranging from peptide bond cleavage to conjugation with nonprotein moieties. These mechanistic similarities may be the result of convergent evolution, but in at least one case—hedgehog protein autoprocessing—there is definitely a close evolutionary relationship to protein splicing. Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Modulation of intein activity by its neighboring extein substrates Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106(27):11005-11010 (2009) Traceless protein splicing utilizing evolved split inteins Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106(27):10999-11004 (2009) NMR resonance assignment of DnaE intein from Nostoc punctiforme Biomolecular NMR Assignments 3(1):41-43 (2009) Expression of antibodies using single-open reading frame vector design and polyprotein processing from mammalian cells Biotechnology Progress 25(3):735-744 (2009) Fractured genes: a novel genomic arrangement involving new split inteins and a new homing endonuclease family Nucleic Acids Research 37(8):2560-2573 (2009)
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