Purification and Properties of Yeast Proteases Secreted by Wickerhamomyces anomalus 227 and Metschnikovia pulcherrima 446 during Growth in a White Grape Juice
2016
Martina Schlander | Ute Distler | Stefan Tenzer | Eckhard Thines | Harald Claus
Aspartic proteases are of significant importance for medicine and biotechnology. In spite of sufficient evidence that many non-Saccharomyces yeasts produce extracellular proteases, previous research has focused on the enzymes of Candida species because of their role as virulence factors. Nowadays, there is also increasing interest for their applications in industrial processes, mainly because of their activities at low pH values. Here, we report the features of new acid proteases isolated from wine-relevant yeasts Metschnikovia pulcherrima and Wickerhamomyces anomalus. To our knowledge, this is the first detailed description of such an enzyme derived from strains of W. anomalus. Deviating to most former studies, we could demonstrate that the yeasts produce these enzymes in a natural substrate (grape juice) during the active growth phase. The enzymes were purified from concentrated grape juice by preparative isoelectric focusing. Biochemical data (maximum activity at ≈ pH 3.0, inhibition by pepstatin A) classify them as aspartic proteases. For W. anomalus 227, this assumption was confirmed by the protein sequence of WaAPR1 determined by LC-MS/MS. The sequence revealed a signal peptide for secretion, as well as a peptidase A1 domain with two aspartate residues in the active site. The enzyme has a calculated molecular mass of 47 kDa and an isolelectric point of 4.11.
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