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(Received for publication, November 28, 1995, and in revised form, April 3, 1996)
From the Department of Biology, Sinsheimer Labs, University of
California, Santa Cruz, California 95064
We have isolated a gene from Neurospora
crassa that appears to encode a pepstatin-sensitive protease
found both in membranes and in soluble contents of vacuoles. The gene
contains two introns and encodes a 396-residue protein with a molecular
mass of 42,900 Da. Because of the similarity of the protein to
proteinase A in Saccharomyces cerevisiae the gene has been
named pep-4.
Strains with mutations in the pep-4 gene were generated
in vivo by the gene RIPing procedure described by Selker
and Garrett (Selker, E. U., and Garrett, P. W. (1988) Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 85, 6870-6874). The mutant strains were
deficient in pepstatin-sensitive protease activity and did not appear
to produce a major 42-kDa polypeptide in the vacuole. The mutant
strains grew at the same rate as the wild type and had no other
observable phenotype. When compared with inactivation of the
PEP4 gene of S. cerevisiae, inactivation of the
pep-4 gene in N. crassa produced a phenotype
that was different in several ways. In N. crassa the mutant
strains did not exhibit reduced sporulation or reduced viability after
nitrogen starvation, and they had elevated levels of proteinase B and
carboxypeptidase activities. The pep-4 gene appears to
encode the N. crassa, homolog of proteinase A, but the
maturation of vacuolar hydrolases appeared to be less dependent on this
protease than has been observed in S. cerevisiae.
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