Steinernema carpocapsae is a parasitic nematode that is high virulent to insects. The parasitic juvenile reaches the insect haemocoelium by passing through mid-gut barriers and develops there. During invasion, the nematode was predicted to express a large set of proteases, including metalloproteases, one of which was sequenced and expressed in this work. A 1583-nucleotide cDNA encoding a putative metalloprotease containing a 28-aa signal peptide, a 79-aa propeptide and a 311-aa mature protease with a predicted molecular mass of 35.2 kDa and a theoretical pI of 5.9 was cloned from the parasitic stage of the nematode. Sequence analyses predicted signature sequences of the astacin metalloprotease family, an astacin domain, a zinc-binding motif and a methionine turn motif; therefore, this protein was identified as an astacin and designated as Sc-AST. The astacin domain of Sc-AST has an amino acid sequence homology of 46% to prototypical astacin from Astacus astacus and 82% to Caenorhabditis elegans NAS-8. Like NAS-8 of C. elegans, Sc-AST has a C-terminal ShK toxin domain. Recombinant Sc-AST was produced in an Escherichia coli system and was purified by affinity chromatography. Maldi-MS/MS analysis of purified recombinant protein matched the Sc-AST sequence with a significance score of 499. Sc-AST was produced in the correct folding conformation, showed activities against gelatin and azocasein substrates and was inhibited by divalent metal-chelating agents. Sc-AST presented an optimum pH of 7.5 and temperature of 37°C and K(m), V(max) and k(cat) values of 1.86 mM, 0.281 μM/min and 27.9 s(-1), respectively. Expression analyses indicated that Sc-AST is up-regulated in the parasitic stage and is strongly induced in vitro by insect tissues, thus suggesting that it plays a role in the parasitic process.
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