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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

BLH1 codes for a yeast thiol aminopeptidase, the equivalent of mammalian bleomycin hydrolase.

We have cloned the BLH1 gene of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae coding for a peptidase with significant homology to rabbit bleomycin hydrolase. Bleomycin is a glycopeptide antibiotic used for the treatment of human cancers. The antitumor activity of the drug is limited by its metabolic inactivation caused by bleomycin hydrolase, a member of the cysteine protease family. The open reading frame of BLH1 consists of 1,449 base pairs encoding a 55.4-kDa protein consistent with the molecular mass found in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The consensus sequence within the active site region of cysteine proteases is conserved in the yeast enzyme. Biochemical studies on the purified enzyme confirm its classification as a thiol protease. The nonvacuolar enzyme has a molecular mass of 220 kDa, suggesting a homotetrameric structure. It exhibits an aminopeptidase activity with broad substrate specificity. Biochemical and genetic linkage data give evidence that the BLH1 and the LAP3 (Trumbly, R. J., and Bradley, G. (1983) J. Bacteriol. 156, 36-48) encoded aminopeptidases are identical. Deletion of the BLH1 gene is not lethal under normal growth conditions. However, blh1 mutants show hypersensitivity to bleomycin, indicating that bleomycin hydrolase is able to inactivate bleomycin in vivo and to protect cells from bleomycin-induced toxicity.[1]

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