Chemistry and the Environment, Chemical Ecology, Short Talk
EV-026

Proteolytic Activity and Substrate Specificity of Lake Geneva

J. Meibom1, N. Wichmann2*, M. Zumstein2*, T. Kohn1*
1Laboratory of Environmental Virology (LEV), School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland, 2Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Heterotrophic microorganisms in lakewater secrete proteases which contribute to the turnover of dissolved organic matter and the degradation of peptidic contaminants. However, little is known about the identities and substrate specificities of these proteases. Using Multiplex Substrate Profiling by Mass Spectrometry (MSP-MS)1, we sought to characterize the global proteolytic fingerprint of the extracellular proteases present in Lake Geneva. We identified preferred enzymatic cleavage next to positively charged and certain non-polar amino acids, while cleavage next to negatively charged residues was disfavored. Specifically, many of the detected cleavage sites were predominantly surrounded by arginine and lysine, consistent with a trypsin-like substrate specificity. This pattern was conserved across seasons and water depths and was shared with two other Swiss lakes. In contrast, we observed variability in the number and types of cleavage sites across samples, suggesting spatial and temporal differences in overall extracellular protease diversity. Our findings expand our understanding of protein stability in lake ecosystems and may be used to predict the fate of peptidic contaminants in the environment.

[1] Anthony J. O’Donoghue et al., Nature Methods, 2012, 9, 1095-1100