Current Microbiology, Vol.70, No.1, 19-26, 2015
Current Functional Metagenomic Approaches Only Expand the Existing Protease Sequence Space, but does not Presently Add Any Novelty to it
Proteases are a fundamental function in many organisms and thus many ecosystems and yet they are rarely obtained in functional metagenomic screens. Here, we have isolated an active protease gene (M1-2; 613 amino acids) which resided in a 38.4 kb fosmid clone that showed a classical protease-positive phenotype. It was classified as a zinc-dependent metalloprotease, with the closest annotated sequence as a neutral protease from Collimonas fungivorans (62 % similarity and 72 % homology). Further characterisation showed that its optimum temperature and pH were 42 A degrees C and 8.0, respectively. Activity was inhibited by EDTA, but inhibition started to be reversed by excess Zn2+. A putative signal peptide was identified bioinformatically and this may be why this protease was successfully isolated using a functional metagenomic screen. Bioinformatic analysis shows that this does not represent a novel protease, but simply expands the current sequence space of known proteases.