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1.
Class II actins, such as Drosophila and mammalian skeletal muscle actins, have genes that code for a Met-X-Asp NH2 terminus where X is usually cysteine. These actins have an Ac-Asp NH2 terminus so two amino acids must be removed. To determine the nature of this processing, we labeled Drosophila Schneider L-2 cells with [35S]methionine or cysteine, isolated the actin, and analyzed the NH2-terminal actin tryptic peptides and their thermolysin digestion products. After a 4-h labeling period, we detected completed actin polypeptide chains with either an unblocked Asp or an Ac-Asp NH2 terminus. No intermediate with an NH2-terminal Cys or Met could be demonstrated. If, however, Drosophila mRNA was translated in a mRNA-dependent rabbit reticulocyte lysate system, an additional 43-kDa actin intermediate was observed. On the basis of thermolysin digestion studies and experiments using mild acid hydrolysis of a labeled actin NH2-terminal tryptic peptide fragment, we identified this intermediate as having an Ac-Cys-Asp NH2 terminus. In a time-dependent fashion, Ac-Cys was removed generating actin with an exposed NH2-terminal Asp which was subsequently acetylated to produce the mature form of actin. The removal of Met and the acetylation of Cys may occur early in translation while the nascent polypeptide chain is still attached to the ribosome. Subsequent processing occurs following completion of the synthesis of the actin polypeptide. The removal of Ac-Cys from Drosophila actin is thus similar to removal of Ac-Met from the NH2 terminus of class I actins although in the case of the class II actins, it is the second amino acid that is removed as an acetylated species.  相似文献   

2.
Both mammalian nonmuscle and muscle actins possess an AcAsp(Glu)NH2 terminus. The nonmuscle actin genes code for a polypeptide with a Met-Asp NH2 terminus (class I) whereas the muscle actin genes code for a polypeptide with a Met-Cys-Asp NH2 terminus (class II). Two amino acids must be removed for mature muscle actin synthesis, whereas only the Met must be removed for nonmuscle actin synthesis. We wished to know whether a nonmuscle cell which normally does not synthesize a class I actin can correctly process a muscle actin with its extra NH2-terminal amino acid in vivo. To answer this question we have used L/LK165 cells, a mouse L-cell transfected with a human cardiac muscle actin gene. When these cells were labeled overnight with [35S]Cys, an actin with an NH2-terminal tryptic peptide corresponding to that of mature cardiac muscle actin was detected. When the cells were pulse-labeled for 20 min, a new actin intermediate containing an AcCys-Asp amino terminus was observed which then disappeared with time. Furthermore, the muscle actin was processed as fast if not faster than the nonmuscle actin in these cells. This actin intermediate was also seen in chick myotube cultures. Our results show that the ability to correctly process muscle specific actins is not tissue specific. Furthermore, these results confirm a processing pathway for class II actins proposed by us earlier on the basis of experiments with a cell-free translation system.  相似文献   

3.
In previous studies, we have identified possible biosynthetic precursors of rat insulin-like growth factor II (rIGF-II) using specific immunoprecipitation, approximately 22-kDa prepro-rIGF-II and 20-kDa pro-rIGF-II. We now provide chemical evidence that amino acid sequences corresponding to mature 7484-dalton rIGF-II are present at the NH2 terminus of the putative approximately 20-kDa pro-rIGF-II. BRL-3A cultures have been labeled individually with several radioactive amino acid precursors, the cells have been lysed, and the lysates have been immunoprecipitated with antiserum to rIGF-II. Following electrophoresis of the immunoprecipitated proteins, labeled approximately 20-kDa pro-rIGF-II was eluted from the gels and subjected to automated radiosequence analysis. Discrete peaks of radioactivity were observed in 12 of the first 30 cycles of Edman degradation. The deduced partial amino acid sequence was identical at each position with that of mature 7484-dalton rIGF-II. These results directly demonstrate that mature rIGF-II sequences are present in the approximately 20-kDa protein, as required if the approximately 20-kDa protein were pro-rIGF-II. In addition, they localize the 7484-dalton rIGF-II to the NH2 terminus of the precursor molecule. A second NH2-terminal sequence differing only in the absence of the NH2-terminal residue, alanine, also was present in an approximately equal amount. Similar NH2-terminal heterogeneity has been reported for 7484-dalton rIGF-II and most likely reflects ambiguity in the cleavage sites for the signal peptidase.  相似文献   

4.
Unusual metabolism of the yeast actin amino terminus   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
In this paper we have examined the post-translational modifications of the NH2 terminus of actin from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Like actins examined previously, this actin contains an acetylated NH2 terminus. Actins in other organisms undergo a unique post-translational processing event in which the initial amino acid(s) are removed by an actin-specific processing enzyme in an acetylation-dependent reaction. This is defined as actin processing. In yeast, actin retains its initiator Met in vivo and is thus not processed even though a rat liver actin processing enzyme can process yeast actin in vitro. This lack of actin processing appears to be a general property of fungi, as the actin from three other species, Aspergillus nidulans, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and Candida albicans are not NH2 terminally processed either. Yeast actin is a class I actin; its initiator Met directly precedes an acidic residue. We converted yeast actin to a class II species by inserting a Cys codon between the Met-1 and Asp-2 codons. In normal class II actins the Cys residue is removed as acetyl-Cys during processing. Neither the mutant actin nor chick beta-actin (a class I actin) are processed when expressed in yeast. S. cerevisiae thus appears to be also incapable of processing exogenous actins. Further study of the mutant actin containing a Cys at position 2 shows that 30-40% of this actin is stably unacetylated. This unacetylated actin does not have a shorter half-life than the acetylated form. From these studies we conclude that 1) NH2-terminal actin-specific processing is not required for actin function in yeast and three other fungi, 2) yeast are apparently incapable of processing any type of actin precursor, and 3) the stability of a yeast pseudo-class II actin is not affected by the acetylation state of the NH2 terminus.  相似文献   

5.
Alternate pathways for removal of the class II actin initiator methionine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Class II actin genes usually specify a polypeptide with a Met-Cys-Asp NH2 terminus, whereas the actin itself begins with an acetyl (Ac)-Asp(Glu). Previous studies with Drosophila actin showed that the first detectable intermediate is one with an Ac-Cys NH2 terminus which is subsequently cleaved in a novel reaction to expose the Asp. The initiator Met was probably removed early in translation as a free amino acid. To determine whether the class II actin initiating Met could also be removed in an acetylation-dependent manner, we translated Drosophila mRNA in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate in which protein acetylation was inhibited. After 60 min, three actin intermediates were detected, NH2-Met-Cys-Asp-actin, Ac-Met-Cys-Asp-actin, and NH2-Cys-Asp-actin. During processing in the presence of acetyl-CoA, three additional species were observed with NH2-terminal Ac-Cys-Asp, NH2-Asp, and Ac-Asp segments. In a time- and acetyl-CoA-dependent fashion, Met-Cys-Asp-actin was processed to the mature actin, presumably through an Ac-Met-Cys-Asp intermediate. Thus, two different pathways for removal of the initiator Met of class II actins, acetylation-dependent and independent, are possible. Since no class II actin intermediate containing the initiator Met is seen in vivo, although in class I actins this intermediate is observed, the most probable pathway for class II actins in vivo is the cotranslational removal of the initiator Met as a free amino acid.  相似文献   

6.
The envelope proteins of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) are synthesized from a subgenomic 24S mRNA as a 75,000-dalton glycosylated precursor polyprotein which is eventually processed to the mature glycoproteins gp52 and gp36. In vivo synthesis of this env precursor in the presence of the core glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin yielded a precursor of approximately 61,000 daltons (P61env). However, a 67,000-dalton protein (P67env) was obtained from cell-free translation with the MMTV 24S mRNA as the template. To determine whether the portion of the protein cleaved from P67env to give P61env was removed from the NH2-terminal end of P67env and as such would represent a leader sequence, the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of the terminal peptide gp52 was determined. Glutamic acid, and not methionine, was found to be the amino-terminal residue of gp52, indicating that the cleaved portion was derived from the NH2-terminal end of P67env. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequences of gp52's from endogenous and exogenous C3H MMTVs were determined though 46 residues and found to be identical. However, amino acid composition and type-specific gp52 radioimmunoassays from MMTVs grown in heterologous cells indicated primary structure differences between gp52's of the two viruses. The nucleic acid sequence of cloned MMTV DNA fragments (J. Majors and H. E. Varmus, personal communication) in conjunction with the NH2-terminal sequence of gp52 allowed localization of the env gene in the MMTV genome. Nucleotides coding for the NH2 terminus of gp52 begin approximately 0.8 kilobase to the 3' side of the single EcoRI cleavage site. Localization of the env gene at that point agrees with the proposed gene order -gag-pol-env- and also allows sufficient coding potential for the glycoprotein precursor without extending into the long terminal repeat.  相似文献   

7.
A yeast gene for a methionine aminopeptidase, one of the central enzymes in protein synthesis, was cloned and sequenced. The DNA sequence encodes a precursor protein containing 387 amino acid residues. The mature protein, whose NH2-terminal sequence was confirmed by Edman degradation, consists of 377 amino acids. The function of the 10-residue sequence at the NH2 terminus, containing 1 serine and 6 threonine residues, remains to be established. In contrast to the structure of the prokaryotic enzyme, the yeast methionine aminopeptidase consists of two functional domains: a unique NH2-terminal domain containing two motifs resembling zinc fingers, which may allow the protein to interact with ribosomes, and a catalytic COOH-terminal domain resembling other prokaryotic methionine aminopeptidases. Furthermore, unlike the case for the prokaryotic gene, the deletion of the yeast MAP1 gene is not lethal, suggesting for the first time that alternative NH2-terminal processing pathway(s) exist for cleaving methionine from nascent polypeptide chains in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

8.
Amino acid sequence of Acanthamoeba actin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
By amino acid sequence studies, only one form of cytoplasmic actin was detected in Acanthamoeba castellanii. Its amino acid sequence is very similar to the sequences of Dictyostelium and Physarum actins, from which Acanthamoeba actin differs in only nine and seven residues, respectively, including the deletion of the first residue. Acanthamoeba actin is unique in containing a blocked NH2-terminal neutral amino acid (glycine), while all other actins sequenced thus far have a blocked acidic amino acid (aspartic or glutamic) at the NH2 terminus. Acanthamoeba actin is also unique in that it contains an N epsilon-trimethyllysine residue at position 326. Like other actins, Acanthamoeba actin contains an NT-methylhistidine residue at position 73. The protein sequence is in complete agreement with the sequence derived from the nucleotide sequence of an expressed actin gene.  相似文献   

9.
We present here a new method for inhibiting protein acetylation in a rabbit reticulocyte cell-free protein-synthesizing system. This procedure utilizes S-acetonyl coenzyme A, a nonreactive acetyl-CoA analogue, as an inhibitor of the NH2-terminal protein acetyltransferase in this lysate. With this procedure, we can make, in vitro, Dictyostelium discoideum actin which is 85% nonacetylated but fully translated. With the fully translated but nonacetylated actin as a substrate, the actin can be almost completely acetylated post-translationally in an acetyl-CoA-dependent system after the actin has left the ribosome. Using formylated and nonformylated [35S]Met-tRNAfMet as a source of label and in conjunction with detailed peptide mapping experiments with trypsin and thermolysin, the in vitro acetylation is shown to occur at the NH2 terminus of the newly synthesized actin. Furthermore, the initiator methionine residue, contrary to expectation, is not cleaved off but remains stable for at lest 50 min. thus, in the acetylating reticulocyte lysate system, the primary complete translation product in actin synthesis is Ac-Met-Asp and not Ac-Asp.  相似文献   

10.
Adseverin (74-kDa protein, scinderin) is a calcium- and phospholipid-modulated actin-binding protein that promotes actin polymerization, severs actin filaments, and caps the barbed end of the actin filament, with its NH2-terminal half retaining these properties (Sakurai, T., Kurokawa, H., and Nonomura, Y. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 4581-4585). Further proteolysis of this NH2-terminal half generated five fragments, and two of them (Mr 15,000 and 31,000) showed Ca(2+)-dependent binding to monomeric actin. The Mr 31,000 fragment especially caused actin filament fragmentation, although its severing activity was also inhibited by several acidic phospholipids as was found in adseverin and its NH2-terminal half. Amino acid sequencing demonstrated that the two fragments' NH2 terminus were blocked in the same manner as the NH2 terminus of adseverin, and thus these two fragments are possibly located at the NH2-terminal of the adseverin molecule. This would then indicate that NH2-terminal fragments had a Ca(2+)-sensitive actin-binding function that relates to actin severing. The other two fragments' NH2-terminal sequencing showed a similar homology to the amino acid sequences of gelsolin and villin. Based on these observations, we propose that adseverin has a functional domain structure similar to that of the gelsolin and villin core.  相似文献   

11.
Polyadenylated RNA prepared from neonatal rat muscle was translated in a rabbit reticulocyte cell-free system. Two sarcoplasmic reticulum proteins, the Ca2+ + Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) and calsequestrin, were isolated from the translation mixture by immunoprecipitation, followed by electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The [35S]methionine-labeled translation products were characterized by molecular weight, peptide mapping, and NH2-terminal sequence analysis. The ATPase synthesized in the cell-free system was found to have the same molecular weight (Mr = 100,000) and [35S]-methionine-labeled peptide map as the mature ATPase. The methionine residue present at the NH2 terminus of the mature ATPase was donated by initiator methionyl-tRNArMet and it became acetylated during translation. These results suggest that the ATPase was synthesized without an NH2-terminal signal sequence. Calsequestrin (Mr - 63,000) was synthesized as a higher molecular weight precursor (Mr = 66,000) that contained an additional [35S]methionine-labeled peptide when compared to mature calsequestrin. The NH2-terminal sequence of the precursor was different from the mature protein. The precursor was processed to a polypeptide with a molecular weight identical with mature calsequestrin when microsomal membranes prepared from canine pancreas were included during translation. These results show that calsequestrin is synthesized with an NH2-terminal signal sequence that is removed during translation. These data add to the evidence that the ATPase and calsequestrin follow distinctly different biosynthetic pathways, even though, ultimately, they are both located in the same membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) has been purified to apparent homogeneity from a Chinese hamster ovary cell line expressing a cDNA clone of the human gene. NH2-terminal sequencing of the recombinant hormone indicates that the 27-residue leader peptide is correctly and consistently cleaved during secretion of the recombinant protein into conditioned medium, yielding the mature NH2 terminus (Ala-Pro-Pro-Arg...). Analysis of the COOH terminus of rhEPO by peptide mapping and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FABMS) demonstrates that the arginyl residue predicted to be at the COOH terminus (based on confirmation of both genomic and cDNA sequences) is completely missing from the purified protein. The truncated form of the recombinant hormone, designated des-Arg166 rhEPO, displays an in vivo specific activity of greater than 200,000 units/mg protein. Structural characterization of natural human urinary EPO (uEPO) by peptide mapping and FABMS reveals that the urinary hormone is also missing the COOH-terminal Arg166 amino acid residue, a modification that remained undetected until now. There is no evidence of further proteolytic processing at the COOH terminus beyond specific removal of the Arg166 amino acid residue in either rhEPO or uEPO. On the basis of the FABMS data, we propose that the physiologically active form of the hormone circulating in plasma and interacting with target cells in vivo is des-Arg166 EPO.  相似文献   

13.
Biogenesis of the mitochondrial matrix enzyme, ornithine transcarbamylase, has been shown to begin with synthesis on cytoplasmic ribosomes of a precursor, designated pre-ornithine transcarbamylase, which is approximately 4000 daltons larger than its corresponding mitochondrial subunit, followed by post-translational uptake and proteolytic processing of the precursor to its mature counterpart by mitochondria. We now report initial studies on the structure and properties of preornithine transcarbamylase. When this precursor is labeled at the NH2 terminus with N-formyl[35S]methionine and processed by mitochondria, no label is recovered with the mature subunit. This demonstrates that the amino acid extension which is characteristic of the precursor and which is removed during mitochondrial processing is NH2-terminal. This NH2-terminal extension is found intact in two peptides produced by limited proteolysis of the labeled precursor. Moreover, this amino acid extension modifies the behavior of the precursor during immunoprecipitation in the presence of ionic detergents and plays a critical role in facilitating uptake of the precursor by mitochondria.  相似文献   

14.
Most actins examined to date undergo a unique posttranslational modification termed processing, catalyzed by the actin N-acetylaminopeptidase. Processing is the removal of acetylmethionine from the amino terminus in class I actins with Met-Asp(Glu) amino termini. For class II actins with Met-X-Asp(Glu) amino termini, processing is the removal of the second residue as an N-acetylamino acid. Other cytosolic proteins with these amino termini are not processed suggesting that the reaction may be specific for actins. In actin, X is usually cysteine. However, there are some class II actins in which this residue is other than cysteine, suggesting a broader substrate specificity for actin N-acetylaminopeptidase than acetylmethionine or acetylcysteine. We constructed mutant actins in which this cysteine was replaced with serine, asparagine, glycine, aspartic acid, histidine, phenylalanine, and tyrosine and used these to determine the substrate specificity of rat liver actin N-acetylaminopeptidase in vitro. Amino-terminal acetylmethinonine was cleaved from adjacent aspartic acid, asparagine, or histidine, but not serine, glycine, phenylalanine, or tyrosine. Of the acetylated actin amino termini tested, only acetylmethionine and acetylcysteine were cleaved. Histidine was never N-acetylated and was not cleaved. When phenylalanine and tyrosine were adjacent to the initiator methionine, no initiator methionine was cleaved even though it was acetylated. These results suggest a narrow substrate specificity for the rat liver actin N-acetylaminopeptidase. They also demonstrate that the adjacent residue can effect actin N-acetylaminopeptidase specificity.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
Analysis of the biotin-binding site on acetyl-CoA carboxylase from rat   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The biotin-binding site of acetyl-CoA carboxylase from rat was characterized as to its amino acid sequence and relative position in the enzyme molecule. Biotin binds to the lysyl residue in the tetrapeptide Val-Met-Lys-Met; this tetrapeptide is located in close proximity to the NH2 terminus. In all other biotin-containing enzymes, the conserved tetrapeptide Ala-Met-Lys-Met is the counterpart to that of rat acetyl-CoA carboxylase; and the lysyl residue is 35 residues from the COOH terminus. To examine the significance of these unusual features of the biotinylation site of animal acetyl-CoA carboxylase, cDNA fragments were expressed in a bacterial system and the effects of specific site-directed mutagenesis were examined. Replacement of Val by Ala in the conserved tetrapeptide abolished biotinylation of the expressed protein. However, introduction of a termination codon at residue 36, in such a way that the distance between the lysine on which biotin binds and the COOH-terminal amino acid was 35 residues and the penultimate amino acid was the hydrophobic residue leucine, increased the efficiency of biotinylation, provided a substantial portion of the NH2-terminal peptide was removed.  相似文献   

18.
The blocking effect of the NH2-terminal decapeptide of alpha-smooth muscle (SM) actin AcEEED-STALVC on the binding of the specific monoclonal antibody anti-alpha SM-1 (Skalli, O., P. Ropraz, A. Trzeviak, G. Benzonana, D. Gillessen, and G. Gabbiani. 1986. J. Cell Biol. 103:2787-2796) was compared with that of synthetic peptides modified by changing the acetyl group or by substituting an amino acid in positions 1 to 5. Using immunofluorescence and immunoblotting techniques, anti-alpha SM-1 binding was abolished by the native peptide and by peptides with a substitution in position 5, indicating that AcEEED is the epitope for anti-alpha SM-1. Incubation of anti-alpha SM- 1 (or of its Fab fragment) with arterial SM actin increased polymerization in physiological salt conditions; the antibody binding did not hinder the incorporation of the actin antibody complex into the filaments. This action was not exerted on skeletal muscle actin. After microinjection of the alpha-SM actin NH2-terminal decapeptide or of the epitopic peptide into cultured aortic smooth muscle cells, double immunofluorescence for alpha-SM actin and total actin showed a selective disappearance of alpha-SM actin staining, detectable at approximately 30 min. When a control peptide (e.g. alpha-skeletal [SK] actin NH2-terminal peptide) was microinjected, this was not seen. This effect is compatible with the possibility that the epitopic peptide traps a protein involved in alpha-SM actin polymerization during the dynamic filament turnover in stress fibers. Whatever the mechanism, this is the first evidence that the NH2 terminus of an actin isoform plays a role in the regulation of polymerization in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
We have examined the role of the acidic residues Asp2 and Glu4 at the NH2 terminus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae actin through site-directed mutagenesis. In DNEQ actin, these residues have been changed to Asn2 and Gln4, whereas in delta DSE actin, the Asp2-Ser-Glu tripeptide has been deleted. Both mutant actins can replace wild type yeast actin. Peptide mapping studies reveal that DNEQ, like wild type actin, retains the initiator Met and is NH2 terminally acetylated, whereas delta DSE has a free NH2 terminus and has lost the initiator Met. Interestingly, microscopic examination of filaments of these two actins reveal the appearance of bundled filaments. The DNEQ bundles are smaller and more ordered, whereas the delta DSE bundles are larger and more loosely organized. Additionally, both mutant actins activate the ATPase activity of rabbit muscle myosin S1 fragment to a lesser extent than wild type. We have also developed a sensitive assay for actin function in vivo that enabled us to detect a slight defect in the ability of these mutant actins to support secretion, an important function in yeast. Thus, although the mutant actins resulted in no gross phenotypic changes, we were able to detect a defect in actin function through this assay. From these studies we can conclude that 1) although NH2-terminal negative charges are not essential to yeast life, the loss of such charges does result in a slight defect in the actins' ability to support secretion, 2) removal of the NH2-terminal negative charges promotes the bundling of actin filaments, and 3) actins lacking NH2-terminal negative charges are unable to activate the myosin S1 ATPase activity as well as wild type actin.  相似文献   

20.
An auxiliary beta2 subunit, when coexpressed with Slo alpha subunits, produces inactivation of the resulting large-conductance, Ca(2+) and voltage-dependent K(+) (BK-type) channels. Inactivation is mediated by the cytosolic NH(2) terminus of the beta2 subunit. To understand the structural requirements for inactivation, we have done a mutational analysis of the role of the NH(2) terminus in the inactivation process. The beta2 NH(2) terminus contains 46 residues thought to be cytosolic to the first transmembrane segment (TM1). Here, we address two issues. First, we define the key segment of residues that mediates inactivation. Second, we examine the role of the linker between the inactivation segment and TM1. The results show that the critical determinant for inactivation is an initial segment of three amino acids (residues 2-4: FIW) after the initiation methionine. Deletions that scan positions from residue 5 through residue 36 alter inactivation, but do not abolish it. In contrast, deletion of FIW or combinations of point mutations within the FIW triplet abolish inactivation. Mutational analysis of the three initial residues argues that inactivation does not result from a well-defined structure formed by this epitope. Inactivation may be better explained by linear entry of the NH(2)-terminal peptide segment into the permeation pathway with residue hydrophobicity and size influencing the onset and recovery from inactivation. Examination of the ability of artificial, polymeric linkers to support inactivation suggests that a variety of amino acid sequences can serve as adequate linkers as long as they contain a minimum of 12 residues between the first transmembrane segment and the FIW triplet. Thus, neither a specific distribution of charge on the linker nor a specific structure in the linker is required to support the inactivation process.  相似文献   

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