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1.
A Novel Family of Ubiquitous Heavy Metal Ion Transport Proteins   总被引:33,自引:0,他引:33  
We describe a novel diverse family of metal ion transporter (CDF) proteins (the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) family) with members occurring in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Thirteen sequenced protein members of the CDF family have been identified, several of which have been shown to transport cobalt, cadmium and/or zinc. All members of the CDF family possess six putative transmembrane spanners with strongest conservation in the four N-terminal spanners, and on the basis of the analyses, we present a unified structural model. Members of the family are shown to exhibit an unusual degree of size variation, sequence divergence, and differences in cell localization and polarity. The phylogenetic tree for the CDF family reveals that prokaryotic and eukaryotic proteins cluster separately. It allows functional predictions for some uncharacterized members of this family. A signature sequence specific for the CDF family is derived. Received: 15 July 1996/Revised: 21 October 1996  相似文献   

2.
Several novel but similar heavy metal ion transporters, Zrt1, Zrt2, Zip1-4 and Irt1, have recently been characterized. Zrt1, Zrt2 and Zip1-4 are probably zinc transporters in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Arabidopsis thaliana whereas Irt1 appears to play a role in iron uptake in A. thaliana. The family of proteins including these functionally characterized transporters has been designated the Zrt- and Irt-related protein (ZIP) family. In this report, ZIP family proteins in the current databases were identified and multiply aligned, and a phylogenetic tree for the family was constructed. A family specific signature sequence was derived, and the available sequences were analyzed for residues of potential functional significance. A fully conserved intramembranous histidyl residue, present within a putative amphipathic, α-helical, transmembrane spanning segment, was identified which may serve as a part of an intrachannel heavy metal ion binding site. The occurrence of a proposed extramembranal metal binding motif (H X H X H) was examined in order to evaluate its potential functional significance for various members of the family. The computational analyses reported in this topical review should serve as a guide to future researchers interested in the structure-function relationships of ZIP family proteins. Received: 31 March 1997/Revised: 14 May 1998  相似文献   

3.
We have isolated a 29,000-Da carbonic anhydrase (CA) protein from the zebrafish, Danio rerio, sequenced two peptide fragments, and tentatively identified it as a high-activity CA by inhibition kinetics. We have also characterized a 1,537-bp message whose deduced sequence of 260 amino acids matches that of the isolated protein. This CA is clearly an α-CA based on the similarity of its sequence to that of other members of the α-CA gene family. A phylogenetic analysis suggested CAH-Z diverged after the branching of the CA-V and CA-VII genes and prior to the duplications that generated the CA-I, CA-II, and CA-III genes of amniotes. This marks the first characterization of the mRNA and its protein product from the CA gene of a teleost. Received: 31 March 1996 / Accepted: 8 September 1996  相似文献   

4.
Molecular Evolution of the Myeloperoxidase Family   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Animal myeloperoxidase and its relatives constitute a diverse protein family, which includes myeloperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase, thyroid peroxidase, salivary peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, ovoperoxidase, peroxidasin, peroxinectin, cyclooxygenase, and others. The members of this protein family share a catalytic domain of about 500 amino acid residues in length, although some members have distinctive mosaic structures. To investigate the evolution of the protein family, we performed a comparative analysis of its members, using the amino acid sequences and the coordinate data available today. The results obtained in this study are as follows: (1) 60 amino acid sequences belonging to this family were collected by database searching. We found a new member of the myeloperoxidase family derived from a bacterium. This is the first report of a bacterial member of this family. (2) An unrooted phylogenetic tree of the family was constructed according to the alignment. Considering the branching pattern in the obtained phylogenetic tree, together with the mosaic features in the primary structures, 60 members of the myeloperoxidase family were classified into 16 subfamilies. (3) We found two molecular features that distinguish cyclooxygenase from the other members of the protein family. (4) Several structurally deviated segments were identified by a structural comparison between cyclooxygenase and myeloperoxidase. Some of the segments seemed to be associated with the functional and/or structural differences between the enzymes. Received: 25 January 2000 / Accepted: 19 July 2000  相似文献   

5.
Three proteins have been identified in the milk of the common brush tail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula that from sequence analysis are members of the lipocalin family. They include β-lactoglobulin, which appears to have two forms; a homologue to the late-lactation protein found in tammar, Macropus eugenii; milk; and a novel protein termed trichosurin. Whereas β-lactoglobulin and trichosurin are both expressed throughout lactation, the late-lactation protein is not detected in samples taken before days 100–110 of lactation. The cDNAs encoding each of these proteins have been isolated from cDNA libraries prepared using possum mammary mRNA and sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the T. vulpeculaβ-lactoglobulin, along with two other macropod β-lactoglobulins, forms a subclass of β-lactoglobulins distinct from those for eutherian mammals; both marsupial late-lactation proteins appear to have similarities to a family of odorant-binding proteins, whereas trichosurin has similarities to the major urinary proteins of rodents. Received: 28 October 1996 / Accepted: 19 May 1997  相似文献   

6.
The α-esterase cluster of D. melanogaster contains 11 esterase genes dispersed over 60 kb. Embedded in the cluster are two unrelated open reading frames that have sequence similarity with genes encoding ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme and tropomyosin. The esterase amino acid sequences show 37–66% identity with one another and all but one have all the motifs characteristic of functional members of the carboxyl/cholinesterase multigene family. The exception has several frameshift mutations and appears to be a pseudogene. Patterns of amino acid differences among cluster members in relation to generic models of carboxyl/cholinesterase protein structure are broadly similar to those among other carboxyl/cholinesterases sequenced to date. However the α-esterases differ from most other members of the family in: their lack of a signal peptide; the lack of conservation in cysteines involved in disulfide bridges; and in four indels, two of which occur in or adjacent to regions that align with proposed substrate-binding sites of other carboxyl/cholinesterases. Phylogenetic analyses clearly identify three simple gene duplication events within the cluster. The most recent event involved the pseudogene which is located in an intron of another esterase gene. However, relative rate tests suggest that the pseudogene remained functional after the duplication event and has become inactive relatively recently. The distribution of indels also suggests a deeper node in the gene phylogeny that separates six genes at the two ends of the cluster from a block of five in the middle. Received: 18 January 1996 / Accepted: 12 March 1996  相似文献   

7.
The structure of a Salmonella enterica serovar typhi gene located within the fim gene cluster and encoding a putative periplasmic chaperone-like protein involved in the assembly of type 1 pili was determined. This gene, named fimC, has the ability to encode a 26-kDa polypeptide which is similar, at the sequence level, to the PapD periplasmic chaperonin mediating the assembly of P pili of Escherichia coli, as well as to other periplasmic chaperone-like proteins involved in the biogenesis of pili or capsule-like structures of various Gram-negative bacteria. A comprehensive search through the literature and sequence databases identified 31 (putative) bacterial proteins that can be included in this protein family on the basis of sequence similarity. Results of a multiple sequence comparison analysis showed that several residues, including most of those known to be critical in maintaining the three-dimensional structure of PapD, are either conserved or conservatively substituted in all these proteins, suggesting an overall similar folding for all of them. It was also evident that members of this family are clustered into different subfamilies according to structural and phyletic data. Received: 15 February 1996 / Accepted: 3 October 1996  相似文献   

8.
All currently sequenced stress-activated protein kinases (SAPKs), extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs), and other mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) were analyzed by sequence alignment, phylogenetic tree construction, and three-dimensional structure modeling in order to classify members of the MAPK family. Based on this analysis the MAPK family was divided into three subgroups (SAPKs, ERKs, and MAPK3) that consist of at least nine subfamilies. Members of a given subfamily were exclusively from animals, plants, or yeast/fungi. A single signature sequence, [LIVM][TS]XX[LIVM]XT[RK][WY]YRXPX[LIVM] [LIVM], was identified that is characteristic for all MAPKs and sufficient to distinguish MAPKs from other members of the protein kinase superfamily. This signature sequence contains the phosphorylation site and is located on loop 12 of the three-dimensional structure of MAPKs. I also identified signature sequences that are characteristic for each of the nine subfamilies of MAPKs. By modeling the three-dimensional structure of three proteins for each MAPK subfamily based on the resolved atomic structures of rat ERK2 and murine p38, it is demonstrated that amino acids conserved in all MAPKs are located primarily in the center of the protein around the catalytic cleft. I conclude that these residues are important for maintaining proper folding into the gross structure common to all MAPKs. On the other hand, amino acids conserved in a given subfamily are located mainly in the periphery of MAPKs, indicating their possible importance for defining interactions with substrates, activators, and inhibitors. Within these subfamily-specific regions, amino acids were identified that represent unique residues occurring in only a single subfamily and their location was mapped in three-dimensional structure models. These unique residues are likely to be crucial for subfamily-specific interactions of MAPKs with substrates, inhibitors, or activators and, therefore, represent excellent targets for site-directed mutagenesis experiments. Received: 13 August 1997 / Accepted: 21 November 1997  相似文献   

9.
Summary Bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-Cl cotransporters and thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporters comprise a family of integral membrane transport proteins, the Na-K-Cl cotransporter (NKCC) family. Each of the members of this family is over 1,000 amino acids in length. We have multiply aligned the ten currently sequenced members of this family from human, rabbit, rodent, shark, flounder, moth, worm and yeast sources. Phylogenetic analyses suggest the presence of at least six isoforms of these full length proteins in eukaryotes. Average hydropathy and average similarity plots have been derived revealing that each of these proteins possesses a central, well conserved, hydrophobic domain of almost invariant length, possibly consisting of twelve transmembrane α-helical spanners, an N-terminal, poorly conserved, hydrophilic domain of variable length, and a C-terminal, moderately conserved, hydrophilic domain of moderately constant length. A functionally uncharacterized homologue of this family occurs in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. Limited sequence similarity of these proteins with members of a family of basic amino acid transporters suggests that the NKCC family may be distantly related to the previously characterized, ubiquitous, amino acid-polyamine-choline (APC) family of facilitators. These observations suggest that the NKCC family is an old family that has its roots in the prokaryotic kingdom. Received: 27 July 1995/Revised: 8 November 1995  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated a new gene encoding a putative 103-kDa protein from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. Analysis of the deduced amino-acid sequence shows an extended central domain, predicted to form coiled-coil structures, and two terminal domains that display purine NTPase motifs. These features are reminiscent of mechanochemical motor proteins which use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to move specific cellular components. Comparative analysis of the amino-acid sequence of the terminal domains and predicted structural organization of this putative purine NTPase show that it is related both to eucaryal proteins from the ``SMC family' involved in the condensation of chromosomes and to several bacterial and eucaryal proteins involved in DNA recombination/repair. Further analyses revealed that these proteins are all members of the so called ``UvrA-related NTP-binding proteins superfamily' and form a large subgroup of motor-like NTPases involved in different DNA processing mechanisms. The presence of such protein in Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya suggests an early origin of DNA-motor proteins that could have emerged and diversified by domain shuffling. Received: 29 June 1996 / Accepted: 28 February 1997  相似文献   

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