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Soluble and membrane-bound thiamine-binding proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Authors:Akio Iwashima  Hiroshi Nishimura  Yoshitsugu Nose
Institution:Department of Biochemistry, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kamikyoku, Kyoto 602 Japan
Abstract:Previous communications from this laboratory have indicated that there exists a thiamine-binding protein in the soluble fraction of Saccharomyces cerevisiae which may be implicated to participate in the transport system of thiamine in vivo.In the present paper it is demonstrated that both activities of the soluble thiamine-binding protein and thiamine transport in S. cerevisiae are greatest in the early-log phase of the growth and decline sharply with cell growth. The soluble thiamine-binding protein isolated from yeast cells by conventional methods containing osmotic shock treatment appeared to be a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 140 000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The apparent Kd of the binding for thiamine was 29 nM which is about six fold lower than the apparent Km (0.18 μM) of thiamine transport. The optimal pH for the binding was 5.5, and the binding was inhibited reversibly by 8 M urea but irreversibly by 8 M urea containing 1% 2-mercaptoethanol. Several thiamine derivatives and the analogs such as pyrithiamine and oxythiamine inhibited to similar extent both the binding of thiamine and transport in S. cerevisiae, whereas thiamine phosphates, 2-methyl-4-amino-5-hydroxymethylpyrimidine and O-benzoylthiamine disulfide did not show similarities in the effect on the binding and transport in vivo. Furthermore, it was demonstrated by gel filtration of sonic extract from the cells that a thiamine transport mutant of S. cerevisiae (PT-R2) contains the soluble binding protein in a comparable amounts to that in the parent strain, suggesting that another protein component is required for the actual translocation of thiamine in the yeast cell membrane. On the other hand, the membrane fraction prepared from S. cerevisiae showed a thiamine-binding activity with apparent Kd of 0.17μM at optimal pH 5.0 which is almost the same with the apparent Km for the thiamine transport system. The membrane-bound thiamine-binding activity was not only repressible by exogenous thiamine in the growth medium, but as well as thiamine transport it was markedly inhibited by both pyrithiamine and O-benzoylthiamine disulfide. In addition, it was found that membrane fraction prepared frtom PT-R2 has the thiamine-binding activity of only 3% of that from the parent strain of S. cerevisiae.These results strongly suggest that membrane-bound thiamine-binding protein may be directly involved in the transport of thiamine in S. cerevisiae.
Keywords:Thiamine-binding protein  Thiamine transport  (S  cerevisiae)
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