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Evidence that the iron-sulfur cluster of Bacillus subtilis glutamine phosphoribosylpyrophosphate amidotransferase determines stability of the enzyme to degradation in vivo
Authors:J A Grandoni  R L Switzer  C A Makaroff  H Zalkin
Institution:Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana 61801.
Abstract:Bacillus subtilis glutamine P-Rib-PP amidotransferase contains a 4Fe-4S] cluster which is essential for activity. The enzyme also undergoes removal of 11 NH2-terminal residues from the primary translation product in vivo to form the active enzyme. It has been proposed that oxidative inactivation of the FeS cluster in vivo is the first step in degradation of the enzyme in starving cells. Four mutants of amidotransferases that alter cysteinyl ligands to the FeS cluster or residues adjacent to them have been prepared by site-directed mutagenesis, expressed in Escherichia coli, and characterized (Makaroff, C. A., Paluh, J. L., and Zalkin, H. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 11416-11423). These mutations were integrated into the B. subtilis chromosome in place of the normal purF gene. Inactivation and degradation in vivo of wild type and mutant amidotransferases were characterized in these integrants. Mutants FeS1 (C448S) and FeS2 (C451S) failed to form active enzyme, assemble FeS clusters, or undergo NH2-terminal processing. The immunochemically cross-reactive protein produced by both mutants was degraded rapidly (t1/2 = 16 min) in exponentially growing cells. In contrast the wild type enzyme was stable in growing cells, and activity and cross-reactive protein were lost from glucose-starved cells with a t1/2 of 57 min. Mutant FeS3 (F394V) contained an FeS cluster and was processed normally, but had only about 40% of normal specific activity. The FeS3 enzyme was also inactivated by reaction with O2 in vitro about twice as fast as the wild type. The amidotransferase produced by the FeS3 integrant was stable in growing cells but was inactivated and degraded in glucose-starved cells more rapidly (t1/2 = 35 min) than the wild type enzyme. Mutant FeS4 (C451S, D442C) also contained an FeS cluster and was processed; the enzyme had about 50% of wild type-specific activity and reacted with O2 in vitro at the same rate as the wild type. Inactivation and degradation of the FeS4 mutant in vivo in glucose-starved cells proceeded at a rate (t1/2 = 45 min) that was somewhat faster than normal. The correlation between absence of an FeS cluster or enhanced lability of the cluster to O2 and increased degradation rates in vivo supports the conclusions that stability of the enzyme in vivo requires an intact FeS cluster and that O2-dependent inactivation is the rate-determining step in degradation of the enzyme. The fact that mutant FeS3 was processed normally but degraded rapidly argues against a role for NH2-terminal processing in controlling degradation rates.
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